All Episodes

May 27, 2025 • 36 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Brian.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
I found that example you gave a cross country running
very interesting. I used to run cross country too, and
I was pretty average in Montana where I ran, I
was spt middle of the pack a lot of the time.
But against the girls, I would have spoked all of
them all the time my times.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Yeah, it's true, and it didn't make this. I remember
the girl's name. She was a runner for Onsted. She
was remarkable. Her name was Heather. And it was about
mile one, so you're talking of like a three mile raise,
three point one miles five k at the time, it
was like nineteen ninety two, and I noticed I had
never experienced this.

Speaker 4 (00:44):
I think about that for a second.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Here I am, I'm the number five runner in cross country,
at least in Michigan. And you're there's seven runners, five
who count toward the score, and then you have two
alternates and you all run boys or girls. And in
these invitationals, it's a big invitational. The boys and the
girls they run together. There's a shotgun, the gun fires,
and you you all go. And by mile one every

(01:07):
race I had run previously, every imitational, there was no
girl that was still with me. And I'm talking i'my
like our talkbacker just said, a middle of the road runner.
My best time, I think was eighteen oh nine. I
was flying on a very flat course in Whitmore Lake, Michigan,
and that was the best race I ever ran. But
like I said, the competitive racers, Lance Fisher from Onsteed,

(01:31):
Michael Ball from Hudson, and these names don't mean anything
to you, but I remember them. Michael Ball ran like
fifteen thirty fifteen thirty for a five k I'm talking
smoke flying.

Speaker 4 (01:44):
And I couldn't keep up with him, but I would.

Speaker 3 (01:47):
Run around nineteen nineteen, nineteen thirty if it was a
real hilly course, maybe twenty twenty minutes. Folks, those are
winning times for girls. They're winning. I'm talking of winning
the whole blank and race. And this girl had there
was with me at mile one. I'm like, she's pushing
me here. So we kind of looked over it one another,
and she's like, do you mind if we run together
because it seems like we're running aout the same speed.

(02:09):
My gall let's do it. So for the second mile
she's kind of hanging with me, like this is gonna
be tough. I've never lost to a girl, and yeah,
that was a point of personal pride, and it wasn't
that misogyn No, it's just it's just the fact of
the matter. So we get to the third bile and
give a credit. She's hanging in there. She's way ahead
all the other girls, by the way. I mean way ahead,

(02:32):
by the way. She's a girl. It's very feminine, very
kind of pretty. Actually, we get about so that that
point one of the three point one it means something.
And we get around this final turn and then there's
a straightaway that goes right into the ski lodge. There
this beautiful invitation to suck Valley in the Irish Shills
in Michigan. And I turn on the after burners and

(02:53):
I sprint to the finish and.

Speaker 4 (02:56):
She can't keep up with me. She wins.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
She wins the girls race by a lot, and eat
several boys doing so.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
But here's my point.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
The best girl, she's the best, might beat some of
the boys some of the time, but she's never going
to beat all of the boys any of the time.
It's not going to happen. That's why there are girls
sports boys sports.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
That I have to explain this in twenty twenty five.

Speaker 3 (03:21):
If you would have told me back then, well before
that race, Red Fox had just died and we gave
a tribute Red Fox. We're gonna run the race for
Red Fox, Sanford and Son. This is how long ago
it was? Okay, thirty three years ago, a third of
a century ago, a third of a century ago. Had
you told me Ryan, you know you're gonna be a
radio talk show host filling in for Michael Brown in

(03:43):
twenty twenty five, and you're going to have to explain
why you and Heather shouldn't have been in the same race,
Like that's ridiculous. I'm here in nineteen ninety two and
I know that, well, no, no thing.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
Times are going to change. Well, that's point blank ridiculous.
And it is.

Speaker 3 (04:01):
It is for anybody who's ever competed like our talkbacker
just mentioned right there, if you have similar experiences, and
again what I'm looking for here, specifically thirty three one
oh three the text line, are there examples in the
state of Colorado chassa CHSAA where transgender identifying biological boys

(04:23):
have competed in girls' sports and one Now, this portion
of the quote I want to make sure get back.

Speaker 5 (04:29):
To it is okay for our students to experience disappointment.
We cannot protect our children from all the disappointments in life,
but we can encourage them to develop resilience. This growth
mindset will benefit them in numerous situations.

Speaker 3 (04:44):
Why does that have to apply to the girls competing?
Why can't what she just said this mom, this absolutely
head up her backside? Mom, apply that exact statement we
just heard to trans individuals.

Speaker 4 (04:57):
You're going to live with disappointment. You're not going to
get what you want you might.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
Why why do girls have to sacrifice because it's not
just one race. She's like, it's just a race, it's
a spot on a team. That that boy, that biological
boy who's had no reconstructive surgery whatsoever. Not that that
young person should they shouldn't. But he's a boy that
you grow your hair out, wear makeup and decide I'm

(05:22):
going to be a girl today. Doesn't cut. It doesn't
make you a girl. That's that's woman face, that's girl face,
just like blackface. I'm calling it what it is. That's
what it is. Don't even get talk about my fiance, Kelsey.
Don't even get her worked up on this. I mean
she is more militant. About this issue than I am,
and I don't blame her. Girls and women should be

(05:43):
fired up over this, and many are. Jennifer say xxxy athletics.
I've talked to him many occasions.

Speaker 4 (05:50):
JK. Rowling takes a lot of heat on X for this.

Speaker 3 (05:52):
Martina Navrazlova, who is to the left of us on
every single issue and hate Donald Trump, is on board
with our stance on this issue. And yet here are
these Transhausen by proxy moms, these awfuls as I called
them earlier, affluent white female liberals, that they think they're
better than everybody.

Speaker 4 (06:13):
They're more feeling and caring, as Russel and Ball used
to say, because they care.

Speaker 3 (06:17):
What about the girls that are being displaced. That boy
took a spot on a team from a girl. That
spot does not exist because the boy took it, and
the girl, any girl, the girl, the last girl.

Speaker 4 (06:31):
On the team.

Speaker 3 (06:32):
As I just mentioned five count towards points. It's called
cross country seven on the whole team. That seventh girl
that should be on the team not on the team
because the boy is the medals that were won by
the boy. Girls didn't get the scholarship that this boy
who's pretending.

Speaker 4 (06:48):
To be a girl might get won't go to a girl.
You see where I'm going with this.

Speaker 3 (06:52):
This continues to have residual, echoing snowball effects based on
one individual. There's a ripple effect that everything flows downhill
from that. Even Gavin Newsom is coming to terms with this,
Governor California on his own podcast with Charlie Kirkle. Oh yeah,
it's an issue of fairness here, Damn right. It's an

(07:15):
issue of fairness, and nobody seems to be caring on
the left about the girls and women involved in this.
And that's where I come down on the matter. Thirty
three to one to three. Here's another issue in the
news that I wanted to make sure to address and
talk to this to a dragon about this. During the break,
there was an incident over the weekend. I don't follow

(07:35):
the English Premier League of soccer very closely, but I
like Liverpool and it's simply because of the association with
the Beatles. I think Michael Brown would appreciate that. But
they won apparently the English Premier League title, and they
were celebrating this in the streets of Liverpool and a
prey and then a car decided. The car decided of course,

(07:56):
remember the headlines from New Orleans and New Year's Eve.
This car just nowhere, willy nilly, unbeknownst to anyone, plowed
through this group of people. Now use that as an
example New Orleans. That individual was a member of ISIS,
had been radicalized, had I think an ISIS flag on

(08:17):
the back of his vehicle. There was some stuff going
on with that. But what happened in the news headlines, AP, Reuters, NBC, etc.
We didn't know the identity of the driver for some time.
Why not because it was not convenient for their narrative
that we'd be inclusive and that radical Muslims are not
a threat to our way of life in the West
American society or here in the United Kingdom. Now, what

(08:39):
I posted on x I got some blowback for, but
turns out I was exactly right. I was proven right. No,
I like being right, but I don't like why I'm
right in this instance. What I said was, if this
was let's say, in Britain, there wouldn't be one of these,
but let a MAGA supporting middle aged white dude, we

(09:00):
would know that person's identity front and center, and if
it was a radical extremist Muslim person. Well, they want
to bury that in the headlines. Let me tell you
the game on that. Having been on the inside, they're
trying to wait out the news cycle. They're trying to
wait for this Liverpool parade car crash to age through
the news cycle, so it's no longer top of the

(09:22):
top of the above the fold in the old newspaper
terms or leading the newscast. Once that's all said and
done and it all quiets down a little bit, then
they come out with the details in the New York
page New York Times, page seventeen. Here we go, New
York Times article UK Liverpool parade crash.

Speaker 4 (09:43):
Who is the suspect?

Speaker 3 (09:46):
The police said that the car stopped at the scene
and that a fifty three year old white British man
from the Liverpool area had been arrested. We believe him
to be the driver of the vehicle. Ms Simms confirmed
at the news conference. The police, who have not identified
the man or released information about the suspect. Less than
two hours after the episode occurred, as posts on social

(10:07):
media were already erupting with alternative theories about what might
have happened and why get this. The decision to disclose
the driver's race and nationality, so quickly appeared calculated to
diffuse the rumors and misinformation that have spread after other
recent violent episodes in Britain, thus proving my point. Another

(10:29):
New York Times article has the following headline, Police quickly
gave details on Liverpool car.

Speaker 4 (10:35):
Ramming, aiming to prevent rumors.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
What did they just do? Fifty three year old British
white dude. That's my point, that's the very point I'm making.
Of course they watched that. Oh it wasn't an oh
Muslim person. We have to fight the misinformation that's out there.
In course, if you tweet something wrong in Britain, you
could be jailed, They could come knocking at your door, and,

(11:01):
as Brownie puts, the Gestapo, they might just haul you away.

Speaker 4 (11:05):
From mean tweet. They're doing it in Germany and they're
doing it in the UK.

Speaker 3 (11:09):
So as an attempt to blunt that, oh no, no, no, no,
it was a fifty three year old white dude, British guy.

Speaker 4 (11:16):
Would they have come out with that information that quickly if.

Speaker 3 (11:19):
This was a twenty thirty odd year old Muslim jee hottist. No,
The answer is no, of course they wouldn't that. I'm
just citing what's happening in the news cycles. Don't shoot
the messenger. I'm just reporting what's happening, and you've reacted
to that. You know what's going on out there. People
that listen to this show, to this station, that consume

(11:42):
their own media, make their own decisions. Know there is
stilted coverage in this because of the preferred narratives that
are going on around it.

Speaker 4 (11:49):
But because a middle aged white dude, did oh get
that out there?

Speaker 3 (11:53):
Publicize that, make sure they know that wasn't a Muslim
jee hottist. But that was the motivation? Should they said
it right there in the article. I just read it
to you three three one zero three, U Ryan, I
was out of the room. Did I hear you use
the term blackface? Brilliant gender blackface? I'm stealing that. Well,
it's woman face and I didn't come up with that

(12:15):
term either. My fiancee Kelsey uses that term. And that's
what it is. What I'm saying is in performance art,
let's say, if you're doing the groundling Saturday night live
ensemble kind of impromptu improv sketch acting, there's a saying
you got to commit to the bit. Got to commit

(12:37):
to the bit. You gotta immerse yourself in the character
and believe it and so that the audience believes it.
If you're gonna commit to the bit, uh, you gotta
go full throttle here. And you can't just be a
boy or man and just decide I grew my hair long,
I put the makeup on, I'm wearing a dress. I'm
a woman now, anymore than an individual such as myself,

(12:58):
or let's say Dragon, who was as not black as
anybody I've ever met. He decides one day, I'm red beer,
but I'm gonna be a black man today, puts on
the black face. I mean, you would rightly mock him,
ridicule him, and say you're not a black dude. Dude,
your melanin content is not enough. Not gonna do it
slightly on the low side. Rachel Dulzel now proved us

(13:21):
all wrong. If you remember her with the big frizzy
hair and the kind of tanning agent product I don't know,
And it wasn't she like a local leader of an
NAACP branch there?

Speaker 4 (13:32):
Yeah? Sure?

Speaker 3 (13:33):
Now does she have a place in society now as
appropriating a black identity? Oh no, no, no, They outed
her on that, and it was no longer considered kosher.
I don't know why this can I'll tell you why. No,
I will tell you why it can apply to females.

Speaker 4 (13:49):
You know why.

Speaker 3 (13:50):
I'm sorry for the ladies in the audience. It's not you,
it's not your prison company excluded. But there are too
many of you women.

Speaker 4 (13:56):
They go, oh, I don't know. I guess they can
be women along.

Speaker 3 (14:00):
Was it if every single girl and woman stood up
and said, no, no, that's this is not happening. That
is make believe, That is the land of make believe.
Mister Rogers would take us there on the trolley. We
can go there. We can do that. You can pretend,
you can portray this character, you can present yourself as
the opposite gender. But when you demand that you receive

(14:22):
like women's rights. This is no less ridiculous than the
episodes of South Park where mister Garrison changes gender and
Dragon Scott his head in his hands right now.

Speaker 4 (14:33):
But they make a point.

Speaker 3 (14:34):
Of at least at that time that now we're talking
at least ten fifteen years ago, that these episodes were happening, like, okay, well,
he can't insist upon x Y and Z, and yet
he does, and in the show it's kind of well,
there was.

Speaker 6 (14:48):
A point in time where mister Garrison also thought missus Garrityson,
excuse me, he needed an abortion right. She hadn't gotten
her period, so she was very worried that she was pregnant.

Speaker 4 (14:58):
And there are those that would make that argument.

Speaker 3 (15:01):
And there are those that are on TikTok and X
and whatever else, biological men who transition that suddenly describe
and discover that they have menstrual cramps and pains.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
And I'm here to tell you, no, you do not why.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
I don't know because I took seventh grade life science
and tenth grade biology, and I could tell you that
dragon and yours truly, and even MDB, I'll speak for him.

Speaker 4 (15:25):
We don't have ovaries.

Speaker 3 (15:27):
That produce eggs, that travel through fallopian tubes that are discharged.
I'm sorry to have to go through this anatomy, but
apparently this needs to be discussed and explained. We don't
have that monthly cycle because we are dudes.

Speaker 4 (15:44):
No, this is difficult. It's a tough concept to grasp.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
I can never be female, no matter how I try,
or how much I might want to be I can't
be my body the way I was born at conception,
I had what's called a Y chromosome. Then when I
was a boy and I was going through puberty, and
that was a difficult time. You know, your voice changes,
things happen, Yeah, you know.

Speaker 4 (16:08):
Yeah, shocker.

Speaker 6 (16:09):
It's a tough time for everybody.

Speaker 3 (16:11):
Everybody, and it's okay to go through it, but so
many kids are told that are we having an exceptionally
tough time?

Speaker 4 (16:17):
And it can be tougher for some than others.

Speaker 3 (16:18):
I get that, But when it's tough and these kids
are vulnerable and they're very low in confidence and self esteem,
then then they're preyed upon by this trans ideology.

Speaker 4 (16:30):
Well, maybe you're not the gender then.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
That you're currently representing. Maybe you were born in the
wrong body.

Speaker 6 (16:37):
Or on an offshoot, you know. Groomed by a lesbian
teacher at Columbine.

Speaker 3 (16:42):
Ooh, topical and local. Very well done their dragon. Yeah,
the grooming that takes place under the guise of something else.
Talked about this with Aaron Lee, who was as well
spoken on this topic as anybody, and she went through
this nightmare first hand with her daughter, who is who
was invited to join at the age I believe of twelve,

(17:05):
twelve year old girl going through it tough times. Huberty
starts for girls. It's really tough. Goes to what was
described as an art club, Folks, it was not an
art club. Go to art club movie on YouTube. Google
that online. There's a website too, and watch it. This
was a mirage and a facade and a veneer and

(17:26):
a false representation of what this after school club was.
Had nothing to do with art. It had to do
with a gay community LGBT, and they, over the course
of a couple of hours, convinced this young girl that
she was actually a boy. And it took Aaron Lee
and her husband, the girl's father, over a year to

(17:48):
get her back on track, her mind in the right place.
Here's another part of our wonderful Colorado culture currently under law.

Speaker 4 (17:55):
A therapist that you go to for something.

Speaker 3 (17:56):
Like this cannot recommend non treat meaning maybe we're going
to talk our way out of this. You don't need
to transition to the other gender. Cannot advocate for that position.
There's only one right way here. Kid thinks here she
is trans, they are trans. You have to enforce and
endorse and reinforce that and our answer on this side,

(18:18):
the equation in the land of sanity, in common sense,
is absolutely not. The first course of action should be
maybe this is a phase, and maybe counseling will do
the trick.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
Since Dan Bongino has announced that he cash for Telman,
FBI are reopening three cases, which include the DC bombing,
the cocaine in the White House, and the leak on
the Dobs case. The results should be interesting and will
be very telling.

Speaker 3 (18:48):
Yes, there's been some considerable movement on each of those three. Now,
the DC bombing, I anticipate alexis talking about what happened
on January sixth, where there was allegedly a bomb outside
the DNC where Vice President elect Kamala Harris was stationed.

(19:08):
Someone discovered said bomb. Again, I'm using that in quotes,
whether it was a bomb or not, or whether it
was planet and fake.

Speaker 4 (19:15):
And we don't know that. We should know that.

Speaker 3 (19:18):
That individual reported discovering a backpack or whatever it was.

Speaker 4 (19:23):
There's some video of this too, by the way, to.

Speaker 3 (19:25):
A couple of nearby DC police officers. Yet we have
no record of this happening. It's been scrubbed. The text
message exchanges the timing of that the cell phone data.

Speaker 4 (19:38):
Where is it?

Speaker 3 (19:39):
And if this person rightfully should be considered and exalted
as a hero having discovered a bomb, having saved the
life of the vice president elect, wouldn't we know that
person's name. Wouldn't that person have done all the talk
show circuits and said, hey, I found this backpack?

Speaker 4 (19:57):
Seriously asked yourself that of course person? Why not?

Speaker 3 (20:01):
Why in this case? Is that still a mystery. I'm
glad they're getting to the bottom of that now. There
is one issue that ALECSA left out there that I
just want to put out there for conversation's sake.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
And I'm not a conspiracy theorist.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
However, we're hearing now from both Cash Betell and Dan
Bongino that yes, indeed, in fact, Jeffrey Epstein killed himself,
Diddy though the security cameras were turned off, a lot
of funny business going on there.

Speaker 6 (20:30):
Dragon, I'd say that the environment was right for him
to do that to himself. Okay, see that's you know,
because him not doing it and him getting killed, you know,
you know they but these are the big wigs that
are saying, no, it didn't happen. So I will tend
to believe that, but I will also believe that the

(20:52):
environment was right perfect for him to do so and
nobody around to.

Speaker 4 (20:57):
Stop him from doing so.

Speaker 6 (20:58):
Especially because he was in a place where he should
have been stopped.

Speaker 3 (21:03):
Yeah, in the flight logs, where are those?

Speaker 4 (21:06):
Where?

Speaker 3 (21:07):
Why is there this kind of restrictor plate to use
a NASCAR term, on the flow of information regarding the
Epstein logs and who is on them? What's going on there?
Where's Pam Bondi in this? It doesn't smell right to me.
It doesn't pass the smell test. And for Bongino to
go zero to sixty then back to zero on this.
If you were a regular viewer listener to the Dan

(21:28):
Bongino podcast, which I was, and I loved it, I
think he did a great job.

Speaker 4 (21:33):
He was kind of like I was.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
And I'm not saying I'm not concluding that Jeffrey Epstein
was murdered, but like Dragon just did. As a detective,
you have this mindset, do not go in with any
preconceived notions or conclusions that you jump to without evidence,
allow for every scenario to be possible, and then let
the facts guide you to whatever the truth is.

Speaker 4 (21:54):
And maybe Dan Bongino has done that. But I do
know is that.

Speaker 3 (21:57):
He was highly skeptical at one time that Jeffrey Epstein
killed himself in that jail cell.

Speaker 4 (22:03):
And now I've.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
Seen him interviewed and I sit down, it's like he
was mind wiped or brainwall I don't know. And I
like Dan Vagino a lot, don't get me wrong, but
something did not ring true to me about like what's
going on here. I just I know a lot of
you are the same way. In my default position now,
I'm so jaded. I have such a jaundiced eye to
all of this. Many of us are never going to

(22:25):
believe anything they tell us at this point on that subject.

Speaker 4 (22:28):
Of many others, COVID other one, I.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
Mean, like Alexa, I'm so glad RFK Junior is in
there now, I'm so glad doctor Marty mckarey is in there.
You know, so many others. Jaye Bardicharia another one.

Speaker 4 (22:41):
You know.

Speaker 3 (22:41):
Get to the root of the matter here, Get to
the truth, whatever it is. Tell us the truth, no
matter how inconvenient it might be, or how might it
might hurt her feelings or make us distrust government. We'll
trust you more if you come out with the truth,
even if it's quite a bit late.

Speaker 4 (22:55):
In this case. Again, that text.

Speaker 3 (22:57):
Line is three three one zero three one. Did you
hear Jared Polis? Kind of the topic of the day.
And we'll be getting to an interview coming up in
our final hour with Shannon Adcock, and she's doing great
work in Illinois. Kind of a sister state to us
in many ways from a policy, a democratic domination of

(23:18):
their legislature and their governor's office in a state, I
might add again comparable to Colorado. My grandfather had a
farm in Ava, Illinois. Southern Illinois, folks, that's not blue.
It's not blue, Carbondale, Cairo, you know, all down in
southern Illinois. Much of the state land wise is read.

(23:41):
The next time one of your lib friends family members
talks about.

Speaker 7 (23:44):
Well there's jerrymandering and the Republicans and look what they
did in Alabama and Rondo Santis in Florida, print out
and show them a map of the congressional districts in Illinois.

Speaker 4 (23:55):
It's a joke.

Speaker 3 (23:57):
It looks like a very poorly designed jigsaw by a
four year old. There are little jagged edges and weird
shapes that stratch to make sure that the Republican districts
cover as much land as possible that couldn't possibly go blue,
so they got to account for those.

Speaker 4 (24:14):
But then their blue districts.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
Are we're in a kind of and force our way
in there, square peg, roundhole, that sort of thing. So
the gerrymandering in Illinois is real. But there's a lot
of people in Illinois that are not being represented by
their government because everything's dominated by Chicago.

Speaker 4 (24:29):
Sound familiar.

Speaker 3 (24:31):
Yeah, it's a lot like Colorado and the Denver Boulder
Corridor and the two college campuses in Boulder and Fort Collins,
and again the Bell Weather. To me, although we've seen
progress in places like places like Pueblo or even Aurora
to a degree, Arapahole County has gone solid blue, and
at one time that was not the case.

Speaker 4 (24:52):
It was rather red. And that's why George W. Bush
won Colorado twice. And that's changed.

Speaker 3 (24:58):
The demographics of that the county which I reside have changed,
and the fact that irapah is so highly populated as well,
and it's at least sixty forty blue. To me, that's
one of the big determining factors in our elections, along
with the larger populations again in the Denver Boulder corridor
and of course Fort Collins as well. There's just not
enough out state rural areas and voters to offset that

(25:22):
at a statewide election.

Speaker 4 (25:23):
Well so goes Illinois as well.

Speaker 3 (25:24):
Shannon Adcock, the founder of a Wake Illinois, has battled
these woke policies in Illinois when it comes to the
trans agenda, and what I mean by that is the
ideology individual transgender people exist. There is such a thing
as gender dysphoria. I always want to point this out.
Every American citizen, including transgendered individuals, deserve individual liberties and

(25:49):
rights under the Constitution, so far as they do not
infringe on the rights of others. And this is where
I get into the gray area of no. I can't
go that far when you're taking spots away from girls
and women that are rightfully theirs under Title nine. And
how did I become the feminist, by the way, how
did that happen? I don't know, but I guess I am,

(26:10):
and I'll proudly I guess where that labeled.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
Because I think.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
Girls and women deserve to have their spaces and sports protected.
I don't think that's a bold hot take it shouldn't be,
but so many. I don't know if there's self loathing women.
I mean, we've got a text along these lines too,
thirty three, one oh three, Ryan, Exactly where are all
the women that were protesting for women's rights?

Speaker 4 (26:34):
Did they all get disappeared?

Speaker 3 (26:36):
Yes, where's Gloria Steinem She's still alive, by the way,
into her mid eighties now. But that whole second wave
feminist movement of the late sixties early seventies, burning the bras,
you know, equal rights in the workplace, equal pay for
equal work, where are they now?

Speaker 4 (26:53):
Some of them are vocal. Jk. Rowling, Martin and Avratilova.
There's a few.

Speaker 3 (26:58):
And even when I had this conversation with Jennifer Say,
she was not a Republican much she is now. Jennifer
lives right here in Colorado now, founder of xx x
Y Athletics. She was railroaded out of her position as
an executive for Levi's in San Francisco, California.

Speaker 4 (27:13):
It wasn't about this, but it might as well have been.

Speaker 3 (27:16):
It was about COVID and the lockdowns and protocols there
that were draconian. But when you push somebody like Jennifer
say to the right, where she was a pretty solid
Trump supporter. She didn't love everything Trump did, but she
ended up voting for him because it was the only alternative.
To support girls and women was one of the first
things President Trump did when he was sworn into office

(27:36):
the second time, he signed an executive order protecting girls
and women in their sports. And he's battling that out
with the likes of the state of Maine and continuing,
this is a hill that the Democrats seemed determined to
die on, and die they will.

Speaker 4 (27:51):
Politically.

Speaker 3 (27:51):
I'm saying this is an eighty twenty issue, but they
are firmly dug in on the twenty percent side of this.
And the only reason why it's twenty is I don't
think enough people have been exposed to the real ramifications
of this.

Speaker 4 (28:06):
And once they are.

Speaker 3 (28:07):
Once it's your daughter or your niece, or your sister
or your wife who has a spot taken from her
because a transgender individual who is biologically male has a
superior advantage physically, physiologically in a particular sport. Well, now
it's real. Now it hits home. But until then, oh,
what's the big deal? If a girl loses a race,

(28:30):
they need to learn how to lose in life. This
is coming from the left, the land of trophies for everybody.
The participation trophy crowd wants us to learn how to lose. Now,
wants girls to learn how to lose to boys and
just deal with it. Just accept Wait a minute that
I don't know. That kind of sounds m misogynistic, and

(28:54):
it's coming from the left, and it's coming from women.
It's coming from the awfuls I talked about. I got
a text about that too, Ryan awful. Can it contain
a you that you neglect that stands for ugly? Now,
I'm not going to get into that. That is Iya
the Beholder Territory and Texter If you want to do that,
feel free. But they are affluent, they are white, they

(29:15):
are female, and they are Liberals. So I will stick
with that. And those are the types of voters right now,
especially in the state of Colorado, that are really determining
whether or not these policies are going to continue and
until they turn against it and go you know what.
I don't like much of anything about the Republican Party,
but this issue is important to me and I'm not
going to vote for a Democrat that's going to support
the infiltration of girls sports and spaces by biological males

(29:39):
until they stand up against that. Then this is what
we're going to get in Colorado and in Illinois and
again coming up later. She Hannon Adcock will join us
in our fourth and final hour. She is the founder
of Awake Illinois. Fighting this battle in Naperville, Illinois centered
around a biological male beating out seventh grade girls and
attract meet winning medals in multiple events. In that track,

(30:00):
Nate time out wrapping up our number two, the situation
without Michael Brown, Ryan Schuling filling and along with Dragon
back after this.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
Now that the books are out, people are opening up.
It will be interesting to see over the next few
months what collaboration on stories we get. Over the weekend,
supposedly a secret service agent had dropped the information that
Jill was very controlling of Bidom, made him sit in

(30:28):
the corner and even locked him in the bathroom. I'm
sure we're going to be shocked by the truth when
it all comes out.

Speaker 3 (30:36):
Now, Dragon, missus Dragon, I struck up a kinship at
a film screening. I remember that. You know she's a
great gal. Has she ever locked you in the bathroom
for any reason. No, she ever tried.

Speaker 4 (30:51):
No.

Speaker 3 (30:54):
Do you think Tamra has ever locked Michael Brown in
the bathroom? Yeah, there's no doubt in my mind. Are
they at the undisclosed location?

Speaker 4 (31:03):
I think I believe so. Yeah, Okay, it's near Taos,
New Mexico.

Speaker 3 (31:08):
Three three one zero three. This strange voice you're hearing
if you are so inclined, you can hear more weekdays
two to four pm. I know, summer you'll get this
guy off the radio already, But Brian Showling Live does
air weekdays two to four pm, and you can hear
it on six point thirty k how as many of
you are right now, or subscribe, download, listen to the

(31:30):
podcast at your leisure or leisure depending on how you
say that word, and usually those podcast episodes run about
thirty six minutes. There are far fewer commercial interruptions there.
But those live read sponsors that I love so much,
I know Michael does two those are included in the
RSL podcast.

Speaker 4 (31:50):
Look forward to your participation there as well.

Speaker 3 (31:53):
A lot of confusion on the text line about who
these messages are being sent to. We're getting them, we're
getting them, but this is my or Michael Dragon, Ryan
super Shoe.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
I don't know who I'm texting.

Speaker 3 (32:04):
Speaking of the five K and the differences between men
and women, the men's record is twelve forty nine. The
women's record is fourteen thirteen. That's a huge difference. It's
a huge difference. It's very big. Of one twenty four.
That's the only proof you need that men can't be
in women's sports. It's the only proof you need, but
it's not the only proof that exists.

Speaker 4 (32:24):
I've used this example too.

Speaker 3 (32:26):
One of the reasons Martina and Novretlova is so vocal
about this issue. It's one of the few issues where
she lands on the square that we occupy the right side.
And I mean that both literally and figuratively. She knows
if she in the seventies and eighties, where she dominated
the sport of women's tennis, she's as good as it gets.
She's probably the second best ever professional women's tennis player,

(32:47):
beside Serena Williams. However, had Martina been matched up against
let's say, Jimmy Connors or John McEnroe of her time,
if a Lendel, Stephan Edbergh, Forrest Becker, she knows she
likely would have lost six love six love might have
won a a game, maybe, but maybe not. And even

(33:10):
Serena Williams said on David Letterman, I have this audio
somewhere too in the archives. Andy Murray really wanted a player,
and I think he had the best of intentions, but
she was like Andy no. And Andy Murray was a
very good British tennis player.

Speaker 4 (33:22):
He won Wimbledy.

Speaker 3 (33:23):
He was the first brit to do so, I think
since going back to the early twentieth century. But Serena
knew that if she had to play Roger Federer or
Raphael Nadal or Andy Murray, that it would be an
absolute obliteration and that would not be a poor reflection
on Serena, and it wouldn't have been on Martina Navratilova.

(33:43):
And everybody goes, oh, Billy jen King beat Bobby Riggs.
Bobby Riggs was my age right now playing Billy Jean
King in her prime back then. It was in nineteen seventies,
before my time, but I know that it happened. And
Bobby Riggs in his prime was very good, very good
tennis player, but not the best, not the all time best,
and she did beat him. The Battle of the sexes.

(34:05):
But then you want another example, I was talking to
Dragon about this one. Remember the ridiculousness those of you
who are maybe gen X in a little bit older.
Andy Kaufman early eighties decided as a shtick as a
bit and he got together with Jerry Lawler, would later
be known as the King Jerry Lawler in wrestling pro wrestling.
Decided he was going to wrestle women and only women,

(34:27):
and he'd get in the ring and he'd talk a
lot of trash and he'd challenge any woman in the
arena to come take on Andy Kaufman, the intergender champion
of the world. If you want to see more on this,
watch the movie Man in the Moon starring Jim Carrey.

Speaker 4 (34:42):
Very good movie.

Speaker 3 (34:43):
Andy Kaufman was a comic genius of his time, and
this was an element. Again we're talking early eighties folks,
Like forty five years ago. He was making fun of
the fact that, of course Andy Kaufman, the scrawny SNL
star would also star on Taxi and Andy Kaufman and
giving him take it rout could defeat most, if not all,

(35:04):
not all women. Now that's the thing. Can some women
like Amazonian brand of Ptarth from Game of Throne stypes.

Speaker 4 (35:11):
Can they defeat a lot of men?

Speaker 3 (35:13):
Sure, but the best woman against the best man in sports,
the man's winning every time. The average woman against the
average man, man's winning every time. And Andy Kaufman it
was a joke, It was a punchline because of course,
you know he's beaten up on these women, these you

(35:34):
know this is a significant disadvantage. But why did Andy
Kaufman have that figured out in nineteen eighty But we're
confused about it in twenty twenty five, We're not confused
about it. It's intentional, it's obfuscation, and that's what's happening here.

Speaker 4 (35:52):
More of your text. There's a lot of great ones
coming in.

Speaker 3 (35:54):
At thirty three one to oh three, we're halfway through
this odyssey, as it were, the situation with out Michael Brown.
Dragons still around. You can text them as well, ignore
me altogether. Thirty three one oh three
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Boysober

Boysober

Have you ever wondered what life might be like if you stopped worrying about being wanted, and focused on understanding what you actually want? That was the question Hope Woodard asked herself after a string of situationships inspired her to take a break from sex and dating. She went "boysober," a personal concept that sparked a global movement among women looking to prioritize themselves over men. Now, Hope is looking to expand the ways we explore our relationship to relationships. Taking a bold, unfiltered look into modern love, romance, and self-discovery, Boysober will dive into messy stories about dating, sex, love, friendship, and breaking generational patterns—all with humor, vulnerability, and a fresh perspective.

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.