Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Good morning, Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:02):
I just wanted to let you know that, for the
first time in my life, I'm inside of a radio
station working today, and man, in my disillusioned you're not
lying when you talk about how crappy your studio is,
are you? I didn't think you were Anyways, you sound
like you've been yelling a lot, so I hope you feel.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
Better, buddy.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
We work on high quality Windows ninety eight machines around here.
Speaker 4 (00:29):
Who mine still has to activate Windows go to whatever?
And then I keep getting a little ping every once
in a while about some software update.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Then because we will get upgraded to Windows seven here eventually, well, we'll.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
Get agreeed to Windows seven. When Microsoft says it's no
longer supporting Windows seven, it's no longer it's been. It's
already there. I mean, I don't I'm gonna Windows guys
spent a year, so yeah, it's.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Not a little bit longer.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
And then I discovered on Saturday, I go in and
I get the television in the in the weekend program.
I get that televisions working now working, Look that, But
now the monitor in front of me isn't working. Oh beautiful,
So I have to turn around look at the monitor
behind me, so you know it's.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
Well, it's a good thing. We got four new TVs
up in the newsroom.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
It's so blinding now, I'm mesmer It's like a kid
going to the circus or to the carnival. I just
I stop, and I can't. I can't go from one
TV monitor to the other because I'm just so fascinated
by everything that's not on it.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
Well, they have three five five monitors that are working
that have a Fox and CNN and local Fox on them.
But it's really frustrating because they've got Fox Local on
both walls.
Speaker 4 (01:44):
So I didn't notice that.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
If you're walking either direction, you'll you'll see Fox Local.
Speaker 4 (01:50):
Well that's so carry away. You're cubical spacing. You get
to get the Fox Local. Yeah, So what do you
think they'll put on the five over here? Like reruns
of I Love Lucy Bonanza Bonanza. That'd be a good one.
I'd love the Bonanza thing. You get the Bonanza theme.
I love that theme.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
That's what I'm play because they don't have to kind
of let's.
Speaker 4 (02:05):
Get out of the podcast exactly right, and then and
then again, I got another Dean just now from from
HR about not having an affair, you know, with people
inside the building. Not It was really about you have
actionable items in you. You have action life.
Speaker 1 (02:23):
You've got four days. You got four days too, and
you even dumbass printed it out. Why would you do that?
Speaker 4 (02:30):
I still have it right here too.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Just love it right here, take your way through it
like you do this show, and it'll be fine.
Speaker 4 (02:38):
Well, considering I talked to the boss and he's taking
his way through his self assessment, I'm thinking, when I
just wait and see once he gets his done, can
I just borrow his and just cut and paste and
and I would put all ones instead of fours like
you did. Five is the best, right?
Speaker 1 (02:57):
Correct?
Speaker 4 (02:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (03:00):
For us?
Speaker 4 (03:00):
Right? So that then it we it would at least
give Tepper something to say, well, really, I think you're
better than that.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
See or just or when the high muckety MUCKs come around,
see it's room for improvement.
Speaker 4 (03:12):
Yes, yes, room for improvement. I wonder what station he's
working in right now.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
I have been in.
Speaker 4 (03:23):
Not just iHeart stations, I've been in other companies, radio
stations all across the country. They're all the same. The
only one that's different right now it's KOA. But mark
my words, how long has it been since they finished
that remodel?
Speaker 1 (03:41):
Oh you think a couple of years?
Speaker 4 (03:44):
Okay, yeah, then I would say, give it two more
years and it'll be right back like this.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
It'll be just like Well, then I won't say that.
The turret for the mic one position wasn't functioning this morning,
so they had Was.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
That why you were in there?
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (03:58):
I saw you in there. I thought, okay, I thought,
maybe you're working on a computer or.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
Something, and that turret controls the volume speakers for the
studio itself, so they have no idea what's going on
if they do not have their headphones on. Oh yeah,
that's that's great. What do we do now?
Speaker 4 (04:16):
Oh, I'm I'm gonna emphasize those of you on the
text line. I am not faking this voice today. It
is hurting more right now than it did when I
came in, and it wasn't because I was yelling all week.
I think I I think I've pinpointed the source of
(04:39):
whatever I've got, which I think a strap throat or something.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
Oh, how fantastic that you show up with a contagious
disease like that. Thank you. You're in the other room.
Speaker 4 (04:48):
Well, I'm gonna spray with lights all before I leave.
You know, I'm gonna be that courteous. I think it
was the Wednesday meeting that you know we.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
I went to because I didn't get to go to that.
Speaker 4 (04:59):
Well you said you went looking for barbecue.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
Well I saw that there was food present, and it
was far less food than you would normally get for
any gathering around here, which I found peculiar.
Speaker 4 (05:09):
But isn't that that is interesting when you invite, don't invite,
when you order everybody in the building to show up
for the meeting, and then you order like one third
what you would normally order if it was for the
sales staff.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
Right, the sales staff gets like eight large pizzas and
there's like five of them.
Speaker 4 (05:27):
We got two little bins of barbecue and that was it. Yeah,
I thought that was funny. But two plates of cookies, which.
Speaker 1 (05:35):
BROWNI ear doesn't.
Speaker 4 (05:36):
Yeah, and then I'm not sure there's ever been a
talent or no, I'm sorry, we're influence, right, Yes, So
I had to do a video since I couldn't attend
the meeting I'm supposed to be at right now, So
I had to do a video.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
So they schedule with the meeting during the show.
Speaker 4 (06:02):
Do you ever stop to think that maybe nobody out
there knows that one. I'm either eat it on air,
let alone when I am on air, or I thought
the third option too, Hey, let's invite Mikey, but let's
invite him at a time.
Speaker 1 (06:17):
When he can't come to the meeting.
Speaker 4 (06:19):
See that's what I think. That's that's what my first
thought was. Oh, yeah, you want me to come. You
want me to come and give you all my brilliant ideas,
which I you know, so I started because I recorded
it at home, you know, on on quick Time on
my MacBook. I started it out with, it's really good
to see you all today. I don't have pants on.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
Because I figured it's a normal day, like right now,
right right now.
Speaker 4 (06:46):
Right, And I figured they were having a bad day anyway,
because there was a Monday morning and were having that,
you know, a meeting and true. So lord, but now
we're influencers. So whoever got me the talent badge? I
now need an influencer name tag to wear.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
I think we didn't know a couple of people who
might do that for you, I know.
Speaker 4 (07:06):
But I do want to emphasize in all seriousness. I'm
not planning to take the week off. H I could
have called last night and and Tepper would have heard
me and said, you probably able to stay home, But no,
I'm I'm. This is how dedicated I am.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
It adds some oomph to uh to what you have
to say. Now, what do you mean to add some
just the lower base? I mean you typically had a
pretty base tone to begin right, and now you've lowered
that a half an octave.
Speaker 4 (07:35):
So yeah, well, but you know why it's lowered half
an octave because if I tried to talk in a
normal tone, it hurts, Like hell, it really does hurt,
which is why today I brought in this.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
You've got a different thermos? Is that you're don't tell
me you brought in like tea or something?
Speaker 4 (07:52):
No, no, no, no, no, no no. This is diet coked. Okay, good,
But I knew that an extra large diet colt from
quick trip wasn't going to work today, gotcha, because I
was going to suck down a large diet cold in
the first hour. So I brought this yetti, which is
like one and a half a gallon or something. It's
pretty big. Yeah, it's honking big. I don't know. I'm
(08:13):
just kind of done. I've got a whole I got
a whole plethora of things here to talk about, and
I'm just not in the move to talk about any
of them.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
Pick one, just to hold out, to close your eyes,
hold out your finger and touch the screen. See where
it goes.
Speaker 4 (08:29):
Oh, okay, I don't mind. I don't mind doing this right,
all right? So it was it was a week ago
yesterday that we had the one year anniversary of the attempt.
And actually, this is actually a pretty good topic to
follow up on the last topic.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
You're welcome. You know it's.
Speaker 4 (08:49):
Not if, but that's exactly how good of a producer
you are. You don't do squat and then when just
by happenstance something works out, you take credit for.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
Of course, as he goes for my stack headlines, just
read those, see what happens. I don't even remember what
they were. That was four hours ago.
Speaker 4 (09:12):
I've got one that I actually think is wrong. I
saw this yesterday, so I did a dive on it
and then got bored with it and decided I don't want
to talk about it today. And then you bring it in.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
Is that the Mike Johnson one?
Speaker 4 (09:27):
No this is the Jason Crow one.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
Oh okay, so.
Speaker 4 (09:30):
The headline from nine news, nine milimeter news. That's a
great that's a great account to follow an X. By
the way, nine milimeter News headline is Congressman Jason Crowe
says he was denied entry to an Aurora ice facility.
Crow has made regular visits to the privately operated Geogroup
(09:51):
facility since entering Congress in twenty nineteen. He issued a
statement from his office Sunday stating he was night entry
to Aurora's ice detention facility, a move he says violates
federal law and undermines congressional authority to oversee federal immigration operations.
In a statement, he said, you know, these y'allhoos will
(10:16):
do anything for attention anything.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
Quote.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
Today, I attempted to visit the federal detention facility in
Aurora in order to conduct critical oversight as a member
of Congress. I was unlovely denied accessed by Ice and
the Trump administration. A Crow representing Democrat. A Democrat representing
Colurel's sixth Congressional district, which includes Aurora and parts of
the eastern Denver metro area, has made regular visits to
(10:42):
the privately operated Geogroup facility since entering Congress in twenty nineteen. Oh,
this is interesting. Once again, it shows you how lazy
everybody is in the news media. Now, huh, you've printed
this off nine News. Yep, you get to the end
of the story. Guess what the hyperlink is. Read the
full story from the Denver Gazette.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
That's awesome, isn't that awesome? But I ta paste cutting paste,
cutting paste.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
Baby cutting paste. So I actually did a little bit
of Uh, let me see if I can find my
notes on this. I actually did a little search to
see if I can find out whether or not it
truly is unlawful for him to do what he did.
This is probably going to piss some of you off.
But again, I live in the real world. I don't
(11:31):
come here just to oh, Jason Crow. You know, he
showed up and he shouldn't be allowed in Well, guess what.
According to federal law, it's the Consolidated Appropriations Act of
twenty twenty. You can find it at PL One sixteen
ninety three, Section five thirty two. It has been uh,
this has been in effect for five years now. It's
(11:54):
been referenced in every single appropriation to the Department of
Homeland Security. Members of Congress have the explicit right to
enter ICE detention facilities for oversight purposes. So I'm going
to play lawyer here in a minute, for oversight purposes
without providing prior notice or scheduling an appointment. The statute
(12:16):
prohibits the use of Department of Homeland Security funds to
prevent such access, and the laws there's nothing in the
law that requires a Member of Congress to give advanced notice.
Now that's been in similar Appropriations Act going all the
way back to twenty twenty. Now, if it is in
(12:37):
effect as of this Sunday or yesterday whenever he did this,
then it affirms that members can conduct unannounced visits to
facilitate to facilities used to detain or otherwise house aliens.
Congressional staff, however, may be required to provide at least
(12:59):
twenty four hours notice. Now, DHS to be objective, they
are challenging this law. There are reports from this year
that indicate that ICE and DHS have issued internal guidelines
trying to impose advanced notice requirements such as you know,
forty eight to seventy two hours. In some cases, I
(13:20):
found even a week for visits to certain detention facilities,
leading to instances where people like Jason Crow have been
denied entry despite the law. Now, the policies of DHS
have drawn criticism from lawmakers like Jason Crow and of
course the usual suspects like the NGOs and some legal
(13:43):
experts who argue that the Homeland Security policies violate the
statute and do undermine congressional oversight. But DHS is arguing
that the guidelines apply to the current guidelines and the
law they're argumented is it applies to field offices and
(14:03):
specific visit types like if you're showing up because you're
going to meet with a constituent, which I don't know
how an illegal alien can be a constituent since they're
not a citizen, but I digress. Or for actual oversight,
and that they can restrict it in cases of emergency,
(14:25):
like you know, for security reasons they have to you know,
shut the place down because there's a riot going on inside.
My argument would be, if there's a riot going on inside,
let Jason Crow go in, mister marine, mister army guy,
whatever it was, go in and you know, go help out,
go help put down the insurrection. The insurrection. Now, if
(14:50):
a denial occurs, they can challenge it through congressional hearings
they get, you know, they could challenge it through the
court system, whatever they want to do. They could even
ask for contempt, you know, contempt of Congress for not
allowing him in. But having said all of that, when
do you think Jason Crow went? Mm hmm, when do
(15:10):
you think you went? Now, I think they should let
him in. I really do. Absent exigent circumstances, meaning absent
some emergency, let him in, because what's he gonna do?
Come out and go oh yeah, now, staff, no, staff,
you gotta have you gotta have an appointment. But if
he wants to go in by himself, escort him men,
(15:32):
walk him through, walk him out, and then they can
have a stupid little press conference, let him lie about
what he saw inside, and then invite a member of
the media. Just go out, you know, pick pick nine
millimeter news and say, hey, Jason Crow just said X, Y,
and Z about what's going on in here. How would
you like to come in and see for yourself. Mhm,
(15:55):
come on in, baby, just come on down. You're the
next contestant on ice over side by a congressman grief.
I guess we'll think of these people anyway. So what
I really hit was it was one year ago, last Sunday,
not this past Sunday, but the last Sunday that Donald
(16:17):
Trump almost got his brains blown out on television. So
I have a question for you, what do you know
about it? Well, seriously, what do you know about it?
I don't know much. I do know that the director
of the Secret Service, Kim Cheadle, she's resigned. In her
(16:37):
comments about the incident, she sounded like a complete and
income poop. Days after the incident, Cheatle who got her
to help with the job got her job with the
help of excuse me, Jill Biden because she had served
on doctor Jill Biden's security detail. Well, bfd, I don't
think that qualifies you to serve as the president's head
of the Secret Service. That building, in particular, she wrote,
(17:04):
has a sloped roof at its highest point, and so
you know there's a safety factor that would be considered
there that we wouldn't want to put somebody up on
a sloped roof, So you know, the decision was made
to secure the building from the inside. Does she realize
just how stupid that is. Let's ask I don't know,
(17:27):
Marcus Latreuell. Let's ask any sniper in the United States military,
how many times you've been up on the edge of
a cliff somewhere and it's sloping and it's uncomfortable. You've
had to kind of push rocks aside, you kind of
had to make your own bed there so that you
could take somebody out, somebody from the Taliban, take them out.
And yet the Secret Service which is more important the
(17:50):
comfort of a Secret Service agent or the protection of
the president. Now we know that, what I ask you know,
what else do you know? Let's forget about Epstein. Let's
release the Butler Pennsylvania Fires.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
Hi, Michael, it's Jamie and Kentucky listening on Kahwe really
liked this show, and I like the weekend, but I
really wish you would have a little more interaction with
your producer on the weekend, because the interaction you had
with Dragon Redbeard is really great. Oh, and it would
be nice if you could duplicate a little bit of
that over the weekend.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
I appreciate you, Thanks very much.
Speaker 4 (18:30):
Nevigat Day, Oh, who's that your nephew? Is that one
of your kids.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
I don't know anybody over there. Huh.
Speaker 4 (18:37):
Yeah, they just lied. They're actually down there in the
parking lot, aren't they. You got somebody to do that,
didn't you.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
It's worth every penny.
Speaker 4 (18:44):
Yeah. Well, here here, in all seriousness, here is the
issue with the weekend program. He's in LA and I'm here.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
And they don't pay me. So I'm not gonna show
up if they don't pay.
Speaker 4 (18:58):
Me, and I'm not going to pain and I can't
get them to pay, so I can't believe he doesn't
want to volunteer to work with me. But part part
of the part of the reason that this works right
here is because we can see each other. And it
(19:18):
also works because he can whisper in my ear and
we're in different rooms. We're in different rooms. He can
whisper in my ear, but I can still see him,
and we can we can use hand signals. Now usually
with me it's just my middle finger, but with him,
it's usually you know, like he just put his head
in his hand, like oh God, make him shut up,
or please don't you know yeah, or please don't let
(19:39):
him don't don't or don't go there, don't you know,
like I see the waiting hands, I don't go don't
go there, don't go there.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
I usually give you the eyeball because normally you do
get close to swearing, so I have to.
Speaker 4 (19:52):
I just want to see you. I just want to
see you reach for the dump button. That's all I want.
That's that's you put out those fake exercise tapes. This
is the only extra size you actually get is just
reaching for the dump button about twenty times a day.
Where was it, oh seventy one to fourteen? Wrote Michael,
Do you really want Jason Crow to help put down
(20:14):
an insurrection? I do believe he was hiding behind desks
and chairs when the old ladies were walking through taking
pictures on January sixth, Well, funny you had mentioned that
because Rosa de Laura, she is the blue haired lady
from Connecticut. I think she's the Democrat from Connecticut. I
(20:35):
make I'm sorry, but I make fun of her, and
I apologize because we shouldn't make it fun of how
people look. She's a grandmother, but she wears this blue
or purple hair, and she's just a craggly looking old
hag that just looked like if you if you ran
into her somewhere on the street, get turned around and
(20:56):
run because you think you just run into the wicked
witch to the east. Now I understand she has a
law I mean, I don't know if it's a law degree,
but she's got a degree from an Ivy League school,
to which I would say, and that proves what huh.
I'd put whatever skills she has up against whatever skills
I have anytime of day. But Congress is wanting to
(21:18):
put up a memorial, a plaque for those who died
on January six I don't think the plaque includes Ashley Babbit.
I think the plaque only includes people that they think
died on January six Let me ask you, don't go cheat,
do not cheat? Who other than Ashley Babbitt died on
(21:43):
January sixth at the Capitol? I guess I put that
limitation on it because I'm sure there were lots of
people that died on January sixth or twenty twenty one.
But who other than Ashley Babbitt died on January six
at the US Capitol? Cause I bet you don't know.
(22:04):
I give you, Congressman Rosa Delora.
Speaker 5 (22:08):
You don't want to recognize maybe the speaker doesn't want
to recognize. The President doesn't recognize that January sixth existed,
and these men and women they gave, they gave their
lives and the rest of them who didn't saved our lives.
And why we can't internalize that in some way and
(22:28):
put up a plaque that does some honor.
Speaker 4 (22:32):
Hmmm, Well, several people did die in connection with the
January sixth, twenty twenty one Capitol the riots, in addition
to Ashley Babbitt. You can go to the District of
Columbia Medical Examiner's office and probably some other sources, but
I went straight to the DC Medical Examiner's office. Do
(22:53):
you know who died on January sixth other than Ashley Babbitt?
Rose and Boyland God rests Roseanne Soul. She was thirty
four years old. She died of an accidental amphetamine overdose
during the riot. She's reported to have been crushed or
(23:16):
trampled in a mob of rioters near the Capitol steps
as they were clashing with police, but the cause of
death was ruled as an accidental overdose of amphetamines. Yeah, so,
I don't know if Rosa Dolora wants to memorialize her
or not. But I probably she does. I mean, if
(23:39):
you die of an accidental overdose of speed, then maybe,
you know, maybe that's who the Democrats went to memorialize. Oh,
Kevin Greason died. No, I know you've never heard of
Kevin Greeson. God rest his soul. He was fifty five
years old. He died of a heart attack. He was
on the sidewalk west of the capital. Let me emphasize again.
(24:03):
He was on a sidewalk west of the capital. If
you understand the layout of the US capital, the sidewalk
west of the capital is, Oh, I'm guessing a couple
hundred yards away from the US Capital, there's a sidewalk
that kind of goes along the visitor center. Yeah, he
(24:26):
had a heart attack. Yeah, just walking along like many
people do, like any day dragon hopes. I do just
boom kill over a heart attack. But I got a
zero calcium score, so you don't worry about that, mister Redbeard.
Oh there was somebody else too, So I don't know,
do we want to honor someone who just happened to
have a heart attack because they weren't getting regular check
(24:46):
ups so they ate too many crumble cookies or whatever
they did we're doing wrong. And they died. God rest
his soul. But he died. He didn't die because of
anything going on. So now we're still down to Ashley Babbitt.
Oh maybe if there was another one. There's another one,
Benjamin Phillips, God rest his soul too. Benjamin was fifty
(25:09):
years old. He had a stroke. Yeah, he was on
the Capitol grounds. I can't ascertain exactly where he was,
but he was on the Capitol grounds and he had
a stroke and the paramedics tried to revise him and
he expired. There. That's it. That is it. So who
(25:32):
are we honoring, Rosen? Who are we honoring? Do you
want to put Ashley's name on there? Do you want
to put Roseanne and Kevin and Benjamin on there? Because
here's who you cannot put on there. You cannot put
on there. Brian Sicknick. Everybody wants to claim that Brian Sicknick,
a Capitol police officer, died on January sixth. He did not.
(25:56):
He died, according to the DC Medical Examiner, from natural
causes after suffering two strokes on January seven, and the
medical examiner did not attribute his death to those injuries.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
HM.
Speaker 4 (26:15):
But yet the cabal keeps trying to convince you that
he died on January sixth. It's a bald face lie.
In addition, now, okay, how about this Jeffrey Smith, a
member of the MPD, the Metropolitan Police Department, and another
officer for some reason they listen to. But I can't
(26:35):
find the name of the other die. I'm sure if
I use Google or something, I might be able to
find it. They died by suicide, but it was days
and weeks after the riots. Now the medical examiner, I
don't know how they did this, but they try to
link their deaths to the trauma and the injuries sustained
(26:57):
during the event. I think that's kind of stretching it.
Lots of cops commit suicide after a traumatic event, but
I don't know that you can contribute it directly to
the event. Now, that's based on the DC Medical Examiner records.
The Washington Post has a couple of reports out of
(27:19):
the New York Times does, but Ashley Babbitt was the
only person who was killed on January sixth, and I
don't think that's who she wants to memorialize. Just guessing
to show you how bad the cabal is. So On
ABC's This Week with George Steppen Lapolis, Martha Raddits was on.
(27:44):
She interviewed the mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, about
the success at the border. But guess what she mentions
the success of the border only after the interview is
over when she goes back to the host.
Speaker 1 (28:06):
The immigration crackdown. You traveled to California and spoke with
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass. What is she saying about
how this is impacting the nation's second biggest city.
Speaker 6 (28:16):
Karen Bass said, Basically, it is completely outrageous.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
What is happening. I asked her.
Speaker 6 (28:21):
About the million immigrants who do who are not documented,
who live in her city, and she seemed to think
they are all working and they should stay. But we
ask her specifically about how this policy is impacting her city.
Speaker 7 (28:39):
Los Angeles is a city of immigrants, three point eight
million people and about fifty percent of our population is
Latino and so when the.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
Raid started, fear spread.
Speaker 7 (28:50):
Fear spread like a virus around the entire county.
Speaker 6 (28:54):
Is there anything good you think the administration is done
in these.
Speaker 4 (28:57):
Six months in the border?
Speaker 7 (28:58):
Well, I will, he prays on the administration for the
first six months in Los Angeles with the fires. If
you ask me, is there anything that they have done
good in terms of immigration, I don't know.
Speaker 6 (29:12):
I don't think so.
Speaker 7 (29:14):
I think that the viewpoint has been punitive, has been
let's make it as miserable as possible so that these
people don't come.
Speaker 4 (29:23):
End of interview. Now they cut the interview off and
they go back to Martha the host, and Martha go back.
It's a it's called the cutaway. They now cut back, cutaway,
back to the studio. Now, listen to Martha.
Speaker 6 (29:37):
Rabbits, and whatever they're doing is certainly working at the
border itself with we were down on that border and
it is dramatically, dramatically.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Different than it was a year ago. All right, Martha
Rabbits for us, we appreciate it. As always, remember to
tune into this.
Speaker 4 (29:55):
Isn't it interesting she didn't confront the mayor of Los
Angeles with you know, I've been to the border and
it's miraculous. She used the word miraculous. Why didn't you
ask Karen Bass about that? Martha Raddits, Oh, that's right,
because your middle name is cabal.
Speaker 2 (30:11):
Hey, Michael, when you see this recorded misrepresentation of how
the events of January sixth actually unfolded in real time.
Does it not make you question the way that history
has been recorded and what we think we know.
Speaker 4 (30:32):
All the time, all of the time, which is, and
when I say what I'm about to say, you'll probably
know because there's another talk show host that always talks
about doing this, and I happen to agree with him,
even though I don't have a lot of respect for him.
(30:56):
And that is go to the original documents, Go to
contemporaneous writings. For example, you know understanding the Constitution, yes,
you need to read how the Court has evolved over
time in its interpretation. For example, I think we have
(31:16):
long gone way beyond appropriate limitations on free speech. But
in order to understand that, you can't first read the
case law because that will poison your brain into thinking, oh,
that's what it is now. The case law might be
good for some history, but you have to go back
and you have to read the Declaration of Independence. You
(31:39):
have to read the Constitution. You have to read the
First Amendment itself and see exactly what it says, and
then think about before you go to anything else, what
does that mean, Because the meaning of those words really
haven't changed how E've interpreted them has And then you
need to read the Federalist papers, You need to read
some of the pamphlets written. You need to read history
(32:02):
that was written, say prior to you know, nineteen hundred
and because when you read that, you're more likely than
not to get a more objective viewpoint of what goes on.
So it's about going back to the original documents and
going back to early history. For example, I told you
that I started reading and I haven't quite finished it yet,
a trilogy that Rick Atkinson has written about the Revolutionary War,
(32:28):
and I chose him in particular because the book is now,
I want to say, almost twenty years old, so if
I look back to the year two thousand, we weren't
quite as woke and stupid and dumbass as we are today.
And he has he's written three really in depth, very
(32:51):
well documented in foot noted books. But he's written two.
The third one hasn't been published yet. So that's how
I would read about the American Revolution. I know that
you know, David mccollin, some other modern authors, authors have
written about it, and I'm not trying to disparage their objectivity,
but I would rather go back and read an older
book before we got into the age of social media
(33:13):
and we got into the age of all the bull
crap that we listen to now. So that's that's how
you understand history, original documents, things prior to say, even
even nineteen six