Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mike, I didn't get to hear the whole story. Can
you tell us what kind of assault rifle that got
in New Orleans?
Speaker 2 (00:04):
You used to kill fifteen people and injure thirty five
in less than sixty seconds.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
Thanks, Yes, it was an assault rifle, so therefore it
was because it's an assault which begins with the letter A,
and a rifle which begins with the letter R. It
was obviously an a R.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Pick a number, pick a number, ar F one fifty, Yeah,
ar F one fifty right, right?
Speaker 3 (00:33):
You know, Dragon, you've been You've really been doing some
mental exercises while you were gone. Weren't didn't you? I'm
barely awake either, one barely here. I'm so happy that
it's the new year because Colorado has once again proven
(00:57):
that it is the Nannius of the Nanny States. Gavin
Newsom can move over because the Democrats and Jared Polis
have taken over. They have surpassed California when it comes
to Nanneyism. There were dozens of new laws that took
effect on Uh when, Yeah, there was yesterday. I need
(01:18):
one day? What day is a dragon?
Speaker 1 (01:21):
Stupid Thursday that feels like a Monday.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
Yesterday was Sunday to me all day long, told me
nuts because I kept thinking, Okay, I gotta, I gotta,
I gotta do a Michael Brown minute. I got to
get my u ur l's and my tabs ready, I
was like.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
And I kept looking for football. It was like, oh wait,
never mind, Oh gee.
Speaker 3 (01:43):
Well, anyway, yesterday January first, dozens of new laws and
here are ten that I think that you ought to
know about, as if you haven't heard about these already.
But of course I have some commentary.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
Wait a minute, didn't Polus just take out that chainsaw
table saw and cut up a whole bunch of laws?
Speaker 3 (02:05):
He did? It was a giant stack. Yeah, yeah, of
immaterial bull crap. You know, it's pretty hard when you've
been gone for like, how long have we gone? Not
quite two weeks? And because I've been dropping like.
Speaker 1 (02:28):
Bull you know what, the other one, the real.
Speaker 3 (02:31):
One, quite a bit. There might have even been a
few f bombs over the past couple of weeks. Yeah,
and there's been a lot of a hole. So I've
got to really get back into my FCC bring.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
Well, you spend time with family, so that's understanding.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
Absolutely, and well more importantly, the family spent time with me.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
So you heard I heard those words records you too, Yes.
Speaker 3 (02:58):
I heard those words an awful lot. You know, I'm
so childish. Have you seen the overhead signs about, you know,
phone down or get fined and all that crap. Have
you seen those signs.
Speaker 1 (03:13):
Everywhere don't look down or don't look up or whatever.
Speaker 3 (03:15):
I don't look up, and then you know, phones down
or get fine. I have been just because I'm hoping
there's a camera somewhere. Every time I passed one of those,
I picked my phone up and I hold it up
to the windshield. Phone up. Such a jerk. So, anyway,
do you ever hold your phone? You know, play GPS music,
take a phone call that's now illegal? You cannot hold,
(03:42):
you cannot touch. I saw this story, I don't know,
a couple of days ago, and they were trying to
describe it, and they said, you cannot even touch your phone,
and then they went on to talk about how Colorado
State Patrol is going to be out in force to
(04:03):
enforce that.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Well, thank goodness, I can still eat this bowl of
soup while I'm driving.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
Exactly, or you can have you know, screaming twin boys
in the back seat, screaming and throwing things and pooping
and peeing and doing everything else that's not a distraction
at all. Or you can have as you normally do.
You can have your spouse sitting next to you in
the passenger seat screaming at you about what an idiot
(04:28):
you are. Of course, I guess that's no longer distracting
to you because you're just so accustomed to it. But
they're going to they're going to be checking you, see
if you're touching your phone. I always touch my phone.
I put my phone under my right leg on the
driver's side seat and I can feel it, and that
(04:50):
way I remember never to leave it in the car.
It's right there. But no, I can't. I cannot touch
my phone. Now. The existing law already bans drivers under
the age of eighteen from using cell phones, but they
now expanded that to adults. Now you can use hand
(05:12):
for hands free devices such as a Bluetooth headset so
you can still converse. You can still use Apple Play
car Play, you can use a dashboard mount, and of
course you can use your car speakerphone systems. Penalties range
from seventy five bucks two points for the first offense
(05:37):
goes up to two hundred and fifty dollars and four
points for three or four more offenses. The other thing
that which I use car play a lot, so I
don't I tend not to pick up my phone because
if I need maps, I can just turn the dial
in the Beamer or on the Jeep, although in the
Geep I actually have to touch on it's such a burden.
(05:58):
I actually have to put my finger up in touch
as opposed to just turning the dial. Oh, it's the
inhumanity of.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
It sounds dreadful.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
It's horrible to live in this kind of society and
actually have to pick your arm up and reach over
and touch the touch screens.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
Like you're traveling like a cave man.
Speaker 3 (06:15):
It is. It's horrible. But what I really loved about
it was you cannot even pick your phone up at
a stop sign. I don't mean a stop sign, a
stop light where you know you're sitting and you're waiting
because you're gonna wait forever. You can't do that. You
can't pick your phone up there either, and you certainly
(06:36):
can't do it. All of you here are going to
be stuck in rush hour traffic if it well it's
already started. Don't pick that phone up. Now, think about
traffic's moving along at let's say your southbound on the
twenty five right now, you're at about eighty fourth or
the Thornton park Way, and you've already hit that jam.
(06:58):
I'm assuming the jam's already. I haven't looked at Google Maps,
and so you're you're scooting along at about five miles
an hour, touching, go, touch and go stopping, go stopping, go. Uh,
don't think at that phone. Don't do that. But here's
the here's the deal. Here's what I love. You're gonna
do that. You're gonna pick your phone up. There's gonna
(07:20):
be a state trooper somewhere within that can make a
visual contact with you picking up your phone. So they're
gonna flip on their lights, which is going to make
the traffic jam even worse. And then they're gonna start
moving over while you try to move over to pull
over onto the shoulder. Then you're gonna sit on the shoulder.
(07:42):
Now stop and think about this because this is long
Colorado now, so now they're going to pull you over
for having touched your phone. Now you can touch your penis,
you can scratch your ass, you can touch your boobies,
you can do all of that, but don't touch your phone.
Do not touch that phone now if they catch you. No, women,
(08:03):
I have to warn you now. If they catch you
scratching your mobies as you're driving down the highway, I
don't know what they'll do. Maybe they'll pull you over.
I don't know. But if you touch your phone, you're
you're you're south Battle on the twenty five at the
Thornton Parkway. You're already barely moving, you're already late for work,
and now they're going to pull you over.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
Yeah, let's not forget too that. If there is a
somebody with their flashers.
Speaker 3 (08:25):
No, no, no, no, no no no, I'm not there yet.
That's where I was headed. Don't you who's the talent?
Do we have to re establish our boundaries again?
Speaker 1 (08:34):
Do we really need to ask everybody who the talent
is around here?
Speaker 3 (08:39):
So I'm trying to paint a picture, so you get
pulled over before touching your phone. Traffic, And now that
you've pulled over, he's got his lights on and so
now the already slow traffic has to start pulling over
or slowing down even more So thanks to Jared Polis
and the Democrats, you're rush hour traffic just got suckier.
(09:02):
In fact, it's now suckiest if you know, unless, of course,
you're going to buy eggs. And if you're going to
buy eggs, it's going to be even worse. What eggs, Well,
we're gonna get to that too, cage free eggs. Now
I had to dig. Whoops, I I just dropped my phone.
Is it? Is it possible? Can I touch my phone
(09:24):
while I'm on air? Is that abo anything?
Speaker 1 (09:27):
You are not talented enough to play with your phone
and be on the air at the same time.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
No, I'm not. But it's Monday after a holiday, so
what am I supposed to do?
Speaker 1 (09:38):
All right, stupid Thursday, it feels like a Monday, so.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
At least it means tomorrow Friday, so we got that
going for us. So I got it. I got to
think about the cage free eggs because over the holiday
on x everybody I forget, I forget who it was now,
but somebody was trying to get people to post photos
of the eggs unavailability in the grocery stores. So everybody
(10:05):
starts posting pictures of just these empty shelves. Well, as
I recall, they started this law back last year, because
last year it mandated that hens be given more space
in their enclosures, and if the egg producer was caught
violating the law, it was up to one thousand dollars
(10:29):
per violation. Now I couldn't quite ascertain from the statute
whether that was like every hen was a violation, or
if they just walk in and saw a dozen hens
that were in less space than required, that that was
a violation. You know, why don't we have we take
better care of chickens then we do homeless vents? Have
(10:54):
you ever thought about that? Yes? Now, sun stores, let's see,
let me back up. So now egg producers will be
prohibited from selling in the state if they keep their
hands confined with less than one point five square feet
of floor space per hen, or one square foot if
(11:18):
the if the hens have unfettered access to vertical space.
Let me tell you that. Did you follow along? Now?
If they're if the hens are confined, you have to
have one point five square feet of floor space per hen,
(11:40):
So you could have cage free hens, but you have
them all just out in that you just you have
a big, giant barn. Let's say you know fifty feet
by two hundred feet. Well, now you just calculate how
many dragging you are good at numbers, So fifty by
(12:05):
two hundred, how many square feet is that? You could
have one point five You need one point five square
feet of four space per hen. Got it. But now
if the hens are all just on the floor of
that barn and there's no restriction above them, then it
(12:29):
gets reduced to one square foot. Do you think the
hens care? With all due respect to chickens, do you
think the chickens care? Hey, I only have a square
foot now, but look, I've got thirty feet above me.
If I only have you know, two feet above me,
(12:50):
then I get one point five square feet of space.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
On some of the other shows that I work on,
we've had egg producers talk about this, and there is
no nutrition change in the egg on as to how
much space the hen has.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
So if there's no nutritional change in the egg, then
that means whether the chicken is caged or not cave huh,
does not affect the chicken's ability to produce nutritional eggs. Correct.
So this is all about Marlon Reese, Jared Poulos's husband,
making the chickens happy. Exactly, Yeah, just happy chickens. Now
(13:32):
that means you're gonna pay more for your eggs, but
that's your problem. The chickens are happy. I love this.
According to one story, some stores have begun raising concerns
that the law could result in egg supply issues. Well
you think so, but experts, now does it? Say you?
(13:53):
The experts are experts say that any supply issues that
you might find with eggs now are because of avian
influenza outbreaks that have been occurring over the past two years.
King super is a safe way say the change should
(14:14):
not affect customers. If it's affected you, I want to
know about it. If you've found your local King Soupers,
or your Safeway or your Whole Foods. Of course Whole
Foods is isn't an egg organic anyway?
Speaker 1 (14:32):
There is no real classification as to what organic is
or isn't. It's just a quote made up term. And
you can make whatever your qualifications for organic almost anything.
But if it really doesn't matter, okay.
Speaker 3 (14:48):
But when I just think of the term organic and
I think of a chicken leg and egg, that egg
has not been processed, manufactured, It hasn't been assembled. There's
no assembly line, so it's organic.
Speaker 1 (15:05):
I would like to think that it was probably what
is fed to the chicken. Then whatever the egg will
whatever the chicken will produce, is now an organic egg
because what they ate was better quality. But chickens eat anything, yes,
yes they will even other chickens.
Speaker 3 (15:24):
Yes, but if they eat gravel, that still goes into
the digestive system. True, rocks are organic. It's all organic.
Speaker 1 (15:39):
True, all right.
Speaker 3 (15:41):
Anyway, touch me, tell me about your your chicken, your
your egg experience. Did you know this anonymous sperm donation?
Did you Did you think I'd come in today dragon
and talk about sperm donation.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
I was hoping you weren't.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
Sperm donation Anonymous sperm donation is no more. We are
number one. We are number one, where the first state
in the entire country to pass the law banning the practice.
With the prohibition set to take We did this back
in twenty twenty two. I never remember this stuff because
(16:21):
I look at it and think it's so foolish. I
just vote against it because it's so stupid. Well, it
took effect yesterday. Under the law, sperm and egg donors
have to agree to have their identity released to children
conceive from their donations when the child turns eighteen. Now
(16:42):
I keep thinking about that, what sort of legal, unintended
consequences are going to result from a sperm donation? And
then the child decides that, hmm, I wanna go find
out who daddy is. Oh, Daddy, I had a really
lousy childhood, and I need some money. I need money. Now,
(17:08):
the sponsors claim that this is intended to give the
donor conceive children access to critical information about their medical
and genetic backgrounds. Can't you find out a lot about
your genic background based on your own genetics? And then
they say there's fraud in the industry. Some fertility doctors
(17:34):
were revealed to have used their own sperm to impregnate
numerous unknowing patients under the guise of using anonymous donors.
I can make a joke here, but I won't. And
then we get to this one. I love the next one,
guns and cars. Let me just say that I will
(17:56):
not comply. Well, Happy New Year.
Speaker 4 (18:11):
I thought Michael was gone until January sixth, so I
left my big chief tablet at home, was gonna mindlessly
listen to some news this morning, turn on the radio,
and who do I hear but the great One himself.
And now I have to concentrate so I don't miss anything.
(18:33):
Have a great day, you.
Speaker 3 (18:37):
Know, Dragon, it's kind of funny to think that somebody
actually listens to us seriously.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Oho, I never heard of him.
Speaker 3 (18:45):
You know that that gentleman needs serious psychiatric health counseling.
Get counseling. Yes, he's the kind of person that this
law is made before. He's a danger to society because
he's listening to us and taking it seriously. This is
a law that I just simply I can't do it.
(19:09):
You are prohibited from storing a gun in your car.
You cannot leave a handgun in an unintended vehicle unless
the handgun is in a locked, hard sided container placed
out of plane view, and the vehicle itself is locked.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
Quick question. Does that locked hard sided container have to
be bolted to the car by any chance?
Speaker 3 (19:36):
No, it does not. By the way, Dragon, it just.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
Seems very easy that, you know, I could break a
window to get into your car and take that locked
box with your firearm in it, and then open it
as to my discretion later on, why.
Speaker 3 (19:50):
You certainly could accept that you won't know what car
to break in, because it has to be let me
find it again out of plane view, so you can't
just look in the car.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Yeah, I keep everything of value in my car out of.
Speaker 3 (20:12):
Plane view exactly. Now, your glove compartment or your glove
box or whatever you call it can count as a
hard sided container if you lock it and then lock
your car. Yeah, why are we doing this? Why did
(20:34):
we pass this law? Because some a hole by the
main state Representative Ron Weinberg had two pistols stolen from
his truck parked outside the state capitol. I want you
to now, at the time, he wasn't sure whether he
had left the truck unlocked or the thieves had broken in. Now,
(20:57):
can't you can't you tell if somebody's broken into your
car if you left it unlocked, you're not gonna be
able to tell if they open the door. Not open
the door because it was it was unlocked. But if
your door's locked, can't you see like scratch marks or
something that indicates or they've jimmied the lock they've done
(21:19):
can't you figure out something? But set all that aside
for a moment, stop and consider that this dummy doesn't
in the entire in the entire Colorado Pollup Bureau doesn't
recognize that crime is occurring on their own property, and
(21:39):
yet they want us to pay for their lack of
law enforcement. Yes, now, I want to know how somebody
broke into a car on on the parking lot of
the state Capitol. Were Where was the security? Where's the
Colorado State Patrol? What were what were they doing?
Speaker 2 (22:00):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (22:00):
Look, guys, I wonder if that's the owner of that car.
Seems to have trouble getting into this vehicle. I don't know.
It's time for coffee. If we don't have time to
go check on that, I'm just not going to do it.
I don't think either. I need to research this more.
But normally when I get stopped, I normally haven't well,
(22:21):
it hasn't happened in gosh, I haven't been stopped in
knock On for my car. I have been stopped in
three years. Yeah, I haven't had I haven't had to
take it in three almost four years now. But normally
what I do is I handle my driver's license in
my concealed carry. I guess what I would do now
is I would just tell them if they ask, where
(22:42):
is your weapon? Well? But no, wait a minute. If
I get stopped I'm in the car, doesn't apply, so
I can still have it. I can have it laying
on the seat next to me, for that matter. But
if I lock my car and somebody breaks into the car,
to Dragon's point, I'll tell them, Hey, Mike, it was stolen.
(23:06):
Oh yeah, I had it in a lock box and
under the seat, and somebody stole it from under the seat.
By the way, if you have a long gun in
your car, just a soft sided case will do. Now.
I don't know how you keep a long gun out
of plane view in a soft sided case unless you
have some way of hiding it under the seat. But
(23:26):
I can hide it in my seat, so I guess I
would put it in the back of the jeep and
pull the cover over the the back part of the
jeep where you can't see in there. Maybe maybe that
would work, I don't know. But somehow that's supposed to
stop or prevent stolen guns. I don't think so. Also,
(23:49):
there's a new tax on guns and AMMO and it's
meant to reduce gun violence. How is a tax? Explain
to me. How is a tax on guns and ammo
supposed to help prevent gun violence. Well, the problem is
(24:10):
you don't think like a progressive, you don't think like
a Marxist. At the color out of Pullet Bureau. The
six and a half percent tax on manufacturers and sellers,
including pawnbrokers of guns, gun parts, and AMMO is estimated
to generate thirty nine million dollars a year. Where's that
(24:32):
money going? Primarily to crime victim services? So people who
have already suffered from a crime, and not necessarily even
a gun crime. But gun owners are going to pay
for helping those victims including in fact, I would change
(24:52):
I'm just reading from the story, but let me change
the story. The money is aimed primarily at crime victim service,
including groups that help victims of domestic violence. Let me
interpret that for you. The six point five percent tax,
which is estimated to raise thirty nine million dollars a year,
(25:13):
is going to go to NGO's. So this is another
laundry money laundering scheme. In other words, the six and
a half the the the thirty nine million dollars is
going to go to an NGO, which is Democrats taxing
gun owners so they can then divert the sixty or
thirty nine million dollars six point five percent, thirty nine
(25:36):
million dollars, so they can divert that to a Democrat
controlled in GOO run by their friends to help victims
rights groups. Explain to me. I'm dead serious here. Explain
to me how that reduces gun violence, because that's that
(25:56):
was the purpose of it, was to reduce gun violence.
It's not going to do anything. Some money laundering scheme,
that's all they're gonna do. Let's see, starting yesterday, the
ages that teens must wear seat belts in the back
seat from under sixteen to under eighteen. Yes, babies must
(26:21):
use rear facing car seats from under one to under two,
and children must use booster seats from under eight to
under nine. I always worry. Now, my daughter lives in Arizona,
so I don't worry too much about this, but I
always worry about this with my daughter because our granddaughter
will turn six on Saturday. She looks like she's about four.
(26:44):
She's a tiny little kid. She doesn't have she could
just use the booster seat, but she looks like she
might be required to use a rear face In me,
maybe a front facing car seat. And then there's this
one which really hit home when I went down there
with Zone. You know, now on the express lanes, if
(27:10):
you cross the double white line, it's a seventy five dollars. Fine.
Have I told the story that I got one of
those tickets.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
You may have, but I think I got one of those.
Speaker 3 (27:21):
Tickets, and I was going to challenge the ticket, but
they don't provide video. So the photo that they sent
me shows me clearly within the double sided lines. I'm
in the express lane, and I know exactly where it happened.
It happened as I was going from four to seventy
(27:42):
on to E four seventy. So I thought, well, I'm
going to challenge this, so I started reading up about it.
You don't go in front of a judge, you go
in front of some little hearing panel. And so far
ninety nine point nine percent they've they've turned away and
just said no, you're stuck with fine. Now you can
request I may still do this request photocopies. I want
(28:04):
to see you. I want to I want you to
show me where I illegally crossed the double white line,
because I don't think they can prove it. But I
also don't want to spend all that time and energy
doing something where I've already paid the fine anyway, but
if you if you look closely, So I go to
Arizona and the one on one and find that matter
of the two l two, they are the expressways all
(28:28):
around Phoenix. The freeways all have express lanes just like
we do. And let me tell you, they drive ten
times faster than we do. And people weave in and
out of those express lanes all the time. So I'm
(28:48):
coming back yesterday, going back to the house, and I'm
I'm not in the express lane. But it's early morning
because I've taken the dogs for an early morning walk
out of the dog park and we're coming back home.
And as I come back home, I see, like I
don't know, a Toyota or something in the express lanes
and it's driving I bet, fifty five miles an hour
(29:11):
and all of us in the regular lanes are doing
about sixty five seventy five miles an hour. As I
see this car. As as I'm approaching the car, I
see a Tesla whiz right by me. And now they're stuck.
They're stuck behind the stupid Toyota that's going fifty five
in the express lanes. And he knows because he starts.
(29:33):
He you can see him starting to kind of think,
I'm going to go around this car, but then he realizes, Ah,
I'm going to get a ticket because all these cameras.
So now he's stuck. I so bad. He wanted to
wave till what I drove by, but I didn't do it,
even though I desperately wanted to. So you can do
it in Arizona and it doesn't cause any additional wrecks.
(29:56):
There's no I read about it. There's no problem down
in there. But in Colorado, don't you dare cross those
double white line? Michael.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
Isn't there already some kind of law that addresses this,
like what a distractive driving law? So I think it's
already covered, Bud.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
What do I know? Well, clearly you don't know anything.
Let me find yes. He uh you number fifty five
sixty six, Michael. What's the difference between touching a phone
(30:40):
versus touching the screen on the car for CarPlay? Absolutely nothing,
nothing at all. But this is the nanny state that
we live in. For this one nine or this one
(31:00):
really pisses me off, Mike. The police have a freaking
hold computer in front of their face. I've seen them
type while they're driving rules for thee and not for me. Yeah. Absolutely,
But go back to the securing your guns in your car.
(31:26):
I think this is pretty good. You bent ever zero
ninety three eight, Mike, I'm pretty certain that my car
is a hard sighted container. I think it is too. Yes,
but think about why this law was passed. This law
(31:46):
was passed because some idiot at the Colorado Legislation Colorado
Pullop Bureau probably left his gun laying on left two guns,
whether they were in cases or not. It's pretty easy.
I mean, you don't have to be a criminal. In fact,
In fact, my guess is a criminal saw two cases
(32:07):
in a car on the front seat of his pick
him up truck or his car or his tesla, probably
a tesla, and looked in and said, oh, look, I'm
on the ground to the Colorado State Capitol. There's nobody
here to watch me. So I think I'll just break
the window and just reach in and grab these two
cases and take them moment and see what's in them.
And he ends up with a forty four MAGNETE three
(32:29):
fifty seven magnum happy thief right took them to a
pawn shop pawned them off or sold them over on
Federal Boulevard, some criminal somewhere. So the idiots of the
Pollop Bureau screw up, and now you and I have
to pay for it. I have never ever left a
(32:51):
gun sitting on a car seat. Now I've had a
gun on a car seat. But when I get out,
I'll put it somewhere. I'm not gonna tell you where,
but I'll put it somewhere and you won't be able
to see it. And no, it's not in the glove box,
and it's and it's not in a gun safe either.
(33:15):
But the irony that there are car thieves that are
breaking into cars on the grounds of the Colorado State Capitol,
and then they want to react to that by making
it more difficult for you to conceal carry while you're
driving or while you have a gun in a car.
Their reaction is to punish you, not to punish the
(33:39):
yahoo that left his guns in his car, who, by
the way, to this day still claims, oh, I don't
know whether it was stolen or broken into. I think
you would know whether your car was broken into or
you forgot to lock it. Either window is going to
be broken or there's going to be marks from them.
Jimmy opening the lock somehow, you're going to know your
(34:04):
car is broken into. I think he probably left an
unlocked and he's embarrassed to say so, And now you're
paying for it. Mike, what happens when I go, honey
and leave my shotgun in the truck? Well, what I
find interesting is you can leave a shotgun in a
soft sided container. But the way I read the law,
(34:26):
you don't necessarily have to hide it. He just has
to be in a soft sided container. Now, the last
I checked, both are called firearms. One's a handgun, one's
a long gun. Both can kill people. And if the
whole ideas we want to reduce gun violence, well we're
(34:47):
gonna take care of that because we're going to put
a tax on you that's going to go to Democrat
funded NGOs to help victims of crime, which won't do
anything so they pass along instead. That says you have
to lock your gun in a case locked inside your car.
Because we had an idiot in the state capitol that
(35:08):
had his guns stolen.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
It goes right back to wearing two masks. It's just,
you know, it just makes more sense, you know, Dragon
a lock box inside of a locked box.
Speaker 3 (35:19):
Yeah. Yeah, it's already inside a locked car and it's
not visible inside the locked car. So why isn't that
good enough? There may be others. If there are some
other laws that that you're aware of that are new
as of yesterday, Uh, send me a text or a
reference because i'd i'd like to know about him, because
(35:40):
I want to fully comply with everything, because I'm just
a good unit that does whatever the government tells me
to do.