Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
A story that we won't likely see too much on
the mainstream media is that seventeen members of El Chappo's family,
one of the drug cartels in Mexico, walked across the
US Mexico border last week and turned themselves into the FBI.
(00:20):
I'm sure we would have seen something similar happen under
Harris right now.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
Not a chance.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
In Haiti, Hey, dragon, do you remember yesterday we had
the entire conversation about Khadar k.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
So last night it was a role they had a
role in the Kata.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
Yeah, well I can't do that, so I can do
the first work. So last night, I am, I finished
everything downstairs. It's now four o'clock, so I go upstairs
and I decided I'm going to watch Special Report with
Brett Baer because he's in Catar and he's you know,
(01:04):
and I'm kind of and this I'm kind of half
assed watching it, and I particularly wanted to hear what
the panel had to say best some questions about you know,
Trump's trip, see what you know, what the different opinions were.
And then Brett does this kind of you know, midnight,
whatever time it was two am, you know, when he's
(01:25):
actually live here.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
Whatever time it is there, I don't know, but it's dark, and.
Speaker 3 (01:32):
He's walking through Doha and he's walking along where the
Pearl Monument is and everything. I mean, it's it's it's
a beautiful city. And he's walking.
Speaker 4 (01:40):
Along and then he goes into the Emir's.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
Mansion whatever you would call it, his his equivalent of
a white house, and he's walking around and then he
ends it with this, and I, frankically looked last night,
and I looked again this morning to see if I
can find it, and I can't find it. I suppose
if I found the entire episode, we could fast forward
(02:08):
to the very end. He then goes and there is
something I'm paraphrasing here. There is a dispute or controversy
over the pronunciation of the name Cutter, And he said,
we have decided at Fox News to officially use the
phrase or the pronunciation cutter, because that's what everyone in
(02:35):
the country and everyone that we've met with, and all
the officials and all the members of the royal family,
that's how they pronounce it.
Speaker 2 (02:46):
Well, I suppose, for argument's sake, with the video that
we could play on air, but not on the podcast.
So you had to go to Michael says, go here
dot com in order to listen to the video that
was a CNN video.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
It was a CNN video, but the person that they
had put up was the executive director of the Counter
Tourism Board or something. So think about this. Yesterday, we
(03:24):
had an incessant number of talkbacks text messages about pronunciation
of names, including if he's awake at four h nine
Alaska time, including girl Dad who goes on to not
only leave a talkback, but then to also send me
a text message about the proper pronunciation.
Speaker 2 (03:47):
But doesn't give us the proper but.
Speaker 3 (03:48):
It doesn't give it so that I and tells me
to go in fact, tells me you're doing it wrong.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
Go google it.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
You know, well, f you you know if you're gonna
tell me I'm doing it wrong and then then and
tell me. So I did google it, and that's where
I came across numerous sources, and I finally settled on
that one that I know was on the CNN website.
But it shows that I'm ambidexters. I can go both ways,
I can you know, I can go left or right.
Because I was more I didn't care if that was
(04:16):
on CNN. I cared who the person was that they
were interviewing.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
But he also did say at the very end, as
long as your intentions are good, we don't care how
you say it.
Speaker 3 (04:28):
And that went right over the heads of everybody, because
the Goobers and and You and Bozo and Alaska all
are like, oh yeah, you can't roll your yards, you know,
and just about it.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
And then all I'm doing is just sitting at home.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
You know.
Speaker 3 (04:49):
You know, I'm kind of exciting because Tamer's gonna fix
burgers and brocks last night, and you know, it's gonna
be a good meal of just you know, burgers and
broughts and things. And I've got all my show prep
done and I'm kind of just relaxed. I've had a
good day and and then Brett Behrick comes on and
just screws everything up again. So I'm tired of trying
to because I've been practicing CTR.
Speaker 2 (05:10):
Gotar that's pretty close. I know, you gotta work on
the hard.
Speaker 4 (05:15):
I can't do that. So, I mean, I can't. I
cannot roll.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
Eighty seven years old. But any cod it's bout time
to start learning new tricks.
Speaker 4 (05:22):
I physiologically cannot do it.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
You just haven't tried hard. No, no, no, no.
Speaker 4 (05:28):
By entire effing life.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
Buzz Bozo listened to me. People tried to teach me
to roll my cars. I have a very flat, thick tongue.
It's not you know, like some people can stick their
tongue out like a lizard. I can barely get mine
past my lips, and it's flat and it's thick. I
just it's just genetic. I can't roll a little. They
(05:51):
can't do it. I can't do it so well. They
officially be cutter on this.
Speaker 4 (05:55):
Program because car is just too much work.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
I have enough problem problems cleaning off the spit after
every show from my laptop, and if I go to
it's gonna be even worse.
Speaker 4 (06:10):
So screw all of you, uh.
Speaker 5 (06:15):
Mayor.
Speaker 3 (06:15):
Mike Johnson is fully on board with continuing the use
of the flock, which is basically the FU It's just
spelled f F l O c K, but they really
mean F you camera system, saying he believes data won't
be shared with immigration authorities.
Speaker 4 (06:31):
It's comes from nine news or.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
If you want to follow a really funny account on
the on the X platform, nine millimeter News, nine millimeter
nine millimeter moves nine see, I get I can't talk regularly.
Nine millimeter news is actually kind of funny. Here's what
I find hilarious about this story. So this cropped up
(06:57):
last week and I just kind of ignored it because
you know, I'm just I'm kind of done with Denver.
But the city council is all upset because they the
last last week's city council voted down a contrast extension
for the Flock camera system. Now the Flock camera system,
(07:17):
uh more than seventy law enforcement agencies across Colorado currently
use this technology. The technology is basically a plate reader,
and whether you want your plate to be read or
not doesn't make any difference. I find it funny how
people will post photos, and even the government will post photos,
(07:42):
you know, like they've stopped somebody for speeding, and they
they you know, pixelate the plate so you can't see
the plate number, or somebody takes a photo.
Speaker 4 (07:52):
I don't do it.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
If somebody that's parked, you know, sideways into parking places
and they'll pixelate the plate number because somehow we're supposed
to protect their privacy. What privacy, You don't have any privacy.
Seventy different law enforcement agencies are scanning your plates just
driving around, and of course they justify as saying, oh,
it's allowed us to find you know, X number of
stolen cars. Uh yeah, well what about the cars that
(08:17):
are stolen that you don't catch, you know? So well whatever,
But the city council voted not to renew the contract.
But the mayor comes back and says, but I want
to continue the contract. I have every intention of wanting
to keep every camera up and keep them operating because
we know they dramatically reduce crime in the city dramatically. No,
(08:45):
they don't dramatically reduce crime it. But let me just
take the surveillance system, which reads license plates and tracks vehicles,
reads license plates and tracks vehicles, has been become a
focal point in the debate between.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
I tried to pronounce coulter too many times, excuse me.
Speaker 3 (09:08):
Has become a focal point in the debate between public
safety benefits and privacy concerns. Johnson explained his request for
the for council to reject the contract extension with strategic
giving the city time to address council members' concerns about
what do you think the City Council of Denver is
concerned about your privacy or the abuse of this system, Well,
(09:34):
of course they are. Mayor Johnson wants to give the
time that the city council time to address their concerns
about potential data sharing with Immigrations and Customs enforcement to
the plates. Somehow ascertain that that plate DyF B one
(10:01):
nine Colorado Aspires twelve twenty six or whatever, that that's
being driven by an illegal alien?
Speaker 2 (10:09):
Do they what?
Speaker 4 (10:12):
How what.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
Denver will stop using flowed cameras after city council unanimously
reject to the contract proposal. Do their privacy and their
immigration worries? They're so freaking concerned about immigration and they're
concerned about time. Every time a Democrat goes on television, radio, newspaper,
(10:37):
a podcast, anything, they should ask do you support criminal
illegal aliens remaining in this state? Do you care more
about people who have broken the law and broken into
our country illegally than do you care about American citizens
(10:59):
naturalized or born here? And I'm not I'm going to
exclude birthrights, citizenship. We know that's being heard today. We're
going to hear about nation. What we're not going to
hear about, but the Supreme Court's already closed down their
oral arguments for the year, and they're actually busy writing opinions,
except today they're going to have a special session. I
(11:23):
don't know. I mean there may be in history, but
I don't recall in my constitutional law class or my
constitutional lawst practice any recollection of any special like, oh,
we need to have you know. I know they've had
immediate cases where they have emergency cases, but wherefore just
regular order. They've taken up oral arguments to hear, particularly
(11:48):
about the nationwide injunctions and whether or not these federal
district trial judges can issue an injunction that affects anybody
other than the people that are under their jurisdiction that
are appear in front of their court and then apply
that ruling to people all over the country. And they're
going to hear the Trump argument about his attempt to
(12:09):
eliminate birthright citizenship.
Speaker 4 (12:11):
So that's going on.
Speaker 3 (12:12):
But I'd like to ask, just like the Denver City Council,
do you care more about protecting people who have broken
the law and are in the country illegally, some of
which are trafficking in children, sex trafficking children, human trafficking.
You know, men and women into slavery, you care, or
(12:33):
they're drug trafficking in bringing more and more fentanel into
the country than you do care about American citizens.
Speaker 4 (12:40):
Which is it?
Speaker 3 (12:41):
Somebody asked them the question, could I really think if
they were honest, if they were truly honest, they would
tell you they care more about those people than they
do us people. Thanks to Alexius, she sent me this
story yesterday. But of course, just like with anybody you
send me a story, I'm not just going to do
it the minute you send it to me. I want
(13:02):
to read about it. So it has to do with
a camp camp Idrajaje. I'm not sure if I'm pronouncing
that right. That is a Christian camp well, a great organization.
I've mentioned this organization before, the Alliance Defending Freedom.
Speaker 4 (13:20):
It's one of the.
Speaker 3 (13:23):
Several I would say, nonprofits, public interest law firms, if
you will, public interest law groups. Sometimes there are actually
a law firm and they do nothing but public interest stuff.
Or they might be an organization, a group of lawyers
around the country that are a member of an organization
(13:44):
where they defend religious freedom. They they defend freedom of speech,
you know, as opposed to the ac LU, which just
now all they do is just defend illegal aliens too.
But they file a lawsuit Mondey here in the US
District Court for Colorado on behalf of this camp. It's
a Christian camp, but I know that it's a Christian camp,
(14:08):
but I want to emphasize that when they've been around
since nineteen forty eight. This summer they plan to have
or they're planning for up to three thousand kids to
attend this camp. It is a faith based camp, but
it serves children of any faith. The parents just have
to agree up front before their kids go that you
(14:32):
can come here. If you're a Jewish or Muslim, you
can come here. If you're a Catholic or Protestant you
can come here. If you're Hindu or Buddhist or whatever,
you can come here. Just know that we preach the
Gospel and we are a faith based camp. But anybody,
it's opened to anybody. Well, that could come to an
end because the Colorado, these new Colorado regulations force the
(15:00):
camp to you know where this is going right, to
open its girls' facilities to boys who identify as females,
and to you know, open it to boys who or
to girls who identify as boys. Yeah, I can't. I
never can keep it straight, and despite their attempts to
(15:21):
get a religious exemption, the states refused to do so. Recently,
the department that issues the resident camp licenses amenuted its
regulations requiring children's camps to allow campers to access to
access bathing, dressing, and sleeping facilities designated for the opposite sex. Now,
(15:44):
while the camp requested to run its camp in line
with its religious beliefs, the department denied the request, forcing
a camp to choose between upholding its beliefs about biological
sex or risk losing its license, or alternatively, you can
just abate and in your beliefs, and you can just
abandon your mission to minister to children. The legal counsel
(16:08):
for the Alliance Defending Freedom, Andrea Diil wrote in several
articles quoted across the state, the government has no place
telling religious summer camps that it's lights out for upholding
the religious beliefs about human sexuality. Idrajaje exists to present
the truth of the Gospel to children who are building
character and lifelong memories. But the Colorado government is putting
(16:31):
its dangerous agenda. That is losing popularity across the globe
by the way ahead of its kids. We are urging
the court to allow Idrajaje to operate as it has
for more than seventy five years, as a Christian summer
camp that accepts all campers without fear of being punished
for their beliefs. Children ages six to seventeen, you get
(16:54):
to go backpacking, camping on site activities. Somewhere between twenty
five to three thousand students attend every year, and the
camp's mission is to win souls to Jesus Christ through
the spreading of the Gospel. It's open to children of
all backgrounds, all beliefs. Parents do have to agree to
the camp's policies when Registry.
Speaker 6 (17:17):
No.
Speaker 3 (17:19):
They also note in their press release about it that
every year that they've been in operation since nineteen forty eight,
the camp has met every single license requirement until they
amended it to allow boys in the women's girls bathroom
(17:41):
and girls in the boys' bathroom. So the State of
Colorado is engaged in discrimination. State of Colorado, and yes,
Alexi is right. This is much like the Masterpiece Bakeshop
cake Shop case. Uh, State of Colorado, You're gonna lose
(18:04):
this one, at least I hope you do. And I
hope they ask for attorney fees, and I hope we
have to pay them. I want the taxpayers of Colorado
to pay for this. And by the way, Jared Polus,
you know the governor, you keep telling us we're the
free state of Colorado. How can you call us the
(18:27):
free state of Colorado when you do this? How somebody
explain that one to me?
Speaker 6 (18:39):
Oh ye of short wooden tongue lapeno through you, uh
sixty five eleven rights. Mike, You've got it all wrong.
It's not the free state of Colorado. It's the fee
state of Colorado.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
Oh that's good.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
But then he says, loves the show. That's that's from
Tom loves the show. Tom missing up this show. It
is the free state of Colorado, because that's what Pola says.
And if Pola says it, you know it has to
be true that just because you're pissed off, because everywhere
(19:20):
you turn, I mean, pretty soon you're got to pay
a fee to you know, every public restroom which has
opened to everybody. I went to a place where the
hell was I I gotta start making I gotta start
carrying like one of those little spiral notebooks that fenced
in your shirt pocket with you know, a pencil, you know,
(19:41):
or a pen, a big pen so it can then
you know, leak through my shirt. So I have like,
you know, an ink stain down in the front of
my shirt and then my little notebook.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
You're not a big enough nerd for any of that.
Speaker 4 (19:53):
Well it could be I could.
Speaker 3 (19:54):
I could certainly play the part because I walked into
a restaurant where do we go have dinner? Recently? I
don't know where it was, but walked into a restaurant someplace,
and you know, I'm looking for, you know, to either have,
which I think is really sexist when you think about it.
They either have the figurine, you know, the little carved
(20:15):
out wooden figurine, and one has what appears to be
a dress and the other two just have pants, and
so you know you've got that, or you have senior
or seniorita and you've got to figure out in your mind. Okay,
do I speak Spanish? I don't know, thank you, this
is not in German, you know whatever, or just not
in Hebrew. Wouldn't you even be able to read that?
(20:38):
But this one said on the two restrooms, we don't
care which one you use, just clean.
Speaker 4 (20:47):
Up after yourself.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
They'd had signs made that said that, and I thought, okay,
I can live with that.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
Yeah, you know, just make sure you clean up.
Speaker 3 (20:58):
I think that's really a sign to the men who
might go in put the lid up, and then put
the lid down, and if you spray, take some toilet
paper and clean the rim off.
Speaker 6 (21:10):
You know.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
I think you automatically go to the men for the
dirtier restrooms. You go to the men for the No. No,
we had a subway franchise store in the inside. You
or them all. Yeah, I don't know how fecal matter
gets that hop high. I don't know how women do it.
But the women's restroom was always the worst, really, always consistently,
(21:35):
absolutely terrible. You all creatures are disgusting. But I love
you so much.
Speaker 4 (21:40):
His name is Dragon red Beard. Not that's not me talking.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
Hey, I can't. I said, I love you very much,
but y'all are disgusting when you're out in public. That's right,
Oh so much true.
Speaker 3 (21:51):
Yeah, oftentimes here I'll go to the basement, and I've
been known to use the women's restroom in the basement,
because I don't think anybody except me uses it.
Speaker 2 (22:05):
There's a women's I know there's the one.
Speaker 4 (22:07):
Oh, you didn't know there was.
Speaker 2 (22:08):
I thought it was just the one.
Speaker 4 (22:09):
No, there's two down there.
Speaker 3 (22:11):
Really, you've not got twenty years and you didn't know
there was two restrooms down there.
Speaker 2 (22:16):
I've just always seen the one that's got all the
awards to the Fox.
Speaker 3 (22:19):
Right, he's got all the Fox awards, and then somebody's
put up on the inside of the of the door.
Uh it has a five star rating and says I
would poop here again. I thought that was pretty cool.
Let's take its rights right under the hangar for your
jackular one.
Speaker 2 (22:35):
So if I had to number two here, I don't
think I would go down there do that because everyone
goes down there and do that. Use the ones up
here that nobody uses. So you know it's gonna be okay. Downstairs,
everybody's got that.
Speaker 3 (22:45):
I think I'll just start going to the second floor.
They since that's not our triloor anymore. Yeah, No, I
always go down to the first floor. I mean to
the basement because as you're facing the men's room, Yeah,
just to your left is a very short haulway.
Speaker 2 (23:00):
Yeah, it's got the garage right there.
Speaker 3 (23:03):
You need to look when you step just to the
left of the men's room. Don't look toward the garage,
look to watch. You think is a wall, Okay, it's
actually a very short hallway and there's a women's restroom
in there.
Speaker 5 (23:17):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
And it is.
Speaker 4 (23:19):
It is Tamra clean.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
I mean, the lunch apparently, what because nobody knows.
Speaker 4 (23:28):
I'm the only one that knows it's there.
Speaker 3 (23:30):
I don't know if it says because I don't know
if either one of them have men or women's signs
on them.
Speaker 4 (23:36):
I don't remember that, right.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
And I don't think so. Because the door is always opening.
You can see the toilet right there, just you know,
like at home, it's just the toilet and sink.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
Well, sometimes the door's closed and I have to very
gently check the handle see if it's locked or not.
Or oftentimes I just won't to even check if the
door's closed. I'll just go around the corner and use
the other one and I figure out. I mean, because
you know, what if if some woman that works here
sees me walking out like.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
This, and it's not like it's multiple stalls or urinals anything,
it's just one commode and once it's just.
Speaker 3 (24:09):
One separate, enclosed bathroom. Uh, let's see. I know what
idrajaj means because it's in the story. I didn't think
it was pertinent to the story. But let's go back
to the cameras for a moment. Forty three forty four
(24:32):
rights sounds to me like the Democrats, the Marxists, the
Communists are more concerned about the privacy of illegals than
they are the privacy of citizens. Also, I find out
ironic that police is threatening a special session. I is
Republicans cut taxes. Yeah, well, let police threatening.
Speaker 4 (24:53):
He wants to.
Speaker 3 (24:56):
They're more concerned about the privacy of ille eagles, and
they do not care at all about the privacy of citizens.
I just want I just wanted to kind of clarify
your your statement. They don't care, they don't give a
rats ask about your privacy. Then sixty seven eighty nine rights. Mike,
(25:16):
funny you bring this up. You reminded me of something
I saw this past weekend. I walked out early Saturday
morning from my house and noticed this little white sedan
drive by. I also noticed four cameras mounted on each
corner of the roof. I believe it was reading license plates,
but not one sure. There weren't any markings on the vehicle,
(25:37):
so not sure if it was HOA or police. I
haven't made up my mind how I feel about this yet.
There was there a camera on top of the little
white sedan because if you if there was you know,
like an old bubblegum machine siren, like an old cop car.
He kept its all black. If that, if that was
(25:59):
on there, that was a Google Map car. They were
mapping the streets. Now, if that wasn't one there and
there were four corners, there were, there were cameras just
on the four corners, I'm not sure what that would be.
That means, I don't know it was a license plate
reader or HOA or ho A's are doing that now,
(26:21):
I mean h as. If ho A's are doing that,
they've gone full board communists. Because I always thought ho
A's were communists, but they've gone full bore communists.
Speaker 4 (26:34):
Everybody else was thinking that. I get that. Was it
about that? Since I don't know.
Speaker 3 (26:39):
The early two thousands, probably give or take, governors and
legislator governors and legislators.
Speaker 4 (26:47):
From both parties, both parties.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
Have signed on to this climate agenda in California and
obviously now in Colorado, and it is truly unequivocally making
energy steadily more unaffordable. But I want to just use
because I haven't found the statue yet for Colorado. But
I'm want to focus on California for a moment because
(27:12):
it's going to be true here. Gasoline in California, according
to the Triple A, you know they track gas prices daily,
costs an average of four dollars and seventy eight cents
a gallon, compared to the national average of three dollars
and sixteen cents a gallon. You know, Trump keeps talking
about this gas at a dollar ninety eighty gallon?
Speaker 2 (27:35):
Where is that? Is that up on?
Speaker 3 (27:38):
There's always a gas war up north. Somewhere is that
Highway fifty two and twenty five? Whereas what's the gas
price up there right now? If somebody knows where a
gas we're regular, unleaded is below two dollars a gallon
in the state of Colorado, will send me a text
message and tell me where it is, and we'll just
have a conclave up there today and it all fill
(27:58):
our cars up the cost of electricity in Colorade, in
California is now in the is the highest in the
entire country, coming in at more than thirty cents of
kilawatt per hour thirty point two to two cents to
be precise. Now, people want to blame the discrepancies across
(28:20):
the country on greed, you know, big oil practicing price gouging,
which governments suggests, or utilities lining their shareholders'.
Speaker 4 (28:30):
Pockets or paying their outrageous salaries.
Speaker 3 (28:34):
But at the pump and on your electric bill, California's
high energy prices are better understood if you realize that
this is all self inflicted. This is all a result
of the pursuit of the green energy deals, of the
green energy scam. Everything that's costly in California which we
(28:56):
can trace to that scam will eventually be able to
trace to this a scam here in Colorado. So the note,
and it seems that California always has the highest price
for gas. And I know everybody thinks that the oil
and gas companies are the ones that you know, set
(29:18):
that price. Well, the people that manufacture oil and gas
don't set the price. The wholesalers who buy it and
sell it to the retailers. You know, if you see Grandike,
which is a big truck trucking company out of Oklahoma,
you see Grandyke, which is just a actually they're not
(29:39):
even a wholesaler, they're just they're just the transport. That's
company does not set the price. Whoever, the whoever the
purchasing person is. For uh, Circle K or Quick Trip
or King Supers for that matter, they buy their gas
from a wholesaler. The whole sets the price, and then
(30:01):
whatever that wholesale price is, then whatever the market will
bear in that community where that Quick Trip or the
King Supers is, they set that retail price. So don't
blame don't blame the people that drill for oil and gas.
Don't blame the people that do the refining to take
the you know, that barrel of oil and convert it
into propane and converted into you know, kerosene or jeta
(30:25):
or to regular unleaded or premium unleaded. They're not I mean,
they have their costs and so they sell it at
a price. But then the wholesalers that buy that gas
and then distribute it out to the retailers, they set
the price, and the retailer set the price so quick,
blaming the oil and gas companies, blame yourself for a break,
and blame myself for a break.
Speaker 2 (30:45):
Right here, Michael, this is Cooper seven three nine six
of Lewisville, Kentucky.
Speaker 4 (30:49):
The missus taught me this little rhyme. If you sprinkle
while you tinkle, be a sweetie wipe the CD.
Speaker 5 (30:56):
Actually, Mike, you're kind of close. Actual price of gas
is set by us, the consumers, by how much we drive.
Remember when COVID was at its peak and we were
all locked up and the price dropped to a dollar
fifty at gallon.
Speaker 2 (31:13):
That's because nobody was using it.
Speaker 4 (31:16):
Well, you're absolutely right.
Speaker 3 (31:17):
I mean, ultimately we are the price centers because it'll
be it just it's what the market market will bear.
It's price elasticity, So absolutely right. It's two eighty nine
at the twenty five and three ninety two and then
they've got FJP on there. I I don't know what
that means. Let's see here two fifty four at the
(31:38):
quick trip at seventeen twenty one East one hundred and
twentieth in North Glenn. Uh with regard to the car
driving through a neighborhood with cameras on all four corners.
Forty one twenty nine says it could have been a
weay Mo. No, because if you look at if you
(31:58):
look closely at the weymo, they also have the uh
the rightar the light are now the lighter I think
is on the side. I'm not sure it's what kind
of camera it is on top. Yeah, but they got
the spinning three sixty on top like the the Google
cameras do too. So I don't think it was a
way MO. But I find it absolutely astonishing that an
(32:23):
HOA would have that driving through. I mean, think about
I don't know what those cameras cost, but the cost
of the cameras plus mounting them.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
And then you've got the insurance on the car. You
got to buy the car, you got to maintain the car.
Then you gotta have somebody drive the car all what.
So you can find that somebody's fence wasn't painted right,
or there's you know, somebody's has a gate on the
fence that needs to be repaired a little bit, or
you're like somebody, yeah, exactly, good grief. Yes, I copped
(32:54):
to gender confusion today because I used the But I
don't think I'll have to go. Look, I don't think
either of those restrooms are specified male or female, but
maybe they are.
Speaker 4 (33:05):
I don't know. But whether they are or not, I
don't care. I just don't care.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
Nobody's in there, so I'm gonna go use it.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
We don't even that's where engineering is down to the basement,
and we don't even have engineering.
Speaker 3 (33:18):
Anymore, right exactly. And if you go in the garage,
the garage is like the garage has turned into like
they used to have spots where the muckety MUCKs could park,
right well, now there are those spots for the muckety MUCKs.
Now the garage has become the storeroom. The garage looks
like when Tary and I lived in when we were
living in Alexandria. She didn't live there all the time,
(33:41):
but we had this town home near Old Town Alexandria,
and directly across because it was a you know these
town homes, the density is amazing, well directly across the
street from us. I felt so sorry for the husband
because the woman was a hoarder. And when they the
very first time we saw them open the garage door,
(34:01):
you literally, I mean literally, he had one tiny, little
path where he turned sideways to walk through the garage
to get into the house.
Speaker 4 (34:12):
And then you can see in the green belt. You
can see into their kitchen. Oh my gosh, scary.