Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning, Michael and Dragon. This is your favorite Jew uber.
I just wanted to know, how do you win? And
Hardman win in New York was having the second biggest
juice population in the world, first biggest juice population outside Israel.
How a heck that you win? And what were all
(00:22):
the Jews? Have a good day?
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Free stop, free, stop, freestop free.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
And you should know this as a Jew. Jews are
not a monolith. They are not all of one mind.
It's always boggled my mind.
Speaker 2 (00:42):
And what's the old joke to Jews? Three opinions?
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Yeah, I've thought of that in a long time.
Speaker 3 (00:50):
They they read the New York Times, they listened to CNN,
and they vote Democrat.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
I just don't get it. The other thing that let
me go pull up my text messages.
Speaker 3 (01:05):
Let me just run through these fifty seven ninety two
that same stuff like in the bathrooms, it's taking place
in Douglas County schools. My kids have had opposite sex
and locker rooms. And then you look at the election
results in Douglas County and once again the results show.
Speaker 1 (01:22):
That I don't know what it is. I really grapple
with how.
Speaker 3 (01:31):
And Douglas County has been bouncing back and forth for
as long as I can recall now between on school boards,
between conservatives groups running, liberal groups running. You know, the conservatives.
Conservatives get in, they do what they want to do
they think's right. Liberals react, they get organized, then they
(01:52):
come back and then they win. They do their stupid stuff.
Conservatives get upset, then they come back and then they win.
Just ping pong and forth, back and forth.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
And you're right.
Speaker 3 (02:03):
The Minneapolis mayor, that town, this is five seven ninety two,
that town is screwed. But that screwing is coming to Denver, guaranteed,
coming to Denver, coming to Denver. It's in Denver. They
the city council has voted for it. Now that I
(02:23):
think there were two or three no votes. They have
voted for a renovation of Civic Center Park. Now, the
state of Colorado at large, the entire state all, you know,
like Para and everything, some forty billion dollars in debt.
(02:44):
The Denver City Council has a two hundred and fifty
million dollar.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Black hole they're trying to fill in their budget. So
what do they vote to do?
Speaker 3 (02:53):
They vote whatever the vote was, you know, ninety two
or eleven to two whatever what I don't remember too,
I smearer. There were two votes against it to spend
thirty nine plus fort fort let's just round it up
to forty million dollars. Forty million dollars to start the
renovation of Civic Center Park.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (03:16):
I don't know about you, but I know that I
get requests from friends and family, you know, from all
across the country who say, we really want to come
to Denver, we really want to come to Colorado, and
we want you to take this to see the sites,
and we want to start with Civic Center Park. Yeah,
we don't want to go to Rocky Mountain National Park.
(03:36):
We don't want to go to tell you Ride. We
don't want to go to Aspen. We don't want to
go up to the Indian Peaks Wilderness. We don't want
to go to ESS's Park. We want to go to
Civic Center Park. Oh okay, why Well, because we want
to see all the drug adult addicts, they call them homeless.
We want to we want to see all of the
urine in the feces. We want to see all the
(03:57):
we want to see if we can get attacked by
the guy carrying the PVS heat pipe, we want to
see all of that. We want to see, you know,
the sixteenth Street mall, m A U L. We want
to see all of that. So they're gonna spend forty
million dollars to start the renovation. That's just phase one.
And there's some amphitheater in the park. I forget what
it's called. It's the Greek amphitheater. I forget whatever it is.
(04:20):
I don't care. And they're gonna redo that. So it's
still in the Red Rock. It's still going out to
Red Rocks. You can go to the amphitheater in the
Civic Center Park. They're idiots, They're utter idiots. So as
you are driving to work today through Denver, you hit potholes,
you you know, you can't figure out whether that's a
(04:42):
bike lane or not a bike lane, or you're a
you're at a corner somewhere, you're at say Alameda and
Santa Fe and the window washers attack your car, or
you get you know, accosted by a homeless person. Whatever
it is that you think they ought to be fit,
don't worry about it. They're fixing the park so that
(05:04):
the drug adult addicts will have a nicer place to
stay it's wonderful, absolutely wonderful. Let's see what else. Oh,
and then they they they have a two hundred and
fifty million dollar operating budget black hole, and yet by
(05:26):
overwhelming margins, they approve all of those Denver bonds. And
then we had the free school lunch program that when
they decided to expand it, what costs something like and
again don't hold me to these numbers, but something like
fifty It costs fifty three million dollars more than they expected.
Speaker 1 (05:45):
Well, who could have seen that coming.
Speaker 3 (05:48):
We're gonna start, you know, McDonald's has decided they're gonna
start giving away free hamburgers.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Well, guess what.
Speaker 3 (05:55):
The line to get into McDonald's is going to be
a mile long now because everybody here's a free hamburgers.
So now the program costs fifty three million dollars more
than they expected.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
So what do they do.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
Oh, let's see if we can't get people to chip
away at tabor the taxpayer Bill of rights, and let's
take some of that money that she'd be coming back
to your pocket to help you pay your expenses. No,
let's give it to kids get free lunches. And by
the way, everybody gets a free lunch, and a free
breakfast and a free smack free, free, free. We are
the land of the free. Absolutely no longer the hold
(06:29):
of the brave. We're just the land of the free.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
I just can't take it, which is why I have
to laugh. Okay, let's get serious for a moment. How
do you think they'll handle this over at koa Dragon.
I'm starting to worry about it a little bit.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
Hey, do you care?
Speaker 1 (06:53):
No, I don't care.
Speaker 3 (06:54):
I'm just yeah, I don't care, because, as they said,
we don't want you to change a bit.
Speaker 1 (06:59):
I'm not gonna change. Yeah. We are who we are.
We Yeah, we can't change our stripes. It's just gonna
take you know what.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
Russian Themball used to have a saying something to the
effect that if this is your first time listening, you
can't just make the judgment there. You've got to listen.
I think you had like you got to listen for
six weeks or something before you fully understand the program.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Heck, I'm not even going to listen for six weeks.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Well, I'd say over the course of the six years,
you've listened for six weeks.
Speaker 2 (07:28):
That's probably pretty close to act.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
Yeah, And so you finally get it, and so now
that you finally get it, you kind of, you know,
you kind of go with the flow. The greatest threat
to this country is self created, and it's centered in
our urban areas. If you survive the pandemic and the
(07:53):
twenty twenty Summer of Love, mostly peaceful protests, then you
recognize that our cities and most critically New York. But
I would include in that every major urban area in
the country. Obviously I would include Denver in that. But
it's Houston, Dallas, Austin, San Antonio. It is to some
(08:19):
degree Tulsa and Oklahoma City, although I think I do
think some people in Tulsa, Oklahoma City would would relatedly
or be grudgingly admit, yeah, we got some problems down
here too. It's Kansas City. It is obviously Chicago. It's Detroit,
It's Seattle. It's Portland. It's obviously d C, although they're
(08:42):
trying to clean up DC. It's Miami Dade, It's Atlanta.
These urban areas are adopting the politics that seem designed
to make the urban doom loop a reality. Now they're
(09:03):
not facing up to the fundamental challenges in terms of
liveability or economic viability. So all those big cities New York, Portland, Seattle,
San Francisco, La, Minneapolis, Chicago.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
That they're all falling for full on progressives.
Speaker 3 (09:21):
And now we know in yesterday's election that Zoefram and
what you're gonna need a lot of Zofram if you
live in New York, Kaigt. Frankly, we're gonna need Zoe
Fram all over the country because it's gonna, it really
is gonna be nauseating. So if you see, here's another
example of where I think it's gonna take.
Speaker 1 (09:41):
It still takes this.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
Audience, awhile it's gonna take the KOA audience a little while.
His name is I know, it's zo Ran. I call
him Zofram because to stomach what he's feeding you is
nauseating and you need that nauseating medicine.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
Zo Fram.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
It's oh Fram, Mom, Donnie, the socialist running as a democrat,
the Marxist, the communist running as a democrat. But I
repeat myself, the leftist, the Marxists, the Communists.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
You know, I.
Speaker 3 (10:16):
May I take a moment of just personal. I just
want to say something personal for a moment. My maternal
grandfather was a world War One veteran, and he was
obviously he was a staunch anti communist, but he had
(10:36):
gone overboard in the fact that he thought that everything
was a communist plot. We'll give you an example. Although
as I get older and I see that, you know
who wrote the book You will Own Nothing? And like
it was it Carol Roth that wrote that book, I
(10:58):
forget the author. But his attitude was that mobile homes
were part of a communist plot. That communist plot was
an idea that we want people to live like they
lived in the old Soviet Union, but we wouldn't build
(11:20):
although they tried, like with Cabrini Green in Chicago, they
tried to build public housing and put everybody in these
just really nasty buildings. Well, he saw mobile homes as
being like that too, but he thought he thought it
was communists. It's a way to get us, to get
us out of single family homes and into these trailer
(11:41):
parks where they could better control everybody. Now, guess there's
a little bit of paranoise to start in with that,
but there's also a little bit of reality in it,
because we're now facing the point where it is you
will own nothing, You will own nothing, and the means
of production will be owned by the people in charge,
(12:02):
who will have ultimately although they think they're gonna be
in charge, will ultimately be replaced, like communist revolutions always do,
with the real people they're gonna be in charge. The
revolutionaries will get pushed aside because you can't trust them
because they were the revolutionaries, so you have to take control.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
I tell you that story because I find it.
Speaker 3 (12:23):
Utterly beguiling, fascinating and depressing all at the same time
that the kind of home that I grew up in,
where a grandfather saw everything, is a communist conspiracy. I'm
now on airwaves talking about how communism. It's like the
(12:48):
McCarthy era is now realizing, Oh, maybe Joe McCarthy was right.
Maybe there really are communists in the government. And now
what would they be sixty seventy eight, eighty years later
or later or so we're now looking around and we're going,
holy crap, there are communists in the government. Wow, that's
(13:12):
what I'm thinking. That's that's how I feel today. And
you and I I still believe are the majority. But
we put up really bad candidates, we run really bad campaigns.
We're still up against the cabal. The cabal is still
doing everything they can to hold on to power for
(13:33):
as lot as much longer as they can, and they
will take everything that Trump is doing or the Republicans
are doing that we want them to do and turn
it into a bad thing, and then they take the
as Rush would refer to them, the low information voters,
and I would say this as long as I'm off
track here, Let me stay off track for a moment.
If you want to know why why that this is happening?
(13:58):
One is what Dragon points out. It's free stuff. Now,
yesterday I brought in the candy from Halloween and I
had it in a in a ziploc bag on my cubicle.
Dragon either told me or texted me. I forget which
but you just say you said no, You're gonna tell
(14:19):
you over and put on the on the candy cubicle.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Nobody touched it because it was on your desk, so
I moved it over to that that free cab.
Speaker 3 (14:27):
They surely put the cakes and stuff exactly. So, yeah,
but you dumped it out, Oh yeah, you dumped it out.
And then Dragon texted me about two minutes later with
a photo. It's all gone.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
Hey, we get with Arguably it was about two hours.
But yeah, all that was left was some okay sweet two.
Speaker 3 (14:42):
Hours in a twenty four hour period, Like I said,
in about two seconds, two minutes, it was gone.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
Yeah, yes, relatively speaking, it was. It disappeared.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
That.
Speaker 3 (14:53):
Not not saying everybody in this building's communist, although I
think there are some communists in its building. They it
oh human nature. Now we are reaping what we have
sown over the over decades of indoctrinating kids in socialism,
(15:13):
indoctrinating kids in Marxism, and by omission, not teaching them
about republican form of government, about a constitutional republican form
of government. So by omission, we have eliminated any sort
of alternate universe and only presented this universe to them.
(15:34):
And now we're seeing that. And as as a as
a boomer, I look back on those generations and it's
not don't get me wrong, I understand it's not everybody,
but I think every generation behind me would admit that
there is a cohort within your generation that has not
(15:54):
seen the light because they've never been shown the light.
So they see free stuff, they see that. You know,
we go through these economic cycles, the economy is cyclical.
We go through ups and downs. We always have and
we always will and so and then we go. We're
now seeing the results of all of the unfettered immigration,
(16:17):
the absolute open border policies, and now we have reacted
to it. And now people see other people get getting,
you know, thrown into unmarked vans, oh, the scary unmarked
van and hauled away, and people are having a visceral
reaction to that, and they think it's wrong. Whereas I
(16:40):
think it's right. I also recognize, and I hope it
never happens to me, but I know that when you're
trying to round up people that are here in the
country illegally, that when you're making a giant sweep, you're
going to accidentally pick up a wrong person and until
you can verify who they are and that they're in
the country illegally, that you know, they might be detained
(17:01):
for I don't know, two hours or twenty four hours,
I don't know. People get detained all the time, and
then suddenly they get released because the cops realized, oh,
we got the wrong person, but we don't have the evidence.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
Morning, Michael, I haven't heard from my friend, my neighbor
over here, out of Louisville, Kentucky. I know, we don't
want to lose anybody when we make the move next week.
Because I hope he's doing all right. My fear is
that some of his neighbors finally got after him for
constantly mispronouncing Louisville, Louisville, Louisville, Louisville lo.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
They haven't heard from a while, we have not heard
from it.
Speaker 2 (17:43):
I loved how he did it from this from old Kentucky, Kentucky, Kentucky.
Speaker 1 (17:50):
Yep, uh, we hope you're okay. Let us know, send
the bat signal.
Speaker 3 (17:59):
Instead of facing up to the fundamental challenges of livability,
economic viability, affordability, all of that, all of these cities
are falling for all of this truly picking up where
I left off Marxism, if not full on communism.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
And that's why I.
Speaker 3 (18:23):
Rambled off into that whole story about my grandfather, because
you know, my obviously conservative family, brought up with conservative values,
brought up you know again, become a boomer, brought up
with you know, really good teachers. Now not every teacher
was great, but I had some great teachers when it
(18:44):
came to history and literature and government and I mean
just wonderful. Even my math and algebra teachers were great
because they told me, hey, you're just not very good
at this. You need to focus on what you're good on.
Oh you couldn't tell a kid that today. Oh no,
you can't say that. And now here I am living
long enough to see what they feared come true. Tama's father,
(19:10):
for example, having studied medicine for a short time in Vienna.
They lived in Vienna for a little while Austria, and
he saw the ravages of socialized medicine and constantly preached
about how that's one of the inroads toward Marxism and communism.
(19:33):
You take control of people's healthcare. And we see that
happening here and now it's true, it's right in front
of us. So then it becomes the question, if they're
scoring these victories in the urban areas, what's going to happen.
I think it's hard to see how politicians like Zoefram,
(19:56):
following the agenda, the platform, if you will, of the
Democrat Socialists of America, It's really hard to see how
he will abolish capitalism, how he can implement the social
ownership of all industry in what is still, although it's
difficult for us to see at times a still profoundly
(20:18):
capitalist nation, people at least outside the bluest cities and
the bluest states, are not going to respond well to
progressive ideas that he has espoused, like taxing white areas.
I would like to think that even in a place
(20:40):
like Douglas County, which is kind of if a county anymore,
that if somebody proposed taxing, well, Douglas County is predominantly white,
taxing white areas, that we would have not had we
would have anything less than a visceral reaction that says
that is absolutely wrong. But that's one of Mandani's proposals.
(21:04):
Another of his proposals is the very existence of the
New York Police Department because it's an obstacle to quote
queer liberation. Really, I thought the existence of the New
York Police Department was to enforce the laws. So if
you're a defender of Mandami, they've died, they've disavowed those
(21:26):
views since he aired them in the COVID and the
beat Black Lives Matter era. But the rule about but
his statements from back then, which really wasn't that long ago.
If every impression of sincerity, So unlike his failed opponent
(21:48):
Andrew Cuomo, he comes across as an ideological true believer,
a follow traveler if there ever were one. The bigger
problem is that this abrupt left turn comes as the
urban areas in this country are beginning to lose their
primacy core cities account Well, I want you to guess first,
(22:14):
how much of the US population do these core cities
account for in terms of the total population. Fifteen percent
fifteen percent of the entire population, down from twenty five
percent in nineteen fifty. But again another butt, lots of
(22:37):
butts in this story. The suburbs and the exerbs. They're
starting to see and have seen all this explosive growth.
Those areas now account for eighty six percent of a
metropolitan area's population, from thirteen percent at at the outset.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
Of World War II.
Speaker 3 (22:59):
So the the suburban areas, the x urb areas of
metropolitan areas like Colorado, like the Front Range, the core
area accounts for fifteen percent. Eighty six percent accounts for
those suburban and urban ex urban areas. So suburban and
(23:21):
especially ex urban dominance of metropolitan area growth is beginning
to accelerate and I think even more critical cities are
losing their once dominant economic role. Before the pandemic. Go
back to twenty nineteen, office construction was a third of
the rate of nineteen eighty five.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
It was half that of two thousand.
Speaker 3 (23:44):
Even the big and multinational firms that were historically anchored
in New York and Chicago are beginning to rethink their
real estate strategies. According to The Financial Times the Pink Paper,
many companies are planning to reduce their office foot print
anywhere from ten to twenty percent. The University of Chicago
found there as much as a third of the urban
(24:06):
workforce can and probably will at some point be operating remotely.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
What do those stats mean.
Speaker 3 (24:16):
It's those conditions that helped create this new urban demography
that's favorable to far left city politicians like Zoefram Mamdani.
Between nineteen seventy and two thousand, according to the Brookings Institute,
the middle income areas and core cities dropped by almost
twenty five percent, down from nearly half, while the majority
(24:40):
lived in low or very low income areas. Job losses
and manufacturing middle management were overwhelmingly concentrated in urban labor
markets and those of all shifted, leaving behind, leaving behind
what Take New York for example, New York lost about
(25:02):
seventy six thousand middle income jobs since twenty twenty. Over
the past five years, seventy six thousand middle income jobs
are gone. Now the upper income and lower income jobs
are drown and that's even widen the gap between the
rich and the poor even further. And all that parallels
(25:22):
the exodus of all the middle and the working class Ethnics,
the Italians, the Irish, the Jews, the African Americans, of
the Puerto Ricans. They've all moved into suburbs, particularly those
where they can find lower prices affordability. Once again, affordability
rises to the top as one of the most important
economic issues. So their departure is a blessing for the
(25:45):
professional left, the professional class left that back somebody like Mondani,
while all those remaining middle and working class voters, at
least from the indications I can find in the polling
and the turnout, they continue to back Andrew Cuomo all
(26:06):
the way to the bitter end. So now, burden with
college debt, high education but low wage voters. Let me
repeat that, high education but low wage voters. That is
really the vanguard of the far left in most of
these urban areas.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
So what do they do.
Speaker 3 (26:26):
They adopt the radical positions that are hostile to Israel,
scene as threatening to Jews, especially the older ones who
at one time played a dominant rolling city politics. So
Mandami knows how to appeal to that emerging class. And
(26:47):
I would say not just the emerging class, but there's
one other factor about that class. Set aside all the
economic factors, and now sprinkle on top of that the
education factor and what they have not learned and what
they've been indoctrinated with. And now you should begin to
(27:07):
understand how in these urban areas, someone like the radical
what's his name in Chicago, or Mike Johnston in Denver,
or now Mandami in New York. Now you should understand
how they get to power. It's not that we didn't
(27:27):
vote for them. It's not that we're not there to
vote against them. And the overwhelming people that are in
that demographic, well educated, low income, All of the ethnic
groups have moved out. They've gone to more affordable places,
and those that haven't moved out remain subject to that
(27:51):
demographic of economics and the demographic of the lack of education,
the lack of understanding exactly how a constitutional republic operates.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
So what do they do? They vote for the free stuff? Mike,
I think I got a little red button infection. Will
it be safer over at the Koa campground? Oh?
Speaker 3 (28:10):
Yeah, because they they actually clean over there, so you'll
it'll be sanitized.
Speaker 2 (28:18):
Just because it's new does not mean it's clean.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
Well a little bit, but I've noticed that what the
janitorial service does is they're scared to come in here
and clean the red button, so they but over there.
They you know, it's just like, oh that this has
gone on so long, we can't go in there, but
they'll go over there and clean that one.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
Yeah, fair enough. Yeah, and it's easier to keep something
new clean versus something old exactly exactly. Yeah, okay, make sense.
Speaker 3 (28:49):
Yeah, speaking of something new, So I went to the
fourth floor restroom.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
Oh have you been in there today?
Speaker 2 (28:57):
Not today? No, the urinals working now? Or is the
one perpetual flush?
Speaker 3 (29:02):
The perpetual flush is gone. So if your water pressure
is back up to normal today, that's because they fixed
the perpetual flush in the iHeart Death Star and number
two the short the lower urinal, the one that I
have to use because of the lenked problem.
Speaker 2 (29:20):
You don't want to get wet.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Yeah, yeah, that one works.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
But the one that was overflowing yesterday is has a
sign on it says do not use broken.
Speaker 2 (29:30):
Oh so at least one of them, the short one
flush the short one.
Speaker 1 (29:35):
So here's what, here's what flee sad drive, I said,
I had said.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
I stood and watched because I was curious, is it
really going to flush or is it going to kind
of half ass flush and leave kind of you know,
not yelled but slightly tinted yellow water. You know, what's
what's he really gonna do? And it flushed and I thought,
it's not going to do it. And I waited and
(30:01):
it kept flushing, and I'm thinking.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
You know, if we got a new fire, perpetual flesh. Now,
guess what, it's in a state of perpetual flesh.
Speaker 3 (30:10):
Now, no, it's not perpetual, but it's getting close to it.
Let's put it this way. Uh oh crap, I got
to start a show here pretty soon. I got to
get out of here. But it it does work. I'm
just thinking that if we were really like concerned about
conserving water, we might not be.
Speaker 1 (30:30):
Compliant. There's a lot of water going out of this building.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
And we're not compliant with any saving anything around here
because we've got the diesel generator out back that just
use all that.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
The lights are on all the time, exactly, All the
computer monitors are always turned on exactly.
Speaker 3 (30:46):
We got twenty seven televisions out there that are now
aren't they all now working?
Speaker 1 (30:51):
Out? I can't are these three right here on the
end working? Two working? We got we have Telemundo, but
not the clock. Not the clock.
Speaker 3 (30:59):
You know, we can't get the clock working because because
they still want me to turn by, they want to
make sure that my QC kinetics is still working by
turning left to look at the clock on that wall
and still looking straight.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
Ahead of Yeah, yeah, what are we gonna bitch about
when we go over there? I know, I'm.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
Am I kidding, You'll find it down and go okay,
I'm you know what.
Speaker 3 (31:23):
I've got to put on my list to find? I
think the music stand. There's got to be some sort
of music stand like device that I can put my
notebook over here to the side. Then the question becomes
do I leave it in there for other people to use?
Speaker 1 (31:37):
You do other you can just.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
Put it in the corner. Yeah, nobody will touch it,
I'm sure.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Yeah, it's a it's a radio station. Are you telling me?
Just because it's the blow towards the people, don't steal
stuff out of there.
Speaker 2 (31:51):
And I think you're also gonna have a problem with
where the traffic can is located, because right now it's
almost literally right behind.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
You, because I just turn around and make three points
every day.
Speaker 2 (32:01):
Right but in that studio, it's it's by the door.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Oh so I'm my my average score might drop a
little exactly.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
Yeah. Yeah, Ross misses constantly. He's like one for eight
on a daily basis. Really, yeah, it's bad.
Speaker 1 (32:16):
See all I'll have to show him does he clean
this mess.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
Up or leave it? You know, because he only has
the one piece of paper, so he'll he'll shoot it miss,
walk over there, walk back, shoot it, miss, walk over there,
pick it up.
Speaker 3 (32:28):
Walk But la, he's getting his exercise, he's getting sick,
he's getting those nasty legs that aren't washed from exercise.
Keep getting all the perspiration on it. I want to
finish up this idea about Mom Donnie and why this occurs.
Speaker 1 (32:43):
Next