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September 20, 2024 • 32 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Man.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Oprah nailed it. I think she spoke though, I think
she meant trout. Oprah always nails it.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
You know, he isn't fascinating how these millionaires and billionaires
that they're always bitching about, you know, they're not paying
their fair share.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
They're all buddies with them.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
That's funny thing is that they are more than welcome
to pay more.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
They certainly give.

Speaker 4 (00:29):
Is stopping them from giving the government more money from
their own free will.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
I'd also be curious how many of all those millionaires
and billionaires what they're charitable giving is. You know, they
care so much about the down trodden and the poor.
So I can't We've got the boat story and and

(00:59):
I do want you to hear it, but I can't
let you hear all of it.

Speaker 4 (01:07):
I edited the guy version, the shirtless guy.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Oh oh you did edit it? Yes, okay, So here's
what before you hear it, before I let Dragon play
it for you.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
He uses.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
He drops an F bomb and an S word, but
he gets pretty salty because a little reporter for a
little reporter act for CNN is at this Florida boat
parade for Donald Trump, and she asks him what his

(01:42):
main concern is and his concern obviously are taxes, inflation,
the cost of everything is going up, and she come
about class warfare. She makes an assumption that because he

(02:04):
owns a boat, that therefore inflation may may not be
affecting him. It shows how clueless economically the cabal is.
And in this case, I do think this woman is clueless.
I think the cabal at writ large is not clueless

(02:27):
at all. For them, it absolutely is class warfare. She
just happens to kind of swerve into it. But listen
to the audacity of what she asks.

Speaker 5 (02:37):
This guy, I live in a latitude, Marguerite de.

Speaker 4 (02:40):
Vellem, what's your most important issues?

Speaker 5 (02:43):
The economy? Getting interestras down, getting it what we can
afford to live in America? Right now? It's it's too expensive.

Speaker 6 (02:51):
Okay, now, let me maybe ask it like a slightly
imp that question. But you know, if he can afford
a boat, if you're not heard of, so bad, right,
because a boat costs a lot of money and.

Speaker 5 (03:02):
It's a lot of Upkeep listen, nobody gave me. I
earned everything that I've got. I'm retired military, retired power
plant and I am successful and retired and with boats,
jet skis because I did it right, and everybody has
that chance. Whether they choose or not, that's up to them.

Speaker 7 (03:20):
I would never try to take anything away from you
in that way. But what I'm asking is groceries are
probably a smaller part of your budget than say, you know,
someone who's like a little worse off. I think it's
interesting that people who are a little bit more comfortable
are still so concerned about the economy.

Speaker 5 (03:39):
I want my money to go further.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
She so, uh, maybe so you you have, you have
a boat, so you meet you maybe have more money
than other people. So maybe groceries aren't quite as large
of a percentage of your budget as say somebody else
who does not own the boat.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
Class warfare.

Speaker 3 (04:04):
When he goes and buys groceries, if he's also buying
Goya friolies, he's paying the same thing as someone who
makes less than him.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
He's paying the.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
Same thing as someone who makes more than him. It's
not how much money you make, it's how much money
you're spending. And if he chooses, if he's worked hard,
by the way, it wasn't firefighter as a power plant,
so he's retired military, retired power plant and as he'll

(04:41):
tell you shortly, he did everything the right way. He
worked hard, he saved, he created this life for himself
because he lives in a country where you're able to
do that. Now, are there people who are unfortunate who
don't have that, who maybe didn't have that, you know,
who did not have that work ethic?

Speaker 2 (05:01):
Of course there are.

Speaker 3 (05:04):
But for her to claim that what maybe doesn't hurt
you quite as bad because you owned a boat so
you got more money is pure unadulterated Marxism.

Speaker 7 (05:15):
I think it's interesting that people who are a little
bit more comfortable are still so concerned about the economy.

Speaker 5 (05:22):
To use what I'm because I want my money to
go further, I want inflation to go down, I want
interest rates to go back down. I want all that.
But that covers everybody in the economy, not just me,
not just a poor, not just a ranch, And that
covers everybody.

Speaker 7 (05:36):
That's something I've heard from some people tell me, if
this supplies to use like there, their kids aren't able
to afford.

Speaker 5 (05:41):
A house or a clou I trained my kids and
taught my kids properly. They have great educations and they're
both successful in their careers. Actually, they're doing better than me.

Speaker 3 (05:54):
The audacity of her to ask that question, the audacity
and of course the ignorance of her to ask that question.
But that's what's happening in the country right now. So
what's Kamala Harris doing. Kamala Harris is playing to the

(06:15):
economic illiterate, either willfully or by virtue of the fact
that they were never taught economics and we're somehow all
taught to be envious. One thing that my parents taught
me is no matter how wealthy or poor you are,

(06:41):
everybody has problems. I got problems, You got problems. The
only person I don't have problem that I know that
doesn't have problems is Dragon. And Dragon doesn't have problems
because he's just too stupid to know that he does
have problems.

Speaker 4 (06:53):
All I know is I got a grandson's birthday in.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Two weeks, right, so dragons.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
Dragon's got his priorities, folks, And it doesn't make any
You know, Dragon bitches about how much money he doesn't make.
But I guarantee n t you whatever amount of money
the dragon doesn't make, there'll be plenty of money to
take care of Lance. When Lance's birthday comes around and
He'll get whatever whatever the grandparents want to get him.
By golly, they're going to get Lance, And I say

(07:20):
go for it, because Dragon gets to make his choices
and I get to make my choices.

Speaker 2 (07:29):
You know.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
One of the one of the people that I got
to know fairly well in a previous life was David Murdoch.
David Murdoch is the owner of Dole Foods. I don't
even know if David's still alive or not. I should check.
I haven't talked to him in years. David's a billionaire.

(07:52):
I was with him one time on his ranch north
of la and we were in this old beat up
pickup truck driving around on the ranch talking about stuff,
and he confided in me about a problem he was

(08:12):
having that. As I listened to this problem, I thought
to myself, Gee, I wish I had that problem. Let
me just make something up. Uh, the maintenance costs, the
maintenance costs of my private jet have skyrocketed, and it's
just really it just irks me that I've got to pay,
you know, whatever the annual was. You know, maybe he's

(08:33):
having an annual done on his Gulf Stream and whatever
that annual was going to cost. It was so much
more than what he expected, and he was really ticked
off about it because you know, dang it, I'm I'm
gonna have to go write a check for this, and
you know, and then then you know, whether you actually
had to sell some stock or do something.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
I don't know, but for.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
Me it was it was a reinforcement of my parents
teach to me that regardless of what your income is,
that we all have problems. And for David Murdoch that
was a problem. Now, his problem, from my vantage point,

(09:15):
was not a problem because well, you've got them, you've
got the money to pay for it. But for him
it was still a problem because he didn't expect to
pay that much money. Go back to this guy that
owns the boat, owns the boat and some jet skis,

(09:36):
none of which I have any interest in whatsoever.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
I still don't like the reasoning of her questions, like
you're well off, you own a boat. That's just like
saying to somebody here, we don't have lakes or you know,
really rivers to have big boats to play in. But
that would just be like, hey, you're well off, you
own a car.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Exactly so much.

Speaker 4 (09:58):
It's like when I joke about our he owns a car,
he owns a car, she owns a car, she owns
a car. He has to No, it's it's not a
big deal, right. For example, you know, I.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
Sometimes mentioned I drive a Jeep Grand Cherokee and I
got a BMWM Sport. That car is now four years
old with I think seventy two thousand miles on it.

Speaker 4 (10:23):
Time to throw it away. It's too old.

Speaker 3 (10:24):
Yeah, it's too old. Time to throw it away. So
when I was when I was having the tires change
over the garage, the garage is not expert yesterday, actually
before that, when when I had it in for service
the week before, and they were like, Brown, you idiot,
you gotta quit driving this car. Your your tires are bald.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
Stop it.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
And we know how you drive, so you park this
thing until we get you some tires. And the question
that Paul asked me, which I chuckled at, was because
he was concerned because you know, as OEM original equipment,
it comes with run flat tires.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
And I despise run flat tires. I hate them.

Speaker 3 (11:09):
They're noisy, they're hard, they have no performance whatsoever. They're
just crappy. It's horribly crappy and so I said, well,
you know, I've always wanted to get rid of run
flat tires, but I've been told that I can't. And
Paul looked at me and said, well, I don't know
who's told you that, but that's not true. You can
change out the run flat tires. It's just whether or

(11:29):
not you intend. If this car is leased and you
turn the lease back in and you've taken off the
run flats and we put on regular tires, you're going
to put the run flats back on, so you're going
to pay double. I'm like going, well, no, I intend
to drive this car until it falls apart, because I've
maintained that car. In fact, when I bought the lease out,

(11:53):
I had to take it back to the dealership because
I had to do an inspection before I could buy
the lease out, and you know, they were going to
detail it and do all this other stuff. And when
I went in to see the sales guy, he said,
do you ever drive this car? And I said, well, yeah,
look at the mileage. Of course I drive the car,

(12:13):
and he goes, we didn't need to detail it. Well,
that's because I take care of the things that I buy,
because I want to get as much use out of
them as I possibly can. Would I like to trade
it in and get a new M sport?

Speaker 2 (12:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (12:35):
Am I going to know why? Because that's a choice
I make. I would rather drive a car that I'm
comfortable in. I know the maintenance records on it. I
know what's working and what's not working. What's not working
I've gotten fixed and everything's working just fine. The seats
are I mean, the interior of this car is perfect,

(12:56):
absolutely perfect.

Speaker 5 (12:59):
Why would I it?

Speaker 3 (13:00):
In the point being, we all make these different choices.
This guy made a choice. He wants on a boat,
he wants on a couple of jet skis. I have
no interest in a boat or jet skis. I've had
friends who have had boats. You know, their happiest day
when they've sold the boat and they no longer have
all the expenses, all the upkeep, all the maintenance, all
the insurance, everything else, storage, everything that goes on with

(13:23):
owning a boat. But I don't begrudge the guy owning
a boat. But the little twerp does and she makes
an assumption that because you own a boat, well then
it's easy for you, just like although I didn't make
the assumption, I recognize that David Murdoch was upset because
whatever he was bitching about to me, it was like, Gee,

(13:45):
I wish I had that problem. Well, maybe I actually
don't wish I had that problem. Do you know what
it costs to own, maintain and operate a private jet?
Would I love to have one?

Speaker 2 (14:00):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (14:01):
If I had the means by which I could comfortably
afford it. And then I think, for what practical purpose
to fly to the undisclosed location and then and then
land at an airport that is, you know, twenty thirty
or maybe well, by the way the crow flies might
be thirty or forty miles away, and then I'd have

(14:24):
to keep a car there and then drive Because you know,
I used to work for a family in Oklahoma.

Speaker 2 (14:29):
Who did that.

Speaker 3 (14:30):
They kept beat up, old cars at in Dallas, in Tulsa,
and in Oklahoma City. Why because they liked to fly
their planes, and they would fly their planes to these
different places and they'd have these old beat up cars. Now,
these these were very wealthy people that I worked for.

(14:54):
I was their lawyer in house council. And yet they
didn't I'm driving an old beat up car. They just
needed to get from the airport to airport to where
their meeting was, and they didn't care if they showed
up in an old VW bug or an old beat
up four f one fifty. They didn't make a difference
to them. Everybody has different problems, different levels of income,

(15:16):
different desires, different aspirations, all of that, and Kamala Harris cannot,
for the life of her answer one single question honestly
about what she's going to do about any of this stuff.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
When she.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
When she starts talking about, we'll just take a.

Speaker 2 (15:47):
Listen to this one.

Speaker 4 (15:48):
We love our country.

Speaker 3 (15:51):
I love our country.

Speaker 4 (15:52):
I know we all do.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
That's why everybody's here right now.

Speaker 4 (15:54):
We love our country.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
We take pride in the privilege of being America.

Speaker 4 (16:04):
And this is a moment where.

Speaker 3 (16:08):
We can and must come together as Americans.

Speaker 4 (16:12):
Her fingers are, we have so much more in common
than this. Let's come together with the character that we
are so proud.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
Of about who we are.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
She has no policy that she wants to expose to
scrutiny whatsoever. This is all deliberate and on purpose. Let's obfuscate,
let's deny, let's hide, let's prevaricate, Let's do everything we
can but don't tell them what your real policies are.

Speaker 4 (16:44):
I'm a trucker.

Speaker 8 (16:46):
I'm at maybe sixty last year, and it's been that
way for quite some time during a maintenance and cost However,
I have on three airplanes in my life.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
A sixty six ten and a seventy two to two ten.

Speaker 5 (17:03):
Now, if that little.

Speaker 8 (17:04):
Girl seen me at the airport, she probably assumed I
don't have to worry about making my bills, she'd be
damn wrong. I'm broke as hell because.

Speaker 3 (17:13):
Of I think the boat guy touched a nerve as
I wanted it to, because it shows you just how
utterly off track this country has gotten. You've been number
eighty three fifteen Mike. It has been my experience that

(17:35):
most wealthy people have two basic characteristics. One, unless you
are a very close friend and know their history, you
really don't know their wealth. Two, they have earned their
wealth by making intelligent choices about how they spend that money.
They're not going around frivously spending their wealth. Not all
are like this, but I feel most are, and more
power to them for having the ability and the wisdom

(17:58):
to make it work. Yes, and I would say this,
this is why I wish if I could do one
magical thing. It would It would be to take not
necessarily you eighty three fifteen, but I'd like to take

(18:19):
like that little dwee of a reporter from CNN and
take her to some of the crabhole countries that I've
been to and let her see real poverty.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
I mean true.

Speaker 3 (18:31):
Poverty, because most people in this country have never seen
real poverty. They don't know what it's like. Thirty four
eighty six, Mike, a bass boat goes for between sixty
and one hundred KFYI well, maybe that might be one
reason why I don't have a bass boat. Mike Goubman, Ever,

(18:53):
forty seven to sixty five one percent. I've got a
twenty twelve Tacoma with two hundred thousand plus miles, and
I'll be buried in exactly seventy nine and forty four Mike,
boat boat stands for break out another thousand in this.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
Zero four to three three.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
One thing I got out of that interview with the
guy with a boat is the hypocrisy in the media.
She is telling that guy that because he owns a boat,
he shouldn't be concerned about the economy. Now, if you
go by that way of thinking, then when Kama says
she is concerned about the economy, why don't they tell
her she is a millionaire and rubs elbows with the

(19:35):
richest woman in the world. How can she be concerned
about the economy. That's the great thing about communists and
Marxist They never want to, as Dragon says, they could
go pay more money in taxes if they wanted to.

Speaker 4 (19:53):
Nothing stop at them.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
And in fact, there is a particular account that you
can make out to the UN Treasury that if you
want to make more money, if you want to pay
more money in taxes the Treasury, you will gladly accept it.
If you want to pay more money to help pay
down the national debt, they will gladly accept it. And
I would also challenge, I'd like to see what Kamala

(20:17):
Harris's charitable giving is.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
What does she do?

Speaker 3 (20:23):
Why don't you tell us that sweetheart, tell us that
eighty eight seventy seven, Michael, that reporter lady with the
guy who owns the boat did everything but say the
quiet socialist Marxist part out loud. I was just waiting
for her to ask, why don't you give some of
your money to the people who can't afford groceries. You
see that little dweeb of a reporter. She's never seen poverty.

(20:47):
She doesn't see anything except the results of that guy's
life of hard work in the military and working in
a powerhouse. Whether I don't know it was a electrical generate,
but so I don't know why. But he worked in
some sort of power plant. That's hard work. That's hard

(21:08):
physical labor, as obviously is the military.

Speaker 4 (21:11):
Fox Business had a story in twenty twenty one, So
take this with a grain of salt that it's a
little older. But Kamala Harris and her husband donated just
one point six of their income from twenty twenty.

Speaker 3 (21:24):
They didn't even tie. They didn't even give ten percent.
Let's see, this is pretty astute. Twenty two to ninety three, Mike,
the young reporter is a victim of her entitled thinking
and career laziness. This guy is rich and successful, so
he doesn't care. He doesn't suffer fools, and I love

(21:47):
this one. Fifty two thirty two. Mike had been up
since five o'clock this morning, haines and kitchen cabinets before
I leave town at eleven o'clock today, I was a
bit surly about my situation until I realize I'm about
to go sit on a couch in the sky and
I spent the extra twenty five bucks to get extra
leg room. Now I'm really angry because I don't feel

(22:09):
like I'm paying my fair share. I've already decided not
to buy a boat. But what else can I do?

Speaker 2 (22:16):
Well?

Speaker 3 (22:17):
I mean, I can't believe you're this dance to not
understand what else you can do?

Speaker 4 (22:21):
Jem gets back real quick to the Kamala Harris and
her husband donations. Diving deeper into the stories, the pair
reported to their excuse me, their adjessed gross income was
one point six million dollars but contributed only twenty seven
thousand to charity in twenty twenty, which is about one
point six percent of their income. The average charitable contribute

(22:43):
contribution among households reporting five hundred thousand to two million,
was roughly three percent of their income, So she didn't.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
Even do you have what the average is?

Speaker 3 (22:55):
So back to the guy that says, I don't feel
like I'm paying my fair share, and I've already decided
not to buy a boat, But what else can I do?

Speaker 2 (23:01):
Well?

Speaker 3 (23:01):
You can do the you can do the fair thing.
You can take the money that you're not going to
spend on a boat, and you send half to me
and half to Dragon, or actually you could send seventy
five percent to me in twenty five percent to Dragon,
because that would be the fair thing to do, because
obviously I deserve more because I work harder than Dragon.
Does I mean? I you know, see, isn't it Isn't

(23:26):
it all stupid? And how we fall into this trap
of well, we don't fall into the trap. We've been
pushed into the trap. We've been pushed into the trap
to believe that. Because take Jeff Bezos just randomly, I
don't know why I came into my mind, but pick

(23:48):
Jeff Bezos.

Speaker 2 (23:50):
To one of the world's richest men. Do you think
he always was?

Speaker 5 (23:56):
No.

Speaker 3 (23:57):
He came up with the idea, called it Amazon, and
thought he'd sell a few books. And then after he
realized that he could sell a few books online, he thought, well,
maybe I'll take some of this money that I've made
selling books, and I'll expand that a little further and
I'll sell some trinkets, I'll sell some crap from China,

(24:21):
I'll sell whatever. And then he grows and he grows
and grows and now Amazon. Yeah, I mean, you can't
drive down the street without seeing an Amazon truck unless
it's an Amazon Electric vehicle that's parked by the side
because it's running out.

Speaker 2 (24:33):
Of a charge.

Speaker 3 (24:35):
Fred Smith Neil fred Smith is Fred Smith. I think
is one of the most admirable people in the world.
I don't know anything about his personal life whatsoever. He
may be actually be a scumbag, but I think it's
one of the most admirable people in the world because
of an idea that he had, and that was how

(24:55):
beout If I get an airplane and I tell, well, uh, these,
I forget where FedEx started. Let's just say it was
in Denver. What if I what if I buy an
airplane and there are a lot of people in Denver
that do business in Chicago. And so I tell people,

(25:16):
I I you know, I go around, I pass out
business cards, you know, to every business I can find
in Denver. I'll do the same thing in Chicago, and
I'll guarantee people that you give me your package that
needs to be in Chicago, you know, by tomorrow morning,
and I'll fly it there overnight. Fed X Federal Express

(25:37):
FedEx is now a verb kind of like you know, Kleenex,
we've now co opted the term just just fed X. Well,
actually you could dhl it, you could ups it, you
could even try to usps it if you wanted to.
But Fred Smith took that simple idea and build it

(26:00):
into a worldwide company. You you want to get it
to London overnight, Yeah we can do that. You want
to get it to New Delhi, Yeah, yeah, we can
do that. And think about you ever go to the
hub sometime and watch those planes fly in and out. Oh,

(26:22):
it's it's utterly fascinating. Or find I don't know whether
you can find it on YouTube or not, but find
the video, maybe a high speed video of of of
the sorting facility. And then somebody came up to the
whole idea of a barcode. Just scan the barcode tells
you everything you need to know, and then come and

(26:43):
then somebody developed the machine that does all the sorting.
Imagine that Steve Jobs. These damn iPhones that were all
now addicted to utterly changed, utterly change everything more computing
power in this you know, they just honored them. The

(27:05):
the what would they call the hidden lives of the
story of the of the black female mathematicians and computer
experts that worked on NASA on the Apollo program. We've
got more computing power in these stupid phones than they had.

Speaker 2 (27:23):
Gifts.

Speaker 3 (27:23):
For some reason, we think that we at a Now
do they pay more taxes? Think about the story about
Warren Buffett, and everybody keeps using Warren Buffett as an
example that his secretary pays more in federal income taxes

(27:48):
than he does. Well, that's because Warren Buffett. I don't
know what his salary is, but he takes a very
minimal salary. So he may pay his secretary. Let's just
say he pays her one hundred thousand dollars and he
takes fifty thousand dollars in salary. He's still one of
the richest man, if not the richest man in the world.

(28:09):
I think it bounces back between four or five different people.
Maybe it's Elon Musk today, I don't know. But they
don't take salaries. They are money off coupons. And if
you don't know what that means, go look it up.
And I gotta take a break because I got to
make some money.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
I'll tell you I cannot stand class warfare. I hate it.
If I were living in a shack, I would not
pay it to the rich. No, that's stupid. The wealthiest
person that I know works like six and three quarter
days a week, never quits, and he's in six gear
all the time. He's pushing so hard. And I'll tell

(28:48):
you what, when people diss him, I don't get it.
I just don't understand it.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Class warfare. That's all.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
The Democrats have to run on class warfare. And they're
able to do that because progressives that are really re
Marxists to begin with, have inculcated an entire not just
an entire generation, but a couple of generations of kids

(29:18):
younger than me to believe that somehow that the economic
pie is limited and that if if I'm taking In fact,
somebody mentioned this on the text line, that if if
I'm doing something, if I'm making X number of dollars

(29:39):
per year, that whatever, that whatever they think the right
amount out to be. By the way, the amount of
money that I make every years dependent upon two things.
One what my employer, iHeartMedia and I can agree to
in terms of contracts, and two what I'm able to

(30:02):
do in terms of this program to attract sponsors who
will pay me a fee to endorse their product, now
just to make certains. You understand, I don't endorse anything
that I don't either use or that I haven't vetted myself.
But somehow, whatever I make doing this prohibits somebody else

(30:28):
from making part of that money, which is insane. As
somebody pointed out about the boat owner, the money that
he has saved and the money that he makes from
a pension or social Security or whatever sources of revenue
streams he has right now, that boat alone represents profit

(30:55):
for somebody else. Storage fees, maintenance, upkeep. I'm sure occasionally
he has to have it, you know, it has to
have the interior redone, much like you went on an airplane.
Much like I do with the cars. I take them
to the garage. I get my service done there, and

(31:15):
by the way, I pay for my service there, so
that the owners of the garage make money off me
while I'm making money off them. Seems to me it'd
be a win win situation. But we've trained people to
think and to believe that somehow a millionaire, whether it's
Fred Smith or it's Jeff Bezos, that somehow they're preventing

(31:37):
us from making more money. The amount of money, for example,
that I make is dependent upon how good of a
job that I do every single day, six days a week.

Speaker 4 (31:52):
What's wrong with that?

Speaker 2 (31:54):
There's nothing wrong with them.

Speaker 3 (31:56):
For somehow, that weep little reporter thinks that, however wrech
money i'mmaking, or the boat owners making, or the dragon's making,
is somehow preventing her from making more money. Her wind
Santa taxpayer relief shops coming up there
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