Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Quickly, can you name the two US senators from California.
You can surely get one, and if you're watching the
news yesterday, you finally probably got two. I confess that
(00:22):
I didn't remember the second one. I guess I'm just
an old fart still back in the Barbara Boxer and
Diane Feinstein era era, or for that matter, of the
Kamala Harris era Alex Padilla. Who's Alex Padilla?
Speaker 2 (00:42):
You ask.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Twenty four hours ago, I could not have picked this
dirt bag up out of the lineup. And tomorrow, don't
worry tomorrow, Well maybe because I might talk about him tomorrow.
By Sunday he'll be forgotten. But for that very brief
moment that everybody that's online, for everybody that wants to
(01:06):
be on TikTok or on x or on Facebook, or
they you know, they get so excited because they're on
TV or they get their name mentioned in the newspaper.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Oh it's just like that.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
Oh yeah, he's the United States senator known for a
stupid stunt during a Christy Nome press conference being held
in Los Angeles. There are a couple of things about
the video that was taken by Bill Mlusion of Fox News,
(01:38):
who I heard say something to the effect that he
was obviously there for Christy Nomes, the Secretary of Homeland Security,
there for her press conference. He didn't have a cameraman
with him, He was just there to take notes for
the press conference. And he heard a kerfuffle, He heard
a disturbance, and somebody was in the room. Bill Mallusion,
(02:01):
the reporter for Fox News, didn't recognize him, and he
came bursting into the conference room where the news conference
is being held.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
And shouts his name.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
And makes a bee line, aggressive bee line for where
Christinome is standing. How many months ago has it been
now since Donald Trump almost lost his life by a
tenth of an inch? I mean literally, like by a
tenth of an inch. And how long ago was it
(02:38):
before the Secret Service captured another attempted assassin on the
golf c at the golf club. And then there was
that third one out in California, ironically that I never
really thought should be included, But if you wanted to,
just if you were just trying together every potential.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Assassin, oh oh, oh, you know.
Speaker 1 (03:00):
What we should add in the mullas in Iran, they've
got Trump on a hit list, So yeah, we had them.
But in Butler, Pennsylvania, Donald Trump came with a tenth
of an inch of losing his life.
Speaker 2 (03:13):
Frankly, to be very very blunt about.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
It, of all of us watching on live television Trump's
brains being blown to bits, it wouldn't be this sub
bruder film from the Kennedy assassination.
Speaker 2 (03:25):
Oh no, this would be an HDTV.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
We would see the gray matter splattered on all the
people behind him.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
We would watch the skull explode.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
That's how close it was. And I want to be
graphy because nobody want you. Where's the interest in that?
Where's the interest in? We had a president, a former president,
running to become the next president by millimeters, having his
(03:59):
blame brain's blown out on national TV. And we still
don't know much about crooks the guy or the failures
of the Secret Service. We don't know anything, and nobody
seems to care. But here's what we do care about.
And if you're a member of the United States Secret Service,
here's what you care about. Or if you're a member
(04:20):
of the Federal Protective Service, or you're on any detail,
for any member of the President's detail, the Vice president's detail,
or anybody in the cabinet, or for that matter, even
Susie Wild's the chief of staff. You know that the
threat is real, and you know that at any given moment,
(04:43):
somebody's going to come lunging and try to take out
whomever your principle is. In this case, that happened to
be the Secretary of Homeland Security. So this dirt bag
comes running in. Now there is and boy that they
Just watch. If you don't believe me, just watch the
(05:07):
next time you see a member of Congress senator House
on television. Check the lapel, or if it's a woman,
check her blouse, her jacket, whatever she has on. You
will see on I think they wear it on their
left I don't.
Speaker 3 (05:26):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (05:26):
Sorry, I don't remember particulars. But it is a security
pin that identifies them. It's like a credential. It's like
a cop carrying a badge. It identifies them either as
a member of the United States Senate or a member
of the United States House of Representatives. And that is
(05:48):
a clear indication to anybody around them that might be
involved in security that this is a person that you
probably don't have to worry about. Even even when I
was in the president's bubble. Sometimes yes, sometimes no, but
sometimes yes, even when you're in the bubble, and and
(06:13):
and Frankly, I knew Eddie, who was the head of
Bush's detail, so he would know who I was, But
that didn't mean everybody else knew who I was. You
might get a little pin that you clamp onto your lapel.
That might and every day it might change. Some days
you would have it, some days you wouldn't. But it
would be a certain color, it might be a particular shape,
(06:33):
like some days it might be a triangle. Sometimes it
might be a pentagon. Sometimes it might be a square.
But it might sometimes may or may not have a
letter in it, but it was for that day. It
was the Secret Services indication, particularly if you were making
multiple stops where you might have multiple interactions with different
agents of the Secret Service, to indicate that, yes, you're
(06:54):
allowed to be in the bubble. Yes you're allowed to
approach the president. Yes you can walk up, you can
you can. You know if you just walk up on stage,
the way's going to do anything.
Speaker 4 (07:05):
Well.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
These little pins that these senators and representatives wear is
an indication that they're a member of the House and
the Senate So, for example, when they walk into the House,
a House office building, or a Senate office building, and
they walk into the US Capitol, or for that matter,
when they walk through TSA, it allows him not always,
but sometimes, depending on how upity they are, it may
(07:29):
allow them to bypass security. So Alex Padilla walks into
this crowded conference room where Christin Noman is doing a
press conference. He announces, I'm Alex Padilla, and my adjective
(07:50):
or my verb is charges. He charges the podium, shouting
at Christine Nome. Well, just like you probably didn't know
who Alex Padilla was, I didn't know who Alex Padilla was.
In fact, when the news started reporting that it was
Senator Alex Padilla, my first thought was, Oh, it was
(08:13):
a California state senator. No, he's a US Senator from California.
Adam Shift's together. So I'm watching all of this and
I'm thinking, of course you're going to get tackled.
Speaker 3 (08:28):
I'm Senator of Padia.
Speaker 4 (08:30):
I have a question for the secretary, because the fact
of the matter.
Speaker 3 (08:34):
Is half a dozen seals.
Speaker 4 (08:37):
What's getting on your I.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
Finally shoved out the door.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
And he's taken to the ground. Now Interestingly, he had
a staffer there. The staffer never once intervened to say, hey, uh,
I'm I'm Senator Padilla's staff or his legislative aide or something.
I can confirm this as a US senator.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
No, you know what he did.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
He already had his iPhone up in the air because
this was a staged event. Trump's been shot at twice
in the past year. We got riots breaking out from
coast to coast. Los Angeles is under a curfew, and
then some guy in street closed sands his little US
(09:27):
Senate lapel pen barges into a Homeland security press conference
in a federal building, tries to rush the podium, yelling
a bunch of nonsense, claims to be a senator while
shoving him pushing security. Now, I would note that most
US senators are too old to push around security. It's
usually the other way around. But he happens to be
(09:50):
kind of a big, heavyset guy, so he's pushing and
shoving and trying to make his way. Well, the more
you push and shove, the more the Secret Service is
going to react. What the hell are you doing?
Speaker 4 (10:00):
Get you?
Speaker 1 (10:00):
You know, we don't know who you are. Boom, we're
taking you out of here. This is the precise reason
elected officials and some of their staffers have security details,
and here they handled it perfectly. Don't you know who
I am?
Speaker 3 (10:19):
Well?
Speaker 2 (10:19):
As a matter of fact, I don't know who you
are now.
Speaker 1 (10:22):
Alex Spadilla on March eighteen, twenty twenty three, at two
forty nine pm, just to be exact, posted this to
Twitter x in all caps, the two words no one.
No one is above the law. Sheriff, you agree well
to mister, don't you know who I am? Whatever happened to?
(10:45):
No one is above the law?
Speaker 4 (10:47):
Now?
Speaker 2 (10:47):
In response to the.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Democrat Party and their media arm, the cabal have marched
in lockstep, all repeating the sign tired rhetoric about fascism
and whatnot. The dependable, ludicrous US Senator Corey Booker Well,
also known as Spartacus. You know if Corey Booker bar
(11:09):
barges in the room and said I am Spartacus, Well,
the Secret Service probably would have genuflect to drop to
their knees and said, oh we are worthy, we aren't worthy.
Speaker 3 (11:17):
If you who could make Alex Padilla forcibly beat Neil
before this executive? When does it stop he's a United
States Senator. And if you can force him to kneel
to his knees violently, when does it stop? What does
it say to other Americans who want to speak up?
What does it say to hey.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
Where's the pous button? Let me tell you, sparta this
thing on pot pause. Let me tell you, Spartan, here's
what it says. Don't go barging into a press conference
and rush the stage yelling whatever insane things you're yelling,
because the security details are going to.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Take you to the ground. That's what it tells you, Spartacus.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
The arrogance knows no limits constitutional duty.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
What does it say to other Americans this weekend when
they want to peacefully protest? What does it say to
other Americans from humble backgrounds who know poverty? And if
a United States Senator who stands up to do its
job could.
Speaker 4 (12:24):
Be made to heal, driven to his knee.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
Made made to heal, heal, senator heel tip, stay, rollover.
Speaker 3 (12:38):
Violently, handcuffed, What does it say?
Speaker 2 (12:40):
What message does it send? It says, don't rush a
sitting member of the cabinet.
Speaker 3 (12:48):
Dumb ass prebody in this body should see that this
is a crossroads.
Speaker 2 (12:54):
They treated a member of the.
Speaker 3 (12:56):
United States Senate violently after he had to find himself,
dragged him out of No.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
No, he did identify himself, but only after they started trying.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
To tackle him.
Speaker 1 (13:08):
Oh so you intentionally tried to create the chaos, and
then when you got the reaction you wanted, then oh, oh,
I'm a US senator.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
Oh well, it's pardon me, excuse me.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
Threw him upon the ground and put him in handcuffs.
Speaker 4 (13:27):
Every member of.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
This body should object to that. Why because the statement
wasn't he was disrespectful. That is unacceptable. That is offensive.
That is an American.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
I find you disrespectful and an American and kind of
a hothead.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
I'm a man to his knees in the United States
of America.
Speaker 4 (13:53):
That is wrong. That is wrong.
Speaker 2 (13:56):
That is wrong.
Speaker 3 (13:57):
This is a test, This is a cross This is
a day in which the character of this body will
be defined.
Speaker 1 (14:07):
Okay, by the way that was published on YouTube by
the Senate Democrats. So the witless line, the obvious coordination
with his comrades, the dinner theater caliber.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
Acting, it was all perfection.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
In fact, if this was on rotten tomatoes, it would
get you know, a ninety nine rating.
Speaker 2 (14:27):
It was so damn good.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
Do you know what would happened if you ran up
to Corey Booker while he was giving that speech that
you just heard the same thing that happened to Senator
to Padilla. Let's be honest, you know what this is, right,
this is just communist agitation. Make a scene, provoker response,
claim victimhood. That's all the Democrats have. And of course,
(14:54):
oh I left out one element. Make certain that you
have staffers there and you get it all on camera.
You know, it's the same thing the Dems are doing
with these riots. They want you to believe that law
enforcement response is worse than the original behavior. They want
you to stop thinking, they want you to start chanting. Well,
(15:15):
I think it's stupid. I think it's really stupid. I
mean it's funny too, don't get me wrong, it's funny
as hell because I've you know, I'm kind of like
Jane Goodall, you know, with the chimpanzees. I've kind of
lived among them and so I've kind of gotten to
know them, and well.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
They all all they are all kind of like a
bunch of chimpanzees.
Speaker 4 (15:40):
They're just.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Running around and all they're doing is just screaming and
trying to make a scene. Get it on camera, because
they get there, they get there. You know, it used
to be fifteen minutes of fame. Now they just went
fifteen seconds of fame. They you want you to believe
that the law enforcement response to our expedia was worse
than his behavior. I thought the Secret Service acted entirely appropriate.
(16:11):
They want you allar just to stop thinking and just
start chanting along with them. Don't think for yourself. But
let me tell you it's dumb and it's not working.
But I don't blame the Democrats for trying, because our
party is about as popular as oh, well, I don't know, pediatric,
pediatric cancer or something, CNN, MSNBC. They're they're they're putting
(16:32):
up their worst ratings ever, and both of their parent
companies are cutting them loose.
Speaker 2 (16:36):
The news is full of rioting and.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Looting a Democrat controlled strongholds, and of course, oh Trump,
now he continues to exist. Their dreams have been dashed
and other backs are against the wall. So why not
stage another dim witted publicity stunt Because the pet journalists
are going to repeat the same talking points and then
they're gonna slap each other on the back for a while,
(17:00):
and then they'll all go to sleep soundly at night
because there are a bunch of social paths, and they'll
get up next morning and it'll be the same thing, lather,
rinse and repeat. They've got nothing to lose with their dignity,
and I think probably they it's probably already gone. Which well,
I don't think they have any dignity to begin with,
because if they have, the probably would have they wouldn't
(17:21):
be running as Democrats. Now, I'm it's all for nothing
because you know why, Well, Israel started bombing Tayron last night,
so it gets pushed off as the big story. Yes,
and now I think probably within seventy two hours, Israel
has humiliated both Gretaitunberg at al Komene. So much respect
(17:45):
going on, so much respect going on. Coinbases Global Advisory Council.
That council formed by Coinbase their cryptocurrency exchange, includes a
lot of several high profile figures from both political parties.
(18:09):
Chris the Savida, former co campaign manager for Trump's twenty
twenty four presidential campaign. Former US Senator Kirsten Cinema from
the Independent so called independent from Arizona, but Pluff, who's
probably most widely known for his role in Obama's eight campaign,
(18:31):
previously served on the Global Advisory Board of Binance, the
world's largest cryptocurrency exchange. So his addition to Coinbases Council
comes just as the cryptocurrency industry is starting to intensify
their efforts to influence the regulatory landscape that's starting to
evolve in DC. The chief policy officer for Coinbase says
(18:54):
that the purpose of the Advisory Council is to serve
as this sounding board for just using policy initiatives and
business strategies, but it really does it reflects the growing
political involvement of the cryptocurrency sector because Congress is moving
to address digital asset regulation. They're advancing legislation that's aimed
(19:17):
at creating a comprehensive regulatory framework for cryptocurrencies. There's a
bipartisan group in the House that recently signed off on
a bill that regulates stable coins. Those are digital coins
that are typically tied to the dollar. Now, I think
this legislation is going to proceed to the Senate, maybe
(19:40):
even as early as next week, and then we're going
to start getting broader measures addressing the cryptocurrency markets. Those
are currently under review in House committees. Now this coincides
with Trump's commitment to establish the US as a global
crypto currency hub.
Speaker 2 (20:01):
I'm fine with that. I don't mind US being a
cryptocurrency hub.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
Now, Trump and his family, they've been actively involved in cryptocurrency,
including investments in Bitcoin, the creation of a stable coin,
mean coins, and you know, if the family's doing it,
I have no problem with that. But here's what I
do have a problem. There a digital based central currency.
(20:37):
Having your dollars that you have in your wallet, do
you have any cash on you? You should always have cash.
Us going to a digital currency, even if we call
it a dollar, and even if it's in the shape
of a dollar or or it's a token or something
on our iPhones, I don't want that. I don't want
(21:01):
to because I don't want tracked for everything that I do.
Think about how much control. I mean, you think about
the Chinese Communist Party's social scoring system. Imagine what they
could do with digital currency, and if that was the
only way other than if assuming that this big ass
(21:23):
assumption here, but if you assume that bitcoin and the
other cryptocurrencies could remain independent, well you know my tiny, tiny,
tiny little investment in bitcoin. I don't even know what
the original investment was, but I have just to show
(21:44):
you because it's I just find it funny because I
look at what it's done, and I regret having not
done more back when it was first out.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
But I have. Let's see, I've.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Got point zero one six of a bitcoin that's worth
I don't know, close to eighteen hundred dollars or something.
But imagine if I bought an entire bitcoin. I think
today's it's trading at about one hundred and four thousand dollars
or so. If I bought five bitcoins. Yeah, but set
(22:24):
that aside for a moment. The idea of digital currency
just scares the Jesus out of me because it's bad
enough with all of the loyalty cards, the credit cards,
everything that we use for just every day living, and
all of that gets tracked.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
King Soopers knows everything, you.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
Know, assuming you use their loyalty card to get your
fuel points or whatever you're doing, or to get the discounts.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
No do don't get me wrong. I don't blame people
for doing it.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
Tammer uses them all the time, but that means they
know everything we purchase when I go in. And I've
also started to do this. If I want to get
the loyalty points, but I don't want them tied to
a credit card, but instead to a phone number. I've
just got to google a Google Voice number. It's a
(23:14):
fake number. It's not used for anything except for plugging
in to a loyalty program.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
Because I don't want to be tracked.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
But maybe I want the points, and so I transfer
the points, you know, some other point which I guess
didn't they could track that, and probably if somebody was
had a good database, could eventually track me anyway. So
that's going on. So when you think about there are
things that Trump's doing that sound good today that could
(23:45):
become questionable in the future, and I just feel obligated
to make sure that you know about that. The FBI
has launched a probe into funding sources behind all these
pro illegal immigrant riots going on, which you know.
Speaker 2 (24:01):
Are really just.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
Riots that are vandalism, are saluting everything, and they're actually
examining the role of Democrat Party linked in g os
In orchestrating the unrest. And I think that's pretty clear.
You know, I on the on the way out today,
I turned the TV on just to see if I
could grab the forecast. I missed it, but katv R
(24:25):
was showing a graphic of the what are the protests called?
Hey Rod, do you remember something about something about not
the king or against the king or kings no kings,
no king protests? And they had a graphic of the
protests that are going to take place. I guess it's
tomorrow sometime. I don't know. I wasn't paying that much
(24:47):
attention to it. I hope they all turn into riots
all up and down the Front Range. That has to
be some sort of really damn good organization going on.
When you got that many, I mean it looked like
they're were dots all the way from Fort Collins down
to Pueblo and spreading out as far east as all One, well,
Elbert County and maybe up into Summit County.
Speaker 4 (25:07):
I'm up for you. Now, look at all those. That
is the entire country.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
That's the entire country.
Speaker 4 (25:11):
Yeah, quite a few of those. I mean, if you
had to guess how many dots you see there.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
Well before, I guess, does it tell you?
Speaker 5 (25:19):
Do you know?
Speaker 4 (25:19):
No? No total gas, It doesn't.
Speaker 5 (25:21):
I don't see a number about how many, but I
mean I would say, I don't know it's in the
thousands across the entire country.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
I say probably a thousand. Yeah, yeah, it looks like.
Speaker 3 (25:35):
It.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
It looks like every not just it looks like every
urban area. And then like in Colorado, it looks like
if you just took dots and started it at the
Wyoming border. It kind of stays straight, but then when
it gets towards Loveland, long Month starts to spread out
a little bit, gets the Denver, spreads out even further,
spreads out going down to the springs, then narrows down
(25:58):
as it goes through. And that it looks like that
all over the country. So could Cash Betail, The director
of the FBI confirm the focus the FB quote the
FBI is investigating any and all monetary connections responsible for
these riots. The acting director of ICE echoed the severity
(26:23):
if you have to watch out for a burnt car,
that isn't a peaceful protest, that isn't America, that's anarchy,
and then real quickly Texas, Oklahoma, Florida. Now there may
be others, but these are the only ones I heard of. Yesterday,
Ron de Santis came out and gave a pretty damn
(26:44):
good speech about in Florida, if you impede traffic and
you start mobbing a car surrounding a car, that car
is allowed to drive away. And as the Samtras said,
if you're in the way, you're in the way. The
(27:06):
story I read about Oklahoma was a little more graphic.
If if you start flash mobbing a car, and I
still think there's a requirement should have a reasonable fear
for your life. But I would say the very act
of flash mobbing a car creates a reasonable fear for
your life. You can just run them over. And then
(27:28):
I apparently Governor Abbot in Texas announced the same thing,
to which I say to all states, that should be
an inherent part of self defense. If you're on if
you're a broadway in Colfax and there's a crowd that's
(27:49):
spreading across you know, city park, it's it's across you know,
all the way from the Capitol over the city Hall,
and the crowd is voluminous, and they surround your car,
and you got your kids and are you're by yourself?
I don't care. It's like the whole rule that Oklahoma
adopted about brandishing. If I'm surrounded like that and I
(28:11):
just lay a glock on the dashboard to signal get
the hell out of my way. I should be able
to do that and not be charged with brandishing. It's
time that we stop allowing the mobs to control our
lives and to control what we do. They are the criminals,
not us.
Speaker 6 (28:30):
I'm pretty concerned about Iranian sleeper sales being activated on
these nationwide protests this Saturday. It really could be just
like shooting fish in a barrel. And what else does
Iran have to lose at this point? It would just
sew for their chaos and confusion.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
Well, so a Rod has hijacked the program by showing
me that damn map, there's no Kings protest in Lamar.
There's a King's protest in to watch. So watch Colorado,
Craig Cortez. We were thinking about maybe they're going to
(29:09):
march on Masa Verdi. I'd like to see that. Yeah,
you're going to go to Drango.
Speaker 5 (29:14):
You want to go to Craig, But yeah, Craig, I
mean Trndad all over.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
But now that I've watched their video, why I think
I'm going to participate.
Speaker 2 (29:27):
They've convinced me every day across this country.
Speaker 7 (29:32):
Something powerful is happening, and people are rising for each other,
for democracy and for our collective freedom.
Speaker 4 (29:39):
Live, our collective freedom inspired already?
Speaker 2 (29:42):
Are you rising for me? Are wise for you? If
you'll rise for me?
Speaker 1 (29:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (29:48):
Questionab believe then.
Speaker 7 (29:50):
Not to live in fear or let division destroy this country.
We believe in something bigger than ourselves and the promise
of freedom and justice for all. But now our rights
and our freedoms are under attack. We can point fingers
or we can take action. This spring, millions of US
(30:10):
united for one of the largest peaceful protests in the
history of the United States. Together, we told Trump and
his billionaire administration to keep their greedy hands off our healthcare,
our veterans benefits, our public lands are rights. Courage is contagious,
and now we're taking to the streets again on Saturday, June.
Speaker 4 (30:32):
Fourteenth for No King's Day.
Speaker 7 (30:35):
While Trump weighs tens of millions of taxpayer dollars on
a military parade for his birthday, acting like a wannabe king,
people in every state have organized over eighteen hundred events
in their communities to uphold democracy and protect our rights.
People standing side by.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Side for the future we all deserve.
Speaker 7 (30:55):
We don't do kings in the United States. We believe
power belongs with the people. Join us on Saturday, June fourteenth.
Go to no Kings dot org to find the protest
near you.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
We were right, eighteen hundred, not bad, Yeah, eighteen hundred.
And I mean they are everywhere.
Speaker 4 (31:25):
I was telling you.
Speaker 5 (31:25):
It looks like if I had to guess, roughly outside
of California, Texas, New York, Michigan, and Florida, Colorado's right.
Speaker 4 (31:35):
Up there with having the most. Yeah, we are, yeah.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
Shocked, and I really do. For example, for those of
you that understand what Look, my dad grew up in Swatch,
so I'm not making fun of it.
Speaker 2 (31:50):
I love to watch. But it's a hole in the wall.
It's a beauty.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
It's, in my opinions, one of the most gorgeous areas
in Colora. It sits in the valley and you can
see all the mountains. It's just gorgeous. But it's a
hole in the wall.
Speaker 2 (32:08):
I want to know.
Speaker 1 (32:09):
I mean, if I didn't have to do the show Saturday,
I might drive to watch just to watch.
Speaker 2 (32:13):
What's going on.
Speaker 5 (32:14):
There might be two flags, one lemonade stand and like
seven people.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
Oh no, no, I know.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
I thought when you said there might be like two flags,
two people each with a flag, that would be it.
Speaker 2 (32:29):
I mean generous or Lamar, Lamar, what do you think?
Speaker 1 (32:34):
Lamar is again not picking you on Lamar, just stating
some facts. Lamar is trucker central. Yeah, can you imagine
if they try to interact with some truck drivers?
Speaker 5 (32:48):
Well, let's be real. Also, content aside, context aside, Why
would they spread out so thin not just go to
the all of the metro make it more of a
powerful one.
Speaker 4 (32:57):
Hide there's gonna be at lench of small little ones,
because you'll.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
See that there were useful idiots.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
M