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The way Jasmine Crockett speaks is by design, and it mocks poor black people. Jon Stewart vs Elon Musk, and what Elon Musk should have said. In defense of Gene Hackman’s last days…

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What Does God’s Word Say?
Genesis 3:19: “By the sweat of your face you shall eat bread, till you return to the ground, for out of it you were taken; for you are dust, and to dust you shall return.”
Genesis 18:27: “Abraham answered and said, “Behold, I have undertaken to speak to the Lord, I who am but dust and ashes.”
Ecclesiastes 12:7: “And the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.”
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the three Stories version of the Todd Herman Shows.
Story number one, Jasmine Crockett is mocking poor black people,
and so I'm gonna mock poor black people and we'll
see how that goes and see if it seems odd
and horrible. Story number two, John Stewart versus Elon Musk,
and story number three in defense of Gene Hackman's last days.

(00:25):
We'll talk about this with the help of Know Your
Risk Radio dot com Zach Abraham's free Live webar but
the first one hundred days of the Trump administration is
yours at no Your Risk radio dot com. Thank you
for the opportunity to do this. To God Almighty, the
Todd Herman Show is one hundred percent disapproved by big
pharma technocrats and Tyron severyan where.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
From the hind mountains of Free American. Here's the Emerald
City exime Todd Herman.

Speaker 1 (01:02):
Today is the day the Lord has made, and these
are the times in which God has decided we should live.
How do you feel when you see someone mocking somebody
for things they can't change about themselves? For instance, there
are people who speak as people who have little education.

(01:28):
They might have limited vocabulary, there's words they might not
say correctly, and how do you feel when you see
smart people mocking them? When I lived in Utah, there
were these regionalisms, and one of the regionalisms was people
would say library instead of library, and it was just
a thing that Utahans did. They had other very strange

(01:50):
speech affectations. One was oh for ignorant. And the first
time I heard someone say to me and they were
addressing me, oh for ignorant, and I did not have
any idea what they were saying, oh for ignorant. And
so I did a radio program about this, about hearing
people say library and over ignorant, and I was just

(02:13):
asking what these things mean. And so someone called and said,
oh for ignorant means you're being ignorant, Oh for ignorant,
Oh for ignorant. And then other people called to argue
with me that it actually was the library. But what
didn't occur to me was to mock people around me
who did that. So we turned the show into these regionalisms,

(02:36):
like funny things that happened regionally, y'all. I mean, that's
become sort of commonplace now, bless your hearts, But people
actually say that in the South, and it means something
quite different to us. I mean, I guess in the
West we say this mock bless your heart.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
But how would you.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
Feel if a super well educated white dude decided to
talk ghetto. I mean, it's sort of like when you
see members of Congress doing this. There's that purple heard
weirdo from what she from Maine, you know, the purple
heard word I'm talking about with the hipster glasses. I
should have pulled this for this base. But she did

(03:15):
a sort of rap video, not not really rap, where
she's sort of doing spoken word poetry, but she's speaking
from the urban dictionary. You know, people coach run this.
If I was a black person, I don't know that
i'd call that cultural appropriation. I think it's say you're
mocking us. Now, if I were to walk into let's say,

(03:38):
a black neighborhood and attempt to do this, first of all,
it would be unbelievably cringe because I can't.

Speaker 2 (03:47):
And back of the day when I first heard black
people say yes, I eas.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
I I heard that and thought, what if I did that?

Speaker 2 (03:59):
Well, you would deserve in my mind.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
In my mind, if as a white cat you did that,
I think you would deserve ahead smacking.

Speaker 2 (04:10):
I think you're signing up to.

Speaker 1 (04:11):
Say, please provide me a good solid whack it about.
And I think after that you should say thank you sir,
that was a height. Then you get another one. But
what if it was a really well educated black woman
who's mocking less educated black people. All right, so maybe

(04:34):
she's a comedian, So maybe she's making fun of quote
her people the way comedians will do. You know, black people.
Black comedians can make fun of Black culture in a
way ways white people can't. Maybe it shouldn't be that way,
but it's that way.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
Now.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
Of course, black comedians can make white people all day long.
Hispanic people can do that. Same sex attracted people can
make fun of straight white people. But them's just the rules.
Oh there's a regional Them's just the rules. But honestly,
how would you feel if the motive changed? What if
it wasn't to get laughs? What if it was to

(05:10):
get votes? And what if it was a level of
playcating that was unbelievably easily proven. A well educated black
woman mocking less educated black people. Now I thought, maybe

(05:31):
this is just me observing this with Jasmine Crockett. It's
not just me. I found a black woman who has noticed,
maybe not the mocking, because I don't think she's aware
of Jasmine Crockett's actual background or the character Jasmine Crockett
is playing.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
And this goes to a far deeper, deeper problem.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
You know, when I was a young kid and we
were first experimenting with trying to get phone numbers from
girls and trying to get a kiss from girls, we
invented names honestly because we were unsure of ourselves. And
one of my pickup names was Kloyd Dexter because I
thought the yeah, I know, Cloyd Dexter. I thought that
sounded like a sexy name, Cloyd Dexter. And the problem was,
when you really liked a girl, you had to work

(06:16):
run at things, say yeah, my name's not really Cloyd Dexter.
And back in the day, it would be oh, that's okay,
because that wasn't my real phone number I gave you.
So by the way, you know, we're all playing the game,
and it was an act, and it was this form
of security, and oh, we were being so clever, and
so were the girls giving us fake numbers or using
their middle names. And I'm going to guess if you
ended up liking somebody.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Yeah, you told the truth. I was just playing around.
I was just joking.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
And it was not, by the way, to go sleep
with the girls. Praise God. I've never been that sort
of guy. But maybe you gonna get a kiss, But
then you're kissing Cloyd Dexter. You're not kissing me. But
what about to get votes or to divide society? What
about to be part of a color revolution?

Speaker 3 (06:55):
Now?

Speaker 2 (06:55):
I don't think this woman feels I don't know.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
I think sheels marked, but I don't think she's aware
of Jasmine Crockett's full level of mockery or this character
she's playing.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
But she does not dig Jasmine Crockett Texas.

Speaker 4 (07:17):
What are y'all doing?

Speaker 5 (07:18):
Are y'all really proud of a representation y'all getting from
Jasmin Crockett?

Speaker 2 (07:23):
I'm serious?

Speaker 5 (07:23):
Are y'all proud at the way Jasmin Crockett carries herself
in Congress? Jasmin Crockett is a racist, trashy, ghetto piece
of myss Yup, I said, y'all get mad at mile,
y'all want I send ten toes Donald?

Speaker 4 (07:36):
What I said?

Speaker 5 (07:36):
I said it that minute. She's a ghetto trashy, racist
piece of crap. Jasmine Crockett mouth is completely filtered to
be in Congress, for her to be representing the American people,
she mouth is filthy.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
She don't eat no.

Speaker 5 (07:53):
I don't care what she said at home and how
she talking at home. But when you're in Congress representing
the people of the United States of America, represent the people
your you should know how to act and.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
How to control yourself.

Speaker 5 (08:03):
How mouth is ridicted. Now, don't get me wrong, my
mouth can be ridiculous sometimes.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
But I'm not in Congress.

Speaker 5 (08:08):
I'm not representing a certain dishes of people who put
me in office. And you can best believe if I was,
I would know how to act and how to carry myself.
Even if you disagree with someone, you should know how
to carry yourself. Jas Mincrockett is a piece of ghetto trade.
And I'm so sitting y'all, I here telling meself. Oh,
Jack mccracktt is a strong black woman, Jack mccrocktt. Don't
take no mess, Oh Jack mccrocktt.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
She'll tell you.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
Wait, don't take no mess. I'm taking that that's mine now,
I don't take no mess.

Speaker 5 (08:34):
I'm stealing that one Jasmincrockett is that ghetto piece of
trash who do not know how to control herself or
do not know how to act in congress.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
And it is what it is. So if I were
to break into this and do a Howard Sterring thing
and see no, no no. Hold on now, lady, hold on, sister, now,
let me ask you. Let me ask you about this
chas mcracket. I don't take no mess, no no, no none.

Speaker 1 (08:53):
Either might be trash, right, she try to get cheap lives.
What if it was to try to relate to her,
yo yo yo, I feel you, No, I feel you.
She ghetto trust, She don't know, she don't know know
what I say?

Speaker 2 (09:09):
Ain't men and amen it's second bat that joke.

Speaker 1 (09:14):
I want to let her finish because she is a
very eloquent woman. One of the magic things about social
media is you can experience all different forms of eloquence.
She has no in her regionalism, from where she comes from,
education background. This is an eloquent woman, I think, particularly
emotionally eloquence.

Speaker 2 (09:32):
I mean, I got.

Speaker 5 (09:33):
Really proud of this.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
Women.

Speaker 4 (09:35):
Are we with this?

Speaker 3 (09:36):
This?

Speaker 4 (09:36):
What this is? What will represent us?

Speaker 5 (09:38):
Are these is a type of women that we won't
represent us in Congress.

Speaker 2 (09:41):
I'm I'm serious.

Speaker 5 (09:42):
I don't care if you're black, white, age, and lauteno.
I don't care what you are. Is this what you
want represent us as women? And stop lumping all us
black women up together and acting like we we agree
with this bull crap at JAZZM. Crockett doing because we don't.

Speaker 2 (09:55):
Okay, Ill, that's so magical social media you can surface
people like this who are eloquent in their own ways.
So she gets this, but she didn't say mocking. That's
to me.

Speaker 1 (10:07):
What's most insanely hurtful and sick about this is that
Jasmin Crockett is not being herself.

Speaker 2 (10:15):
It's just like Hillary Clinton. I don't fee you no
ways tired, someone hand me my hot sauce sis. So I.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
So we'll get to Jasmin Crockett and how she actually
speaks here in a second, because I think it's important
to see other way she's mutated herself. There's been a
mutation in American healthcare. We saw this over a period
of time where everything seemed upside down and no one
knew what they were doing, and the public health officials, well, look,
there is mutation and then there is protectionism. You are

(10:47):
protected out of having some things that I really favor. Now,
it's my opinion mine personally, my experience has been raw
milk is good, raw milk is helpful, my experience as
a human being. I'm not a public health official, so
don't quote me on that. My experience, my experience, backed
by data and scientific outcomes, is that having actual live

(11:11):
stem cells in your body to produce bone and cartilage
and muscle and tendon is better than having your stem
cells which have flat runouts at our age. Those that
have not run outs are out of power. And you
can get these from people's umbilical cords only the most
healthy people, the most healthy babies, and they can get

(11:31):
into your body and they can replace cartilage, they can
replace bone. They can take a condition with your lower
back where you can't get in and out of.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
Your truck without help, where you can't grip things and
carry things, even if you're in the construction trades, you
can't do it in a matter.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
Of a couple of days. That cure can be done
in a matter of a week or two. You can
be back to walking in out of your truck and
lifting heavy things. I know this because renew Healthcare is
a partner of mine. Because I just spoke with Robert Dietrich.
That was his experience. Nothing worked for his body but Renew.
Oh and by the way, just as a little tiny bonus,

(12:10):
renew is not just stem cells.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
While they were down there, Robert's wife decided to get
her heart tested.

Speaker 1 (12:15):
Because Renew has invested in this incredibly, incredibly amazing machine.
She had two blockages in her heart. They saved her life.
She had open heart surgery that day and went home
to Seattle alive in three days. Go check these guys
out at renew dot Healthcare. You do not need to

(12:37):
live in pain. It may not mean to be surgery,
and you may not need those pills. It's renew dot Healthcare.
Please tell me a part of the Todd Herman Show family,
and don't let a mutated healthcare system keep you from
getting honest treatment. So when that lady is speaking about
Jasmine Crockett, this is the Jasmine Crockett she's referring to
as ghetto trash as I think she's what she said
and she don't take no mess.

Speaker 6 (12:57):
This is not what we should be doing.

Speaker 4 (12:59):
I don't know what we buy with Greenland.

Speaker 5 (13:00):
Why was I with Greenland?

Speaker 4 (13:01):
We fighting with Canada, we fighting with Mexico, yet we
in love.

Speaker 5 (13:05):
With what is happening like this is not America.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
This is a terrible nightmare.

Speaker 5 (13:10):
Somebody slap me and wake me up, because I'm ready
to get old with it.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
Yeah, you need to step down because that's who she is, because.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
Look, she grew up ghetto man.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
You know, when you in and out of jail, prison,
this is how you speak.

Speaker 2 (13:30):
She's playing a role.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
And what's so disturbing about this is the Democrat power
structure has clearly said to people like Jasmine Crockett, can
you be.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
A little bit more black? For lack of a better word,
could you do that again? Let's take that again, but
with a touch more ghetto.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
Do you remember when Naomi Wolf was Al Gore's masculinity consultant.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
This is a true story.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
A feminist liberal named Naomi Wolf was hired by the
Gore campaign to teach him how to be masculine, and
there was a debate where he famously crowded George W.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
Bush. Georgia Bubush is there doing the Jorji.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
Bou Bush thing speaking and Al Gore actually walked up
to him and like looked at him, and Gore looked over,
I mean, and Jeorgie Bush looked over and nodded.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
He goes like this, he goes and then went back
in this thing sold.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
By the way, they actually this is a true story.
I can't remember if it was Rolling Stone, it was
one of the liberal magazines. They actually photoshopped his crotch
this true story to puff it up. That is a
true fact. And probably Niami Wolf told him to do that. Well,
that was Al Gore. Here's more of Jasmine Crockett. And
again this lady saying ghetto trash. Okay, I'm not saying it.

(14:56):
She said it because I'm not saying it because it's
not okay for me to say.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Secondly, it's not who she is.

Speaker 6 (15:03):
Let me make sure y'all got the facts. Most extreme
crimes that take place in this country are committed by
white supremacists. Eighty percent of extreme crimes are committed by
white supremacists in this country.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Do you know who went up there on January sixth?
White supremacists. This ain't me just telling you this, say me. Oh,
just some numbers.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
By the way, three percent of the United States population
are young black men, forty three percent of homicides are
committed by young black men, usually against young black men.
Just FYI, now I'm familiar with code shifting. If you're not.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
It's a sociological phrase.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
For how people change their behaviors around different groups, and
we all do it to some degree. Okay, when I'm
in my youth group leading the youth group, I have
not really changed who I am, but I listen more.
I am more cognizant of working God's word into everything

(16:16):
then I am went with my friends, we do try
to work God's word into things.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
But this isn't code shifting. We don't know why.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
I know because Jasmin Crockett chooses to act that way
in front of national television audiences. Now here's how she
acted when she was trying to get into office in
front of a television audience.

Speaker 4 (16:35):
So we first of all, it is good to see
you in the new year. You know, no one could
have told me that when I went down to Austin
now looks like a little bit over a year ago,
that I would be running for Congress. That's not what
my plan was. But what I've always decided is that
I would step up when there was a need listening.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
He up there he's.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Doing Now we do this side by side of comparison
and where she's suddenly a different person, private school, probably
a smart woman. It's not code shifting because she's not
just doing it around black people. She's doing it for
an affectation, and I think it's because she's been told

(17:17):
by white people in the Democrat Party, could you be
a little.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
Bit more ghetto trashy you? She'll not lie. Story number two.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
John Stewart responded to a challenge from Elon Musk and
I'm going to say something unpopular in circles like mine.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
Elon fumbled this.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
John Stewart had been trying to get Elon Musk on
the program, and Elon Musk responded with something we'll talk
about and then Elon, I think fumbled it. I think
Elon should have thought a little bit more about how
he framed, aimed the rules for an interaction. We can't
talk with Elon or about him these days without recognizing

(18:06):
things that are going on to him. Elon wrote on
Twitter X on March tenth, there was and still is
a massive cyber attack against X. We get attacked every day,
but this was done with a lot of resources, either
a large chronoid coordinated group and or a country's involved tracing.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
Ellipses dot dot dot other words, Doge designer first protests
against Doge. Then Tesla stores were attacked. Now x is Dowt.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
I know from experience that leftists in digital will do
absolutely anything to destroy Republicans. When I was running the
digital stuff for the Republican National Committee, we got attacks
when we launched a new website, and we learned that
these guys know everything we're doing. They attacked us with

(18:52):
with with images that were offensive and images that were illegal,
meaning they had those images that were illegal sitting around
ready to use. We had a massive distributed denial of
service attack against us.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
We learned a lot.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
Next time we launched, we set up a honeypop for them.
They thought they had us hacked, They thought they had
us ready to take down. Then we launched from a
whole different set of servers at the content development networks
behind us, and they was fun to watch them in
their check groups because we'd infiltrated their chat groups. So
we learned they're willing to do anything to destroy Republicans,
and it's not just denial of service attacks anymore. Of

(19:29):
course it's attacks against as Tesla facilities. They've been burning
them down. There is an activist in Washington State who
has organized and target Elon. Well, she says it's target Tesla,
but it's really target Elon. So we can't talk about
Elon Musk without mentioning this, and we can't talk about

(19:51):
John Stewart without asking John Stewart, do you intend to
say anything to your audience of barking sea us such as,
please don't go down and burn Tesla facilities, Please don't
destroy people's Tesla cars. Are you going to ignore that?
I'm betting he's going to ignore that. He's this clever

(20:12):
man Stewart. He's the guy who invented a technique called
clown on. Clown off. It's a brilliant, brilliant technique. See
the clown on is when John Stewart is mocking everybody
and mocking this situation and mocking this outcome, and then
people come along and say, well, you know you're kind
of biased.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
You never mocked this.

Speaker 1 (20:29):
Say, oh, hold wait a minute, I'm just a comedian.
I'm just a comedian and I'm just doing comedian things.
And then when he wants to make some serious social
commentsary like when he I think heroically went and helped
the firefighters in New York.

Speaker 2 (20:41):
I thought that was a great move. There were people
who said, wait.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
A minute, you're a comedian. We should listen to you
in your opinion. Oh, just because I'm a comedian, I
don't get have an opinion. It's a great tool. Clown on,
clown off. Here's John Stewart using that tool in combination.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
And he is devastatingly good at this because his writers
are devastatingly good at putting words in his mouth. Have
you seen John Stewart what he's not being written for?

Speaker 7 (21:07):
And two weeks into the Trump presidency, we have a
better sense of the evil and powerful forces that have
been dragging our once great nation into decline.

Speaker 4 (21:19):
The Trump administration removed transgender references from federal government websites.
It now reads LGB instead of LGBT. The Trump administration
ordering all gender ideology references be removed, including pronouns and
email signatures.

Speaker 7 (21:36):
Oh yeah, consonants and pronouns your next prepositions. No more
pronouns and email signatures. Good luck signing your emails now,
President she those are just the actions that this president

(21:56):
has taken to prove that he's still kind.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
Of cloud on clown Off. You can believe what you
like about gender ideology, choose your belief. Here's what you
can't ignore. It's divisive, it causes people to question truth,
and it's going to remain divisive. It has harmed families

(22:21):
in society. But when he does clo clown on thing,
he gets to do the social commentary and the performance
and he doesn't have to have any of the nuance
or consideration for things like that dynamic and Elon Musk
had said he would go on the program if if

(22:41):
John Stewart would agree to a certain scenario. We'll talk
about this and why Elon Musk is right to agree
to this scenario. But something Elon should go back to
Musk as a second offer, because at this point I
don't think Elon can afford to not go on. I
mean not afford he can afford anything, but I think
he should go on. I'd say what he should do.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
Here in just a second John Stewart to believe.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
So there's his program and his other videos out of
state of California. You know, Elon Musk moved out of
the state of California. That's where he's taken Tessa now
to Texas. Our friends at Alan Soaps are still in California.
Alan is thirteen, He's been through eighteen operations. He needs
a support system. That's where the family is, that's where
his school is. He's not a guy that's really going
to be good at moving these days. He is so

(23:26):
affected by autism that he's effectively nonverbal, and he has
learned to live within this government school system. He's mainstreamed.
He has a tablet that he can kind of communicate with.
But he's a kid who has a job after school.
Every single day he goes home to Alan Soaps. He's
either doing packaging or quality control, and occasionally he invents
new fragrance of his soap. And then a family takes over.

(23:50):
Not Alan and his family. John is his dad who
runs the company, but if family back in the Midwest.
They take the soap designs and they make them with
no chemicals, all natural, all made in America, and that
family has three generations of soap making expertise.

Speaker 2 (24:06):
Then we get involved and.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
Ask you to buy the soap, not just because we
want to sell soap. Honestly, there's not a lot of
margin and soap, but there is great, great, great activity
in building the kingdom because all these lives matter. Alan
probably couldn't get a job. In fact, doctors had offered
to end Allan's life, and John and his wife said, no,

(24:30):
we hire people like this.

Speaker 2 (24:32):
Alan's a great employee, it's a great inventor.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
His brother Ian, also impacted by autism, is equally great,
so is Amy.

Speaker 2 (24:38):
That's why we do this.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
So you can continue to purchase soap from big companies
that may not like your values. Or you can go
to Alan soaps dot com slash Todd get ten percent
off all their products there.

Speaker 2 (24:47):
And it's more than just the soap. It's the mission.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
All lives do matter alansoaps dot com, slash Todd so
Elon Musk did agree to go on the program with
John Stewart, but he had conditions. I wish you would
have thought about one additional writer to those conditions. Here's
John Stewart talking about this.

Speaker 7 (25:11):
We had some critiques about Douge after the show. Governor
Musk tweeted or xt I guess that he would like
to come on here and talk to me as long
as the show airs unedited. So I thought about it.
But after thinking about his offer, I thought, you know, hey,

(25:36):
that's actually how the in studio interviews normally air.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
Is unedited.

Speaker 1 (25:42):
Did you catch it normally? That's an interesting word normally.
So sure, So he accepted it, accepted that fact.

Speaker 7 (26:00):
He's Sweeten or on Sweeten the pod. The interview can
be fifteen minutes, it could be an hour, it can.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
Be two hours. Whatever.

Speaker 7 (26:05):
Uh, I'll be honest, I don't think this network makes
any other programmer. That's a good line, dude, whatever the
we want?

Speaker 2 (26:16):
Oh wait, he cussed? Did he cuss? He does that? Wow?
That is edgy.

Speaker 7 (26:21):
That's as long as we wrap before the new season
of south Park, which comes out like May or June
of twenty twenty six.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
So uh, I am game.

Speaker 7 (26:32):
I think it'll be a very interesting conversation.

Speaker 2 (26:35):
So Elon should have thought about one dot dot dot.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
I will do the show if it airs unedited, dot
dot dot, and I'll tell you what I think the
dot dot dot should be. John Stewart is a skilled
performer with great writers. Elon should have said, in a
neutral location, with a neutral audience, he gets to recruit

(27:02):
people from X Dash, Twitter, and John Sewart gets to
collect people or recruit people from his socials or his
website or his email list. Put five hundred people in
a room in a neutral location, no writing cruise, no teleprompters,

(27:25):
no notes, sit down and have the conversation that way.
I don't know if John Sewar would agree to that.
Maybe he would. He continued to critique this conversation with
and about Elon Musk, not yet with.

Speaker 7 (27:39):
But then I checked X again and I saw another
tweet from Elon because you can't not And he then said,
after saying I'd like to come on, John Stewart cannot
be trusted and that I am a propagandist, you give

(28:04):
me too little credit.

Speaker 2 (28:07):
And that I am not bipartisan.

Speaker 7 (28:11):
Again, the guy who custom made his own dark Maga
hat that he wears to opine in the Oval Office
with the president who he spent two hundred and seventy
million dollars to elect, thinks I'm just too partisan.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
Clown On, clown Off. He is not bipartisan. Elon spent
his life prior to this voting for and donating to Democrats.
Why the change? Because of the radicalization that John Stewart's
in the first clip we played today refuses to recognize

(28:56):
radicalizing truth, seizing it forcing people to identify others in
a way that they think is false.

Speaker 2 (29:04):
That's radical.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
So it should have been the show airs live and
unedited in a neutral location. Half of the audience he
gets to select from X that's Elon, half that John
suit gets to collect from his base of people, email list, whatever.

Speaker 2 (29:20):
That's how it should have gone down, and this is
the way it should go down.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
But there's other reasons to not trust John Stewart, and
it has to do with the talent the man possesses,
because it is immant and it's not a talent Elon possesses.

Speaker 7 (29:32):
I guess what I would say is this, look, Elon,
I do have some criticisms about NOSE. I support in
general the idea of efficiency and delivering better services to
the American public in cheaper and more efficient ways. And
if you want to come on and talk about it
on the show, great. If you don't want to, sure,

(29:53):
but can we just drop the pretense that you won't
do it because I don't measure up to the standards
of new neutral discourse that you demand.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
And display at all time. Because quite frankly, you know,
I know.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
The standards of the discourse that Elon lives up to
are the standards of discourse that come out of his head.
Elon doesn't have writers, he doesn't have words put into
his mouth. Sometimes he makes mistakes people choose to make
into something else. Your show is almost completely crafted, and

(30:34):
you are absolutely brilliant at reading the lines, and I
am sure that you add lib a ton of things
because you're gifted that way. The way this should be
is it's live, unedited, neutral location, half an Elon audience
or at least people you would think would be supportive
of Elon coming from x Dash, Twitter, and half Jon
Stewart's audience. No notes, no writers, sit down too, dudes,

(30:58):
have the conversation, walk the day. You can both agree
when it's done, or one of you could tap out.
Elan is wise to not trust the Mockingbird media because
they're not trustworthy. Just some reviews on that. Now, this
isn't John Stewart's fault, but let's just go back and way, way, way, way,
way way back in media history. Do you remember George Zimmerman.

(31:22):
He's a weird cat, He's a troubled man. In my mind,
you remember him from the Trayvon Martin case, the tragic
death of Trayvon Martin, who decided to try to kill
Georg Zimmerman and himself got killed Zimmerman acting completely in
self defense. Here's what NBC News did and they lost
a defamation case based on this, one of the many

(31:43):
cases media is lost. Here's how they edited the nine
to one to one call from George Zimmerman describing Trayvon Martin.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
This guy looks like he'snooga.

Speaker 7 (31:52):
He looks black and to see what he was wearing, Yeah,
I'm dark.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
This guy looked like.

Speaker 3 (32:04):
The training feature walking around looking around.

Speaker 2 (32:08):
Okay, and this guy about fact, did you look black?
Would wear?

Speaker 8 (32:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (32:15):
Dark?

Speaker 1 (32:16):
Curdie like a great NBC's apology. During our investigation, it
became evident there was an error made in the production.

Speaker 2 (32:23):
Process that we deeply regret.

Speaker 1 (32:25):
Will be taking the necessary steps to prevent this from
happening in the.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
Future and apologize to our viewers. An error occurred. Yeah,
we accidentally made it seem like George Zimmerman was a
raging racist because the guy didn't look right because it
was black.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
That's one instance all sorts of reasons to not trust
the media. Now, I would say Stuart maybe not do this, Remember,
he said, usually the interviews air unedited. Usually, if only
we could find a recent example of the media doing
such a thing.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
It seems that Prime Minister net and Yah who is
not listening.

Speaker 8 (33:04):
Well, Bill, the work that we have done has resulted
in a number of movements in that region by Israel
that were very much prompted by or a result of
many things, including our advocacy for what needs to happen

(33:25):
in the region.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
But it seems that Prime Minister net and Yah who
is not listening.

Speaker 8 (33:30):
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for
the United States to be clear about where we stand
on the need for this war to end.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
You remember that, I think you all do. Of course, they're.

Speaker 1 (33:42):
Trying to make Cammy Harris look good, and they may
well still end up paying for that in even bigger ways.

Speaker 2 (33:50):
Praise God. Story number three.

Speaker 1 (33:54):
I want to defend Gene Hackman's last days, and people
might find that odd. Now I have to do this
with a ton of caveats, and the biggest one being
I don't actually know what Gene Hackman's relationship was with
his family. I don't know if he was told, hey, look, dad,
you can't live this way anymore. You are just too unhealthy.

(34:15):
This can't continue. I don't know that he was shown
those things at all, or told those things. I know this.
I have family members who decided to die this way now.
Some of them had nurses on hand to sort of
tend them into death.

Speaker 2 (34:32):
Some of them kicked the nurses out because they.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
Didn't want to be tended into death. Gene Hackman had
a ton of resources. But there's also some bit of
reality here. I don't well spirituality. Everything is spiritual. I
don't know that Gene Hackman knew the Lord, but I
know this that God knows we're all going to die.
And sometimes clinging to life is a puzzlement to me.

(34:56):
I'm not suicidal, nothing like that. I've really grown to
enjoy life. I'm glad to be here. I'm glad for
an opportunity to build the kingdom. I enjoy my work again.
That's all great, but I'm not clinging to life. There's
also the discussion of quality of life. Should old people
really be corolled to go live in a quality of

(35:18):
life that makes us comfortable, or should it be something
that makes them comfortable in their last days? So lots
of holes have filled and lots of gaps, a lot
of questions, but I think it's completely defensible. It might
be that Gene Hackman did everything he could to extend
his life. We know that he had some dementia, and
maybe a lot of it. It was so bad that

(35:39):
authorities have said that he may not even have known
that his wife had passed. I do find it sad
that they both pass and that the dog died. I
find it really sad that the dog probably died of hunger,
apparently in his enclosure, apparently had access to water but
not food. I find that incredibly sad. But I'm inspired
in a way that Gene Hackman decided to live his

(35:59):
last day is the way Gene Hackman wanted to live
his last days, because in reality, we're all going to die,
and you can put that off, and you should. I
work with an all family pharmacy, and it's their job
to help you live as happily as you can, as
healthy as you can. Number of reasons I love these guys.
Number one is they don't push pharma.

Speaker 2 (36:21):
They're not a place that's going out and pushing for
you to get on psychotropics and antidepressants and ADHD and so.

Speaker 1 (36:28):
Called diet drugs. They know that there are people who
use these drugs because they're helpful. Some people need them.
They can supply them, and they'll do that. They'll do
that at excellent cost. If you don't have insurance, no problem,
they can figure out how to work with you. They've
got very straightforward pricing. They've got online ordering. They ship
in just two to four days overnight in a pinch.

(36:49):
If you really need it. You can even get everyday
maintenance medications too. There's no gatekeeper, no hassle. Here's what
they specialize in, though, the drugs that the technocratic media
state did not want you to have, hydroxy chloroquin and
ivermectin and antibiotics. Not only have they specialized in this now,

(37:10):
they did it during the lockdowns. They spoke truth at
that point, people should not be kept from having these drugs.
There are other companies that do this, you know them.
Some of them are funded by great, big, famous conservative websites,
really famous conservative websites with tons of traffic. But here's
the dirty little truth. They're marketing companies. So you're paying

(37:31):
a markup on a markup on a markup you enter
your name, your number, your text. That goes into a
database and that is then sold to doctors and pharmacists
who fulfill those orders, comes back to you in a
package that you think was supplied by the marketing company.

Speaker 2 (37:49):
Well, what if you have questions about the dosage.

Speaker 1 (37:52):
What if you're looking at the doss and saying, wait
a minute, this is it seems too higher to lower,
this isn't working.

Speaker 2 (37:59):
And what if you want to talk to the pharmacist.
Good luck?

Speaker 1 (38:03):
What if you want to talk to the prescribing doctor again,
good luck. In the case of All Family Pharmacy is
run by two brothers and their mother works there. If
you call and ask for help, you're going to probably
be talking to two of the brothers or one of them,
maybe even mom. So it's a huge difference. It's a
dollar savings, it's an honest transaction, and you can get
help if you needed so. Visit Allfamilypharmacy dot com slash Herman.

(38:25):
You need to get ten percent off with promo code
Herman ten. Don't wait to be prepared, get ivermecton, get antibiotics,
get hydroxy chloroquin. Now protect yourself and your family today.
Visit Allfamilypharmacy dot com. Slash Herman now and use coupon
code Herman ten and save ten percent. Gene Hackman's last
days bother a lot of people. They bother me to

(38:48):
a degree, but I am going to defend the way
Gene Hackman apparently chose to die.

Speaker 3 (38:56):
This investigation started on February twenty sixth with the discs
recovery of mister Hackman and Miss Arakawa and their dog
at the residence. I just want to do a short
recap and then touch on some new information. As we know,
both individuals tests the negative for carbon monoxide. City Fire

(39:17):
conducted tests and deemed scenes save for deputies to conduct
their investigation. The preliminary pacemaker interrogation results were released last week,
and I'll let doctor Durrell touch more specifically on those results.
The gas company New Mexico they also did an analysis

(39:38):
of the residents and they found one minor leak in
a single burner on the kitchen stove which was point
three to three percent of room there, which was pretty
minute and insignificant. Since that time, Zena, the deceased dog,
has been taken for an a cropsy at the Veterinary
dynastic services, and.

Speaker 2 (39:59):
We'll be awaiting the those results.

Speaker 1 (40:00):
We learned later that apparently the dog died of hunger.
That's very sad, it's very painful.

Speaker 2 (40:05):
I love dogs. I think they're special animals.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
I think God designed dogs to give us great pleasure,
and I think we have unique relationships with them. I
don't know if Gene Hackman's family said, Dad, you can't
live this way. I know I said that to my dad,
who was a hoarder chose to live out on his own.
It was really the hoarding stuff. Because the house was
a fire factory ready to blow up.

Speaker 2 (40:25):
He would nearve it. It was his twenty five acres
in his land and how he was going to live.

Speaker 1 (40:31):
We tried. It was dad's choice. That's not what took
my dad's life. His decision to refuse to care for
his body took his life. Geen Hackman had all the
resources one would ever need to live in any way
one ever wanted. If Gene Hackman wanted to live in
the finest care facility in the world, a luxury resorts,

(40:53):
a beautiful home with all sorts of staff running around,
with five or six nurses or doctors there, he could
have done it. Perhaps his wife was hoarding the money.
I don't think so. Apparently she died of a haunt
of virus related heart issue. Aunt a virus comes from
the feces of mice. They chose to live remotely alone,

(41:15):
maybe because that's what they wanted, Maybe because that's what
the last days were to be for them. Maybe this
is how they wanted to wrap things up. Gene Hackman spent.

Speaker 2 (41:23):
His life in the public eye. Maybe he'd become uncomfortable
with it, no longer liked it, no longer saw it.

Speaker 1 (41:30):
Maybe it's the intimacy he wanted. Maybe it's the long
walks or the silence of the deserts that he wanted.
Here's what I think he wanted it. I think it's
sad that he died alone, maybe confused he wanted it.
I think it's very sad to think of him then
suddenly not wanting it, not knowing how to get help.

(41:50):
But he wanted it. We should respect the way people
want to die. It doesn't mean that I believe in
assisted suicide.

Speaker 2 (41:58):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (41:59):
If people choose to commit suicide often we can't stop them.
I hope they won't because I feel it's stealing from God.
I think God gives and God takes. I also think
you risk going to hell, although I don't think that
God is waiting there ready to scoop you up and
send you to hell, because your last act was a
desperate mistake. But Gene Hackman apparently didn't commit suicide. He

(42:21):
chose to live in a way that made him happy
in his last days. Let's remember something about God and death.
From Genesis chapter three, verse nineteen, we read, by the
sweat of your face, you shall eat bread, to return
to the ground, for out of it you were taken,
For you were dust, and to dust you shall return.
It's talking there about the body. In Genesis chapter eighteen,

(42:45):
verse twenty seven. Abraham answered and said, behold, I've undertaken
to speak to the Lord I who am but dust
and ashes.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
Our bodies fade, and the new Heaven and the new
Earth were given.

Speaker 1 (42:57):
Glorified bodies, bodies that won't hurt, that won't age, it
will not get dementia. But I think a fanatical holding
on to this life, a just dreadful fear of dying,
means you don't know where you're going. And when we
push older people into dying in the way that makes
us happy or at least content. We're taking their last

(43:20):
days and making them into our last days, and we're
all going to have them. Shouldn't we make our own
last days our own Ecclesiastes, Chapter twelve, verse seven. And
the dust returns to the earth as it was, and
the spirit returns to God who gave it. The spirit
returned to God. I so hope Gene Hackman knew the
Lord so that his spirit has gone to God. Psalm

(43:43):
one O three, verses thirteen through fourteen. As the father
shows compassion to his children, so the Lord shows compassion
to those who fear him, for he knows our frame.
He remembers that we are dust, our frame, not our souls.
I think Gene Hackman and his wife chose to live
in the last days in the way that made them happy,

(44:05):
and it may have contributed to their death.

Speaker 2 (44:07):
But we all die.

Speaker 1 (44:09):
Let's not fanatically desperately hold on to a life when
the great forever awaits. It's not suicide, I'm advocating, it's
an acceptance of the fact that your days are numbered.
You don't know the number, but God does. With the
elderly people in our life. Yes, we should strive for

(44:31):
their comfort. Yes, we should strive for their care. And
if they reject it, as my great grandpa did, why
are we imposing it upon him? My great Grandpa wasn't
going to take anyone else. He could barely walk. He
accepted his nurse Buck until he didn't until it was
time for Buck to go, and Grandpa told him, and I

(44:56):
want you to come back tomorrow. So Grandpa exited the
earth the way Grandpa wanted to exit the earth alone
in the same bed in which my great Grandma Florence died.
And I bet you as Grandpa was dying he had
the great comfort of laying in a bed laiden together

(45:16):
all those years, having never been divorced. That's the way
things used to be. This is the Todd Hermannshaw. Please go,
be well, be strong, be kind, Please make every effort

Speaker 2 (45:26):
To walk in the light of Christ.
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