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July 30, 2025 • 34 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael, You're right on The regulatory state that we live
in is out of control, and it's costing me a
ton of money as a small business owner, and it's
costing me a bunch of time.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
I've been down to the.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
Capitol, testifying in front and committee on some of their
insane bills. However, what's to be done about it? It's
unreal trying to be a business, a small business owner
in this state.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
I'm a schizophrenic when it comes to what to do
about it, schiz frednic, schizophrenic in this regard one. I
don't think there's much he can do about it because
in a place like Colorado, it is, it is embedded
in the DNA of the polit bureau and people like
Jared Paulis, and then you look at everybody running for governor,

(00:52):
and with all due respect to those on the Republican side,
I have yet to see someone that has the and
I you can add me all you want to. I'm
just calling I'm just calling it as I see it.
And my guess is I probably have a lot more
political experience than you do. On the Democrat side. I
see the Attorney general who is obviously suing Trump at

(01:16):
every opportunity simply as part of his campaign mechanism. Then
I see our Secretary of State, who's about as ditsy
as a telephone poll. Uh. And then you know a
couple of congressmen and other you know, all, oh, we've
got Michael Benna. Can't forget the accidental senator. He's running too.
So the Democrat Party is putting all of their stellars,

(01:38):
so called star power, out there, and and they're all running.
And then over here on the Republican side, you've got
people that so far. And look, I get inundated with
requests for people that want to come on this show,
and they want to be interviewed. And I find that
interesting because it's like, you want to be interviewed, And
if you've ever listened to this program for even one day,

(01:59):
you know I don't interviews. But they keep asking and
I just keep ignoring. But I look at their campaign
financial reports, I look at their websites, I look at
their organization, I look at what they're doing, and I
just don't see the kind of and I'm gonna use

(02:19):
this term star power, but I don't mean popularity. I
mean the kind of nuts and boats that you would
look at and go, Wow, they're putting together a machine.
They're putting together a well oiled machine that is focused
on fundraising, get out the vote, voter ID. And by
voter ID, I don't mean do you have an ID

(02:40):
to vote? I mean who are my voters that I
need to get to the polls on election day, particularly
in the primary season, so that I can win the primary.
And then I see it and then I go look
at issues and they're so far off to the right
that they make me look like a Marxist because they're
going for the far right wing of the Republican Party,

(03:04):
which I don't have a problem with. But that's not
going to win you a That win you a primary,
but that's not going to win you a general election.
So you got to and I'm not asking you to
sacrifice your principles, but you've got to learn to communicate that. Hey, listen,
I may bee pro this or pro that, or anti
this or anti that, but I'm open to conversations and
I'm open to, you know, hearing from the other side,

(03:25):
and I want to be reasonable. And by the way,
my economic policies, which I think is the number one issue.
My economic policies are going to help, do you regulate
this state and help make it easier for you to
do business, make it easier for you to expand, and
for those of you looking for jobs. If I make
it easier over here for people to expand and grow
their businesses, that increase increases your job opportunities. I just

(03:49):
don't see that messaging anywhere. I just I hear a
lot of the standard typical Republican bulk rap and it's
just tiring, absolutely tired, and it's depressing too. So on
that hand, I'm schizophrenic, and I think that we probably
have to get into that well. We got to go

(04:10):
into the crapper. Somebody's got to finally flush the toilet.
We got to go down the drain, and we got
to be like California is right now. The mayor of
San Francisco, for example, his poll numbers, I think don't
quote me on this, but I think are higher right
now than Gavin Newsom's. He's a Republican, by the way,
he's a Republican businessman, and he's cleaning up and turning

(04:32):
around San Francisco, and voters are overwhelmingly Democratic and Republican
to like, are overwhelmingly in favor of that, and he
came out of nowhere, but he came with here's what
I Am going to do, and then he stuck with it.

Speaker 2 (04:46):
Hmm.

Speaker 3 (04:47):
Sounds like the guy in the White House. Here's what
I'm going to do. And then he said about doing it,
and you need to focus on those things that are
affecting people, the most part of which is the economy.
Speaking of of which, speaking of the economy, it's it grew.
The numbers came out this morning. Grew at a seasonally

(05:09):
adjusted annuate of three percent in the second quarter of
this year. That's according to their July thirty three report,
the Department I'm sorry, the Department Commerce report. Now that
exceeds the economists forecast a two point four percent as
surveyed by Bloomberg. Now do you break the number down.

(05:29):
That three percent growth is largely attributable to a more
than thirty percent drop in imports, and that is opposite
of a thirty seven point nine almost a thirty eight
percent surgeon imports during the first quarter. That surge of
imports occurred in the first quarter, primarily driven by businesses

(05:53):
that were stockpiling on foreign goods because they weren't quite
sure where Trump was going with the tariffs, so they started,
you know, everything they could, which led to a contraction
in the gross domestic product during the first quarter. But
then on the other hand of that, which is how
economists look at everything, consumer spending and business investment increased

(06:18):
in this last quarter. Now, a lot of the so
called establishment economists, those that are you know, those that
are not really trying to be objective. They project the
growth will slow further in the second half of the year,
and they're blaming Trump's tariffs, which actually fueled the current

(06:40):
surge and have already helped raise government revenue. Now, despite
that good performance, I doubt the Federal Reserve will drop
interest rates, although every criteria by which they are supposed
to be measuring whether to increase or decrease or maintain

(07:01):
rates would show that this is a time when you
would be decreasing the rates. But they're not going to
do it. And then I thought, well, what are people
saying on the TV about it. Here's CNBC's report.

Speaker 4 (07:16):
Of three percent of three percent better than expected.

Speaker 3 (07:20):
That would be the.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
Highest level since the third.

Speaker 4 (07:22):
Quarter of twenty four when it was up.

Speaker 2 (07:24):
Three point one percent.

Speaker 4 (07:26):
On the consumption side, up one point four, very close
to estimates. Up one point four would be the best
since the last quarter of twenty four.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
So CNBC, yeah, pretty dang good numbers. But never let
a good number go to waste, right, never let a
good number tell you that, well, things are getting better.
Let's go to Congressman Gomez on CNN.

Speaker 5 (07:54):
Carson, thanks for coming in this GDP report, for digging
into as they just were. I mean, us a conomy
expanded sharply in the second quarter. Business is dialing back
on imports after stocking up earlier in the year to
get ahead of Trump's tariffs.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
Is this showing that.

Speaker 5 (08:10):
Consumers and businesses are weathering Trump's sweeping economic policies.

Speaker 6 (08:14):
Well, I think what it's showing is that they're trying
to do with the ratic nature of his policies. When
he says that there's going to be tariffs, people try
to load up on buying things and when they say
they pull back. Then all of a sudden they calm down.
So you see this kind of whipsaw going on. But
also you need to look at other data to see

(08:35):
what is happening to the Americans consumer who I'm concerned about,
the worker, the people. Auto loan defaults are increasing. That
is a concern because when auto loan defaults increase, what
does that tell you that people are trying to make
a decision should I pay for the essentials right for
the housing and the food versus something like an auto
loan that if somebody takes it, does it. It's devastating,

(08:58):
but not that big of a deal like losing your house.
So I think we need to kind of see what
the data is telling us. But what it tells us
is that Trump chaos is going to continue and the
American people are going to suffer because here's the thing.
Somebody's going to have to pay for those tariffs, and
right now the companies are, but sooner or later that's
going to trickle down to the American consumer.

Speaker 7 (09:17):
What'd you say, dragon, you hear that he tried to
bring back chaos. I don't think it kind of stuck
because it was it a month or so ago, chaos, chaos, chaos, chaos, chaos,
Trump chaos everywhere.

Speaker 2 (09:27):
It just seemed to fade away. And he's like, but chaos, yeah.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
And I read maybe I was glancing at the Wall
Street Journal or something, but he just imposed some tariffs
on India because they haven't met the deadline, and so
he's playing hardball. That's kind of what I want.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
But what about taco.

Speaker 3 (09:50):
Well, taco seems to have gotten swallowed.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
So Trump doesn't Somebody just saw a taco.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
And said, we don't care whether it's a Trump taco
or I can talk. There's a taco. Taco should never
be wasted through eat tacos, swallow them, so that taco disappeared.
Kevin Hasseif, who's the chairm of the President's Economic Council.

Speaker 8 (10:12):
You know, I think if there were a beauty contests
for GDP releases, that Miss July would probably be very
close to the top of the list of the Earth.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
Yeah, it probably would be very close to the top
of the list. How close you know.

Speaker 8 (10:22):
I think if there were a beauty contests for GDP releases,
that Miss July would probably be very close to the
top of the list of the early betting because it
got everything for everybody. There's really strong growth, really strong
income growth. We've got a huge reduction in government spending,
five percent drop in government spending now, seventy thousand fewer
federal employees, and we've got one hundred and twenty seven

(10:45):
billion in tariffs.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
And so the story, the edge Trump story has.

Speaker 8 (10:49):
Been that we're going to have a recession or a
depression because of the tariffs, which are going to jack
up prices and cause consumers to run.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
Through the exits headed back.

Speaker 8 (10:58):
Every single thing about this GDP release has shown strength.
And then the final thing that I like to see
at the release that this is why I said it's
really a beauty Patos level of release is.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
If you look at it, if you if you then.

Speaker 8 (11:10):
Say, oh, well, next quarter is going to even be
better than this?

Speaker 2 (11:13):
Are there reasons to think that?

Speaker 8 (11:15):
And there are because if you look at one of
the weird little blips in the data, there was a
big decline in say, factory spending, and that was ahead
of the big beautiful bill because people were waiting.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
For that to pass so they could expense.

Speaker 8 (11:26):
So it's going to be a huge pind up demand
for factory.

Speaker 2 (11:28):
Spending in the third quarter.

Speaker 8 (11:30):
And so you've got to be starting the pencil in
a four percent number.

Speaker 9 (11:33):
For that work.

Speaker 3 (11:34):
And I do actually believe that because as long as
that bill was out there penning and people really weren't
quite they weren't sure what was going to go on?
Then yes, they needed to take time and say, you
know what, still spending money on expansion or buying, you know,
any capital improvements or anything until we find out what
they do with the bill. Oh, they're going to allow
us to expense it. Okay, boom, let's start spending. Kevin

(11:57):
has it again now talking to the pool. Yeah.

Speaker 8 (12:00):
Really one of the best GDP announcements or releases that
you could imagine, because there's blockbuster growth way above expectation,
and there's also a real, real, almost collapse in inflation.
It went down by about a percent and a half
all the way down to two point one percent, which.

Speaker 2 (12:17):
Is the fed's target. Has it to have high growth.

Speaker 3 (12:20):
That's the fed's target. So where's too late? Pal? You know,
think of what an interest rate cut would do. Might
it spark a little inflation? Yeah, probably would, but it
would also spark an awful lot of economic activity, whether
that be in the auto industry or the housing industry

(12:41):
or anything else. A drop in rates would spur some
economic activity.

Speaker 8 (12:46):
Growth with low inflation and also high income growth. Personal
income growth was three percent. That's just like about a
sweet spot for a GDP release and I will add
that all of this happened while one hundred and twenty
seven billion in tariff was raised, which is clearly not
harming the American consumer. And we've been downsizing government in

(13:06):
order to be more fiscally responsible.

Speaker 2 (13:08):
Seventy thousand federal jobs have been reduced at five percent.

Speaker 8 (13:12):
There was a five percent reduction in federal government spending
while all this was going on.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
You know, I want to say one thing about the
tariffs that I think gets lost over too much. Tariffs
will increase the price of a good. You know, you
buy a widget and now there's a ten or fifteen
percent tariff on it. But that's a one time price increase,
which is different than inflation. So with a tariff you

(13:37):
manufacture a widget, you have to add fifteen percent on
top of that to cover your costs of producing the
widget to imported in the United States. But inflation, on
the other hand, is cumulative. So if you're running at
four percent five percent, you know, like we worth Biden
nine percent inflation, it's nine percent this month, and it's

(13:57):
nine percent on that nine percent, nine percent of the
next nine ers, and it just keeps growing growing, It accumulates.
Whereas the tariff is just a boom one shot. We
manufacture widgets, our cost of manufacturing widget goes up by
you know, ten percent, fifteen percent, whatever the actual number
turns out to be, and then boom. That's it. That's
a fixed cost inflation, which is so insidious, is cumulative.

(14:21):
It just keeps building and building and building. But while
there was good news on the economic front, there was
really bizarre news on the cultural affront. Right you who
Sidney Sweeney is?

Speaker 2 (14:36):
Actress?

Speaker 3 (14:36):
Yeah? Did?

Speaker 2 (14:40):
Could I tell you anything she's in? Probably not?

Speaker 3 (14:43):
Yeah, I I had no idea who she in?

Speaker 2 (14:45):
One of the superhero movies.

Speaker 3 (14:46):
I don't. I don't have no idea. But Sidney Sweeney
has created a stir. We got American Eagle, American Eagle
being accused of Nazism because Sidney Sweeney, whoever the hell
she is, so I'm starlet, is really excited because she

(15:07):
has really good genes g E n ees. They've marked
out the word genes j E A n s and
written in the word genes g E n ees and
that's somehow racist.

Speaker 10 (15:20):
Racial undertones.

Speaker 9 (15:23):
Upon good genes activates a troubling.

Speaker 3 (15:27):
This is a professor Robin LaMDA from King university.

Speaker 9 (15:32):
And historical associations for this country. The American eugenics movement
and it's prime between like nineteen hundred and nineteen forty,
weaponized the idea of good genes just to justify white supremacism.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
Despite that backlash, American eagles sock has been sore. I
love that, despite the backlash. It's sorry. You know, I
think I've got good genes. I do, all right. I
have good j E A N S's because I'm a
I'm a Denim's denim snob, and I have good g
E S s too. I think I have predominantly my

(16:10):
mom's jeans and Greece. She's ninety four years old, So
you guys have got a long time to put up
with me. So, yeah, I got good genes? Does that
make me racist? I think Dragon has good genes? Yeah,
I mean I I you know, you look at his
at his parentage and you know business, you know, a
business woman and then a rocket scientist. I mean he
didn't obviously get much of those genes.

Speaker 2 (16:32):
But here I am.

Speaker 3 (16:33):
Yeah yeah, But then here you are working with me
in this company, so you know you're never mind this
kiss the generation A great say, let me find a
different example that I can use. Somebody in this building.
Besides Dragon's got good jeens. I don't know. Oh, I
saw Kathy Lee out there a minute ago. So Kathy
Lee's got good genes. Oh. By the way, she's Asian too.
By the way, so apparently I'm you know, I'm racist

(16:56):
because I pointed out that the the Asian woman that
sneaked up to the fourth floor from the third floor
has good jeans. And so clearly, by the way, I
didn't he knows what she was wearing. He's talking tracksuit,
because that's kind of that was that is kind of
her outfit.

Speaker 2 (17:11):
Is like me in shorts, Yeah, you in an untucked shirt.

Speaker 3 (17:15):
Yeah. And blue jeans, I mean, good, careful, good blue jeans. Careful,
damn good blue careful. I mean they're they're the best
jeans money can buy. I need a new pair of jeans.
I don't know why, but I just do. I need
a new pair of jeans. So The New York Post

(17:37):
had a fantastic editorial about this kerfuffle, and it's hilarious. Uh,
let's let me pull it up real quickly. Pretty much
everyone wears blue jeans and modern America jeans have gone
from work wear the high fashion over the last one
hundred and fifty years. Dress them up, dress them down.
They're as flexible as American culture, fat or skinny, taller, short,

(17:58):
curvery to curveless, and everything in between. Jeans are the
fashion of unity, but when we're buying a pair, we're
not contemplating any of that. Instead, we're contemplating are these
racist jeans or not?

Speaker 11 (18:18):
So I see the Colorado Tourism Board is blaming federal
regulations for a drop in Colorado tourism. What federal regulations
would that be? Does it ever end?

Speaker 3 (18:34):
Nope? So Dragon starts haranguing me during the break about
Sydney's Sidney Sweeney is her name? I still know nothing
about her except all I had seen was the billboard.

Speaker 7 (18:48):
I looked up the IMDb shoes in that show Euphoria
on HBO. Apparently it's a drugture. I haven't watched it,
so I really don't know. And she was in Madam Webb,
one of the Spider Man Terrible Spinoft That that's the
only titles that I've seen from her.

Speaker 3 (19:03):
That's why I clue who she is. Yeah, but she
is kind of cute, Yeah, she's in fact, she's kind
of hot. Like that meteor that's, you know, slamming toward
the moon. Now, I thought it was slamming toward the earth,
but it's actually slamming toward the moon. But Dragon said, oh,
you're gonna go watch the the commercial, the actual TV commercial. Well,

(19:27):
I found Inside Edition has the commercial. It's cut up,
but they've got a pretty good take on it.

Speaker 12 (19:37):
Look amazing.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
Yes, that's why I buy. That's why I buy the jeans.
I do so that my butt will look amazing. Don't
you think my butt looks amazing? Dragon?

Speaker 2 (19:47):
Uh, missus redbrud At worked. Yeah, she does pretty good. Yeah, yeah,
I'll take it.

Speaker 7 (19:51):
Yeah, I'm safe.

Speaker 3 (19:56):
Well, at least I don't wear the old dad jeans
you know where you're you know, or or my buck
crack's not showing like I'm down on Broadway and.

Speaker 13 (20:06):
Right, I make your butt look amazing.

Speaker 10 (20:09):
Sydney Sweeney's new Genes campaign is sparking major backlash.

Speaker 13 (20:13):
Chans are posted one from parents to offspring, often determining
traits like her color, personality, start that off again?

Speaker 2 (20:23):
You know, I like how.

Speaker 3 (20:27):
I told you earlier. I'm tired right now because it's
been a fairly energetic show today, and I'm just kind
of like, I'm reaching that point where it's like, okay,
it's just time to go home.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
It's close enough.

Speaker 3 (20:38):
So, uh, dragon starts and I don't know how it
works out, but this has caught his brain and he
can't let it go. So here, this is your here.
You tell me when to start and stop, and you
just have at it.

Speaker 10 (20:54):
Here we go, Butt, look amazing. Sydney Sweeney's new Gens campaign.

Speaker 7 (21:00):
Okay, because she put it together, she wrote it, she
filmed it.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
She is there.

Speaker 7 (21:06):
The American Eagle or whatever the hell it is, is
her company, it's her ad campaign.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Or she is just well.

Speaker 3 (21:12):
Yeah, when George Klooning does a movie, you know, he
writes the script and he directs and he produces it
and he does all the acting, does everything. Because these
people are geniuses.

Speaker 10 (21:20):
I continue sparking major backlash.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
Now, can I stop it right there here? Whatever, Let's
see world's biggest quake in fourteen years. Matthew eight point
eight mag Russian Island updates AI in Wyoming may soon
use more electricity than the state's human residents. Uh. His
name is Hayesus. He's a carboner Ice just arrested him.

(21:47):
Oh that's that's on the Drudge Report right now. They're awful.
So yes, this this is a major backlash right.

Speaker 13 (21:54):
Here, from parents to offspring, often determining traits like her color, personality,
eve and eye color.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
Mm hmmm mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (22:09):
Jeans are offs often paste down traits, you know, even
things like hair color and eye color.

Speaker 13 (22:15):
My jeans are blue.

Speaker 3 (22:18):
Everything airliner, right, baldness, male pattern, baldness, Yes, those are
those are all genes. And then it flashes up. She says,
my jeans are blue, and the commercial flashes up. Sydney
Sweeney has great genes j e a n s.

Speaker 10 (22:34):
The campaign has a clever slogan, Sydney Sweeney has great genes.

Speaker 3 (22:38):
That's and she's pointing too. She's obviously in I don't know,
she's either in Hollywood or Midtown, and she's pointing to
a a poster in what's probably an American Eagle store,
maybe on Fifth Avenue somewhere. I don't know whether or
not an American Eagle. I don't have any clue. Uh,
Sidney Sweeney has great genes j E a n s.

Speaker 7 (22:58):
And she happens to be wearing blue jeans and a
blue jean jacket, and.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
Best I can tell not that this is important at all,
But I don't think there's anything under the jacket.

Speaker 2 (23:11):
I didn't look at this closely as you did.

Speaker 3 (23:12):
But if you, oh crap, you're the one that mentioned
it to me. You're the one that made me go
back and play it again so I could see. Yes,
you're right, she's not wearing anything under the blue jean jacket,
which is incredibly.

Speaker 10 (23:27):
Jeans with a J. But many believe the implication is
that Sydney Sweeney's jeans with a G are superior.

Speaker 13 (23:34):
My body's composition is determined by my genes. Hey, as appear,
Sidney's new ad is deeply, deeply un tuttling to me.
It's a problem when white people try to say that
the superior gene is blonde hair and blue eyes, but.

Speaker 10 (23:52):
Others are saying it's much a you about nothing.

Speaker 2 (23:55):
I'm not going to stop you.

Speaker 8 (23:56):
Well, the fun police have found something else to be
angry about.

Speaker 9 (24:00):
What I thought that that meant was, well, she was
wearing some great jeans.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
I get that's Tara's Faulkner, the black the black anchor
on Fox News. She's perplexed. She she truly looks perplexed
here in this little.

Speaker 9 (24:14):
Clip about what I thought that that meant was, well,
she was wearing some great jeans.

Speaker 10 (24:18):
I guess I'm really naive.

Speaker 7 (24:20):
So so, I mean, if it was Zoey Soldana halle
Berry in the same commercial, we'd be drooling as well.
It's it doesn't I don't you're drooling not currently.

Speaker 3 (24:36):
Oh but if go back and watch the commercial account
because you'll want to buy. I'm thinking, now, hell healths Bells,
why am I buying jeans from Raleigh Denim? I need
to go to American Eagle. Maybe you know, hey, sweetie
one to help grandpa buy some jeans.

Speaker 10 (24:54):
Controversy health or hurts American Eagle. Listen, you hear that
all presses good press. Certainly it created more awareness. If
there was anyone out there who didn't know what American
Evil was that they sell jeans, that it is a
brand that's still in existence. Now they certainly know.

Speaker 2 (25:10):
I thought you want to try these chams.

Speaker 3 (25:12):
I didn't really inside additions still existed either. So there's
the controversy of the day. Blue jeans. Good grief.

Speaker 2 (25:23):
Yeah, okay, all right, let's see no where was it
people that.

Speaker 7 (25:27):
Are far too bored with life itself that they need
to find something to complain about.

Speaker 3 (25:32):
Well, let me go back to do I still haven't
pulled up the Oh, I've already closed it again. That
gumm it. Uh. The New York Post story had a
great line in it that I want I want to
share with you because it's freaking hilarious. Uh. Let's see

(25:52):
Sydney Sweeney tantrum. Here it is. The headline is Sydney
Sweeney tantrum is all about the left's rage at America's rejection.
They refer to scroll scroll scroll scroll Here it's a
pretty basic ad current Hollywood it girls. Sidney Sweeney poses

(26:14):
provocatively next to a classic Mustang, wearing classic jeans and
a classic white shirt. She sexily fiddles with the engine,
sexily closes the hood, then drives away in her sexy
car while wearing her sexy jeens. The narrator tells us
Sidney Sweeney has great genes jeens. Get it, get it okay.

(26:35):
The outrage seems two fold. First, the usual suspects are
screaming accusations of racism at the idea of a white, blonde,
blue eyed starlet declaring the superiority of her genes. I
don't recall anywhere in that commercial where she said I'm

(26:57):
superior to you.

Speaker 7 (27:00):
That she even said these genes won't make your butt
look good.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
Right. Then it goes on to say, shades of eugenics
according to thee and I love this. The congregants of
the Church of the Perpetually Offended. We got a new religion. Yes,
we have the congregants in the Church of the Climate Activists,

(27:27):
and now we have the congregants of the Church of
the Perpetually Offended.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
Hmm.

Speaker 3 (27:35):
You know, if you've been looking at the culture wars
going on, there really is those who are looking to
be offended. Now. I find it hilarious that America. Here's what, well,
lest the New York Posts speak for me, American eagles
deliberate bucking of the body positive trend thrust upon us

(27:59):
by the human reas sources cult utterly infuriate certain unstable
members of our eclectic society. Some people blame all their
failures in life and the fact that somebody else was smarter, cuter,
or richer. It's envy, of course, and it undergirds every
ridiculous complaint about the New American Eagle campaign. But I
believe the overheated uproar over Sweeney's ad is about more

(28:21):
than just racism or envy, and it's about Donald Trump,
or more precisely, about the sharp right turn the American
people took last November. We are witnessing the desperate tantrums
of a progressive left that is struggling to accept the
verdict of the electorate. We've rejected their bizarre views on

(28:45):
gender and sexuality. We've rejected open borders of the American
Last programs, we rejected safe spaces, we rejected brutal fragility,
We've rejected pronouns, We've rejected their creepy of session with children.
And the pandemic response so effectively choked off information that

(29:06):
a gas lit Americans do into believing that our national
sensibilities had dramatically shifted. Well, they may have in some quarters,
but they certainly didn't in these quarters.

Speaker 12 (29:17):
Michael, Michael, Michael, could you just say you weren't racist
because you pointed out an Asian lady has good jeans?
Come on, why don't you apply some lefty logic here?
Asian cak, Asian, Asian cac, Asian you're a white supremacist.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Makes perfect sense.

Speaker 3 (29:41):
I'm so glad you played that one, because now I
completely understand how you were totally confused by that Caucasian Asian?

Speaker 7 (29:53):
What Carcasian Cacasian?

Speaker 3 (29:59):
All right, I got a drop for you, dragon, not
a job. I gotta way for you can make a
little extra walking around money. Have you been diagnosed with
postpartum depression? Not recently well, but you have in the
past I know, of course. Are you struggling with a
cancer diagnosis.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
Not recently good?

Speaker 3 (30:18):
Do you have mild cognitive impairment that you fear could
lead to Alzheimer's disease? Very much? So I do too.
I where Yeah, Are you a senior citizen who's curious
about adding CBD to your protocol?

Speaker 2 (30:29):
Slightly outside of that range?

Speaker 3 (30:31):
Okay, if you interrogested any of those questions, and if
you're a day tripper willing to share your experiences, see you, Boulder.
And actually, scientists all around the Denver metro area want
to give you some weed and mushrooms, weed and mushrooms,
and they'll even pay you for your time. A curseor
research of metro area clinical trials with psychoactive compounds turned

(30:55):
up more than a dozen studies involving synthetic psilocybin, CBD, THC,
synthetic DMT. What's synthetic DMT? Do you know what that is?
I don't know what that is? And a proprietary LSD analog.
But it's more than just signing up online and heading
to the app to end shoots to get high. It's

(31:16):
serious business, extensive screening processes and potentially heavy time demands.
But if you have a condition being studied in concert
with a psychoactive treatment, then a clinical trial could be
an option for you. Doctor Stacey Fisher, Professor of Medicine
at see U n Shoots. People who participate in clinical
trials overall tend to have better outcomes, specifically in cancer treatment.

(31:38):
Survivorship just seems to be better for people who participating
in clinical trials? Is there not? Look? I don't care.
I want to emphasize I don't care. If you want
to try psilocybin, you to try some sort of synthetic
proprietary LSD analog and that's your thing, and you've got cancer,

(31:59):
I'm all. I'm actually all for you trying whatever it
is you want to try it. If you want to
go to Mexico, you want to go to Warrez, you
want to go to I don't care Yemen. You want
to go wherever it is, and you want to try
something different than you can go try it. I just
find it fascinating that in Colorado that we we legalize
everything and then people figure out a way to turn

(32:22):
it into scientific research. New mothers in the United States
have been milking the cash cow by selling their own
breast milk for huge amounts to hungry babies, which is
you know, that goes back to our very first part
of the program about thinking about you know, long term,
not just about your short term life, but your long
term life and the hereafter. And to bodybuilders. Yes, bodybuilders.

(32:49):
Mothers are now profiting from their breast milk making capabilities
and apparently fight Club is taking it. They want to
let's see fitness trends, let's see where Nicole Howard says,
it feels like a full time job because I'm always pumping.
I've sold over seven thousand ounces in the past ten months.

(33:15):
Data from Queen Mary University of Lundon reveals no scientific
studies evidence that direct adult consumption of human milk for
medicinal purposes offers anything other than a placebo effect, but
a bodybuilder apparently thinks that it's something good, and so
they're selling their breast milk to bodybuilders. Ruby Doo from

(33:37):
Booby Doo, that's her name, Booby Doo from Utah said,
I use some of the money to buy myself a
new workout watch and by gifts from my kids and
my husband. Man, how much money are they making off this?
Does it say, oh, fifty cents an ounce? Charging fifty
cents an ounce two dollars an ounce for any hungry
health enthusiasts who need to boost after their workout. Maybe

(33:59):
that's what I need after this program be sweeny besweenie
mm hmm
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