Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Of course we're going to find something wrong with medication.
Speaker 3 (00:05):
When we do.
Speaker 4 (00:06):
Medication, be it antibiotics or anti depression or something like that.
Speaker 3 (00:10):
There's always a long list of Sorry, that guy was
a dumb ass. There's always a long list of side effects.
A lot of the side effects sometimes include rage and
aggression and depression and stuff like that.
Speaker 5 (00:28):
Yeah, there's any any number of things. Somebody somebody asked
on the text line whether or not, for example, tam
or since we retired, she feels that occasionally here or there,
but uh, does she see bullying? Bullying is one of
(00:51):
many factors. But to Dragon, Dragon were talking during the break,
bullying is something that's been going on.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Forever since there were people, Yes, since there were people.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
And bullying at school has gone on since there were schools.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
So it's I just you deal with the bullying.
Speaker 6 (01:12):
Yes, the individual that is getting bullied dealing with the bullying.
Speaker 5 (01:19):
And we've raised generations where they're taught not to do that.
Speaker 6 (01:26):
And don't get me wrong here and being the fat,
chubby kid, red haired kid in elementary and middle school.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
Kid, I was bullied a lot.
Speaker 6 (01:34):
But you know what, you just you deal with it.
You I don't want to say you accept being bullied,
but you just have to realize it doesn't matter what
that a hole thinks. Yes, that a hole may be
ten years old, but still an a hole and move on.
Speaker 3 (01:51):
Yeah but you got an email?
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Oh I did? Yes? Oh let me uh yes, interesting?
Speaker 3 (02:01):
Is this someone you know?
Speaker 6 (02:02):
No, it was just to me, not you and me,
So somebody specifically typed in my email dragon at iHeartMedia
dot com and not Michael Brown at iHeartMedia dot com.
But it was very interesting. Uh, just some feedback, but
lay off the Jesus. Too much of that talk makes
me switch back to music for my commute. Usually I'm
(02:25):
not I'm snarky, but I'm not meanhearted when I'm being snarky,
but this time I am. I wrote back, and I said,
hard not to talk about Jesus when talking about I
charged shooting.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
Enjoy the music.
Speaker 5 (02:42):
Interestingly, I think that would have been precisely what I
had said.
Speaker 3 (02:46):
Precisely.
Speaker 6 (02:47):
Would you rather talk about the prophet Mohammad or Gishnu
or right Buddha or what would you like us to
talk about right when there's a Catholic church shooting?
Speaker 3 (02:59):
Yes?
Speaker 5 (03:02):
Well, I guess, I guess when we're talking about Hamas
and Gaza and Israel. We can't talk about Jews, we
can't talk about Palestinians, we can't talk about God.
Speaker 3 (03:14):
We can't do any of that. So I guess that's foreboding.
Holy crap.
Speaker 5 (03:23):
Perhaps perhaps that's part of the problem, is that nobody
wants to talk about Jesus. So here we are. Now,
let me go back, because I do want to and
(03:44):
I don't mean to rub this in your face. I
truly am not attempting to do that, but I am
trying to establish some perspective of all places. Of course
this is CNN. I don't mean places CNN, but of
all people. Andy McKay, Yes, that Andy McKay from the FBI, I.
Speaker 4 (04:09):
Mean now seen in senior law enforcement analysts. Former Deputy
Director of the FBI, Andrew McCabe. Good to have you
with us this morning when we just sort of picking
up where Brian left off. There this clear obsession with
other shooters, with other mass shootings. We know there was
no criminal history, but all these other signs that I
suppose exist in these videos, in these posts.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
That work.
Speaker 5 (04:33):
Craig not whether you want to put this up on
the on the website. Michael says, go here dot com
or not. But if you do and you go look
at it, if Dragon puts it up, this is uh.
And the reason I said whether you want to do
it or not is because as they've got a three
box going on. So it's the CNN anchor. And again
(04:55):
this is from this morning because you knew this is
what they do. But it's a three box. You got
the anchor, and you got Andy mccabn. Two small boxes
over here on the left and on the right of
your screen. You have taking up two thirds of your
television screen.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
You have.
Speaker 5 (05:15):
Robin the shooter. Robin she's got her hair up in
curls or you know, pulled back and tied up in curls.
And Robin is obviously a sick individual.
Speaker 4 (05:28):
Or there are you seeing a rise in copycats given
what we're learning about this obsession that existed.
Speaker 5 (05:36):
I find this interesting because they want to focus on copycats.
When I say copycat shooters, I think most people would think, oh,
what's the common denominator. Well, let's just say, for again,
(06:00):
just pulling numbers out of my butt, let's just say
there are kids between the ages of sixteen and twenty one,
and they happen to be white, and they happen to
be middle class. Nobody talks about the other common denominator, transgenderism.
(06:20):
I wonder if any McCabe does.
Speaker 7 (06:25):
Yeah, absolutely, we are Erica, and I think this is
something that we've seen in other mass shootings. We've seen
mass shooters who actually refer in their manifesto to previous shooters.
But this one is really remarkable to me in that respect.
I was looking at you know, we don't. I haven't
seen the manifestos. I can say whether there are specific
references to the twenty twenty three Covenant School shooter in Nashville,
(06:47):
But if you look at that, if that's the situation
and this one, there are remarkable similarities. So both were
in their twenties, Both targeted religious schools that they formerly attended.
Both brought three weapons to the crime, Both purchased those
weapons legally. Both drove to the attack site and left
a vehicle there. Both posted manifestos in which they raged
(07:12):
and expressed grievance towards numerous ethnic groups and religions, you know,
a real broad stroke of kind of anger.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
There.
Speaker 7 (07:22):
Both sought to kill children, young children specifically, and I
think the most important year is both were students of
other mass shooters.
Speaker 5 (07:31):
And this is key because hmm, that's interesting. This sound
bite is two minutes and twenty seconds long. We've gotten through.
We've gone through one minute and twenty eight seconds of
this sound bite in which the former deputy director of
the FBI has named all of the common denominators between
(07:52):
all of these shooters save one. Here it lies the problem.
Nobody wants to say it. Nobody wants to say that.
Has anybody ever stopped and thought about, Hey, the Covenant
shooter and this shooter, and then there was another one
the It'll come to my mind in a minute, transgender.
(08:17):
I why are they afraid to say that?
Speaker 3 (08:22):
Why are they afraid to even consider it.
Speaker 5 (08:25):
Let's just set aside for a moment my personal belief
that it is a mental health problem, and instead, let's
just focus on it's a common denominator. Don't you want
to look at it? You would think that the former
director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, when he's listing
all the common denominators, they would look at every freaking
(08:46):
common denominator they could find, and they would look at
that one too.
Speaker 7 (08:50):
I think what we're seeing is as we have more
and more of.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
These mass shootings.
Speaker 7 (08:55):
If you are someone who is mentally disturbed and alienated
and filled with rage and grievance, and you're considering doing.
Speaker 3 (09:03):
This, he came close mentally ill, you.
Speaker 7 (09:08):
Can find a template, an example of someone just like
you who did it.
Speaker 5 (09:13):
And now, if you were stating if you were an
FBI profiler, I'm not an FBI profiler. Are you an
FBI profiler? If I were an FBI profiler and I
were going through all of these so called mass shootings,
and I was trying to come up with all the
commonalities that I possibly could, whether it involved let's say
you've got six, whether three or two or four or
(09:38):
all six of them had something in common, wouldn't you
list that? It may not be your number one common commonality,
but it might be on your list of commonalities transgenderism,
but they don't do it.
Speaker 7 (09:48):
That can be a very confirming, affirmative influence on someone
who is progressing to this sort of a violent act.
This could be really an indicator of a of a
expansion of the type and number of people who get
into this, who are drawn to these despicable acts of violence.
Speaker 5 (10:10):
Hum Not one, not one mentioned them, not one single
mention of it. So here we are, we ended the
mass killing annunciation Catholic church. Sorry, so you got to
you got to talk about God because it's a Catholic church.
And and you know the other thing I would put
in here too, if I were looking at all of this,
(10:35):
Minneapolis a hotbed an absolute hot bed of defund the police,
a hot bed of oh George Floyd, a hot bed
of the the whole leftist mentality.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
And you get, you get.
Speaker 5 (10:54):
Two children murdered, seventeen others injured, and what does the
public discourse immediately focus on?
Speaker 3 (11:00):
Guns?
Speaker 5 (11:01):
Manifestos, societal failures. But in the in all of the
cacophony of all of that, there's also another commonality. What
role might legal or illegal drugs or toxic expoke, toxic
(11:22):
exposures play in the volatile mix that drives some individuals
to violence?
Speaker 3 (11:30):
Because there's something else.
Speaker 5 (11:33):
Reporters routinely probe the medical histories are perpetrators, and it
usually reveals patterns of psychiatric drug use. Interestingly, that line
of inquiry seems to have disappeared, and it disappears it's
almost the inquiry starts to go down as the evidence
(11:56):
increases that certain medications carry warnings for suicidal thoughts, aggressive behavior,
And if you want to get really into the weeds,
what about environmental toxins, all of which disrupt normal brain function.
If you ignore all of those factors as much as
(12:18):
ignoring the transgenderism factor, then you're overlooking potential causes. And
that means you're going to miss opportunities to prevent future
tragedies through better data collection and analysis.
Speaker 6 (12:35):
If only we had somebody in Washington right now that
was pushing you know, know your foods, and you know,
check out your medications, and.
Speaker 5 (12:42):
Well, someday we'll get soday, someday there will be somebody
that really will want to make America healthy again. If someday, someday,
someday you go back to the late nineteen nineties early
two thousands when there was a mass shooting, there were
immediate questions about the mental health treatments, including any prescribed
(13:03):
drugs that the individuals are taking. And that was because
a lot of the suspects in the nineties and the
odds exhibited clear signs of mental illness and so everything
that you know, an autopsy would reveal or a criminal
investigation would reveal about what's in their body, what's in
(13:25):
the medicine cabinet, what's in their prescriptions, what are they doing.
All of that would be under the microscope. Let's go
right back here to Colorado. Harrison Klibo, thirteen people killed.
Harris was on luvoxamine and at a depressant an SSRI,
(13:48):
and it's known for its side effects like agitation. In
five the Red Lake Senior High School shooting, sixteen year
old Jeff Weiss killed nine others before he killed himself Prozac.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
Another SSRI.
Speaker 5 (14:05):
Kept Kinkel, the fifteen year old behind the nineteen ninety
eight Thurston High School shooting in Oregon, two dead, twenty
five injured, also prozac. Now, I think you got some commonality,
and those aren't Those probably are not anomalies. In fact,
there's a group called able Child that lists more than
a dozen similar incidents, including the Virginia Tech where Shung
(14:31):
Ha Chu killed thirty two people who had a history
of mental health treatment had been disprescribed antidepressants, although details
on his actual compliance history with those antidepressants was spotty.
James Holmes over here in Aurora murdered twelve injured, seventy
(14:52):
under psychiatric care and was on zoloft, another antidepressant that's
linked to manicup. Now the reporting, if you recall any
of those, those were the details that are often highlighted.
And then we had all of the debate going on
(15:12):
about whether the drugs that were a sensibly going to
alleviate depression, alleviate your anxiety, alleviate your bipolar disorder, could
actually instead be exacerbating those impulses in vulnerable individuals. In fact,
knowing the side effects, that's what you're supposed to look for.
And so then you finally get the FDA issuing warnings.
(15:35):
And in fact, have you ever heard because I use
Ambient occasionally, Ambient has something called a black box label.
You ever heard about black box label that tells both
your prescriber, your doctor, and the pharmacists that there are
increased risks of suicidal thoughts and behavior, and it's usually
(15:58):
particularly true with young people. And then they're experts like
Peter Braggan, a psychiatrist, who have long argued that these
SSRIs can actually induce violence and mania in a subset
of patients, a severe restlessness as a potential sign that
(16:20):
they're having craziness going on in their brains. The Swedes
did a study in twenty fifteen more than eight hundred
and fifty thousand people. They found that antidepressants were associated
with violent crime in more than eleven thousand cases. So
around the early two thousands, then something changed. Do you
(16:45):
know what changed? Direct to consumer drug advertising became normal
on our televisions because that was after the FDA regulation
of nineteen ninety seven, and that's flooded news organizations with
all of this information about pharmacology. Do you suffer from this?
(17:07):
Have you talked to your doctor about you know, if
if if you have this rash, well then you need
this drug. If you sometimes feel you know, or you're
of course, now it's if if you're fat or overweight,
or obese, or or diabetes or whatever it is. But
all of a sudden, the cabal is flooded with money
(17:27):
from Pfizer at all, pushing all of their drugs.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
Hmmm.
Speaker 5 (17:35):
At about the same time we start talk, we stop
talking about and the reporters stopped stop reporting on the
medications that these purpse are taken. Have you heard anything
about any medication that this guy was taking. I'm sorry,
this girl was this trends was taking. I haven't heard anything,
(17:58):
not a thing, But there's a lot of historical databases
out there. The Violence Project, Columbia Psychiatry note the mental
illness and up to sixty percent of mass shooters. Specifics
on prescriptions are now absent from media reporting. Just like Andy.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
McCain, Michael here in Colorado, we have a cure for
all those side effects.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
It's called psilocybin.
Speaker 5 (18:27):
That's weed. The psilocybin, you know, the magic mushrooms. We
got everything. Holy cow, no wonder the states so left up. Oh,
holy crap. So I use the I so apologize. I'm
so sorry for mentioning Jesus.
Speaker 3 (18:51):
Dragon.
Speaker 5 (18:51):
You don't have to say who it was from, but
we had we have someone that.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
That we both love and adore.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
Ha.
Speaker 5 (18:57):
What that's a joke, isn't it. That's listening to that
sent you in the email.
Speaker 6 (19:03):
It was pointed out that I was not snarky enough
with that that texter. They would have started the sentence
with Jesus Christ, what's wrong with you?
Speaker 1 (19:15):
Now?
Speaker 5 (19:15):
That is my se We would have got in the email.
How dare you take the Lord's name in vain?
Speaker 1 (19:19):
Does that?
Speaker 3 (19:20):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (19:20):
So we could just spiral out of control. Wait, this
program spiral out of control.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Never, never, never.
Speaker 5 (19:28):
I used an acronym, and I'm so sorry. I used
the acronym SSRI. I select the serotonin reuptake inhibitor. Those
are medications that are, I have to kind of laugh,
designed to treat depression, anxiety, and in the whole plethora
of mental health conditions.
Speaker 3 (19:47):
What do they do.
Speaker 5 (19:48):
It increases the level of serotonin in your brain, and
that's the neurotransmitter that regulates your you know, regulates your
your mental health. I guess you know, your mood and
your sleep patterns and all of that. It does that
by blocking the reabsorption reabsorption of serotonin, so it allows
(20:09):
the serotonines to remain more active.
Speaker 3 (20:12):
I don't know how it works. I don't know.
Speaker 5 (20:15):
I just know that a lot of people take them.
And I will tell you that very very short period
of time I was on an SSRI, and holy crap,
did I get off it as quick as I could
because it was just like, really, this is supposed to
treat depression or anxiety.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
This is giving me anxiety. So I stopped it.
Speaker 5 (20:39):
But I want to go back for a moment, because
I gave you the history of and I know you know.
Speaker 3 (20:46):
My granddaughter we were having dinner the other.
Speaker 5 (20:48):
Night and she I forget what the conversation was, but
she looked up at either her dadd or camera and said, now, remember,
correlation does not equal cause I looked at her like, crap,
We're we're raising some damn smart grandchildren.
Speaker 3 (21:06):
I love it.
Speaker 5 (21:08):
So I want to emphasize I understand the correlation does
not equal causation. However, in the in the nineties and
the odds, we have all of the reports about everything.
Oh they took asprin yesterday. Oh my gosh, they were
they they they were. They run testosterone, they run everything.
(21:28):
And now you don't hear squat about that.
Speaker 1 (21:31):
Hmm.
Speaker 5 (21:32):
I wonder why. Oh that was when we when the
FDA deregulated the pharmaceutical industry. And now you can watch
TV and you can you can be sitting there feeling
as healthy as possible, and your life is grand, everything's good.
And then there's the TV will tell you, because it's
(21:52):
a boob tube, the TV will tell you that you
got a disease that you're not aware of, and you
better run to your doctor right now, and you better
tell your doctor that you need that.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
Drug, who may not even have heard of that drug.
Speaker 5 (22:05):
That's right, we haven't even heard of that we and
we feel completely fine, but now we've been told that.
It's like if you go on to web md, if
you don't, if you go to doctor Google with your
symptoms and it doesn't tell you that it's probably cancer
or ultimately death, then you better go to your doctor
because it's probably cancer and ultimately death.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
And don't worry.
Speaker 6 (22:26):
If your doctor hasn't heard of that medication, he may
have something that was just brought to his attention by
another pharmaceugical company saying, hey, you may want to try this.
Speaker 5 (22:37):
You mean, the drug companies might actually go out and
it seems like if you went out and pushed drugs.
Let's just take something random like octy cotton. If you
go out and push that drug, and you push it
and push it, and you give financial incentives to push
that drug, you might end up with a some sort
of epidemic and an opiu a be from Barty five,
(23:01):
from Annie Griffith or no opioid, that's the word opioid.
You might end up with an opioid.
Speaker 6 (23:06):
Christ And on occasion too that the new drug that
the pharmacy is pushing.
Speaker 1 (23:11):
The doctor may have a few freebies for you.
Speaker 5 (23:14):
Yes, yes, oh you have to laugh at this stuff
because you realize just how screwed up the world is.
So we've got I gave you the history of pre
pharma advertising. Now let's go to post pharma advertising twenty eighteen.
(23:37):
Now we're talking in even you guys might be able
to remember these dates and some of these shootings. Parkland,
Marjorie Stone and Douglas High School down in Florida, Nicholas
Cruz killed seventeen. Well, it was reported everywhere that that
dirt bag had mental health issues. He had depression ADHD,
and he was in treatment. Could not find the specific
(24:02):
medications that he was on, but at least they acknowledged
that he had depression. Uvaldi. Come on, you guys, remember.
I know it's ancient history because it was three years ago.
In twenty twenty two, Salvador Ramos murdered twenty one. The
reports focused on his bullying and isolation, but there was
(24:23):
absolutely zero inquiry into prescriptions. Despite that, there were behavioral
health interventions, but nobody reboarded on the drugs.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
This is what I love about Lexus Nexus.
Speaker 5 (24:35):
I gladly pay the outrageous amount I pay to have
Lexus Nexus the twenty twenty three I know maybe you're
now beginning to wake up and remember Nashville. Oh, like Dragon,
I'm in deep doo doo here because Nashville was the
(24:55):
Christian school.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
Careful, somebody, You're gonna go listen to music because of you.
Speaker 3 (25:02):
Christian.
Speaker 5 (25:04):
Audrey Hale. Now we know that Audrey had because Audrey
wasn't an Audrey. Audrey had mental health struggles. Yet what
was the cabal talking about the gun? Not potential drug influences.
Then you've got twenty twenty four twenty twenty five Midtown
Manhattan shooting, where the gunman referenced chronic traumatic insil insepitalopathy.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
Easy for you to say, I know.
Speaker 5 (25:35):
A degenerative brain disease caused by repetitive head trauma. I
think I'm developing that banging my head on this console
in a note pharma pharmacological details.
Speaker 3 (25:50):
Zilch nothing.
Speaker 5 (25:55):
I find that there's a pattern that despite databases like
the FBI's Active Shooter Reports that note concerning behaviors in
two thirds of cases often tied to mental health conditions.
So it's worth noting that I think we have a
controversy on our hands, and.
Speaker 3 (26:16):
It's not Jesus.
Speaker 5 (26:18):
No, although you know, I wonder if he'd turn over
and listened to the Christian station, to the Christian music station.
Surely he's not listening to that. Those the crazy couple downstairs,
Rick and Kathy.
Speaker 6 (26:35):
Huh, it could be hit them wially maybe maybe maybe.
Speaker 3 (26:40):
Brett, Yeah, yeah, yeah, maybe Brett.
Speaker 5 (26:43):
I'm sure our audience is really at worked today because
I got on the elevator.
Speaker 3 (26:48):
I didn't smell.
Speaker 5 (26:48):
Anything, So I don't know whether it really doesn't work
today or not. How do you go see if the
truck if the truck's parked that back. We love our coworkers.
We have to love our Yeah, well except for the
blonde check across the hall.
Speaker 6 (27:03):
It's not an amongst them. Well there's us, but there's us.
Speaker 5 (27:06):
We established the standard for a wholeism and we're quite
proud of it too.
Speaker 3 (27:13):
Controversy.
Speaker 5 (27:15):
Do you know that some fact checkers dismiss the really
broad claims that link antidepressants to shootings because they want
to argue that there's no causal evidence, no causal link,
and that most perpetrators are not on meds. Now, think
about the logic of that most perpetrators are not on meds.
Let's just accept that as true. Well, but if you
(27:36):
have a class of purpose over here that are on medications,
can't you call can't you draw a causal link for
those who are on the medications? Oh my gosh, these
articles drive me nuts. Then you realize that a lot
of the fact checkers who are employed by the cabal,
by the media themselves, are actually allied with the drug.
Speaker 3 (27:57):
Ins industry interests.
Speaker 5 (28:01):
Here's a factoid the FDA's warnings and case studies suggests
patterns worth investigating, especially given that untreated mental illness does
indeed affect a significant portion of these shooters. But we
don't want to deal with that. We want to focus
on the guns. What if let's just play a what
(28:26):
if game for a moment. What if these instead of shooters,
we we lived in the United Kingdom and they were
all knifers. They were using butcher knives, they were using
kitchen knives. Do you think we would just all talk
about well, yeah, and unky, that's what they would do.
They would talk about knives. Nobody, nobody anywhere in the world.
(28:49):
I think wants to talk about mental health.
Speaker 3 (28:52):
The world is crazy.
Speaker 5 (28:54):
Yes, crazy, and I don't want to I don't want
to get anywhere near Christianity or Judaism or you know,
Catholicism or anything like that here. But the world really
is full of evil. Evil, even doctor evil. Yeah, they're
out there. But here's here's the deal. Man, If you
(29:18):
would just analyze commonalities such I don't know, maybe drug classes,
chemical bio markers, then if you're a policy maker like
stupid Kobachar, the senator from Minnesota, you know what she
could do. She could identify preventable factors from better prescribing guidelines,
(29:41):
maybe regulating some environmental exposures, actually dealing with some causes,
some cause and effect here. Now, I am never going
to try to excuse violence, and I'm not trying to
excuse violence. But what I'm suggesting is maybe you want
to listen to the signals and maybe we ought to
realize that there are there there, There is excuse me,
(30:05):
there is journalistic malpractice committed by both omission and comission,
and maybe you ought to just start thinking about maybe
there's some omission going on. I hope, but I doubt that.
Later in the day, we might hear that. Oh the
dirt bag Robin was on some SSRs. Yeah, wonder watch
(30:31):
for it.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
Michael Uh, you keep saying Christian. You do understand Christians
believe in Jesus Christ, and that might get someone feathers ruffled.
So maybe even Christians should be avoid because they do
believe in Jesus Christ.
Speaker 5 (30:49):
You said Jesus. Wait too many times. I can't believe
you've paid that on. Let that talk back come through.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
I'm even changing the station at this point.
Speaker 5 (30:55):
I thought the filter would catch that. And you're right,
we can't. You know, we can't talk about Jews, we
can't talk about Christians, we can't talk about well, we
can't talk about radical Islamis I suppose we, but you
shall talk about Palestinians. That's that's the new rule. I
can't keep up with the rules anymore. And then I
love this eighty three fifteen rites freedom of choice. You
(31:20):
choose to talk about Jesus when pertinent to the topic,
the listener chooses to listen to something else. That freedom
is there because we don't have state run radio like
many countries. Oh but we do. It's just the Trump's
defunded it it's called the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, it's
(31:42):
called public radio, but we have FCC run radio. Because
I want to call BS on a lot of things
going on in the news, and I can't call it BS,
so I got to call it bull crap. Alexa writes
that on Fox News, Bobby Kennedy Junior announced that the
(32:04):
Department will initiate looking into any link between SSRIs or
other pyche meds and violence.
Speaker 3 (32:13):
Huh, there you go. Dragon.
Speaker 5 (32:15):
If we only had somebody you ask and you receive someday, someday, someday,
then we get eighty three seventy eight, who writes Mike
as someone who is a big, big did I say
big yet? Fan of magic mushrooms? I think the shooter
could have used some. They make you very empathetic and
(32:38):
one with the world. They would have never done this
after a mushroom experience. Have you ever done mushrooms?
Speaker 1 (32:45):
Dragon, I've never done any thing.
Speaker 3 (32:48):
Have you ever smoked weed?
Speaker 1 (32:50):
Nope?
Speaker 3 (32:50):
Nope?
Speaker 1 (32:51):
People that have, Yeah, I.
Speaker 5 (32:53):
Mean I've smoked weed, but I found it to be
very Really what's this about. I didn't get it.
Speaker 6 (32:59):
I didn't even I'd definitely say I've gotten like contact
highs and everything, but I've never done it myself. Now
you get your what contact high because I've been in
the little smoking circles. But oh yeah, yeah, you have
a puff puff pass. Well, I'll just pass past.
Speaker 5 (33:12):
I'm I'm very uncomfortable doing any of these things like
I have. I have a very perverse curiosity about what
it is like to be on an LSD trip or
even coke, or even meth or even mushrooms. But I'm
a pansy and I'm not about to do it.
Speaker 6 (33:34):
I can't stand opioids and being having that crazy feeling
on those. It's like nope, And so I can only
imagine how i'd be on.
Speaker 5 (33:41):
So after my backstor you know, they gave me some
sort of uh, what's it, what's.
Speaker 3 (33:45):
It called percept?
Speaker 5 (33:48):
Yeah, I got percept, and it just made me crazy,
totally made me crazy.
Speaker 3 (33:53):
I'd rather no, I'm not sure.
Speaker 5 (33:54):
I'd rather have the pain, but the craziness, the feeling
of the out of body experience and just give me
some go hide profile. Yeah, horsonde coke or tequila tequila.
Speaker 3 (34:10):
There we go.
Speaker 5 (34:14):
After I don't I don't know. Just stay tuned. We'll
come up with something