Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Okay, well, welcome to the situation on ko A Now
with live news, traffic, and weather featuring Dragon red Beard headlines,
commentary by Mandy Connell and Michael Brown on sports.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Jeez, how's that guy talk like that?
Speaker 3 (00:25):
It fascinates me how one little thing gets blown so
far out of proportion. So I had two comments that,
you know what, screw it. I didn't want to talk
about that. I don't want to talk about it. I'm
want to talk about what I came in here to
talk about. And because today is Friday, today you get
(00:47):
to you get to do, you get to hear something
the Dragon I have been doing for what five years now,
at least five years every Friday we celebrate the god
given right, the natural, true right of self defense. And
we'll we'll do it in the eleven o'clock hour. We
always do it the last hour on Friday. Well, you're
(01:07):
not about to do with this.
Speaker 4 (01:09):
Texter fifty seven, twenty twenty two suggested you not do here,
are you?
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Michael? I've already decided how I'm going to do it. Michael.
Speaker 4 (01:17):
When you get to taxpayer relief shots, please please please
three times, don't give a thirty minute dissertation to the
new in quotes listeners, just rip off the band aid
and go for it.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
That's what we're going to do. In fact, I would
I just a little inside baseball right now. Don't play
the normal rules of engagement that we normally do.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
I won't play it first.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
I'll play it in the second, later in the.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Hour or something.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
But I'll start out with I have a pre written
short explanation of what taxpayer relief shots are. So for
the for the newbies to the program, for the new goobers,
hang under your head. I'm walking the dogs this morning
as usual, except I take another route. I take a
(02:07):
route that we used to take, but it's a new route,
you know, since I've changed the hours of the program.
And I notice something I'd forgotten about. Now there's a
park across the street from us. And let's just say
it's on the other side of the tracks, so to speak,
because on the poor side of the tracks where I live.
(02:31):
Then there's a park that acts as a buffer to
keep us, you know, pleaves and us kind of you know,
poor folk away from the people that live in Yeah,
I'll just say it's an area. It's an area in
Highlands ranch called Trey Sauna. Tray Sana, yes, and Trey
(02:51):
Sauna is. I know some of the people live there
and they're very nice, but this one place I don't know.
And it's basically they're not they're townhomes. They're very, very
expensive townhomes. Probably in the millions of dollars for these
town homes. So I'm walking on the back side of
the park, on the other side of the creek, on
the other side of the creek, and I head up
(03:12):
the hill and I decide today rather than turn around
and just go back the same way, I'm going to
walk through the neighborhood. So I'm walking up around and
there is this one town home that sits on the
corner of the park as you're leaving the park area
in the green space to go into the cul de
sac to walk down the street, and I noticed that
(03:33):
they have put up something I've seen before, but they've
added something to it. What's been there before is they
have gotten I don't know the color of Parks and
Wildlife or or I don't know the National National Park System.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
I don't know that they've got to do it.
Speaker 3 (03:48):
But there is a creek that runs down through and
it's way down below. It's it's in a flood zone,
and there's you know, they they've gone through, they've cleaned
it out, they've fixed it up, they've you know, put
some new rock in and you know, kind of make
sure the criks go in the right direction and stuff.
And of course there's uh deer. I've seen bear scat
(04:11):
over there. There's occasionally been I think sometimes sometimes somebody
said there was a moose. There's a lot of cayos.
It's it's wildlife because it's it's that big. So they've
had their little backyard designated as a wildlife preserve area.
I thought, you got to be freaking kidding me. You
(04:32):
live in the middle of one of the largest subdivisions
in the entire state of Colorado, and and you've got
your little corner of the world designated as a wildlife preserve.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
You can do that. I don't.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
I think it's fake or did they just hang up
a sign that I think they.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
You know, I think they went online and bought one
of these really fancy like bronze plaques that just says
that that's what they've done. Yeah, I believe that. Yeah,
that's what I really think. It is now. The other
thing it occurred at the same time. I mean, all's
just going on at once. Is the younger Lienburger sees
a rabbit, and I'm thinking, oh, well, if this is
(05:08):
a wildlife preserve, why I just let go of the
leash and see how long and where the Limburger chases
the rabbit and how long before the because the Lienburger
will give up. The Lienburger's always give up because they're
just big, lumbering dufuses of dogs.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
But cute but very cute.
Speaker 3 (05:26):
They're very cute, but very big and very they're they're
lug nuts as well.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
They are.
Speaker 3 (05:30):
They're just lug nuts. And I'm thinking that. I'm looking
at the sign and thinking, but I don't want to
waste my time unless the person who's designated their backyard
the wildlife preserve, I just would then be able to
see because if you've never seen Limburger before, go look
at them online. They look like lions, the hants Lienburger,
but actually they're from Lienburger, Germany. But I could just
(05:54):
see this, you know, I just picture, you know, like
a middle aged, white, suburban, highly educated woman seeing this
dog that looks like a lion chasing the rabbits through
her wildlife preserve. And I think that would just be
a glorious light to see because she would come out
and scream at me and just make my day. But
then I, as I'm deciding not to do that, I
see that they've got one of the little flags they
(06:15):
put out. You know how people put flags on their
front porch. Well, they have a little flag on their
front porchs not hanging, but it's in the ground. And
the flag is the faith on of the Statue of Liberty.
Except Lady Liberty has her hands over her head, her
(06:36):
head is in her hands, and she's sighing in their
tear drops. And I'm thinking, are you freaking kidding me?
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Now?
Speaker 3 (06:46):
I suppose during the Obama years, during the Biden whatever
we call that. Do you call it the Biden years?
I'm not sure what you called the Biden presidency. That was, yeah,
the autopen the of the comatones, the whatever, the nursing
home period. I don't know what whatever you want to
call it. But I could have, you know, put a
(07:06):
flag in my yard with you know, Lady Liberty.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
Oh, but I didn't.
Speaker 3 (07:11):
Instead, I chose to point out, you know, right from
wrong and good from bad, and what's correct and not correct,
and why our policies are free marks and capitalism and
individual liberty and freedom. How I choose to go that
direction and not put my hands on my face and
cover it up. But it did give me to thinking
about a timeline, a certain timeline. The Western world, Western
(07:39):
civilization right now is watching the second Donald Trump term
with about as much attentiveness as American citizens. Why why
is Western civilization watching as much as we watch? Because
they Western civilization large has almost as much skin in
(08:03):
the game as we do. And here's the timeline. Next
year marks more than just a decade, a decade since
the Make America Great Again movement forcefully took the global stage.
But it's also a decade since the United Kingdom voted
(08:25):
to leave the European Union.
Speaker 2 (08:28):
It has been a decade since.
Speaker 3 (08:30):
Italy's globalist government totally and completely collapsed, And it's been
a decade since Marine Lapan broke through a national polling
In France, Austria's Freedom Party ran the establishment pretty close.
Speaker 2 (08:47):
The Twarty won in the Philippines.
Speaker 3 (08:50):
Alternaty for deutsch Land, the AfD party became a significant
fixture in domestic German politics for the very first time,
in Garrett Wilder's PVV party began making its breakthrough. All
of this happened. All of this happened in the past decade.
To say, go back to twenty fifteen twenty sixteen, and
(09:12):
if you remember twenty fifteen twenty sixteen, that's when the
mass migration crisis in Europe started to take place, which
took some of its most heinous victims, harbingers of what
was to come in the form of, for example, the
Colone mass sex.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
Assault scandal that we now know about simply.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
Because some people were willing to report on it, while
governments in the United Kingdom and elsewhere in France and
other places were trying to bury it. Now, you can never.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
Do justice to the shock, true shock.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
That pulsated across Europe and for that matter, across the
United States that year. It was the defining moment in
politics for I'm asked at least one sixth of the
global population, and it would have further knockoff effects in Russia, India, China,
the Middle East. Twenty sixteen was a global year, the
(10:14):
globalist year, and I think we can expect twenty twenty
six to be equally important, but more than Newtonian sense,
because what started in Europe that decade ago in the
small seaside towns of England, the suburbs of France and Germany,
and frankly across the entire European continent swiftly made its
(10:37):
way stateside, across the Pond, across the Atlantic into the
United States, and is now about to bounce back across
the Atlantic again. You know, I have for the past decade,
and for the past i'd say, what a little over
a month now, No, it's not quite a month. When
(10:59):
I thing past a couple of weeks, I've focused on
the what's seeking glorious disaster of November four, twenty twenty five,
depending on your perspective, and the impending catastrophe of November three,
twenty twenty six. Now, why do I see inglorious disaster
(11:21):
of November four of this year, of twenty twenty five,
and the impending catastrophe of November third, twenty twenty six,
Because it's this, If we don't do anything, if nothing
is done, if we don't warn the if we don't
heed the warnings that we see, right now in front
(11:43):
of our faces. The failures of a Republican Party with
gale force wins that are actually at their back right
now will certainly be felt and suffered by Europe's populist nationalists,
and indeed beyond that, will Knight Nigil Farage become the
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. Will the reassemblate national
recovery from the lawfair that's going against Marie Leapin right now,
(12:05):
just like the lawfair that was imposed against Donald Trump.
Will Hungary though voting by April next year, will they
choose stability in the form of re electing Victor Orbon
Or will the globalist and the leftist form the kind
of allegiance that they did in New York City just
ten days ago, and as they did in Seattle this week.
(12:30):
The list of examples could just go on and on
and on and on. Raj Mun Fachetti, he's a historian
and director of the Institute for the Researcher Communism.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
He says this quote.
Speaker 3 (12:43):
While there's still a lot of time until the midterm
elections of the United States, there is no question that
a strong showing from the Republican Party and the MAGA
movement would contribute momentum to Hungarian American relations in Victor
Orbon's party. He goes on to say that the Biden
era was not good for Hungary. The relationship really suffered.
(13:06):
So many in Hungary are understandably rooting for the success
of MAGA and Republicans next year. If they are people
in Hungary are literally cheering for Republicans to now. They
wanted to just win, But from my perspective over here,
(13:28):
I want to say, get your freaking act together so
that we can win. It's Andy Wigmore, who was one
of the original bad boys of Brexit in the United Kingdom.
He was a top ally of the Reform Party leader
Nigelle Faraj in the United Kingdom. He says this the
(13:51):
midterms in America. The midterms here will matter almost as
much to the Brits as they do to Americans. Says
of the second Trump administration will have knockoff, knock on
effects in England, just as Bregsit did in America back
in twenty sixteen. We're watching closely and as always we're
(14:12):
rooting for the president. French conservatives. French conservatives have similar sentiments.
Kate Pezzy of the Tokville Fellowship says, quote, what I
have heard in my travels is that the right in
Europe is wondering if it's already the comeback of the
extreme left. Don't you one sometimes wonder that when you
(14:33):
look at New York, when you look at Zoefram, or
you look at this Katie what's her name out in Seattle,
you look at the ascendancy of Alexandria Cosi cortasm the squad.
She says, what will happen in New York? Or will
what happen? Will what get the quote all screwed up here?
What will what happen in New York happen elsewhere in
(14:56):
the United States? Are these the type of democrats who
are winning? Will they weaken Trump's policies and his allies
around the world Maloney in Italy or Bond and Hungary, etc.
What does the plan to stop the damage done by these?
Islamo Ashiths three by day he leads the Forum for
(15:16):
Democracy party in the Netherlands. He says it this way, Well,
are totally supportive of the Trump movement, are watching closely.
This is a global attempt to recapture power from the
international left. I would insert here as a parenthetical the
globalists and Europe is directly affected by any wins or
losses in America. Well, what's the conclusion? The stakes couldn't
(15:41):
be higher. And behind almost all closed doors, whether you're
talking about closed doors on Capitol Hill or anywhere in
the developed world in Western civilization, politicos whisper about whether
Trump's economy will be roaring by the time Americans vote
in under a year, or whether Trump will become too
consumed by foreign affairs, or the stupid scandal or what
(16:01):
should even call it a scandal? The Epstein saga, let's
call it the Epstein saga or the stupid recently government shutdown.
On the way in I heard Larry Cudlow talk about
how and you can put on your tenfoil how if
you want to. But Cudler was talking about how the
government shut down may cost one or two points of
GDP when we finally get some secured and you know,
(16:23):
kind of mixed up numbers because of the government shut down.
So we're we're at a tipping point. We're truly at
a tipping point. And what does that mean that we
ought to be seen, we ought to see being done here.
Speaker 5 (16:38):
That's next Michael, you would think that iHeartRadio would have
the technical ability to correctly publish them on air live
schedule for eight fifty KOA and six thirty K. How
at this time you're still on air with KOA from
six to ten am. What kind of outfit are you
(16:59):
working for?
Speaker 2 (17:02):
Bankrupt?
Speaker 4 (17:04):
I'll just add chime in and say you must be new, right,
recognize that voice. This, this shouldn't come as a shocking.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
As a surprise to you.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
And then right then Dragon points out today something that
I'd never noticed after a week sitting in the studio
that above my head, Oh there's a missing ceiling tile.
Speaker 4 (17:23):
There's a hole wall, missing ceiling toile. But the lights work,
the light.
Speaker 3 (17:28):
Yes, yes, in fact I forgot. You know, the sun's
just right to the I get. It's nice right an
are in here. I don't see any like dust mites
flying around yet yet, yet, give it time, Give it time.
So everybody's gonna be watching these midterm elections closely. And
it's not just Americans. Obviously, Western civilization is watching these
these returns. They're gonna watch these elections very very closely.
(17:54):
It's obvious that everyone populist nationalists and everybody else is
going to be watching them closely because this stas are
really huge. The real question is whether this political movement
make America great again America first, really pushing individual liberty
and individual freedom can show results that the public actually
(18:16):
recognizes and will support. Because the movement is constantly being
attacked on its credibility, whether these ideas can even work,
which is exactly why the results are going to matter.
Now over at the war room, which I don't but
in doing search for this, I don't really listen to
the war room. But there's somebody over there by the
(18:36):
name of Benjamin Harnwell maybe you guys know him. I don't,
but he says this, the various populist nationalist iterations around
the world are certainly intrinsically linked. I see it as
a worldwide convoy movement rather than a unified battalion, a
flotilla and armada, an association of freestanding vessels that independently
(18:59):
travel together. But he says the United States is the
convoys flagship. That's precisely why what happens in America in
twenty twenty six is so important. I'd say it adds
plus or minus fifty percent to what we're doing here
in what he calls occupied Europe. A good result in America,
(19:21):
he says, we'll give our movements a boost of fifty percent,
whereas a bad result will probably give us a setback
of fifty percent. It's a headwinds Tailwedz thing. Now, think
about that, with so much on the line, populous nationalists,
those of us who are what I would consider to
be and this is a whole different topic, but I
(19:45):
really consider my brand of conservatism to be genuine conservatism.
So with all that on the line, well, the populist,
the nationalists, the conservatives all across the world, are they
going to appear increasingly concerned that a far left immer
victory nation November, will that be the ushering in of
a new dark age of extreme authoritarian In fact, it
(20:08):
would even be Islam allied populism from the far left.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
Because if Republicans lose.
Speaker 3 (20:16):
Badly next year, if the final two Trump years, what's
going to happen? You know, you've been to this theater before,
you've been to this Broadway play before, you've sat down
and watched this mini series on television before, and you
know exactly what the final two Trump years will be like. Subpoenas, impeachments,
(20:41):
deep state shenanigans that would leave so much of the
world teetering on the brink of domination by our adversaries.
Now many people are saying that Trump has got to
quickly return to his own populous roots, to his campaign pledges,
rather than you know, entertaining big farm in these meetings,
(21:02):
or the big bank bosses that he had at dinner
the other night, or floating ideas like the fifty year mortgages,
which I would just say, this is a footnote about
fifty year mortgages. Do you know that a thirty year
mortgage at one time was an absolute unbelievable thing.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
Yes, you go back to.
Speaker 3 (21:26):
The thirties and forties, your mortgages were two or three,
three or four maybe five years, Yeah, and then they
had gigantic balloon payments at the end. So while the
fifty year mortgage has some advantages and some disadvantages to it,
just floating that starter idea like a fifty year mortgage,
I think is a waste of time. As we go,
(21:47):
so goes the world. And I think what we have
to recognize if there is this as I've described it
to to Mike I've not yet described it to you
New Goobers. Tyranny is like a Sherwin Williams advertisement. We
cover the globe, or we cover the world, or we
cover the Earth, whatever their tag line was. And you
(22:08):
see a bucket of paint that is being poured over
a globe, and that paint is just kind of dripping
over the edges, you know, it kind of goes around
the curve of the earth and then starts to drip
off the bottom. Well, I believe that's a great metaphor
for tyranny in the world. And I don't think I'm overreacting.
When you look at what's going on in New York.
(22:32):
What a cluster that was, What a total cluster that
was Eric Adams and all all the stupid things he
did which caused him to withdraw from the race.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
And then we're left with Curtis Sliwa.
Speaker 3 (22:46):
Or Andrew Cuomo, the guy that kills kills your grandparents,
the guy that you know, we that we that we
When I say we, the taxpayers took over the Javit
Center on the West Side Highway, that one of the
largest invention centers in the world took over the Javit
Center filled it within all this emergencies. It's like what
we did in Colorado down at the convention Center. Well,
(23:07):
we build, we build a mash hospital. Suppose you build
a mash hospital and you spend billions of taxpayer dollars
and nobody shows up. Or you just take the sick
people and put him in nursing homes, people who already
have comorbidities, and Andrew Cromo sends them there, and yet
he becomes the one that we look to save New
(23:28):
York City. Now, I don't think that look New York
is unique in this regard. Although I consider curtisly was
to be a friend, Curtis was never ever going to
be able to win that election. The numbers, the math
just didn't add up. New York is predominantly by overwhelming
(23:53):
numbers Democrat. So yeah, Trump can improve his numbers there.
But Trump is not, at least in my lifetime, is
going to ever win New York City. He's not gonna
win those five boroughs. And then Andrew Cuomo steps in
and he becomes the option to a self avowed Marxist communist.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
It's absolute insanity.
Speaker 6 (24:17):
Marn A Bear Base Morning Dang Dong back in Denver,
not in Salt Lake City. Why I tell you, guys,
this change over here to K zero a has got
me screwed up, Just like the time change. I go
to looking for the taxpayer relief shots, and I hear
some goober that don't clean his legs tore me apart.
Speaker 3 (24:39):
Have a good day, guys, you'll hear the taxpayer relief shots.
Just hang tight. So continuing on with the idea about
this tyranny that's beginning to kind of circle the globe,
perhaps living in Seattle should innere you to that shock.
This is the city where the name of George Floyd writes.
(24:59):
Back in the mid twenty twenties, armed fanatics took over
a four block chunk of downtown of development of Seattle's
Moonbeam mayor of the day said that that takeover that
chaz zone reminded her fondly of the Summer of Love.
But then the good vibe from the summer of love dissipated.
Why because the commune's residents started shooting one another on
(25:23):
a nightly basis, and then the squalor set in. Now,
in recent years, the general look of America's Emerald City
has passed from one that was really characterized by its
backdrop of the snowcapped mountains sparkling lakes to something more
like you might imagine Central Berlin to have been after
(25:43):
a particularly hard night of bombing back in you know,
the spring of nineteen forty five. Even so, the news
that forty three year old, excuse me, forty three year
old Katie Wilson had defeated the incumbent, Bruce Harrell, and
she became Seattle's next mayor, and that really was a
(26:04):
jolt politically. The result of the race was made official,
made known only yesterday, nine days after the polls closed.
Why did it take that long, because Washington is one
of those dumb ass states where people vote exclusively by.
Speaker 2 (26:24):
Mail conor I don't looking at you, and.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
It apparently takes a week or more for the United
States Postal Service to successfully convey a ballot.
Speaker 2 (26:32):
From one side of town to the other.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
Every day, at four pm, people in Washington were given
the latest running count, at which point election officials went
home again before beginning their next grueling six hour shift
the following morning. Of course, you had time off for
holidays and weekends. This is how we do business in
that part of the world.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
I guess.
Speaker 3 (26:54):
Now, if you're not previously familiar with Mayor elect, I
have a call her the mini mom, Donnie. She's against homelessness, okay,
it was anybody for homelessness, and she wants the police
to deal with mental health disturbances, you know, like a
(27:16):
raving lunatic who accosts you on the streets, and all
four something called news vouchers, which her campaign is able
to extract another nine million dollars from Seattle taxpayers to
create jobs for fifty new reporters because she thinks they
need to balance the well known right wing media bias
(27:40):
said in those parts of the country. Really, have you
ever listened to Seattle News? Have you ever listened to
some of the radio stations? Good grief? Now, if you
can't do the math, which I'm not very good at,
but let's see nine million dollars from all the working
slubs in Seattle, King County to create jobs for fifty
(28:04):
new reporters. I think that works out to a salary
of about one hundred and eighty thousand dollars perhap, So
I don't know, Maybe I need to get in on
that gig.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
We need a new contract, right we.
Speaker 3 (28:18):
Need new contracts and we want the taxpayers to pay
for us. Yes, no, we do not. This little mini
me was raised in Binghampton, New York. Her college professor, father,
David Sloan Wilson, once wrote a book The Neighborhood Project,
(28:39):
Using Evolution to improve My City one Block at a Time.
That he wrote another one called at List Hug, No
not shrugged. Atlas hug his counter to an Rand. Now
one dimly begins to see the picture a household that
is steeped in the belief that human nature is essentially
(29:03):
benign and all that it takes is sufficiently community collective
goodwill to beat the corporate greed heads. So she runs
off to study philosophy and physics at Oxford, but displaying
that whimsical spirit you know that you see in Seattle
and Pike Market, she drifted back out to the West Coast,
(29:23):
married another activist who supported himself by busking on the
San Francisco light rail system. Yea, he is one of those.
And then she went on a greyhound tour of the country.
That's the way to start your life together, isn't it.
And then they hit on Seattle, traditionally the place where
generations of the nations failed, floonious, fed up, have gone
(29:44):
to disappear, and, perhaps not coincidentally, where there hasn't been
a Republican mayor since the days of Lyndon Johnson