Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael, I hope you have just a awesome, awesome day today,
and just because you probably should be really nice to
drag in today because well he's a great guy, and
I hope every ys nice to you today too.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
The happy day, Michael. Oh, happy day, happy day.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Oh happy day, Oh happy day. Thank you, Oh happy day.
I'm not sure how happy of the day it is.
So I wake up to this email. It's from Angelica
Creola Krelova Krelova. Hello, I'm sorry, but I have to start.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
With bad news. Uh oh.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
A few months ago, you know, not really. A few
months ago, I gained access to your account associated with
the operating system and as a result, all the devices,
all the devices, all of us to surf the web.
Then it was easy for me to install special software
on all your devices that tracked every keystroke and mouse movement.
(01:08):
After that, accessing your personal email was no longer a problem.
You don't seem to know anything about private cards, VPNs,
tour and clicking on suspicious emails, and this is essential.
Not only was I able to access your browser's history
and files, but also your webcam. I've not only recorded
you having fun watching very controversial videos, but I've also
(01:32):
recorded all of your digital conversations. Everything you value everything
I value everything. I value the opinion of your friends.
What I have no friends until I don't value their opinion.
The opinion of your friends, colleagues, colleagues, the opinion of
my colleagues and family about you is at risk. You
(01:57):
have spent a lot of time building a reputation as
a d and responsible person. Neither you nor I want
to ruin it with a single click, a click that
will send everyone you know, love and respect, a suspicious
video about you and the most wonderful entries from your
browser history. I hope you have begun to realize that
(02:17):
I can turn your former life into momentary shame and humiliation. However,
I'm a reasonable person and I don't want anyone to
get hurt, So we can reach an agreement. You need
to transfer blank. We'll leave that for We'll just leave
that blank blank for a moment. This is a very
small sum, so as not to lose the reputation you
(02:38):
have built for years, maybe even decades. When I receive payment,
I will lead all the content once and for all.
Speaker 2 (02:44):
Yeah, and I totally believe, totally.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
Trust her, right, Since I'm tracking your activity. I'll notice
when you send a payment, and when you read this email,
you have fifty fifty hours five zero five zero, not
twenty four, not forty eight fifty I've got I got
two days, two hours.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
It's a nice round number.
Speaker 3 (03:04):
Yeah, to make the payment from the moment you open
this email. And I opened this email about five minutes ago.
I'm the kind of person that keeps my word. You
can trust me, or I would have published this a
long time ago. A few tips in advance. Ooh, this
is kind of nice. Tips and advents. Note one, don't
call the POPO or other authorities. As soon as I
(03:28):
notice that you're trying to get in touch with them,
I will post the video. Oh now, it's just the video,
not the videos. The video on the internet. In addition,
crypto wallets are anonymous, so no one will be able
to track me. Do not try to reinstall your system
or reset your device. As I've said before, as soon
as I receive a notification about this activity, I will
(03:48):
publish all the material. I'm sorry that we had to
meet in these circumstances. Thank you. Well, she's threatening to
disclose everything, all of the electronic devices I use.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
That that sounds scary.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
I mean, there's the phone, there's the iPad, there's the laptop.
There's the desktop, Yeah, the working iPad, the one that
actually works, Yeah, the one you did not smash when
I did not smash. Then there are the systems here
in front of me right now. And then there's the
system out there in my little cubicle, and that I
had been known occasionally to use like a random phone
(04:25):
or I've gone I've sat at a random computer. There's
the computer down on three that I do the naturally
syndicated program on. So they are all of those, and
and and by the way, when I'm when I'm here
alone on Saturday doing the program, I usually do it
in the nude. And so she's had the webcam there
so so for to keep all of that, to keep
(04:46):
all of that, and all of the emails and all
the text messages and everything that I've said to missus
Redbeard about you, or that she said to me about you,
or that you know, when Tam and I are having
you know, our sex conversations on messages, and I'm having
them with all my boyfriends and girlfriends, and you know
with the girl the you know, the Lienburger's when I'm
telling the Lienburger's on the jury. Yeah, yeah, all of
(05:08):
that she wants. I don't know, maybe we can start
of gofund me. You need to transfer way way.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
First off, is it in crypto?
Speaker 3 (05:19):
Is it?
Speaker 2 (05:20):
And then like bitcoin?
Speaker 3 (05:21):
Oh yeah, bitcoin, Yeah, there's a bitcoin, Walt, there's a
crypto wallet. She's giving me the h the address, and
it is in bitcoin. So for all of that, what
do you think all of that is worth for me
to keep from getting onto the interweb? Now?
Speaker 4 (05:39):
What is one bitcoin worth nowadays? Is like seventy thousand?
Speaker 3 (05:43):
So I think it's seventy thousand. Yeah, right, So, and
I've got a lot. As I told you the other day,
when I found out that bitcoin had increased in price,
I frantically ran to my bitcoin wallet to see and.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
Your point zero zero one percent of a bitcoin is.
Speaker 3 (05:59):
Now, let's see, I have zero point zero one sixty
three five eight nine three bitcoins bitcoin is trading as
of right now, it's up one point three nine percent
is trading one thousand. That's that can't be right?
Speaker 2 (06:16):
Maybe that's your point zero one percent?
Speaker 3 (06:19):
Oh oh oh yeah, that's exactly what it is.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (06:21):
So my total balance is in bitcoin right now. I
don't usually give up financial information, but because I just
want you to know just exactly how wealthy I am.
I have one thousand, two hundred and forty two dollars
and ninety nine cents in bitcoin.
Speaker 2 (06:35):
With your point zero one percent.
Speaker 3 (06:38):
Zero zero point zero one sixty three five eight nine. Yeah,
twelve hundred and forty two dollars ninety nine cents. So
the good news is, uh, huh, I can pay the ransom.
Speaker 4 (06:50):
Oh really, yes, so she wants zero one percent?
Speaker 3 (06:57):
What's five hundred dollars in bitcoin? Five from going away?
Speaker 2 (07:04):
Zero zero? What? Ye? Oh my god?
Speaker 3 (07:07):
Yeah, I mean so not, I mean not quite a
third of you know, what I've got in my bitcoin account.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
For all of your information.
Speaker 3 (07:16):
For all of my information, all of all of the
porn sites I visit during the program, you know, during
the breaks, all of the uh, you know, nasty emails
and text messages that I send Tepper and Jojo, you know,
all all of that, all of the nudies that that
I send just to random people. You know. I just
you know, you can just in our directory, you can
just start to type in a name. It'll just auto
(07:38):
populate and so I you know, you can just I
can email, and I just send nudies to random people
all the time on company stuff.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
For five hundred bucks, it sounds like a good deal.
I think you should take her up on it.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
You think I should, But she says she's trustworthy, and
she says she will delete it as soon as I
and if I make any attempt to get in touch
with the authority, she'll know it immediately. So I have
this song, I need to dialline one one, but no,
I'll just do it on air. Anybody out there that's
that's a that's a cop. I'd like to report an
(08:13):
extortion for for for five You know what really really
bothers me about this email? True truly does bother me
about this email. You think you think I'm joking about this,
but this truly does bother me. And that is everything
that she's listed that's only worth five hundred dollars.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Yep, that's that's all.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
On this day, I'm told that all I'm worth is
five hundred dollars in bitcoin.
Speaker 4 (08:45):
Well, it's about time we finally break the news to you.
That's that's all you want to work? I can't, And
that's over selling it.
Speaker 3 (08:54):
I know she's gonna ruin me with a single click
for five hundred dollars. Oh my god, I just give up.
I'm scrolling through Facebook last night, and uh, I don't
ask me why sometimes when I know, usually when Tamra
is busy trying to decide what we are going to watch,
(09:16):
since I have no you know, saying that whatsoever. And
lim Bartle's Lynn Linz. Probably anybody who knows Lim Bartele's
you can tell Lynn that I have mentioned their name.
Today she posted something on Facebook that caught my attention
because it said if you read anything, read the last paragraph.
(09:41):
So oh, so I scrolled through the last paragraph and
then I went back and read the whole thing. This is.
This comes from Tustin and Mole, who is a former
reporter for the Rocky Mountain I think she was a
reporter for the Rocky Mountain News. She's been a reporter
all over Colorado. Let's just say that she posted this
yesterday day on her Facebook page and it happens to
(10:03):
be with Jenna Griswold, and it it very very precisely.
I wonder if she's she must be related to Genomo,
who you remember, you don't even remember Genomo must be
a should be a columnist for the Rocky Mountain News.
Wow Uh. Tustin writes, this mistakes happen, and unless proven otherwise,
(10:29):
I believe that the public access to the voting machine
partial passwords was a mistake by a staffer on the
Colorado Secretary of State's office. But Secretary of State Jenna
Griswold's handling of the situation was either hubris or incompetence,
or maybe both. Griswold learned of the matter, but waited
(10:49):
almost a week to notify county clerks, and then only
after it became public. Was she hoping that if she
ignored it it would just go away. Did it not
occur to her to immediately remedy the problem after she
learned of it instead of leaving it the way it was? No,
(11:10):
she passed the buck and fired the staffer, or the
staffer left on their own. The story keeps changing, problem
solved in Jenna Griswold's mind. Fortunately, there's no evidence that
any of the voting machines had been compromised due to
the multi layer process to access them. The passwords finally
(11:32):
were changed after the Governor's office got involved. And there
needs to be an independent investigation. Amen, there does need
to be But do you think, first of all, as
I said on one of the Michael Brown Minutes this week,
where's the attorney general? I think we still have an
(11:52):
attorney general. I know he's running for governor, as Jenner
Griswold was, as are many people are out There's a
lot of people out there. They're having little mini orgasms
all thinking about being called governor so and so. Because
fortunately Jared is term limited, you would think that the
(12:16):
Attorney General State of Colorado, Phil Wiser, would be conducting
an investigation. And when Tustin and Mole says that there
needs to be an investigation, there needs to be an investigation.
The article that she wrote continues. Griswold rode in on
the Blue Tsunami of twenty eighteen. She had no experience
(12:37):
running a large government agency or any other kind of agency,
but she had a big D next to her name,
and that was enough that year could have been almost anybody.
Then she took credit for everything that her Republican predecessor,
Wayne Williams, had already done, things like making Colorado elections
among the most secure in the nation, along with one
(12:59):
of the countries voter turnout. The office of Secretary of
State is in charge of running unbiased elections, regardless of
to which party the officeholder belongs. In other words, they're
supposed to keep their opinions to themselves. But Griswold can't
help herself. She publicly denounced Trump, which was the first
(13:19):
step in undermining the credibility of the fairness of the office.
Then she sent voter registration postcards to non citizens parentheses.
None of them were allowed to register closed print. And
now this it's almost testing rights. It's almost as if
Griswold set out to support claims of election rigging on
(13:41):
the part of her office. She could have done much
worse if she had. Griswold isn't solely responsible for the
false allegations of election interference. That was going to happen regardless,
but she added fuel to the conspiracy theories and then
she lit a match. It's no secret that Griswold has
her eye on the governor's office. I'm not sure she
(14:03):
would have had the support of the Democratic Party in
any case. But now we'll see if she can survive
the remainder of her term. And then here's the last paragraph.
I don't believe that the election was compromised. The safeguards
put in place under former Secretary of State Republican Wayne
Williams have protected the integrity of Colorado's elections. But Jenner
(14:29):
Griswold should resign now so that the credibility of this
critical office can be rebuilt during the next two years.
Before the next election, it is going to matter if
we want a Democrat to keep the office. You see,
Democrats are panicked not just at the national level, they're
(14:50):
panicked at the state level. And Jenna Griswold just personifies,
absolutely personifies the Democrat Party when it comes to holding
a supposedly non partisan office. Now it's elected on a
partisan basis, but you're supposed to conduct the affairs of
(15:11):
the Secretary of State's office in a non partisan manner.
And Jenna Griswold, the incompetent little twitt that she is,
has no business whatsoever being the Secretary of State of
the State of Colorado. And I think testing is absolutely
right that she just rode in on that blue tsunami
of twenty eighteen. She had a D after her name,
(15:32):
and so a bunch of the Yahoo damask people in
Colorado voted for he simply because she was a Democrat
and she's an airhead. She is our Kamala Harris, she
is our ditts. Now, this is me talking, not Testin them,
because Testinamo, I'm quite sure, is obviously a Democrat too,
and she's very concerned about Democrat politics. But she raises
(15:56):
a great point. Jenna Griswold needs to resign. Now, you
would think that the Colorado media newspapers, Denver Post. I
haven't checked the Gazette. I don't need to check the Post,
the local newspapers. Kyle Clark nine News. I know you
(16:18):
tried to hold her feet to the fire. I know
you asked her if she'd resign. You could have asked her,
don't you think you should resign? Because when you ask somebody,
do you are you going to resign? Well, the answer
is I always know, no, I'm not going to resign.
The better question is don't you think you should resign?
(16:39):
Or to play lawyer, don't you think it's in the
best interests of the integrity of the office of the
Secretary of State that you do resign, like move the
onus onto her to justify have her justify why she
should not resign. KATIEVR, CBS, ABC, all of the rest
of you koa, everybody, where's the where's the title? Wave
(17:04):
of demands that Jenner Griswold resigned from office. The election's done,
the election's over. This woman has proved herself to be
the debts that Kamala Harris is she needs to go away,
and the attorney general who does want to be the
next governor of Colorado. You know, to put it in
very blood terms, you could kill off one of your
(17:26):
primary opponents by simply starting an investigation, but set the
politics aside. You can just do the right thing and say, hey,
I'm going to investigate this just for the integrity of
the office.
Speaker 5 (17:40):
This Jennet Griswold is a complete mess. Back in August
of the twenty twenty two elections, she said the US
could lose the right to vote in less than three
months if Republicans are elected. What we can expect from
the extreme Republicans running across the country is to undermine
free and fair elections for the American people. The country
(18:05):
could lose the right to vote in less than three months.
Speaker 6 (18:11):
It's kind of like, yeah, maybe this past election wasn't compromised.
But the whole I guess zeitgeist of this woman's tenure
is basically death by a thousand cuts.
Speaker 2 (18:25):
Take care.
Speaker 3 (18:27):
Yeah, she needs to go away. She needs to go away.
The White House chief of Staff there are usually there
is the White House Chief of Staff, and then the
chief of staff will have a couple of deputies, usually
one for operations, one for policy. It's probably, in my opinion,
(18:51):
the White House chief of Staff is probably the most
important person in the entire executive Office of the President,
which comprises obviously the Press Office, the Office of the
Vice President, comprises the Political Office, the Commons Office, the
(19:11):
Legislative Affairs Office, I mean, the whole the whole thousand
people that or so that work in the West Wing
and the old Executive Office building. And the reason the
chief of staff is so important is because they act
as a gatekeeper, and not just a gatekeeper in the
(19:32):
sense of who gets to see the president, but what
does the president get to see? And it's also the
one person that and I mean, it's a tough job.
It is an incredibly demanding, difficult job because you're not
only trying to control the flow of human beings in
(19:53):
and out of the oval office. You're also trying to
control the flow of information. You're trying to make certain
that if you have to know and have the confidence
of the boss, the president, and know that person well
enough to know how to manage them. And when you've
(20:14):
got someone like Donald Trump, who is an entrepreneur, he
is a self made man. He is a guy that
likes to make his own decisions, and he's a guy
that likes to cowboy. He likes to you know, ad
hoc everything. And I think that was one of the
(20:35):
flaws in his first term. He went through several chiefs
of staff. He's picked a new chief of staff that
I think is absolutely going to be amazing. Susan Wilds.
Isn't it fascinating to that a guy that we were
(20:58):
told by them crap party, was a misogynist, that he
didn't like strong willed women, that he didn't like women
that were, you know, self thinkers, that critical thinkers that
were able to, you know, stand up to him. Who
do you think runs the pants in that family? Yeah?
(21:19):
Probably millennia. And as in most heterosexual relationships. And when
you look at the campaign that Trump won, you recognized
that there was something different about this one than the
previous campaign, and not talking about twenty sixteen. I'm talking
(21:42):
about twenty twenty because in twenty twenty, even though things
were very different because of COVID, he was all over
the place. He was undisciplined. He was you know, he
was still off on you know, the he was just undisciplined.
(22:03):
I think that's the best way to put it. This campaign,
you could tell when he was freelancing and when he
was doing as he was and I don't want to
stay told to do, but when you could tell when
Susan Wiles had sat down, when Susie had sat down
(22:26):
and said, mister President, here's our messaging, here's what we
want to focus on. Here's the theme of this campaign.
Here's the broad strategy we're going to focus on. Now
we know that, you know, and remember the weave where
he would just start, you know, he would be on
message and then, you know, chasing a squirrel like I
often do, he would start weaving off into other things,
(22:48):
but he would always come back, might take him an hour,
but he'd eventually come back because he knew in the
back of his mind that sitting down in West Palm
Beach was Susie Wiles, who was watching his every move.
And while he's still the boss, and while he still
oftenly makes the decision, he's also one of those guys
(23:12):
that's smart enough to know that he needs somebody that's
smarter than him to help guide him through the campaign. Now,
I also think that the assassination attempts also changed him.
He became more focused, he became much more relatable, I think,
(23:35):
to the grace of God or physics, or wheneverver you
want to put it. I think that changed him also.
But disappointment of Susie Wiles is probably one of the,
if not the most important appointment that he could have
possibly made. It will bring discipline, maybe not so much
to Trump, but it will bring discipline to all of
(23:59):
the other appointee, including the secretaries, the deputy secretaries, and
the under secretaries that will be out in the cabinet.
My guess is there will be a lot more interaction
between the White House and the cabinet and the sub cabinet,
and that will be a lot more strategic messaging. There'll
(24:19):
be a lot more strategic moves made by this incoming
White House, and I think there will be a lot
of strategic appointments made where people will be assigned. You
take someone like as long as we're talking about women,
let's take Toulsi Gabbard. I've heard Toulsi Gabbard floated as
(24:40):
United Nations Ambassador, Secretary of Defense, ambassador to the United Kingdom.
I mean any number of things that she could be.
She could be a deputy Secretary of I mean a
deputy chief staff too. But I think the selection of
all of those people are going to be done in
such a way that they understand and that Trump's made
(25:02):
a lot of promises. He's going to keep those promises,
and he knows that unlike the last time, when he
might have eight years, he knows now he only has
four years. So there's a sense of urgency. And I
think that sense of urgency has manifested itself in this
(25:24):
very rapid naming of his chief of staff. What will
be interested in just inside baseball, But what will be
interesting is how much flexibility will she have to name
her own deputies. And I'm sure that she will have
a wide birth of opening to go name her own
(25:47):
deputies with the approval of the President. I say all
of that because her selection tells me how serious they
are about getting things done. She's going to crack the
whip and run that White House with an incredible discipline.
(26:09):
Now doesn't mean he's always going to be disciplined. Trump's
still going to be Trump. If you're old enough to
remember Reagan, there were times when people would say, come on,
stop it, just let Reagan be Reagan. Well, we're going
to hear that too, because there will be times when
Trump will be out doing stuff and you'll think, ah,
that's you know, that's not Trump. Just let Trump be Trump.
(26:30):
And I'm sure he will. But beneath it, I think
you're going to have a well oiled machine. Now. Susie's
not a spring chicken. She's in her sixties. She's in
her upper sixties, I think. But she has all of
the bona fides that you really need to be a
chief of staff. She knows DC, she knows campaigns, she
(26:55):
knows lobbying, she knows how things work, she knows how
things get done, and so people the way that everything
works in DC. What's going to happen is that cabinet members,
rather than trying to play cowboy and we you know,
(27:16):
kind of weasel their own way into the Oval office
to try to convince Trump of doing something, They're going
to have to go through the process. Now. Obviously, Secretary
of Defense, Secretary of Homeland Security, Secretary of State, they
will probably have fairly unfettered access to the Boss, but
everybody else you're gonna have to work it through the
(27:39):
proper channels because they want to stay on messaging and
they want to make sure that every single day. Remember
at the end of the campaign, I talked about it's
winning the new cycle of the day. Well, now they're
going to have to win the new cycle every single
day for the next four years. Now, obviously they can't
(27:59):
do that, can't win the new cycle three hundred and
sixty five days a year because and again just wad
the S word is so appropriate, But S word happens,
and then you have to respond to whatever that is,
you know, whether that be a terrorist attack on a
foreign embassy, or it's a terrorist attack on American soil,
(28:22):
or whether it's you know, a skirmish breaks out somewhere,
there's some economic calamity, whatever it is, that may be
the lead news in the a block on the in
the media, but the very first thing they're going to
turn to is the Press secretary or the chief of
staff or the president for a comment about whatever the
news of the day is. And they've got to stay
(28:44):
on messaging, and she's going to be able to do that.
She Here's what Trump said. Susie Wilds just helped me
achieve one of the greatest political victories of the American history
and was an integral part of both my twenty sixteen
and twenty twenty successful campaigns. Susie is tough, smart, innovative,
(29:10):
and is universally admired and respected. Susie will continue to
work tirelessly to make America great again. It is a
well deserved honor to have Susie as the first ever
female chief of staff in US history. I have no
doubt that she will make our country proud. She will.
I don't want to oversell this, but I only know
(29:33):
of Susie. I may have met her in passing a
few times during the Bush administration, but because she was
not a part of the Bush administration, and she would
make me take break some time, That's exactly what she
would do. But I just want you to know that, Wow.
The first thing he does sends a signal to Democrats
(29:56):
Congress enemies and allow and allies. I mean business.
Speaker 7 (30:02):
Hey, Michael and Dragon, this is a googer down here
in Norman, Oklahoma.
Speaker 3 (30:07):
Hey, I was watching the head lines this morning.
Speaker 7 (30:09):
I saw that President Trump is going to appoint a
woman as a chief of staff.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
Good on him.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
When would they ever get the point?
Speaker 7 (30:18):
For me, it's not the sexist, not the genders, not
the race, it's the person. I'm willing to vote for
a woman for a president, But give me the right person, Ingo.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
And that's my point about Susie Wilds. She is the
I cannot think of a better person because when you
think about how that campaign was run, and remember there's
always somebody behind the scenes, and Susie Wilds was the
one behind the scenes that was playing the puppet master.
(30:55):
I don't mean that in any sort of pejority of way,
but she was the one that was setting the tone
and everything. And obviously she has Trump's confidence, so bully
for him. And you're absolutely right. Has nothing that has
nothing to do with her sex. It has to do
with her with her amazing political skills, which one amazes me.
(31:18):
But Dragon, just now you're making now you've got me
chasing squirrels. Didn't really mean to just but it's a
great point. So direct you know, Daniel Perry, Penny, Penny
Penny now Daniel Penny. So he's the guy on the
New York City subway where uh, the guy the the
(31:39):
black guy's name was Neely. So you've got a black
guy who's acting crazy, who is threatening people. Uh in fact,
may have actually physically hit somebody. I'm not quite sure
about that. But he's threatening people on the subway. So
Penny the marine takes him down. Now, the autopsy show
(32:00):
that when the medics arrived, he was still he still
had a heartbeat, So even though he had him in
a choke hold to keep him subdued, he was still
alive when the medics arrived. But now he's on trial,
and I didn't realize. I mean, I knew the trial
was going on, but I didn't realize it's been twelve
days in both.
Speaker 4 (32:17):
Of us were shocked by that when the chiron popped.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
Up his day twelve day twelve WHOA.
Speaker 3 (32:22):
So that means between I don't know how many days
of actually been trial versus Vordy or to select a jury.
But here's the point I want to make. This guy's
life has been upended simply because he was doing the
right thing, trying to protect other people on a subway
train from a backcrap crazy nut job flailing around on
(32:48):
a subway, threatening women and other riders. So much so
that if you see the photos of when Penny finally
gets him down onto the floor of the subway train,
there are still other guys that have now circled around
also helping just keep this guy subdued. This is how
to control he was and now he's on trial for manslaughter.
(33:12):
Now I think that someone has put together a legal
defense fund. I think that someone's representing him. So he's
not out financially other than fact if he was, if
he had a job, he's lost his job because hey boss,
I'm not going to be into work. I'm not going
to be in work for you know, six months, because
well I'm facing a criminal trial. Oh a criminal trial. Yeah,
well I killed the guy they alleged I killed. Yeah,
(33:35):
they alleged that I killed the guy. Oh well, sucks
to be you by think about so whenever you see
a photo where you know, I saw one recently, I
know where it was. But somebody was attacking somebody else.
Some people walk out of the convenience store. They see
(33:55):
the fight happening, and they run to the car and hide.
And I know our gut reaction is shame on you
for doing that, But on the other hand, I kind
of understand it too, which is why we got to
quit demonizing weapons.