Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, this is for Eric Harley and Gary McNamara right now.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Who am I kidding?
Speaker 1 (00:05):
This is for Dragon and Michael and mostly myself. Is
a gift for Monday, so I don't have to wake
up for the cackle.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
Thanks guys, Oh great and mighty Dragon Redbeard.
Speaker 4 (00:17):
Yesterday you were talking about the talkbacks that are left
whenever the show is not on the.
Speaker 5 (00:21):
Air, how they count?
Speaker 4 (00:23):
But what if you play a bunch of talkbacks that
were left off the air. It's the first hour of
the show, and then later on in some of the
subsequent hours you don't get talkbacks?
Speaker 2 (00:35):
How do you know we didn't want them play? Then?
Speaker 4 (00:37):
Therefore, is it right to really give us the cackle
if you've played all of our halfire talkbacks sooner?
Speaker 2 (00:46):
People are very fearful of the cackle.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Apparently they are.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
They're very, very fearful of the cackle.
Speaker 6 (00:50):
We've gotten a few over the granted, it was a
whole weekend, so we had all of Friday, all of Saturday,
all of Sunday to leave a talkback. There were a
few left, and I can understand that last Goober's concerns,
but I try not to play multiple talkbacks per break
(01:12):
like I just did.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
There.
Speaker 6 (01:13):
There were two talkbacks in that one. If I do
not have enough to make it through the rest of
the show.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
In other words, you'll preserve them to get through the
rest of the show. Correct.
Speaker 6 (01:24):
If I only have five and I know I've got
six breaks coming up, I'm not going to double them up.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
In other words, in Dragon's defense, he doesn't want to
play the cackle.
Speaker 6 (01:41):
Correct.
Speaker 2 (01:42):
Nobody wants to hear the cackle. Correct. In fact, I
have both Friday and Saturday. I have not done a
story because CBS News sixty minutes in particular, has released
the entire I think it was about a fifty nine
(02:02):
minute video of was it Bill Whittaker? I forget who
it was from sixteen minutes, Yeah, that interviewed Kamala Harris
and so that we could see the and they did.
They They totally changed her answer to a couple of
the questions, and I've avoided what I just really don't
(02:24):
care anymore. She's gone, she's out here, it's over. We're
too busy trying to keep up. We've gone from zero
miles an hour to about one hundred and eighty miles
an hour, and I'm still just trying to put my
seat belt on.
Speaker 6 (02:40):
I mean, I'd pay attention to it if there were
actually some legal ramifications for what happened. Well, they're currently
there's not much out there.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
There may be some legal ramifications. In this sense, it
seems more likely than not that CBS is probably going
to try to settle the libel and slander lawsuit with
that Donald Trump has filed against them, the defamation lawsuit
(03:10):
by releasing the tape showing that, yeah, we really did
significantly edit it, and so we're trying to be transparent.
And how about if we give you ten million dollars
towards your library or something just to settle the case.
So I don't think it has true legal ramifications, but
I think it has ramifications for that lawsuit. I'll put
(03:32):
it that way. Then over the weekend, I get a
couple of I get a couple of emails, I get
a couple of text messages, and you know that we
love us some really d mercer because you know, as
a as a I guess when you've lived more of
(03:52):
your life in Colorado than you have an Oklahoma, you
no longer claim to be an Okie, But growing up
as an Oakie, you love your self some realed Mercer.
Speaker 5 (04:03):
Police Department.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
I need to speak with the chief Mercer. Got a
problem I had one the owl's officer.
Speaker 7 (04:10):
Okay, yeah, in me r C E R okay just
a moment.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Yeah, yes, pleas.
Speaker 3 (04:23):
My name is R. D. Mercer, and we had as
a problem last night with one of the owl's officers
over her or where we're in town.
Speaker 7 (04:30):
He stopped my little stepdaughter last night for a burnout
tail light and he said that he wouldn't ride her
a ticket if she had agreed to go on a
date with you. And I ain't I ain't gonna sign.
I ain't gonna stand for it.
Speaker 5 (04:45):
Well, by god, I don't believe it's he doing.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Down there, trying to work up a date with one
of my step.
Speaker 5 (04:51):
You bring your daughter in here and sign this, and
we'll sign a formal complaint. We'll get him here.
Speaker 7 (04:56):
I ain't gonna do it. I'm coming down there to whoop.
Somebody's asked you and bring her in. I'm bringing myself
down there with about a fifty five gallon drum or
whoop I ask, And now I'm gonna open it on y'all.
Speaker 5 (05:06):
No, you better not do that.
Speaker 7 (05:08):
I guarantee she doesn't engage to marry a fella over
down and broken bowl, fellow.
Speaker 5 (05:13):
I don't know what you're talking about. You talking in
broken Bowlder Bell, Ida Bell.
Speaker 7 (05:17):
She's in Ida Bell. She's gonna marry boy Joe Biffer.
You know Joe Beffin.
Speaker 5 (05:21):
I don't know Joe Bill.
Speaker 7 (05:22):
He's a double diamond. Am way dishriveled her down there
and broken ball.
Speaker 5 (05:26):
You bring her in a complaint.
Speaker 3 (05:28):
I ain't done it. I ain't done it.
Speaker 7 (05:30):
I'm coming down there today and I wanna find that fellow,
and I'm gonna find y'all.
Speaker 5 (05:33):
Let her have your fact straight.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
Well, I guarantee you that's what she told me.
Speaker 5 (05:37):
Well, bring her in, let her facing, Okay.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
Now she she ain't.
Speaker 7 (05:41):
She's too upset about it that she's been safety harass
down there.
Speaker 5 (05:44):
Bring her in, let her facing.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
I ain't gonna do it.
Speaker 3 (05:47):
She doesn't talk to him last night, and I'm buying
Pold about it.
Speaker 5 (05:50):
Well, I'm a little p Old the way you're talking.
Speaker 3 (05:52):
Well, ie, it's somebody somebody.
Speaker 5 (05:54):
If yeah, i'd bring my daughter in though and let
her facing.
Speaker 3 (05:57):
You'd be p o if he's your daughter, would bring
her in? No too, Well I ain't gonna do it.
I'm coming down there.
Speaker 7 (06:03):
She ain't never lied to me, and I don't think
she's gonna start now bad or no bad.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
Somebody's gonna get ass.
Speaker 5 (06:07):
Will you bring her in? Let her face him?
Speaker 3 (06:13):
You ever had an ass?
Speaker 2 (06:13):
Wooman?
Speaker 5 (06:14):
Who you fellow? Don't be calling threaten me on the phone.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
Are you a single man? Or you married man?
Speaker 5 (06:20):
I've got a daughter twenty seven?
Speaker 7 (06:22):
Well, and by god, do you understand how come I
got mad?
Speaker 5 (06:25):
I bring her in.
Speaker 3 (06:26):
I guarantee you I ain't gonna do it.
Speaker 5 (06:28):
Well, then don't come down here raising hell.
Speaker 7 (06:30):
I'm coming down there to whoop. Somebody's asked hearing about
a New York minute.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
Well, and I tell you what I'm.
Speaker 5 (06:35):
You better get your stuff straight.
Speaker 7 (06:37):
Well, I ain't gonna have to have it straight when
I come down there.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
You are she got a.
Speaker 7 (06:41):
Big bachelorette part of the night, and she's gonna be
tore up, and I ain't gonna be able to have it.
I was gonna get to somebody dressed up like a
state trooper and stripped for.
Speaker 5 (06:50):
You better get your stuff together.
Speaker 3 (06:51):
His name is John Kaufman. He's coming down here to
do that.
Speaker 7 (06:56):
He's gonna strip down to a camel belt in the nightclub.
Speaker 5 (07:02):
Who in the hell is this? Your brother wanted to
pull a joke on you? I think you did the
pool one?
Speaker 2 (07:12):
Is that right?
Speaker 3 (07:13):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (07:15):
That first time my blood pressure has been up. I
don't know when? Are you? Okag? I was fixing that.
We'll get my damn pistol and.
Speaker 7 (07:21):
We're gonna we're gonna play gunfight to Okkrell.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
Dude, not first sake me?
Speaker 5 (07:27):
Oh my helm A secondary come back here and said,
who you yelling at? What's going on? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (07:36):
That's Roy d Mercer.
Speaker 8 (07:38):
Roy Mercer radio personality Brent Douglas has died. I had
the privilege of knowing Brent.
Speaker 9 (07:47):
My radio.
Speaker 8 (07:49):
They I got a chance to talk to others who
knew him and loved him as well.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
It's a lot of fun.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
It's more fun than television.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Sorry, more fun than television.
Speaker 7 (07:58):
It's more fun than Dan, you know, sitting around trying
to write a book.
Speaker 8 (08:02):
For twenty seven hilariously foul and inappropriately funny years, the
KMOD morning zoos Phil and Brnt made Tulsa radio airwaves
legendary from nineteen eighty five, when Brent Douglas went from
mild mannered pharmacists to half of KMOD dynamic duo until
twenty twelve, when the pair finally parted ways with their
radio personas you could count on a hearty laugh.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
To start your day. Brent Douglas, also known.
Speaker 8 (08:25):
By his alter ego of roy D Mercer, passed away
early Saturday morning, a cause of death not given but
not needed. His loss felt immediately by anyone who ever
tuned into their show one oh three point three The Eagles.
Lynn Hernandez worked at KMOD with Phil and Brnt for
many years.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
You know, one thing I really liked about those guys
was not just their comedy. I mean they had theater
of the mind radio, which really hasn't done much these days.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
These days, it's.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
A lot of reality TV on the radio, but back
then they really want wanted to take you to a
different place. I mean, whether it was there Dick Slexia,
where they would almost swear on the radio every single time,
but he would just say everything backwards and the fish
and report the Greek theater and then of course Roydy
(09:17):
Mercer just will live on forever.
Speaker 3 (09:19):
Are you going to be there all day?
Speaker 5 (09:21):
I'll be here all day.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
How big and Oldbore.
Speaker 8 (09:23):
Are you The prank phone call radio bits where roy
D would threaten to whoop someone were such a hit
that Phil and Brent were able to sign a deal
with a record label and release more than fifteen CDs.
They were known not only in Tulsa, but worldwide, with
fans across the country and their syndicated markets.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
Mary Moore was a co host.
Speaker 8 (09:41):
From two thousand and nine to twenty twelve and says
those were some of the best.
Speaker 3 (09:44):
Years of her life.
Speaker 8 (09:45):
But she has fonder memories of Brent that went above
and beyond the radio bits where Brent went.
Speaker 6 (09:50):
Through a time where he was really into yoga and
you were starting to.
Speaker 3 (09:54):
Get us all in. Yes, Brent, he would sit.
Speaker 7 (09:57):
And he would have his knees across legged on top
of the counter, and that's how.
Speaker 3 (10:02):
He would be sitting, just to show us, you know,
he was really working on his flexibility.
Speaker 9 (10:06):
So when I look over in my mind, that's.
Speaker 7 (10:08):
What I see, is that guy in this yoga pos
just you know, living his best life.
Speaker 8 (10:14):
Well you may remember that Phil Stone, the other half
of Phil and Brent, passed away back in twenty twelve.
We got a statement from Brett Thompson, the longtime producer
of The Morning Zoo during the Pill and Brent years,
and he says, my thoughts go out to Brent's family
as they deal with their loss, and that includes the
radio family he built over a fantastic career in entertainment
and broadcast. He will be missed but never forgotten.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Yeah. What what I find interesting about KMOD, the station
in Tulsa and that era of radio was once again
it was we were way we are now way too sensitive.
(10:57):
We're now way too Oh we're afraid to offend someone
and we're all so afraid. For example, you know what
they would do is they would literally there was no
planning in terms of, hey, let's call the police chief
and let's get the police chief in on this gag
(11:18):
that we're going to pull. Because you can't do that today, Dragon, Dragon,
We can't. I just can't pick up the phone here
and call someone and just start talking to them and
try to pull a gag like that. It's in violation
FCC rules and in fact, the only you know we
have you done your little test? Dragon?
Speaker 5 (11:40):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (11:41):
Did you complete your test? Did you pass it?
Speaker 5 (11:43):
I share it?
Speaker 2 (11:44):
Well, congratulations for the time the emptyeenth time. And by
the way, you do notice you can answer all the
questions wrong and still pass the test.
Speaker 6 (11:52):
Oh definitely.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Yeah, We'll just tell you how you're wrong. But here's
the correct answer. Oh okay, well thank you. So why
why why do I which is why I just said,
and just you know, do something else? Why it takes
me longer to take the exam because I'm not paying
attention to win. The little red button pops up to
move on to the next section, and I have to go, Oh,
I got to push that, and I go back to
(12:13):
whatever I was doing.
Speaker 6 (12:14):
I just do what I do here on the show.
Oh there's silence. I better hit the button.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
Better hit the button. Yeah, hit the button exactly. But anyway,
there's a section in this test about you. You cannot
put someone on the air without informing them that they're
going to be on the air, and in fact, without
asking them if it's okay.
Speaker 6 (12:30):
If they be on the air, call out if they
if you call out us, there's a reasonable expectation that
you will be.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
On the air. Yes. However, if you read that rule closely,
that that is for a talk show that regularly takes
phone calls, because because there's a gray area because I've
always wanted to and I don't think it happens now,
but it used to happen a lot when I was
doing Afternoon Drive, where we would get phone calls and
you would get a phone call from someone looking for Martine,
(13:00):
and I kept arguing with management, I want to take
those phone calls. Why, Well, because I want to give
them some horrific answer. Well, you'll have to tell them
because you're not Martino and I would be. And I'm like, well,
I'll tell them, Look, Martino's not in right now. How
can I help you and just do it on the air. Well,
you know, it's kind of iffy, kind of iffy, Okay, Well,
(13:23):
in other words, I can't pull a gag. I can't
have someone who is calling a show but it's too
dumb to know that the show is no longer on
the or it is not on the air at that time.
You can't do that. So FCC rules just strip away
the fun of doing stuff. And I think it speaks
(13:48):
a lot to how we have as a nation have
become so concerned, fearful, afraid, whatever adjective you you want
to use, that we or now that we we can't
(14:10):
do that. Did you watch the super Bowl last night?
Did you see the ads about And truthfully, I don't
remember much about it, the super Bowl nor the commercials,
but for example, the one where you know, I don't
like the way you look her, I don't like I
like the way you talk, or I don't what you say.
I forget who wasn't Tom Brady and yeah, Tom Brady
(14:33):
and Snoop Dogg.
Speaker 5 (14:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:34):
See how that's how little I care about it. But
really we have to have an ad about that. Seriously,
I just think we've we've lost all common sense, We've
lost our ability to laugh at ourselves, and we've become
way overly sensitive about cultural issues political issues. I don't
(15:02):
worry about the political issues because I know that I'm
right and you're wrong. So as long as we just
understand that, then you know, we can get along just fine.
But even to say something as stupid as that just
shows that, well, we've just we've just kind of lost
our way about stuff. There is no way to do
a good segue into this, But there is a story
(15:25):
that I've been watching for I would say four or
five months, and it has to do with these Pakistani
of Pakistani origin British grooming gangs, and they're years long,
decades long predations against mostly white, mostly poor British children
(15:48):
and more specifically, mostly white, mostly poor British girls. But
I want to start somewhere else because absent the context
that I want to present, kind of briefly, it's actually
difficult to understand how this has happened. And here we
(16:08):
are coming off now. I'll be honest, Actually I was
done with the Super Bowl after the first half. Now,
I understand that at one point they were down seventeen
to nothing, nothing, and I thought, well, you can come
back from that, and if they come back fired up,
but didn't the Eagles score at least once or twice
(16:32):
again before the halftime. But halftime, it's like twenty four
to nothing or something.
Speaker 5 (16:36):
Something like that.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
Yeah, yeah, yea. At some point, I'm just like, I
just and the Chiefs looked so bad. I just really
didn't care anymore. But I did want to watch out
of a morbid curiosity. I wanted to watch the halftime show,
so I forced myself to watch through the halftime show,
which was utterly abysmal, utterly abysmal, and as somebody on
(16:59):
X said, if you're over the age of forty, you
probably didn't understand a word that was said. You probably
didn't like it, and you probably didn't understand you know how,
somebody under the age of forty thought that was pretty cool.
And I thought to myself, I'm not sure the age
of forty. Maybe the age of twenty one or twenty two.
If you're over the age of twenty one or twenty two,
you had to be somewhere between the ages of fourteen
(17:21):
and eighteen to find that somehow musical or entertaining or whatever.
And the choreography was I thought, was, really, that's that's
not really choreography. That's just synchronized swimming or something. But
I digress. But the point I want to make is
we come off a cultural event like that and we
(17:43):
tend to think that, you know, the rest of the world,
this is how we live, is the way the rest
of the world lives. And we tend to think that.
When we talk about the United Kingdom, we think, well,
the United Kingdom is well, that's the motherland, that's where
we came from, that's where we broke off with that's
where we fought the War of Independence. Is the home
of the magnet KRTA, How can things be this bad
(18:06):
in the UK? Well, they really are. Three hostages were
released by Hamas this weekend. Their photos, they're absolutely reminiscent
of the Holocaust. Got hollow eye. Guys who were praying
in front of screening and celebrating Pakistanis with one red cross,
the neighbors standing by another, shaking hands with the tears
(18:28):
and grinning. That's what we've come to expect and exces.
Speaker 9 (18:34):
I wonder if Taylor Swift has any regrets dipping her
toe into politics. It is obvious from the crowd at
the stadium last night that they were not really fans
of hers. Bet she's not used to that, all right, So.
Speaker 6 (18:53):
It's Friday, Oh no, it's actually zero twenty Saturday morning.
Speaker 5 (18:58):
You're telling me this topic?
Speaker 2 (19:02):
Okay, yep, sure did yep. Yeah. If Dragon tell you something,
you can take it to the bank. So let's talk
about these grooming gangs in the UK. This is a
story I've been following for several months now, and the
release of the hostages this past week. The very first
(19:27):
thing I thought of when I saw those men being
paraded was I could be looking at guys coming out
of Auschwitz. That's how gaunt. They were, hollow eyed, h
their their clothing ragged, everything about it was just just
screamed Holocaust. And of course then you had all of
the screaming Palestinians, just so called Palestinians, just screaming and
(19:51):
hollering and cheering, and then of all things, a Red
Cross enablers standing by shaking hands with these terraces and grinning.
He was disgusting. Meanwhile, in England, at the same time,
a man engaging in anti Muslim performance art burns an
(20:15):
object symbolic of his anger. He burned the flag US flag,
No he did not. Oh, he burned the Israeli flag,
No he did not. He burned the Union Jack, the
British flag, No he did not. A Bible. No, he
burned a Quran. And because he burned a Quran, he
(20:38):
is arrested in the UK and he is charged on
the charge of suspicion of a racially aggravated public order offense.
Now that's the same Metropolitan police in the United Kingdom
that threatened a visibly Jewish man near a Prohamas demonstration
with arrest. And while that's going on in Africa, tens
(21:04):
of thousands have died in Sudan, which the Biden administration
labeled a genocide. I think cleansing, systemic rape, indiscriminate bombings,
including attacks on un workers, the cabal, they don't care.
(21:24):
They don't care. Ditto for the systemic hunting of Christians
in Nigeria. Is the BBC or for that matter, CNN
or MSNBC, or for that matter, truthfully, Fox News or
anybody else are they spilling gallons of broadcast time over
these deaths. No, not at all. What I'm trying to
(21:48):
lead you to is there is some sort of impunity
for Islamist crime. That Muslim Muslim on Muslim crime is
of no interest, that Muslim on Jewish crime must be
seen in some sort of context, and that Muslim on
Christian crime is an issue that well, you got to
(22:09):
be sensitive about that, otherwise it might negatively impact, you know,
community relations. And so we come to these grooming gangs.
And as I looked through all of the notes over
the past couple of months, it's pretty clear the scandal
(22:33):
breaks down into three different phases. And you have to
go back probably in the nineteen sixties to really start
with the first phase, and that's when the first of
the mass immigrations of Muslims from Pakistan and Bangladesh and
other countries Sri Lanka and others, which was previously you know, Bangladesh,
(22:57):
which is also previously part of Pakistan. So in the
mid nineteen sixties through today, they start moving into these
industrial towns in northern England and the Midlands. And even
then there were rumors of endemic sex abuse and grooming
attested to say from about nineteen eighty onwards. And perhaps
(23:20):
if you go back locally, which I can't find, but
maybe even locally there were probably stories, you know, like
individual stories appear here and there, and that you know,
it's a one or two day story, you know, say
in the on the BBC, or it might be you know,
one or two day story back when we had three networks,
and then it just kind of disappears. Oh, your local
(23:40):
newspaper might still carry the story because someone in town
got raped, and so they carry the story for three
or four maybe five days, but then there's no trial
and people who's interests and it goes away. This the
(24:01):
scandal was brought to the attention of local authorities and
local cops by the victims and their mothers starting in
the nineteen nineties, but there was no action taken by
the cops and local authorities at least in two thousand,
maybe two thousand and one, and that's kind of when
the very first investigations began. There's a lot of evidence
(24:23):
that through the nineties and through the two thousands, as
all these cases and accusations began to multiply and just
exponentially grow, it became clear that this was this was
really a national issue, not just a local one that's
restricted to a few towns here or there, a few
isolated incidents, but that the police began to aggressively discount
(24:45):
the testimony of the victims, all of whom were underage,
underage children who had been raped serially, traffic drug tortured,
all consistent a consistent pattern of the the grading kind
of exploitation that you can possibly imagine we're talking about,
(25:08):
I think probably tens of thousands of victims too often
written off in British slang as slags, whores, and then
they're thinking about the desperate parents. Sometimes the parents themselves
get threatened with prosecution because they just keep pushing and
pushing and pushing, and the cops are literally like, we're
(25:30):
not going to do anything because they're well, they're Pakistanis,
they're Muslims. These girls, often as young as ages ten
or eleven, are ignored. They tell their tales of rape
and assault that are so heinous that some of the
stories I read are just absolutely their stomach turning, eyes
(25:52):
wide shut. Is what's going on in the United Kingdom.
Do you know that the Central prosecute involved when this
really started to break in the nineteen nineties, in the
two thousand, is some Yahoo by the name of Sircuir
starmer zyring a Bell. Yeah, because he's now the Prime
(26:12):
Minister of the Labor Party, he's now Prime Minister of England,
the Prime Minister of the UK, and he happened to
be to have been the Central Prosecutor, to the Justice Ministry,
to human rights campaigners, to local popo everybody. And then
there's this all this class not you know, this caste
(26:33):
system in the UK really does still exist because these
girls were no better than they should be. They were
looking for trouble. It was all their fault. You know,
we would call these girls in our country, well, some
people would. They would call him white trash. They were
just you know, their parents were just blue collar workers,
(26:53):
they were working class families, and well, their virginity was
just a small price to pay for the sanctity of
keeping community relations and not stirring up and causing problems
with all of this mass illegal immigration they've been occurring.
And you can say, as which is the reason why
(27:15):
this keeps getting buried, is everybody's afraid of being charged
with the stupid charge of Islamophobia. Well, I'm not British,
I don't live in the UK, I live here. I've
been watching this, I've been listening to it, and I
don't care whether somebody says it's Islamophobia on my part
or not. The perps are almost uniformly South Asia, and
(27:39):
the victims, for the most part, are white. Does that
mean that all Muslims are perverts, groomers, are rapists. No,
it does, of course it doesn't. Decent people of every
religion and no religion ought to be horrified at this.
One of the tribunes for these girls happens to be
(27:59):
a former prosecutor now fear as Al himself, the South
Asian Muslim. But what I have ascertained is that there
is a conspiracy of silence around both the criminals and
the victims. There is an unwillingness in the British tabloids,
(28:20):
the British papers, within Parliament, even within local councils to
discuss the risk and rewards of appointing community spokespersons whose
main job is to shield their communities from unfair and
unfortunately very fair charges. The communities themselves haven't even been introspective.
(28:45):
Do you know what really started my digging into this
elon Musk, Oh, my god, the guy's everywhere. He simply
raised a question on X a few weeks ago about
what the hell is going on in the United Kingdom.
And but for that, even though I had heard hear
(29:08):
their stories about it, I really had not paid much
attention to it. And then a billionaire, a guy that
you know has got us, seems to have his fingers
and just about everything going on around the world, raises
on his own social media platform and the Brits and
we need to respond with, oh, we may just haul
your ass into our country. We may just find a
(29:30):
way to extradite you to this country, and we may
we may come after you for what asking a question,
simply for asking a question about what we've about what's
going on, and to some degree, this isn't just a
story about the United Kingdom. You have millions of Syrians
in Germany, North Africans in France, South Asians and England.
(29:55):
It's everywhere. It's just all, it's all, all of this
mass migration that we have talked about in generalities about
the EU and the United Kingdom has kind of reached
its tipping point. As I said, I'm not opposed to
legal immigration whatsoever, but what we see going on here
(30:22):
is absolutely despicable. As I said, it breaks down into
these three phases, and it really does begin with this
mass migration of Muslims from Pakistan and Bangladesh from the
nineteen sixties forward. There are cases in around fifty cities
(30:42):
around the UK, affluent, middle class, poor. It crosses the
entire gamut of the socio economic arc. And the response
to the Conservative government which was in power back in
the twenty tens was to announce an now we're well,
we're gonna put it. We're gonna put together a committee
(31:04):
which effectively did recommend improvements to welfare services of the
belief of beleeve the victims kind. You know, let's let's
listen to the victims and telling the police not to
take the side of the rapists, the murderers, the torturers.
So at least the Conservatives showed some principles and said,
(31:26):
maybe we ought to stop this just turning a blind
eye to everything. So, however, must became aware of it.
I think it was from a transcript of some court
proceedings of a trial in Oxford that I think once
he became aware of it and he just brought it
out in the open, is when this thing really exploded.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
Looks like the Eagles took a page out of the
Donald Trump playbook and made it too big to rig.
Speaker 3 (31:57):
Everyone have a great day, that's true.
Speaker 2 (32:01):
Somebody asking on the text line, let me pull it
up real quickly Google number thirty one thirty nine dragon.
Listen to this. Oh gosh. Co worker of mine is
pitching a fit about the word pedophile being censored during
a halftime show. It is used to attack a rival
artist named Drake and the two not like us. Then
a second message from the same person, I just saw
(32:23):
that station KDHD hits ninety five seven is playing just
about every hour. Is the word pedophile being centered on
the edit the station is playing. I don't know. I
don't care. I've heard of both of these artists. I
don't listen to them. I don't like their music. I
can't stand their music. I don't know if there's a
battle going on between the two of them. Call somebody
(32:44):
that cares.
Speaker 6 (32:45):
I hadn't heard of the Kendrick Lamara guy, but I
had heard of Drake before, so this is all news
to me.
Speaker 2 (32:52):
But wake should we even discuss the national anthem?
Speaker 6 (32:56):
I missed that completely. I started the game roughly a
on sick you were recording it because of bout this stuff, right, Yeah,
And I went straight to the kickoff and sped through
the entirety of the halftime show and boringly watched the
second half.
Speaker 2 (33:12):
Yeah, I think Timor was kind of irritated at me
because I wanted to know everything I had heard about
this John Baptiste or whatever it was that was going
to sing the national anthem that he had, you know,
a wonderful voice and it's gonna be wonderful, and he
was all hyped up. So I thought, Okay, well, you know,
I'll see if you can match Whitney Houston or not,
and clearly failed to do so. I'm not saying it wasn't.
(33:36):
Sounds like a nice singer and sounds like he has
a nice voice, and you know he's fairly hard but
you know, it's just there's something about the national anthem,
just you know, belt it out, like you mean, don't
do this like a kind of pussy footing around kind of.
Speaker 6 (33:49):
I mean, he didn't do his own flare to it
or anything, did he, Because that personally bugs me. I
keep it that.
Speaker 2 (33:55):
That was the point. It was all. It was all
his personal rendition of No, it's it's the national anthect
sing it with gusto traditional, don't sing softly with you know,
kind of a little jazz infusion here, belt it out, yeah,
belt it out. So yeah, I think the standard is
Whitney Houston and just so yeah, that's rare. So here,
(34:23):
here's the bottom line about this story. It's organized crime.
It's been going on for decades. The Labor Party and
in fact all of Britain has been ignoring it. And
it boils down to this. If you tell the cops
that their job is not to go after the criminals,
but your job is to somehow just maintain community relations,
(34:45):
then you turn cops into a social worker, and you
turn them into an ideologically charged force who do not
administer the law blindly, but instead you charge the cops
with maintaining certain desired social hea comes. And therefore you
will address Jews because there are twelve times as many Muslims.
(35:07):
So when the Jew does something, you'll go after the Jew.
You won't go after the Muslim. You will kick girls
out of police stations when they've been raped because you
fear the civil disorder if you go after the Muslim.
So you're living in anarchy. You're living in the tyranny
(35:28):
of political correctness, and you're living in the tyranny of
fear of Muslims.