Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:24):
Emotion series.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Yes, yes, I'm sorry I didn't answer your I don't
I read all the emails, I read all the text messages.
I don't respond to all of them. I know you
emailed me yesterday, Matt and said, was I the only
person that I'm the first person ever played the according
on K O A or KO Yeah, I I assume
you are and you're the last.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
But I really like it.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
So I thought you were going to jump up and
dance for a moment, I do some sort of Russian
you know.
Speaker 3 (00:57):
Don't know what he was saying because I can't hear
him over the accordion.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
But oh great, now we're in big doodoo with the FCC,
because lord knows what he was saying.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
Possible deniability, you have no idea. Plus fleeting expletives. I
think we can probably be in there too, so fine.
Plus when we have twelve people listening. Anyway, I just love.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
The phrase a fleeting explative. That's the best kind of explative.
Speaker 3 (01:23):
And caught my missus Redbeard's ear during the most recent
Broncos game. Oh you're watching it, and she's like, wait.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
Did he say? Ye?
Speaker 1 (01:32):
Did he did?
Speaker 3 (01:33):
So we weren't listening, so I'm not sure if that
went over the air here on Ka, but if it
hadn't it happened.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
Yep, fleeting exploitives. Do you know what COP thirty three is.
It's the Council of Participants of the United Nations Climate Policies.
They're having their conference in Brazil. That's a country in
South America, and they're having it in Brazil in a
(02:02):
place called Berlin. Gavin Neuwsam is all excited. Gavin Newsom
is down there. In fact, Gavenusom flew in a private
jet to Brazil so he could talk to the conference
where he.
Speaker 4 (02:15):
Awn values will start to decline. You're seeing it across
the spectrum right now. In my state included, which is
one of the most blessed and cursed states as it
relates to climate, we're on the tip of.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
The sphere of climate change.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
Simultaneous droughts and simultaneous floods.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
Gosh, I've never heard of that happening anywhere, Like, I
don't know, maybe say in Colorado, or you have a
drought on the western slope and you got you know,
massive floods or rain on the eastern plains. I mean,
Jim Andy Christmas who ever heard of that.
Speaker 4 (02:49):
Gavin hots are getting a lot hotter the dryes dryer.
You saw one of the most devastating wildfires in American history.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
Yeah, how's that rebuilding going too? One of the most
diffastating while fires in history. And what are you doing now? Now?
People have just given up. People have given up rebuilding
because the rules and regulations, because of the cost of materials,
everything that you said you were going to streamline. Both
you and the mayor of Los Angeles said you were
going to fix that, and you didn't fix any of it.
And so now they're just selling to the speculators. Now,
(03:18):
they're just selling to the hedge funds. Now, they're just
selling to private equity. Now they're just running away. And
they're oh, they're leaving California in the middle of winter.
Oh wait a minute, there was a wildfire in California
in the middle of winter. Do you know where the
Palisades are located? Yeah? Yeah, How often you think of
(03:40):
snow's in the Palisades.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
In Los Angeles?
Speaker 2 (03:44):
In Los Angeles words always got you know, five six
into the snow during the winter in January. He's talking
to the useful idiots who have no clue like all
the California Los Angeles. Yeah, oh man, it must be
horrible there in the winter, one.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
Hundred mile hour winds attached to fire.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
And as we.
Speaker 4 (04:06):
Rebuild, the number one concerned people have how do I
get my home insured? And how do you get a
developer to develop a home that can't get a mortgage
which requires home insurance. So from across the spectrum, from financial.
Speaker 2 (04:21):
Risk to these who cost of living.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Which is universal, to global competitiveness, this is a no brainer.
As I say, what Trump is doing is unprecedented.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
It's Trump's fault. Trump caused the fires, Trump did everything,
is I recollege? I don't think he was president yet
when those fires occurred? Was he? I don't think he
had yet taken off? Maybe he had. I just I'm
confused because I didn't really pay that much attention to California.
But back to Cop thirty three, because it really did
some I've got a real bugaboo about climate change. Now,
(05:00):
for those of you who are new to this program,
let me real quick, excuse me what you real quick?
Speaker 3 (05:04):
Frame of reference to the Palisades fire was January seventh.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
Okay, so you hadn't taken off when when did he take.
Speaker 2 (05:11):
Well, it's it's usually inauguration as like, yeah, you ever
take January twentieth?
Speaker 1 (05:16):
Okay, yeah, so it was so he had he wasn't.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
Okay, yeah, but it's still his fault, right.
Speaker 3 (05:23):
He's just that that naughty kid with the matchbook and.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Behind exactly you got it exactly right. So those of
you that might be new to my position on climate change,
it is simply this climate change occurs, it exists, it
is real, and there's very little of anything at all
we can do about it because it's climate change is
(05:49):
effectuated by things way beyond our control. The sun, sun spots,
moisture in the air, clouds, the heat rising from the oceans,
in any number of things. And the climate has always
been changing, it always will change, and it's just that
where more and more of us live on this planet,
(06:10):
and so where if you lived in Colorado long enough,
you may remember the original Big Thompson flood and when
the original Big Thompson flood came roaring down the canyon, well, yes,
it cost some damage, but not nearly the amount of
damage that decades later a flood in the same area
caused because now there was more development, there were more homes.
(06:33):
There were more businesses, there were more roads, bridges, highways,
there's more in the commercial development. There was more everything.
So yes, naturally the amount of damage is increased, But
even that's not what really bugs me. What really bugs
me is the fact that they're running off to uh, Brazil,
(06:53):
and they're running off to Brazil because well, why not
have your thing where you're asked te people to stop,
you know, uh, living nicely? Why not have it in
a poverty stricken area.
Speaker 5 (07:08):
Hey, Michael, Michael, uh, could you check the dragon and
see if we can't bring back the outro music at
the top and out of the hour. My earballs really
were used to that, and that would help me know
it was time for all of us to take a break.
And then we'd always kind of counting down with you
and see, hey, is Michael going to get done in time?
Or is he gonna get cut off by the break.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
So we missed some of this stuff in the old
ko Okay, howel.
Speaker 5 (07:31):
W see you've been bringing back a koa camp proversation.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Where are you working?
Speaker 4 (07:39):
See?
Speaker 2 (07:39):
I don't pay attention, I don't get rest, that's what
you said. I really I just couldn't. I could not
care less, but what I really do one of those
what was all that noise in the background.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
The shop, here's a machine shop.
Speaker 2 (07:48):
It's a machine shop, or maybe it's a distribution center.
Speaker 3 (07:50):
You know, you got we could wear house something I
would warehouse.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
You know you got some forklifts moving things around or whatever.
That's what we need to know. Three three wednes zero
three else where you were working. I mean, we don't
need to know the name of the place, Like I
don't care if it's a Sam's Club or something. I
just want to know, like what kind of place it
was that. We really don't care at all. You'll see
there that soon learn that we don't care anymore about
(08:14):
you than you care about us. So that's kind of
how we it's kind of how we flow back to
Cop thirty three, Cop thirty I'm sorry, Cop thirty three,
Cop thirty Car fifty four. Where are you? So? This
conference is taking the place in a city Blinn, Brazil,
where raw sewage flows openly into waterways. This is the
(08:40):
this is the perfect hypocrisy. You have all these global elitists,
you have Western so called or putative scientists, and of
course the politicians like you know, Gavin Newsom all jetting in,
usually on private jets, and they're going to lecture the
world on reducing emission. Well, all they have to do
(09:02):
is step outside their hotel room and they'll see the
far more pressing environmental crisis that is right there under
their nose. It's that disconnect that has absolutely made me
adamant that the whole I've not used this term here,
(09:22):
so get ready for it. I believe that climate change
is a religion. And the people that advocate that we've
got to reduce emissions, we've got to get to net zero,
we've got to reduce carbon we've got to do all
of this. They are congregants in the church that I
call the Church of the Climate activists, and they really
(09:44):
don't give a ratsass about the earth, nor do they
really care about you. What they really care about is
their power and control over how you live your life,
how you clothe yourself, how you house yourself, how you
transport yourself. Everything. They want to control every aspect of
(10:06):
your life. They've got healthcare that they're nationalizing and socializing,
and now they can take the climate. And the climate.
Of course, the climate affects everything, right, your health affects everything.
Climate affects everything, so now they can control all of
that too. I'm more convinced than ever that the legacy
of this church of the climate activists will be one
(10:29):
of actual neo colonialism, and they'll try to disguise it.
They'll try to dress it up as virtue, and in
so doing they will deny the developing world the infrastructure
and the cheap, reliable energy that allowed us in Western
civilization to move a thousand miles past them at one
(10:51):
hundred miles an ale hour. And it's all in the
name of uncertain futures.
Speaker 3 (10:57):
Now, normally I wouldn't do this kind of thing here,
but oh oh, I feel that I have to because
this is one of my favorites. And give me a second.
It needs a little setup. Dukes are ready.
Speaker 6 (11:09):
So three old dudes are sitting around the convalesce at
home playing dominoes. The first guy says, I'd give anything
to take a great number one in the morning. The
second guy says, I got that beat. I'd give anything
to take a great number two in the morning. The
third guy says, what do you guys complaining about? Every morning?
It's seven to ten. I take a great number one
(11:30):
and it's seven. I take a great number two and no,
he guys, says, what's wrong with that? Says, I don't
get out of bed until eight o'clock.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
Really, it's one of my favorites. Was that a talkback
or did you just talk? That was a talk I
don't leave them. I just play him. And you know,
I like it.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
When when you feed the stray cats like he is,
like like formally fat ass, bald headed guy back there.
They just keep coming back, So just chill, stop it,
stop it. Back back to Cop thirty three. Why not
keep saying thirty three, Cop thirty Yeah, Cop thirty going
(12:15):
on down in BLI in Brazil, And I'm telling you
that it truly does turn me off. It really irritates
me that billions, billions of people, particularly in Sub Saharan Africa,
get condemned to decades and decades of unnecessary hardship of
really crappy whole lives. They live in crap whole countries. Now,
(12:40):
I'm not here to dissect why, because it's a combination
of generational attitudes. It's civil war, its lack of education,
it's that you know, they're they're run by a bunch
of tyrannical dictators any number of reasons. But nonetheless they
will never ever have the chance to live in the
(13:04):
kind of world that we live in, because we're telling
them that you've got to forego fossil fuels, modern infrastructure,
because the gas that I'm exhaling right now CO two,
that CO two emissions, even as they lack basic sanitation,
(13:26):
clean water, electricity, that we've got to reduce CO two emissions.
That is not environmentalism. It's the form of control, and
that control prioritizes modeled weather. We're not talking about any
And maybe I'll repeat the story if I can find
(13:48):
my notes about the lack of using observational data in
determining whether or not the country or the world is
warming or cooling, because surely this audience knows this. Almost
all of the climate change bull craft that you hear
(14:09):
is based on computer models. It is not based on
real life, real world observable data. So that leads to
useful idiots like Jasinda Ardern, who used to be the
Prime Minister of New Zealand, who is at Cop thirty,
who tells the BBC, who apparently is firing everybody because
(14:32):
they're editorially biased.
Speaker 7 (14:35):
What would your message be to someone who might right
now be sitting in the shoes.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
That you once kill this as a prime minister of
a country who.
Speaker 3 (14:43):
Is dealing with domestic backlash.
Speaker 7 (14:47):
Well, now, I think we've got to ask ourselves how
we came to the point where something that is about
the preservation of our planet.
Speaker 2 (14:55):
For the first it's the preservation of the planet. You know.
The other reason I think this is a relig because
somehow they think they are God. Somehow they think that
they can, by whatever controls they impose on us by
controlling our lives, that they can save the planet. Really,
(15:15):
when you think about the universe that goes on for infinity,
when you think about that God created the heavens and
the Earth, that somehow they are the ones that all
finally came along and they're going to save Mother Earth.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
What a load of crap, huge bixt generation.
Speaker 7 (15:37):
How did they end up becoming so political, Because this
really is should in many ways be a very straightforward question.
You know, if immediately within the next five years someone
said that without significant change, you run the risk of,
you know, losing huge parts of our ecosystem.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Sweetheart, we've been told that every five years for the
past forty years. You keep telling us the same bull
crap over and over and over.
Speaker 7 (16:06):
Wildfires, tropical cyclones that will.
Speaker 2 (16:10):
You know, wildfires which have never occurred in the history
of this planet. Tropical cyclones which never existed until mankind
came along.
Speaker 7 (16:17):
Take many people's lives and a planet that's so warm
that people will die from them.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
Oh, we're all burning to death. No wonder she's no
longer the Prime Minister of New Zealand from hate.
Speaker 7 (16:30):
If that presented itself with immediacy, then maybe we would
be hearing different debates. But that is actually the consequence
of indecision and action. There should be no politics in that.
It should be much more straightforward.
Speaker 2 (16:45):
So do or Well would be so proud because this
is such wonderful double speak. What she's really telling you
is that everything I'm saying is a lie, but I'm
putting in such flowery language that you know it's going
to scare you at the same time that you, oh,
you care so much? Do you really care? You're sitting
in a city that has raw sewage flowing in the streets.
(17:09):
And by the way, Dragon reminded me doing the break, Yes,
this is the place that we talked about several months
ago where they tore down some of the Amazon rainforests
in order to build both a highway to get to
this city and for a runway to accommodate the private jets.
(17:30):
Some environmental destruction is more fair than other environmental destruction,
or is more equal than other environmental destruction.
Speaker 7 (17:37):
Any politician, I would say, and David to take the
politics out because.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
They, yeah, how a bet, you just nip it, just
nip it. So let's think about Milan for a minute.
It's the host it's where all the much of the
mugs are. Population of over one point four million dollars,
has one of the worst sanitation records in Brazil. Now,
I've been to Brazil, but I've not been to Berlin,
(18:05):
and now I don't have any desire to go to Berlin.
According to recent data from the Institute of Try to Brazil,
a nonprofit is focused on sanitation, eighty point seven percent
eighty point sep eight. Let me repeat that, eight zero
point seven percent of the residents in the city have
no access to a sewage network.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
Michael, that's eight oh eight oh eight.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
Oh, I'm sorry, yes, eight zero point seven percent. Other
reports confirm the dire situation. Only twenty percent of the
population has household sanitary sewage coverage. This means that for
the vast majority the people are living in this city
where all these muckety monks are telling us that we've
got to you know, we've got to reduce our lifestyle,
we got to roll back our standard of living. Raw
(18:51):
sewage is being dumped directly into open canals and rivers,
including those that feed into the Amazon Basin. I think
that's probably a significantly more dangerous environmental problem than stupid
greenhouse gases. Now, imagine going to a global summit. Imagine
you know, imagine iHeart when he's sending me down there
(19:12):
where the delegates discuss you need to shower less, you
need to switch to say an induction oven, or you
need to start using heat pumps. While when you the
minute you walk outside your hotel and walk a few blocks,
there are open sewers running through neighborhoods, contaminating the waterways
with human theeces. You can go online, go look up,
(19:38):
you know, go to Google images and look up Berlin, Brazil.
So then the raw sewage that gets dumped into the canals,
you just mixed with solid garbage. Because they don't have
sufficient waste collection, all that gets discharged into the nearest
natural waterway like rivers, lagoons, coastal areas. Can you imagine
(20:01):
what the health impact of this raw sewage discharge is, Well,
it's devastating in the mediate I can tell you that
exposure to untreated sewage and waterways. Think of the illnesses
castroinerritis just from swallowing contaminated water that leads to diarrhea,
of vomiting, dehydration, and eventually you'll die from it. Skin infections,
(20:22):
air and eye irritation, respiratory issues just from the mere contact,
let alone breathing it in. And then water borne diseases,
salmon l or hepatitis, ay dysentery, hookworm which causes rashes, anemia,
and chronic fatigue. So in ecosystems, it elevates nutrients, leading
(20:45):
to all these algae blooms that depletes oxygen, that kills
aquatic life, that introduces intercondisruptors and heavy metals that then
by accumulate up the food chain. So a poor pregnant
mother in this crap whole place ends up eating food
stuff or drinking water that's contaminated, which leads to malnutrition,
(21:07):
cancer risks, and probably deform deformities in the babies. And
yet there they are, having their little key incrumpets in
a very well air conditioned hotel, flying in on their
private jets, telling the rest of the world how to live. Yes,
it is a religion. It is a religion that I
truly despise. Now they pat themselves on the back because, oh,
(21:30):
they made all these emission pledges. They're blind to it.
They're utterly blind to it. It's privilege. You know, we
often hear about, well, Michael Brown, you have white privilege,
or you know, you're a black person, you have black privilege,
or you're an American, you've got an American privilege. I'll
tell you what this is. Elitist privilege is what it is.
(21:53):
You fly into a poor sitting near the Amazon, and
you demand sacrifices from people who are actually offering, and
you don't even address the sewage crisis. It's killing people
right now. And you wonder why I get so wrapped
around the axle over these kinds of stories. I despise
these people. I truly despise them now, And let me
(22:16):
make clear about something else. This is not just an
issue for the developing world. It's an issue right here
in this country. Tuscaloosa, Alabama, during Hurricane Treen, I had
to deal with Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Lounges County is a stark
reminder that people in this country are not immune. It's
(22:39):
a predominantly black county. Estimates show that as many as
eighty percent of the residents in that county lack reliable
sewage systems. So what do they do. They do something
I'd never heard of before. Straight piping. Yes, you just
dump raw sewage directly from homes into ditches and local waterways.
This is in the the United States of America, and
(23:03):
we're told that we need to, oh, electrify everything, convert
to green energy, reduce our emissions. You know, I can
remote control turn on my I'm driving my jeep today.
I can remote control turn it on. I think I'll
turn it on right now and just let it run
and lessen more emissions just you know, spew out into
the atmosphere. Right now, in the southeast part of this country,
(23:26):
or surface water is the primary drinking supply. That means
that some communities are essentially drinking their own excrement. So, yeah,
you talk about hookworm in bilin Brazil. Do you know
that over thirty four percent of tested positive in some
studies for hookworm and other parasites, which leads to what malnutrition,
(23:49):
which leads to you know, slow development mentally and physically.
So all across the rural South, particularly in the Black Appalachia,
Sanaite gaps persist in this country. And it you know,
and I hate to say it, but it's not just
in the South either New Mexico where I have property,
(24:11):
Arizona where some of my family lives. Two million people
in this country don't have Two million people don't have
running water or wastewater services, and rural households comprise more
than half of that. And in major metro areas, go
back to Alabama, for example, Birmingham, Mauver of that area
(24:32):
household sewer connectivity sixty nine percent. Thirty one percent of
homes in a major metropolitan area in this country do
not have a sewer connection. Now, if you deep into
the data, you might find okay, they got a septic tank,
but many I'm willing to have that. They're doing this
straight piping. So we're told We're going to spend trillions
(24:53):
of dollars virtue signaling about the weather, and those communities suffer.
Today we're going to be focused on building sewers, you know,
improving and repairing our own infrastructure. This is neo colonialism
all dressed up in green energy and environmentalism. If we
(25:18):
deny the developing world access to the kind of infrastructure
that built our prosperity, I don't call that progress. That
is a really sick form of colonialism, and it's described
as masquerading as some sort of virtue. Billions in Sub Sahara,
Africa and beyond will endure prolonged poverty because we're obsessed
(25:43):
with emissions over equity right here in America, just like
I described in that one community. So let's be honest
about priorities. COP thirty began in Berlin yesterday. Now, if
the delegates leave having locked in sanitation financing and rapid
(26:05):
buildouts for the host city and in other cities like
it around the world, why would call that a win.
It's a win for people that are impoverished, and it's
a win for the environment. A true environmentalist would be
concerned about that, and not about the gas that I'm
exhaling as I talk and breathe. If they leave with
(26:27):
only new pledges about, oh, meeting our emissions and limitations
by twenty thirty or twenty fifty or whatever, they keep
extending it. You know, it's twenty thirty, then it's twenty fifty.
Pretty soon it will be the year twenty one hundred.
Yet there will be kids in Bilin that still live
along contaminated channels. So what are they doing. It's all
about optics. It's all about what they want to show.
(26:47):
It's not about what really happens. This whole thing about
these activists in the Church of the Climate, these congregants
and the Church's climate activists, is absolutely utter insanity. You
hear about all the great things, all the wonderful things
they are doing, mark my words. It's about control. It's
about trying to prevent you from living a life that
(27:11):
we have established. And look, you know the great thing now,
hang on, I gotta lean b I gotta lean back. Yep,
I can see it today. I can see Pike Peak today,
even though it's cloud yet, so the brown cloud. Yes,
we've done things to improve the environment. We've done things
to make things better. So you know what. Back off, buckoes,
(27:31):
What are you doing here? I'm doing a show?
Speaker 8 (27:34):
Did you did they not explain to you about the
last five minutes of your program really being our program?
Speaker 2 (27:40):
Did they not go over that in the meeting? Yeah,
they did go over it, and and in my contract,
I have until eleven fifty four and then you start
after that.
Speaker 8 (27:53):
No, there's a little handwritten note next to here, caught
on that contract.
Speaker 2 (27:56):
I didn't initial that.
Speaker 8 (27:57):
It doesn't matter. It was in there. It was an
invisible ink, but it was there. So it always shows.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
My heart contract where it's like, we don't care what
the words say. This is what we say. The words say. Okay,
if you said that at the beginnings to all that
bull crap you gave me, then I would have understood it.
But no, you had to come in here all it's
our time together this day.
Speaker 8 (28:22):
I come in to ruin your show for the last
five minutes.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
But it comes with this offer.
Speaker 8 (28:25):
Anytime you're driving around Denver and you think to yourself,
I've got a bone to pick with somebody from now
to three, you can walk right in here and I'll let.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
You have a bone to pick with my listeners. It's fine.
Speaker 8 (28:34):
See it's a reciprocal thing. But mostly it's me coming
on your show.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
I imagine people have a lot of bones to pick with
you because I had.
Speaker 8 (28:41):
You know, I just well, I'm not for everyone, Michael.
I'm not for everyone. I remind myself of that every day.
That's my that's my affirmation in the morning in the mirror.
You're not for everyone.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
And the reason I know that's true is I can't
come up with a smart ass retort. I'm just yeah,
I just let that lay there. Just let it lay there.
And I said it for a reason. So you did
you get your driver's license renew.
Speaker 8 (29:13):
That was a That would be a no, Michael, because
there is not a driver's license office that you can
walk into in the Denver metro area.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
Well, that's right appointment, and let me tell you, I'll
tell you secret. Bethel's appointment. You can't check in more
than I think it's like twenty minutes before you're appointed time, correct,
So if you go take your iPad or something because
you're just gonna sit there until you can actually check in.
Speaker 8 (29:37):
Yeah, that's fine, that's fine. I mean it's self inflicted.
I did it to my I have no one to blame,
but I'm guaranteeing you. There was a lot of people
who looked at their driver's license yesterday.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
I went, holy crap, I thought we got notices.
Speaker 8 (29:49):
No, apparently not, because I did not care.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
License is your notice? It's your license.
Speaker 7 (29:56):
Shut up.
Speaker 8 (29:57):
I don't need your judgment weighing on me too.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
I feel dumb enough.
Speaker 2 (30:01):
So I got pulled over to taking I twenty five
northbound to thirty six, and it was after a baseball game,
and trooper pulled me.
Speaker 8 (30:08):
Over, as were you going to be in the middle
of traffic and to get pulled over after baseball traffic?
Speaker 2 (30:14):
Well I was, I was. I wanted to get home.
Oh okay, And the trooper recognized my voice and he
was very nice, and he came. He seemed to been
back in his car quite a while, and he came
back and said, mister Brown, your license has been suspended.
And I said, really for what? And he goes, apparently
you have a speeding ticket in Wichita, Kansas because my
(30:35):
father was dying, and so I was all and asked
to Wichitac. They transferred into Wichital So why was Wichital
not Oklahoma? And I completely spaced it out. So I
had to call. At the time, I called George Brockler
and said, hey, George, I got a problem. He said, okay,
we'll fix it. So I had to go to court. Yeah,
you know, I had to show that I had actually
paid the fine and he had a new license.
Speaker 8 (30:56):
When I was about nineteen or twenty, had a similar experience,
only I just did the nineteen and twenty year old thing,
got a speeding ticket and just ignored it, Michael, because
that's really the best way to handle a traffic citation
is just ignore it.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
Well, that's that's always been my legal advice.
Speaker 8 (31:10):
Well seriously, and that if people can't try to.
Speaker 2 (31:14):
Kidnap kids in school yards in Colorado, and if people
can get arrested for like fifty four times and get
left out, yeah, nope, Mail, why should I Why should
I comply with the law.
Speaker 8 (31:24):
Well, because you're a right wing guy on the radio. Yeah, yeah,
I mean we're just I'm just suggesting. I'm not saying
there's a two tiered system of government. But whatever, it's fine,
it's fine. It's all good. Heavy veterans day.
Speaker 6 (31:39):
No.
Speaker 2 (31:40):
I just know how see as a lawyer, I know
when to just shut up because the witness will eventually
spill their guts or change the subject. Thanks Michael, I'm
out of here.