Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:30):
News Talk eleven ten, not a nine three WBT. My
name is Brett Waterbow. It is great to be with you.
Seven zero four five seven zero eleven ten. You'd like
to opine on the text line, if you'd like to
opine on the phones, if you'd like to do me
a favor, because it took me an hour and fifteen
(00:51):
minutes on seventy seven north coming from the South Carolina border.
You peep when you are driving in commercial trucks and
you people who are driving around them in commercial trucks
in the rain. You have to slow down because you
(01:14):
made me nearly late for my show. And I trust me.
I left. I left well before I would even have
to be here. I left at one fifteen and I
got here twenty minutes ago, twenty minutes ago. Because there
(01:34):
are people, mostly the trucks, and I'm sorry, but I'm
not talking about pickup trucks, and I'm not talking about
any of that stuff. I'm talking about the big trucks
going too fast on the seventy seven. On seventy seven,
you're going way too fast, and what happens is the
trucks get into the wreck, and then you end up
(01:56):
with the geniuses going southbound stopping to look. Stop it. Please.
My dream for a beautiful Charlotte is this. I want
a forty five foot high divider between northbound southbound so
(02:16):
nobody knows what's going on on either side of the road.
You should not be if you are driving sixty five
miles an hour seventy five miles an hour? Oh, who
am I kidding? You're going about eighty three and you're
going southbound and there's an accident on the northbound lane.
Do not turn your head and look. Just keep going straight.
(02:40):
Did you did you? Did you stop and look when
you were hitting the beaches on D Day? Did you
stand there and say, geez, what's that? Oh it's a
mortar round. No, you've marched all the way up up
the beach to go beat the tar out of the
out of the Germans. You know that. That's how you're
(03:00):
supposed to do that. You stay down low and you
stick with the mission. But you people, I don't understand it.
I go home at night, it's the exact same thing.
I'm going southbound and I'm looking at lookie loose on
the other side, and I don't understand what's going on.
Have you not ever seen a truck, have you. I'm
(03:20):
really it's absurd. And I'm telling you it's speed. And
sometimes it's also speed speed, not speed like speed speed.
And you're just driving too fast. You're driving way too fast.
And that is That's all I'm gonna say. Do not
call me, do not come at me, do not. I
(03:42):
am right, and you know I'm right. And you know
how I know you know I'm right because the people
are stuck in the traffic, in the traffic, they're sitting there.
I'm telling you, there are people who are probably trying
to get to the airport. There are people who are
probably trying to get to their kids. You know, deal
the whole thing. But this, this driving, the way these
(04:04):
people are driving. I let me tell you something. I
lived in a lot of places. I lived in a
lot of places. Nobody tops the shenanigans that go on here.
I'm just amazed by it. I am absolutely amazed by it.
Uh the only the only positive improvement that I have
(04:26):
seen in the last five years, and it's because Donald
Trump became the president. Again, I'm not seeing weirdos walking
down the freeways. We had that going on for Biden.
Once upon a time. But man, it's good. It's good
not to see the criminals and the weirdos walking on
the medians. That's a good thing to see. I'm very
(04:48):
happy about that. That's a that's an improvement. I got
to give a check check check bus for that. But
the fact of the matter is, you've got to slow
down in this In this rain and it will rain again.
It will rain again at some point, and you've got
to slow down. Between the people shooting each other and
the people crashing into each other, everybody's got to chill out,
relax and understand that we have to share the roads Americans.
(05:15):
Americans should expect principled leadership, fiscal discipline, and accountability from
their elected officials. We have to demand a structural reform
to shrink the government's reach and cost. This is what
needs to happen, don't I don't find myself feeling good
(05:39):
about what is happening in Washington, DC. And the reason
why is we are bending the knee to the radical
maniacs who have no business legislating. Who am I thinking of? Uh?
Reuben Diego comes to mind. I've got a clip from
him yelling and screaming at at at a at a
television host because he was asked about the shutdowns. Adam Schiff,
(06:04):
anybody with a swallwell last name, all of these people,
I'm coming in here today to make it all right
for you, because you are good people. I am a
good person. Isaac is a tremendous person, and Nick is
a fabulous person. But here's what I want to do.
I want to take this issue apart because I think
(06:27):
we have an opportunity. I know Schumer wants to try
to burn the entire thing down. AOC is a communist socialist,
Mandami is a communist socialist. I got sound from all
of these yo yos. Don't worry about it. You'll hear it.
You'll be entertained. You'll also be outraged, as you should be.
But the fact of the matter is we have to
lay down a line here for where it is that
(06:49):
we're going. Because it feels to me in the United
States of America, in the most beautiful country that was
ever created, we need to take the reins of power
back and never give him to the little, miniature tyrants
ever again. News Talk eleven nine three WBT. See. I'm
(07:30):
somebody who believes in improvement, and I know everybody in
this audience wants to be part of the improvement. How
do I know this because I just got a run
of great comments, not not about me, but about what
it is that I was just saying, Okay, I got it.
I got one that was a little bit out of order.
I'm just not gonna lie to you. In this one, Robert,
(07:52):
who was vuying for a top ten status of you know,
incredible call uh, he says that he doesn't know if
Mike is going to make the top fifteen of the
of the list. So I don't know about that either.
We're gonna have to have a meeting and put our
heads together. Brett, build that wall. Yes, we should build
(08:14):
the wall. I want it forty five feet high so
that it is impossible to see what is going on
on the other side. And we can people, we people
can just drive home with what we need to do.
Build that wall. Absolutely. Also, somebody who's this this is
no name. I didn't get a name on it. These
are the same people who get off the moving sidewalk
(08:36):
at the airport and stop. Yes, one hundred percent. If
you're not comfortable just stepping off and moving, you got
to stay on the on the left side and let
the let the right side be cleared. Come on, now,
that's how that's supposed to work, or the other way around,
or perhaps in none of it. In regards to your
(08:57):
experience driving to work today, most of the obviously bad
driving behaviors that you are talking about are illegal. Thank god,
government regulation brings stability. That is true. That ad is true. Stan,
You set a mouthful right there. So I want to
fix the problems, all right, I'm a problem fixer. I'm
(09:18):
not a problem denier. So Americans as Americans, I'm not
talking about people that sneak into the country. I'm talking
about Americans. People who are American citizens should expect principled leadership,
fiscal discipline, and accountability from elected officials. And we must
(09:40):
demand structural reforms to shrink the government's reach and cost.
I want, I want to slice the spending by a
factor of fifteen trillion dollars with just a few ideas,
(10:02):
and I think we can do this. How about we
go with constitutional fidelity, uphold the constitution, not reinterpret it
for freaky, deky reasons. That's my that's my terminology, not
the constitutions. Fiscal restraint prioritize balanced budgets and long term
(10:22):
solvency over short term popularity. You got yourself a brilliant
idea right there. How about transparency make spending, lobbying, and
legislative processes visible and understandable. Face consequences for broken promises
(10:43):
or corruption or negligence. Service overpower represent constituents, not the
party machines or the bureaucratic inertia. Because you and I
both know we would get thrown out on our butts.
So here are the answers that I have to cut
the money. Number one, raise the Social Security retirement age
(11:08):
gradually to seventy. I wouldn't do it gradually. I do
it over three years. You're going to seventy. I'm sorry,
you're going to seventy. That's what it's got to be.
You want to be a patriot, Prove it you're going
to seventy. Reflects longer life expectancy and reduces long term liabilities.
Convert medicaid to block grants for the states. Just give
(11:28):
it to the states, Let them deal with it and
handle it. It empowers local control and caps federal exposure.
You don't have to worry about illegals coming in if
your state says, no, we're not going to give them
the goodies you have, put it back on the Feds
and federal subsidies for agriculture, energy, and transportation. We need
to eliminate market distortions and corporate welfare. Privatize Fannie May
(11:54):
and Freddie Mac. Reduces the federal risk in housing markets,
and shrinks the mortgage foot print, which is what we
should be doing. Banks should be in charge of lending money.
Cut the federal workforce by ten to fifteen percent, and
freeze hiring. We need streamlined bureaucracy, and we need to
(12:14):
save billions annually to do this. Number six, eliminate duplicative
federal programs. You know what that is. That's what DOJ
was starting to do before you had idiots self immolating
in front of the buildings. Number seven Reduce overseas military presence. Yes,
I agree. Do you know how many bases we have
(12:36):
in Japan? Like the President is spending time in Japan?
Can you tell me? Can you guess? Give me a
guess and then double it and triple it. How many
bases do we have in Japan? One hundred and twenty
bases in Japan? In Japan. We have one hundred and
(12:57):
twenty bases. I looked it up. I couldn't believe it.
I couldn't believe my eyes. Reform federal pensions and benefits,
move toward a defined contribution plan and align with private
sector norms. You'll get a better return. How about cap
(13:17):
federal spending growth and we're gonna index that to inflation
and population. That's what we're gonna do. Forces prioritization, and
it ends the unchecked expansions, end federal involvement in student loans,
get rid of it. Boom, goodbye, go back to the banks.
I borrowed money from the banks. I didn't borrow money
(13:40):
from the other sort of skive sort of deals. Repeal
or reform, entitlement expansions like Medicare and advantage over payments.
You've got to sell excess federal land and assets. Why
are we holding onto this stuff? My gosh, Zelenski just
bought seventy nine million dollars in uh in Wyoming. Institute
(14:04):
zero based budgeting across the agencies, YEP, audit the Pentagon
and I'll late get rid of the wasteful procurement. Good
luck with that, and end the cradle to grave welfare
dependency by enforcing work requirements. If you don't want to work,
you clearly do not want to eat. And if you
do not want to eat, you're gonna end up losing weight,
(14:24):
and then you'll ultimately be healthier and you'll be able
to get out there and move that shovel. News Talk eleven,
ten ninety nine to three WBT Brett, Whatever'll show. I
(14:47):
am so excited for tomorrow night. It's gonna be so
much fun. We're gonna be heading out over there, gonna
get ready, and it's gonna be a lot of fun
for the Octoberfest, final event of the season. I'm really
really excited to just think about all the different people
that we're gonna get to see. Many of them are
friends already, and many of them are are newbies. Uh,
(15:07):
it's gonna be really a dynamite. And by the way,
Isaac is gonna show up. Isaac is gonna show up.
He's gonna be Isaac's gonna be there with us, and
and and I know that people are gonna look, they're
gonna come up to you, and they're gonna like try
to ask you, Okay, so why did you play that song?
Why did you do this? Why did you do that?
They're gonna they're gonna they're gonna put you in the
corner and uh and make your hold sir there, my friend.
(15:30):
Just so you know, I'm ready to go. All right,
good good, So this is gonna be good. It's gonna
be a lot of fun. I'm expecting uh, great questions, Uh,
great answers and a really really good time because remember
this is like this is this is like one of
the best things we get to do when we get
to do them. So it's always a lot of fun. Uh.
(15:52):
Bill Gates makes a stunning claim about climate change. What
do you think he said? What do you think that?
Bill Gates said? In a stunning and significant pushback to
the doomsday climate activist community, Bill Gates, a leading proponent
for carbon emissions reductions, published a remarkable essay Tuesday that
(16:17):
argued that resources must be shifted away from the battle
against climate change. What I thought we were all supposed
to eat grass, saga, grass and all that guy. What Instead?
Gates argues that the world's philanthropists must increase their investment
in other efforts aimed at preventing disease and hunger. Oh
(16:42):
something's going on here. He's evolving. Climate change is not
going to wipe out humanity, he argued, and his past
efforts that strive for achieving zero carbon emissions have made
real progress. He's the saring victory, I guess. But Gates
(17:02):
said that the past investments fighting climate change have been
misplaced and too much good money has been put into
expensive and questionable efforts. So, in other words, what he's
telling you is he doesn't know if it's effective to
try to just throw money at the problem. Look even
(17:22):
even even even how dare you? From Sweden? Right, you
know who I'm talking about. I mean, even she had
to get a side hustle. She had to get a
side hustle. Once upon a time she was yelling and screaming,
how dare you? How dare you? And then she she
signed up with AMAS. So, I mean even she realizes
that the climate change game is there's no there's no
(17:44):
upside to the climate change game. That the game was
always going to be. It had to always be cleaning
up of you know, pollution, things like that, clean water,
working on that sort of stuff. You don't need to
you don't need to go and get all rap. Nature
is an incredible thing. If you leave it alone, it
(18:05):
will eventually get back to uh, to its natural state.
And I know because you have you have all of
these people who are absolute pagans who don't believe in
the miracle of nature and the ability to clean and
the ability to handle things and all that sort of stuff.
That the pagans are always on the wrong side. And
(18:27):
what I mean by the pagans on the wrong side
is these are people who are absent any faith. They
don't believe that nature can can heal itself. Okay, they don't.
They don't believe that. They think we have to intervene
at every possible turn. And the reason why people like
how dare you comes out and says that we have
(18:48):
to now join the hamas people because the climate hustle
isn't really paying dividends. They just go looking for problems
that don't need fixes. That's the end game. And unfortunately,
when you talk to people a guy like Bill Gates
and I don't know what his what his uh uh
(19:09):
you know, sort of undertone is supposed to be, but
it sounds to me like he doesn't want to write
any more checks to weirdos and he wants to go
ahead and try to kind of fix it on his
own on his own accord, which is which is fine.
It's his money. He can spend it how he wants it.
He can do all of those sorts of things. But
(19:29):
but when you look at these supposedly super smart peep
these people who are really really brilliant and they have
a lot of money, over a period of time, they
start to realize, you know what, these people are all
basically corrupted. They are corrupted. It's it's it's kind of amazing.
(19:51):
And one of the things I'm gonna share with you
when we when we are are diving into this next segment,
is something that is so common sense that because people
do not have critical thinking skills anymore, they don't realize
how they're getting taken for a ride. And when you
(20:12):
think about people who are now in the in the
eye right in the eye of the not the eye
of a tiger, but the people who are in the
eye of the different sort of challenges that are out there,
they are not critical thinking people by and large. I know,
it's a really kind of odd, weird thing that you
would say, Okay, wait, how come you're trying to scam me?
(20:38):
In this way or another way. Well, coming up, coming
up in a little bit, I'm going to talk to
you about what you can do if you can't afford
a vacation. Okay, what you can do if you can't
afford a vacation. And I'm not necessarily talking about, you know,
some huge lavish vacation and I'm not talking about anything
(21:01):
like that. But there are people who are out there
who are able to help you get a vacation. But
it's not I assure you right now. This is not
like a travel Come on, this is not like a
thing where where we have a travel lady coming out.
None of that at all, None of that at all.
(21:22):
If you can't afford a vacation, there is a way
that you can afford a vacation, and it's very easy,
all right. AI is helpful for a whole lot of things.
(21:45):
There are so many things that the ie is really
good at ai AI. Yeah, we had a lot of
great things that you can do. If you can't afford
a vacation. An AI app will sell you pictures of
one Isaac just lost all of his faith in humanity.
(22:10):
If you can't afford a vacation, an AI app will
sell you pictures of one. Here's the article out of
the Verge. Faking wealth has always been big business, from
buying designer dupes to renting private quote jet sets for
(22:31):
photo shoots, But these days people are using AI to
make it look more personal, creating photos of themselves living
in leisure and luxury, not to chase clout, but as
a form of personal escapism or an attempt to manifest
(22:52):
a better life. App developer Tim Woodjaya posted that he
did consulting work for open Ai earlier this year to
study how Indonesians use chat GPT, and he found many
Facebook groups, some with up to thirty thousand members, for
(23:14):
sharing AI generated photos of themselves having luxury experiences, from
including posing with Lamborghinis to shopping at Gucci stores. Most
are middle low income users Tier two three cities making
under four hundred dollars a month. It's both sad and
(23:36):
fascinating that AI has become a form of escapism, letting
people experience lives they'll probably never have. I think that
is sad. I think you can go to a park,
you can go to a place, you can go with
your friends and hang out, have a picnic, take pictures,
do all that kind of stuff. I mean, I gat it.
I understand, it's like it's a thing. Laurent del Rey,
(24:00):
a product designer at Meta's super Intelligence Lab, recently made
a side project called Endless Summer, a social media app
for when burnout hits and you need to manifest the
soft life you deserve with fake vacation pictures of you.
(24:24):
What's the downside to this? What's that? I know exactly
what the downside of this is? What is the downside
to doing all this and putting this stuff up on
social media?
Speaker 2 (24:34):
People are so much more concerned about someone seeing them
go to some you know, fancy vacation than actually saving
up to go in a real and they don't care
if they actually enjoy it.
Speaker 1 (24:43):
They just won't beoplet to think they're very possible. But
what's the downside everything? Here's the downside? The downside is this, dude,
did you know that Linda a Lamborghini at her house
and she's on a jet. We gotta go rub that
(25:07):
house tonight because obviously she's got a lot of money.
Like that's criminals will be looking at that going, oh,
we're gonna go hit this house tonight. Yeah, we're gonna
go hit Linda's double watch. She's gotta that's what. That's
what I'm saying, right And by the way, somebody needs
to call the DDA because apparently she's slinging something. I mean,
(25:32):
I don't understand. And obviously it's not it's not Linda,
it's not it's not Linda. By the way, it's probably
gonna be somebody who's gonna even maybe maybe manufacture an
entire identity, so it might be a dude saying I
got a lambeau and my name is Linda. I mean,
that's possible too. You know, anything's possible in this day
(25:54):
and age. A slew of other AI manifestation apps have
popped up. Oh here's some of them. Let's take some
note manifest AI Coach Dreams Made, which promises to use
AI to create vision backgrounds to help with visualization and
manifestation of a goal. That is a very good thing.
I'm okay with that, no problem at all. Zero. I
(26:17):
would do that if I knew what it was. Manifestor
AI to manifest Me, which allows people to generate personalized
visuals that align with your manifestation goals and energy. I
don't even know what that is like that to me,
I would be I'm going to probably pay one hundred
and ten dollars for that, and I'm never going to
(26:38):
use it because I don't even know what any of
those words are. Can I tell you what manifesting is?
Usually it's a ghost like coming into a house where
it was a hell howl.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
Yeah, I'm pretty sure it's something bad. It's where people
just dream about and think about themselves doing the things
they want to do without actually putting.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
In the work. Okay, but at some point you have
to go to put in the work. You have to
actually you don't just stay at your house manifesting twenty
four to seven, three sixty five, some of them do.
They're just sitting on the couch, yeah, eating handicap fries yep,
and just manifesting yep. I would rather. I'd rather be
the I couldn't do that. I'm I'm too much, I
(27:16):
have too much energy. I can't manifest anything. I gotta
go and build something, do something, write something, call somebody,
do that kind of stuff. Usually, you know, like people
that I already know, Like I text Isaac, Isaac texts me.
We exchange stories. Ai Atlas, you know, he's big on
that right now for some reason. Okay, so listen to this.
(27:40):
Listen to this. So how much does this cost? Okay,
let the summer continue. Just pay three ninety nine for
thirty images, seventeen ninety nine for one hundred and fifty images,
or thirty four ninety nine for three hundred images. At
that rate, you could basically pay for your own outdoor
dem her and a fraction of a Spirit airline's flight
(28:03):
to somewhere genuinely new. Can we all agree this is insane?
It's not insane, it's people were probably. But here's the problem.
What happens when you go to work and you go
into the office and there's somebody in their office and
it's the exact photograph that you have on their mantle,
(28:26):
and you're like, wait a minute, did you go to
that beach too? Did you did you fake going to
that beach? Did you fake that beach? Is that feat?
Is that a fake beach? Is that the beach? Holy cow? Ralph,
welcome to the show. What's on your mind? Ralph?
Speaker 3 (28:44):
Well, brand I just got to say you've been on
fire since last Thursday. I'll tell you what, man, you
have hit on so many bullet points.
Speaker 4 (28:53):
You've knocked everything out of the park.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
You're mister October, and you've opened the liberal up into
the high bleachers. It's just amazing. But you know, Trump
as a builder, ought to go to Japan and say, okay,
on these basis on how much ever it costs to run,
and we're gonna do cost plus ten percent. Let's give
our military raises, double the pay for the seals and
(29:20):
the rangers, and give even all the privates and anybody
in the military get the best of the best so
that we do not have to worry about going to
the war. They'll know that we'll obliterate them. And a
couple other points about Bill Gates. You'll invest and roly police.
(29:41):
Roly police eat lead and all kinds of things in
the earth. It will rejuvenate the earth, plants and trees,
they give them off, They get rid of the carbon
diox that. There's so many simple banks. Liberals make everything hard.
They and they have no purpose or no rhyme or
reason on how it's gonna help the environment and everything.
Speaker 1 (30:03):
That's a great idea, that's a great that is a
tremendous idea. I mean, I love what you're saying it's great.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
You know, it's just it's simplicity.
Speaker 4 (30:15):
Will go a long way.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
Sure, well, I mean you can, Brett.
Speaker 3 (30:19):
I and on your drive end today. I drove a
tractor trailer for twenty eight years. I was paid by
the hour. You didn't see me zipping through every three
lanes to get around one car. I got paid by
the hour. I drove for the second largest air express company,
(30:39):
the ones that give you a purple promise. But anyway,
but uh, you know, you just get people fired up, Brett.
Speaker 5 (30:47):
I just have to say, man, you energize people.
Speaker 4 (30:50):
You've got to move.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
But going on and let's keep rolling.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Brother, Hey, thank you, Ralph. You're very kind and thank you.
You call back anytime. I appreciate you. Man, thank you.
You got it absolutely.
Speaker 6 (31:02):
Well.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
Look, it's very nice. It's nice to hear that. It
really is. Okay, we got this piece of information. I
don't know if you knew about this. This is this
something that's very important, Brett. They use those pictures on
dating sites and other scams they do. I'm a happily
married man. I've never gone on a dating site in
my life, and I hope people double check, triple check
(31:27):
find out what they got, because if it looks too
good to be true, it may be. And if it
looks like three I at Lis over Mars, I think
I think you got to figure that that ain't a
real picture. News Talk eleven ten nine three WBT, it's
(31:58):
the Brett Waterville Show. It is to be with you
hour number two underway. If you want to reach out,
you can call right now seven oh four five seven
zero eleven ten, or you can reach out on the
WBT text line driven by Liberty Buick GMC. If you're
out there driving, if it's wet on the ground, just
be careful, just to be pack your patients, as they
like to say, absolutely absolutely, absolutely Okay. Why do you
(32:23):
think this is an open question? Why do you think
that Democratic Party is not coming back to terms?
Speaker 6 (32:37):
Right?
Speaker 1 (32:37):
You have Hakim Jeffries, who is the House Minority leader.
You have Chuck Schumer who is the Senate Minority leader.
You have these people not wanting to come back. Now
I understand you know that they have basically not been
able to get to the thing that they want to most.
(33:00):
So why is it that the Democratic Party does not
want to cut a deal to reopen the government? Have
I have what I believe is a very plausible reason,
(33:22):
and it goes like this, what did we just experience
in the last two weeks, the No King's protests? Right,
remember the No King's protests. What did we experience in
the moments in June late June, we experienced the late
(33:46):
June moments of the parade in Washington, DC that everybody
said was Donald Trump's Birthday parade and all that sort
of stuff. Right, So it looks to the American people
that you have a situation where there's chaos breaking out
all across the country. You see what's going on over
(34:08):
in Portland, you see what's going on in Chicago, you
see what's going on in other communities as well. And
the Democratic Party has decided that they are going to
stake all of their poker chips on illegals because there's
a reason why that's a benefit for them. Joe Biden
brought in twenty million people along with Alejandro Majorcis and
(34:32):
Kamala Harris at all, they went in and brought in
twenty million people into the United States of America. Do
you think that they brought in twenty million people into
the United States of America because they wanted to improve
the conditions of the United States, or because it was
to improve the conditions of the Democratic Party. Obviously it
(34:53):
was the Democratic Party's possibilities. And that's why Joe Biden
kept saying the border secure, the border secures, You're the
border secure. You never got to see the parenthesy after
it that said the border is secure for the Democratic Party. Okay,
Donald Trump did the one thing that he could not
(35:13):
be allowed to do, and that was to deport these
future Democrat voters of America. Look at the places that
are the hot spots for illegal immigrants who are in
the country illegally. California, Chicago, New York. Those are the
(35:39):
big three. And I know there's a lot of people
that are spread around the country, but those are the
big three. Who are the biggest loudmouths in these different locations.
Gavin Newsom slash Kamala Harris Pritzker slash Brandon Johnson, New
(36:02):
York City, Kathy Hokeel Hakeem Jeffries, and of course don't
forget Chuck Schumer and the newest, bestest immaculated creation of
all time. In a likely win for Mandami, a man
(36:24):
who has two different citizenships, the United States and Ugundan.
So what are you trying to tell us, Brett. Here's
what I'm trying to tell you. They failed with the
parade in June, they failed with the original No Kings.
(36:45):
They failed with the next set of No Kings. So
this is a hail Mary. I probably shouldn't say that,
because there's a whole lot of Pagans that don't that
don't that don't really want to acknowledge that God has
got gotten in control. But let me, let me try
(37:05):
to do this. You're about to see three elections boom
boom boom, four really, but one of them's rigged. The
rigged one is out in California with any twosome Newsom.
But you've got you've got three elections that are underway,
Chittarelli versus Mikey Cheryl uh, the elections going on in Virginia,
(37:30):
which includes a person who wants to be the Attorney General,
but he wants to also shoot children in his own
by his own admission. And then of course you have Mandamie. Now,
Mandami he's been coming down back to earth a little bit.
Cuomo's gone up a little bit. But it doesn't seem
to me that it's still going to be a viable reality.
(37:53):
We're probably talking about Cuomo as as an aborted candidate
in that regard, probably doesn't offend him because you know
he's all pro life, pro choice. But here's the thing,
here's the thing. You're going to see it ramp up
once these elections are over next week. Okay, you're going
to see it ramp up. Then it's going to get
(38:14):
to crazy town. So Chuck Schumer and Hakeem Jeffries will
pick up a couple of allies, right Mickey Cheryl if
she ends up beating Cheddarelli, and of course obviously Mandami.
That's gonna be the biggest of the big of the bigs, right,
He's gonna be made, no doubt about it. They're gonna
(38:34):
start carving for you know, going up to Mount Rushmore
and they'll put his head right up there. They'll get
rid of Thomas Jefferson because he was evil, and they'll
just put Mandami's head right on that. So you're gonna
see this is where it's going to ramp up, because
Chuck Schumer's gonna come out of those elections. I'm telling you,
I'm dead serious. I know this he's going to come
out of those elections and he's gonna say, we have
(38:57):
a mandate, we have a date. We these are the
are the newest elections. These are not the elections when
Donald Trump was elected. And we are not going to negotiate.
So you need it's a it's a it's an absolute lock.
You guys are gonna have to give in, and give
(39:21):
in right away. When it doesn't happen. No, listen, this
is important. When it doesn't happen, you're going to see
the violence in the streets. They'll have Mom Dami as
the mayor, he'll call out the Ruffians. You will see
what is happening. Obviously in New Jersey, my gosh, I
(39:44):
mean Jackie, you know Sherry, she's probably gonna try to
throw throw, throw the guy in prison. And then of
course you've got the guy who's the Attorney general candidate
who wants to shoot his opponents. Let's hope that those
people are being protected because who knows what the this
guy's going to do to celebrate. And then of course
you got the rigged election out in California. The rigged
(40:04):
election in California is Prop fifty. Prop fifty, where you've
got any twosome newsom pushing to really ethnically cleanse Republicans period,
full stop in the Republican Party in California. I've got
audio on all of this. I'm going to play it
(40:24):
for you when we come back. Whistleblower of Warren's illegal
immigrants are sending a shockwave through a crucial industry. Dot
Secretary Sean Duffy accused California of issuing commercial drivers' licenses
(40:50):
to a foreign national whose truck killed three people. What
does this mean exactly? Well, here's what this means. It
means following several high profile, deadly auto accidents involving illegal
alien truck drivers, a commercial trucking industry leader is blowing
the whistle on the devastating shockwave that illegal carrying sanctuary
(41:13):
state licenses have had on the industry. Remember, they don't
necessarily have to stay in California when they're driving. Mike Kucharski,
who is the co owner and vice president of JKC Trucking,
which is based in Illinois, told Fox News Digital that
in addition to endangering American roads, illegal alien commercial drivers
(41:36):
have been killing the trucking business. He said that those
that the problem has only recently been brought to the
forefront of the public consciousness in recent months. Drivers and
trucking businesses have been feeling the impacts for years. We
knew it was an issue right after COVID because the
rates dropped down, and we just thought, okay, look, it's
(42:00):
just inflation, the wars, etc. All these aspects causing volumes
to be down. We were thinking, Okay, in the long run,
these volumes will go back up to where they were
pre COVID conditions, or just go back to regular volumes
and will be back in business. But what happened. The
(42:21):
complete opposite happened. He said. They went down and they
stayed down, and we never knew as truckers what was
the problem. Now recent revelations from the Department of Transportation
and Secretary Sean Duffy about rampant illegal alien truckers on
(42:45):
American roads, Kucharski said, the truth is finally out. Bombshell
report came out on Thursday accusing California of violating federal
law by issuing commercial driver's licenses to foreign asylum seekers
whose semi trucks crash killed three people last week. The
(43:07):
report alleges that the Democratic Governor Gavin Any Twosome. Newsome
administration ignored a federal order to halt non compliant licenses
and revoke improperly issued credentials. The federal regulators uncovered flaws
(43:30):
in how California licenses were obtained by certain commercial truck drivers. Now,
I was complaining about the truck drivers when I came
in on the show in that very first segment. And
I wasn't being mad about the truck drivers. I was
angry about people who are driving far too fast when
you've got wet roads and you've got people who are
(43:51):
driving in big trucks that can't stop on a dime. Right, Okay,
So think about this, What if these people who who
were driving, what if these people who are crashing, What
if these people who are killing are doing it here too,
or in New Jersey or in Massachusetts, or in Chicago
(44:12):
or in any place. Would you want to get on
an airplane if you had a guy who didn't speak
English and was just going to put you in an
aircraft and take you, hopefully this place or that place,
even though he didn't really know how to read the
manuals understand what the things were that were required to
be a pilot. You'd be very upset about that. I
(44:32):
would hope you would be upset about that. I'd be
upset about that for you. Federal regulators uncovered those flaws.
The twenty twenty five Annual Program Review and the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration concluded that the state's commercial Driver's
License CDL system suffered from systemic, policy, procedural, and programming errors.
(44:58):
So those licenses are not really valid. They've been given
to these people who just show up and don't speak English.
As a business owner, I was thinking, well, who are
taking all these loads? Now? I would figure it out
that this is another shockwave that's hitting the trucking industry
(45:20):
after COVID and violent volatility. These non domiciled drivers are
coming in and doing it for cheaper. There's a word
for that. There's a word for that, scabs. Scabs. I mean,
that's what people would tell you. If you're going out
there and you're taking and you're taking loads that you're
(45:41):
not supposed to be taken, that's a big, big deal. Chris,
welcome to the program. What's on your mind?
Speaker 4 (45:50):
Chris, Hey Brett, how are we doing today?
Speaker 6 (45:53):
Doing?
Speaker 1 (45:53):
Well? Thanks?
Speaker 4 (45:55):
All right? Well, I'll get right to it. Chret We've
got some big elections coming up in the city Charlotte.
Speaker 7 (46:01):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (46:01):
You know City of Charlotte, they kind of set the
tempo for the area, right Uh. And I need requesting
that you might consider getting on board with us. I
know you you speak on the national level and that
kind of thing. But this is a huge, huge deal
this election. We've got a great Republican candidate conservative running
(46:22):
for Charlotte mayor.
Speaker 1 (46:24):
Yes, she's been she's been on our show. Yes, she's
been on the programs.
Speaker 3 (46:27):
Yes.
Speaker 4 (46:28):
Well, And I appreciate you guys doing that, but I
really do think that with your time slot that you have,
if we could dedicate some time to them and the
city council members that are the city council folks that
are running to city council, Uh, those Republican folks, and
and our mayor, hopefully Mayor Donovan. Uh. It's just this
(46:50):
is a huge election for us. We need to clean
up the streets of Charlotte. I'm a Charlotte native, uh,
and to see my city in the way that it
is right now. Uh, it hurts my heart yep, because
I grew up here. It's I love Charlotte. I love
the area. All my family still lives here in that.
Speaker 5 (47:09):
You know.
Speaker 4 (47:09):
I really appreciate the folks at WBT. You guys have
got a tremendous megaphone to get the information out there
to the public for these elections that are coming up.
And I would say to all the Republicans and all
of the Conservatives and even the right leaning Democrat folks
that are tired of the streets of Charlotte in a
murder and violent crime capital, to get off your dusk,
(47:34):
get out and vote and vote for a change because
the five terms of this last mayor have done nothing
but lead us down a road of destruction.
Speaker 1 (47:42):
All right, So here's what we're going to do. Here's
what we're going to do. Tomorrow. Okay, tomorrow four thirty
in the afternoon, call into my have her call into
my show and I'll talk to her. Thanks, man, appreciate it.
(48:12):
Make up your mind, decide.
Speaker 8 (48:17):
To walk with me.
Speaker 1 (48:19):
News Talk eleven ten three WBT. It's the Brett Winterable Show.
Good to be with you. Uh let me. I want
to I want to reach some sound here for you
because there's a lot of good stuff here.
Speaker 6 (48:30):
I know.
Speaker 1 (48:30):
I typically I'm as the caller said earlier, I'm gonna
I talk about national things, not local things, which is
not true. It's it's been something that people have said
to me a number of times, but it's not true.
Uh So let's let's go into this, uh this piece
of sound that I want to use, and it is
(48:52):
going to be well, actually, you know what, No, I'm
not I'm actually not going to do I'm not gonna
do the sound there. That's because I I something else
that I want to to use this in this segment.
So one of the things that we're dealing with, okay,
is the ability to decide what the country is going
(49:16):
to look like moving down the road. Okay. And we
have a number of challenges that people are dealing with,
and one of them that is just it's absolutely shocking,
is the inability for this next generation of people to
come up into home ownership. Right now. There are places
(49:41):
around the country where there is home ownership that is affordable,
but in some cases those affordable places may not have
the infrastructure the things that folks want. Like so, for example,
the average price for an apartment is New York City
(50:01):
is one point two million dollars, Okay, one point two
million dollars for an apartment in Manhattan. All right. That's
that's the that's the the number line right there. Now,
if you come into Charlotte, the price is not that exorbitant,
but it is still very expensive to come into these communities.
Speaker 9 (50:22):
Why.
Speaker 1 (50:24):
Number one, you have zoning issues, you have limited space,
you have all that stuff. But on top of all
of that, you're dealing with a situation that says, hey, no,
we want to live in this community too, and they
bid things up. I was listening earlier today to a
(50:46):
financial show, one of the one of the financial shows
Stuart Varney was hosting on his program, and they said
that if you go into Connecticut, now, okay, people are
spending seven hundred and twenty thousand dollars above asking price
(51:11):
so that they can get a home. So think about
the home. Say the home is, say the home is
like eight hundred thousand dollars. Okay. And here in Connecticut
they've got nice schools, safe, there's not a lot of crime,
none of that sort of stuff. You can commute into Manhattan.
So you have people who are going into Connecticut and
(51:32):
they're saying, oh, I want to buy this house. Oh
this house is eight hundred thousand dollars. Right. There are
definitely eight hundred thousand dollar houses here in Charlotte and environs, right,
I mean there's plenty of them, especially if you go
out and you want to go be on the lakes
or any of that sort of stuff. But to get
into the bidding war, they have to pony up another
seven hundred and twenty thousand dollars to be in the game.
(51:55):
So it's not eight hundred thousand dollars. It's a million
five to to be in this particular neighborhood or in
this particular place. And we have those kinds of neighborhoods
here too as well. Right, But that's typically not a
starter family price. And so unfortunately, right, you're going to
see something that is going to blow your mind if
(52:17):
Mandami gets elected. And this is bringing it back to Charlotte.
By the way, if if you think about what we're
looking at, right, Mandami's pitch is I'm going to get
you affordable housing. Mandami has no power to make affordable housing.
(52:38):
He doesn't have that power. Cuomos said it. Sliwa has
set it, bankers have set it. He's not going to
be able to create any more housing. In fact, Curtis
had some very creative ways of reclaiming unused buildings and
turning them into condos for young fans Emily's who would
(53:01):
want to live in those neighborhoods. But everybody just blew
them off and just said Curtis doesn't know what he's
talking about. It's terrible, it's awful, it's it's it's it's ruinous.
But here's the thing, Mandami's gonna take a whole bunch
of inventory and he's going to try to claim it,
and he's going to try to say I can get
(53:21):
affordable housing. So somebody explained to me how you can
get affordable housing when you take inventory off of the page.
Speaker 6 (53:36):
Right.
Speaker 1 (53:36):
So, like, let's say there are a million units of
housing in a particular location. It's a massive place, right,
it'd be a very massive, massive place. But let's say
they take a they have a million units of housing,
and then you come in and you say, you know
what we're gonna do. We're gonna we're gonna get half
(53:58):
of that. We're gonna take half of that and make
that affordable housing. Well, do you think the other half
is going to go up or go down? It's going
to go way up. So what Mandami is doing is
he's telling you he's going to help you if you
are looking for low income housing. But what's going to
(54:20):
happen is if you're not in the market or you're
not connected to somebody who understands what's going on with
low income housing, they are going to learn very quickly
that the remaining stuff is going to go up fourfold, tenfold.
Who knows, you ever go to Miami. It's a limited
(54:42):
piece of space in Miami. Everybody wants to live in Miami.
Everybody wants to be down there, right by the beach,
right by where it's at. And you go and look
for what the rents are. If you go down to Miami,
you could just look it up right now in a
in a you know, in any kind a rental thing
or whatever, you know, to move into a place in
(55:04):
Miami that's decent, that's got a nice area, that's got
nice schools. You're talking like ten twelve thousand dollars a
month a month, and that's just to get in. If
you're in a bidding ward, it's gonna be worse. That's
what goes on in New York. That's what goes on
in certain places here in Charlotte. This is what I mean.
(55:24):
This is the way it works. It's the notion of
scarcity versus availability. And if you want to know why
it's very difficult to get into a starter home right now,
it's what I just said about Miami. You have Blackrock,
(55:44):
you have all of these big corporations who are buying
up homes and they are then turning them into rentals
so that they can make a maximum profit. I'm not
against a maximum profit. I'm not angry about it. I'm
not looking for any of those kinds of things because
the market will be distorted no matter what's going to happen.
(56:07):
But the fact of the matter is when you go
in and you try to go buy a house and
it's suddenly six hundred and fifty thousand dollars and you've
got twenty five people bidding on it, and the next
number has a seven and a five in it, or
an eight and a zero in it, that's going to
be a problem. You can't make something from nothing. So
(56:33):
when the politicians tell you that they can get you
affordable housing, it means it's going to be very, very
unaffordable for the other folks who are looking for their housing.
That's why the free market works. Whether you're a candidate,
whether you're a big time business person, whatever it is,
(56:57):
the elasticity is going to move in a particular direction.
News Talk eleven, ten ninety nine three WBT, It's the
Brett Winterble Show and we are crossing the streams welcoming
in one of my favorite people. I'm gonna get to
(57:19):
spend time with him tomorrow night over at Heist Brewery.
And it is Bo Thompson who is joining us here today. Bo.
How are you my friend?
Speaker 6 (57:30):
Hey, Brett, hope you're doing well.
Speaker 1 (57:31):
Yeah, doing great, very very exciting. First of all, you
know you and I were kind of like texting back
and forth here on the game last night. That was Look,
this is a very very strong Dodgers team, no matter
how you slice it. And it does feel to me
(57:52):
like when you look at that skipper, that skipper said
he wanted to really be hated by all the other teams.
And I think he is at the stage of the
game because he's winning so much.
Speaker 6 (58:05):
This is this postseason and what the Dodgers are doing.
I mean, don't even get me started on show. Hey
sure and what he did and the A and the NLCS.
But I mean that game last night. We were talking
about it this morning. I mean, it was just about
finishing when when those of us would in the morning show,
we're getting up to start the day, and you know,
(58:27):
so in LA, you know, you have these games that
start at you know, five pmish right there, so you
got you got the sun up still when the game starts,
and then you basically played the equivalent of two whole
games last night. I'm telling you, I mean, even if
you hate the Dodgers, you have to marvel at what
they're doing. And and look, Toronto won the first game,
(58:47):
so there's there's good reason to believe as competitive as
this as this game was last night, this game, you know,
it's not going to be a sweep, obviously it can't
be now, But this thing, I mean, wouldn't you love
to see this series go the distance?
Speaker 1 (58:58):
It'd be great, it'd be great, but everybody's going to
be exhausted by the end of out on the on
the East Coast.
Speaker 6 (59:05):
Well, I was thinking, you know, if if for some reason,
LA gets to the end of this and they and
they come up on the short end, you know, do
you think there's going to be some sort of you know,
investigation or a complaint on their end, basically saying they
won two game twos or what was last night was
game three?
Speaker 1 (59:22):
Yeah, so.
Speaker 6 (59:24):
Did they win two game threes? They've already played the
equivalent of one extra game.
Speaker 1 (59:28):
Now, that's very true. Now if I if I go back,
if I go back in time, you know, full disclosure,
I've been a lifelong Red Sox fan, and unfortunately we
haven't had much to cheer about in the last few years.
But if you go all the way back, I think
to twenty eighteen, was it twenty eighteen, it was a
(59:49):
very similar kind of matchup there with the with the
Red Sox and the and the and the Dodgers, and
it was like one of those things where it was
like three three games or four games that went super
long every night. Now didn't bother me because I was
on the West Coast and I was able to still
get my shut eye. But you know, this is this
(01:00:09):
is what you want. I mean, nobody wants to see
a blowout in any sport. You want to see, especially
at the end of the finale. You want to make
sure that you're going to be able to see the
fireworks and all the great stuff like that.
Speaker 6 (01:00:22):
Well, and if you're Major League Baseball, I mean, this
is the best case scenario because you're competing not only
with the NFL on Monday Night football, but you've got
I mean last night we were talking about this this morning. Yeah,
last night was what you call the sports equinoc. Yes,
so last night you had an NFL game with Monday
Night football. You had eleven regular season NBA games, you
(01:00:44):
had the World Series Game three, you had two regular
season NHL games, and two playoff MLS games. So it's
you know, all five major US leagues played last night.
And I mean if you're a sports fan, yeah, that's like,
I mean, that's like Christmas morning.
Speaker 1 (01:01:00):
That's right, That's exactly right. Bo. Let's talk about what's
going to be going on tomorrow night, because this is
one of my favorite things to get to do. And
I know all of us get excited to see each
other because we are many times ships passing in the night. Uh,
what what are you most excited for about the about
about the October Fest there at Highest Brewery.
Speaker 6 (01:01:22):
Well, look, man, it's never lost on me, and I
know it's not lost on you that listeners, you know,
pay to come and sit in the room and and
and chit chat with us. And we we we talk
every day and we do our shows and we're in
that room and we we hear people that we talk
to via via phone calls and texts. But it's very
(01:01:43):
rare that we get to go out and actually put
faces with names, and so you know, it means a
lot to all of us that people will come and
gather uh to hear us talk about things. But the
cool thing is, as you know, and we've done a
few of these now, it really is interactive and if
you come join us tomorrow, you helped steer the conversation.
And it's why we do the Talktoberfest events leading up
(01:02:06):
to this. But this is cool because we all are together.
We don't see each other all the time either, so
there's that kind of novelty to it as well, getting
everybody there at the same time. And you know, this
station is one of the few talk stations in the
country that is local all day long, you know, from
five am all the way till the end of TJ show,
And so we take pride in that and we enjoy
(01:02:29):
getting together and we enjoy each other's company and you
add a room full of WVT listeners to that, and
it's a it's a cool event that we do a
couple of times a year at least.
Speaker 1 (01:02:38):
And one thing that that's hugely important is when we're
doing the talktoberfests on the Saturdays and the Sundays, uh
during during this seasonal period, everybody is jumping into everybody
else's conversation. I mean, you came by with me, I
came by with you. You know, it's like everybody's getting
to mix and match and we ask each other question
(01:03:00):
and things like that. We really do have a really
tight knit squad and it's a it's a real blessing
to have not just us, but our production people are
our producers obviously, all the people that are that are
making this happen. It's it's really a pleasure to be
able to do this both.
Speaker 6 (01:03:18):
I'm glad you brought that up, because you know, we're
not We don't get told that we have to show
up in the you know, the chat rooms on the
other other events. You know, we do that because we
like to be part of it and like to support
each other, and and you know, it's it's an opportunity
in a different venue to to learn some things. I mean,
I always learned something about my colleagues when I when I, uh,
(01:03:39):
you know, log on and hear the conversations and like
we say, uh, you know, it's it's listener driven. So
that's that's the way the online events are. That's the way.
Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
Tomorrow night will be ten seconds. What do you got
for tomorrow tomorrow?
Speaker 6 (01:03:51):
Teresa Peyton joins us on Wednesday, Brett Winnable at seven fifty.
I think we're going to work that one out. Yes,
everything else you know is starting at six am.
Speaker 1 (01:03:58):
Great stuff, rest up, It's going to be big night
tomorrow night and great to talk to you. Man him,
you got it. Give me fuel, give me fogive me
that's asa dudes talk eleven ten ninetynine to three WBT
(01:04:26):
Brett water Bowl is great.
Speaker 7 (01:04:27):
To be with you.
Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
We've got so much good stuff we're going to talk about.
And I haven't even given him any sound, Isaac. I mean,
I you know what I feel like, I'm I feel
like I'm coming up short without the sound. This is
a problem. We we gotta we gotta take the sound.
We've got all this great stuff that we've put together.
Here's what I want to do. I want to take
a look at Mandami. All right, and I'm not I
(01:04:51):
know a lot of people talk about Mundami. I know,
I get it, I understand it. But but let me
just kind of take you for a little bit of
a walk in this guard because what we have right,
what we have is a fundamental change that is taking
place in the body politic. Okay, and I want to
(01:05:14):
go over to Mundami and I want you to hear
some of the stuff that this guy is cooking up here. Okay,
this is going to be cut number thirty. This is Mundami,
and he is playing the victim card. He's very good
at the victim card. Cut number thirty, Let a rip go.
I was speaking about my aunt.
Speaker 10 (01:05:35):
I was speaking about Zanta Lui, my father's cousin sadly passed.
Speaker 1 (01:05:41):
Away a few years ago.
Speaker 10 (01:05:43):
And for the takeaway for my more than ten minute
address about Islamophobia in this race and in this city,
to be the question of my aunt tells you everything
about Andrew Cuomo and his inability to reckon with.
Speaker 1 (01:05:57):
A crisis of his own. Okay, so he's a victim,
like he's a serious victim. Right, he's a victim because
he was saying his aunt couldn't wear the job on
the subways and all this kind of stuff. And Okay,
I understand it's terrible. I remember nine to eleven. I
(01:06:18):
was there, my wife was there, our families were there.
We understood it, saw it, smelled, it felt it, all
of that sort of stuff. But the fact of the
matter is America is not your enemy, Mandami. It's not
your enemy, except for when you like to go out
and play the victim card, or you like to go
out and slander certain people. This is cut twenty seven.
(01:06:41):
Cut twenty seven. Listen carefully to what Mandami is saying.
He takes a swing at the NYPD, and he takes
a swing at the IDF and the Jews. Why would
he talk about this like this cut twenty seven. For
anyone to care.
Speaker 11 (01:07:02):
About these issues, we have to make the role.
Speaker 12 (01:07:07):
We have to make clear when the.
Speaker 11 (01:07:09):
Mood of the NS is on your neck, it's been
laced by the ideas. We're in a country where those
connections abound, especially in New York City, you have so
many opportunities to make clear the ways in which fast
trumble over there is tied to capitalists that you're over here.
Speaker 1 (01:07:31):
Okay, so hold on. You heard what he said, when
the boot of the NYPD is on your neck, the
laces were put there by the IDF. In other words,
he's saying, when the boot is on your neck, the
(01:07:53):
Jews are responsible for lacing the laces of the boot.
Why would you want to put that into the debate?
He didn't want to. It came out. This guy's been
talking radically for a long time, and I don't think
(01:08:15):
he remembers everything he has said. But when you're gonna
go run and you're gonna run against Jewish people, or
you're gonna run against rich people, or you're gonna run
against whatever constituency you're talking about, the NYPD who are
by the way, by the way, lost a whole lot
of officers on nine to eleven. Mundami and firefighters lost
(01:08:38):
a whole lot of firefighters on that day. Mandami and
the rest of the folks who rushed to the aid
of the people who were attacked by people who came
out of Asia and the Middle East. That's it. That's
a very big deal to go after that kind of stuff.
(01:08:59):
In fact, Michael Rappaport of all people, if you can
believe this. He came out. He came out and said, listen,
this guy is not the guy that we need to
be in New York City. Cut number twenty three.
Speaker 10 (01:09:13):
Go.
Speaker 1 (01:09:14):
We have a candidate, Zoran, the moron, the moron named.
Speaker 7 (01:09:19):
Zoran, who will not even bring himself to condemn the
phrase globalize the Interafada.
Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
Then't make this very clear, because it matters.
Speaker 7 (01:09:28):
Globalize the Intifada is not just calling for violence against Jews.
Speaker 1 (01:09:31):
It's calling for the violence against anybody who.
Speaker 7 (01:09:34):
Doesn't submit to radical jihadist ideology.
Speaker 1 (01:09:38):
That means Christians, that means Muslims.
Speaker 7 (01:09:41):
Who don't agree, that means the LGBTQ, that means women,
that means artists, journalists, comedians, free thinkers, anybody that believes
in freedom. It's anti human, it's anti democracy, it's anti
New York City, and it's certainly anti American. And if
you want to know globalizing the Indafada actually is, it
(01:10:03):
took place right here on nine to eleven.
Speaker 1 (01:10:06):
That was globalization of the Indafada.
Speaker 7 (01:10:09):
And this person that is running for mayor of our city,
when asked about condemning that phrase, this person says, different
words have different meanings to different people. So if you're
looking to lead this city and you cannot condemn that language,
you're not just disrespecting Jews, You're disrespecting every single New
Yorker whose life was changed that day. I ain't perfect,
(01:10:32):
this city, a perfect Cuomo, a perfect nobody is perfect.
This election is about protecting the soul of New York
City from people who do not understand it, do not
respect it, and.
Speaker 8 (01:10:43):
Do not love it.
Speaker 7 (01:10:45):
We must go vote for Cuomo. And by the way,
I want to say it, Oh, I have never met
Andrew Cuomo. I've never met him. I wasn't asked to
be here, I haven't been paid to be here. I
am here because we have to be here. We must
vote like this city depends on We must vote like
your kid's life depends on it. It is our city,
New York City. We bully the bullies, we expose the frauds,
(01:11:08):
We protect our own. Some stand up vote Cuomo. Let's
remind these clowns.
Speaker 1 (01:11:14):
Whose city it is. I'm going to share with you
in the next segment, the history of What's at Stake
News Talk eleven, ten ninety nine to three WBT Brett
(01:11:35):
Waterbule Show, Good to be with you, Jay sent a note.
Pretty sure if the Irish had an uprising and brought
down the Twin Towers. Pretty sure people would not want
to see Guinness jars in bars either, But I'm sure
someone would be. They need to stop crying, of course,
et cetera. Profile people of a certain background. When our
(01:11:59):
country is just attacked, Well, that did happen, that happened
to a certain degree, and unfortunately, right, unfortunately, I don't
want to see I don't want to see our country
attacked again, because we just saw what happened on nine
to eleven. But we've had it in a whole lot
of other places. The Trantifa, people who were going around
(01:12:20):
and shooting up schools, people who are shooting ice officers,
people who murder Charlie Kirk, people who are doing all
I mean, think about this, for whatever reason, if you
feel like you're oppressed, you can go out on a
shooting rampage. What are you talking about? Doesn't make any.
Speaker 6 (01:12:37):
Sense to me?
Speaker 1 (01:12:38):
Right, you don't get to go and shoot people. But
here's the thing that Mandami keeps talking about. What Mudami
keeps talking about is the idea that nobody likes Muslims,
nobody wants Muslims nobody wants and it's what he's been saying.
I mean, it's abundantly clear. So I'm going to give
you a history lesson that Mundami would not be able
(01:13:00):
to give you in the history lesson because it would
not it would not comport with what he believes. So
just let me give this to you for a second. Okay.
And this is not all Muslims, this is not all people.
This is this particular person who's running for the mayoralty
in New York City, arguably the two or third, the
(01:13:20):
two or number three toughest job in the entire world.
And I don't I just don't think this guy's ready
for prime time. But let me give you this. People
always say, oh, it's because of Islamophobia, that's why nobody
was ever in the country before the nineteen sixties who
(01:13:40):
were Muslims. That's not true. The first Muslims arrived in
New York City in the sixteen hundreds. Sixteen hundreds. Now,
now here's the thing. Let's be honest. In the sixteen hundreds,
these were probably enslaved people from Africa. But here's something
(01:14:02):
that's interesting that people don't talk about. And I don't
think that. I don't think that Mandami would ever mention this.
The first free Muslim settler was a guy by the
name of Anthony Jansen van Silly, a Dutch North African
(01:14:25):
merchant who arrived in sixteen thirty three. Later waves of
immigration occurred from other regions, with early free immigrant communities
forming in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. So we have
had people on American soil who were Muslims since sixteen
(01:14:47):
thirty three. So is that like some kind of a
shocking reveal I think it would be for this guy
in the eighteen hundreds. Some Muslim communities existed throughout the
nineteenth century, though udence is less direct and relies on
assumptions about names and origins of enslaved individuals. When you
get into the nineteen hundreds, significant immigration waves included Muslims
(01:15:10):
from Greater Syria who settled in areas like Lower Manhattan,
creating a community often called Little Syria. Nineteen oh seven,
Muslim immigrants from Eastern Europe, including Tartars and Russians and
Poland and Lithuania. You formed an early Muslim congregation in Brooklyn,
(01:15:36):
which later opened a mosque in nineteen thirty one. So
This is not about being Islamophobic. It's about being It's
about deciding whether or not you're going to be a
radical leftist as a Muslim right. Because this guy's a
radical leftist. It's abundantly clear. He wants to give everything free, free, free, free,
(01:16:01):
free for me. That's what he wants. So let's go
to New York City for a quick second. This is
a guy by the name of Ja Perez. He's got
advice for the people who live in New York City.
He happens to be a person of color, he happens
to be a person who loves New York City. What
(01:16:22):
is he saying about Mandami and the Mandami Express here,
let's check this out cut number nineteen.
Speaker 9 (01:16:28):
Please, I just want to reach out to you guys
once more with the same old rhetoric. Yeah, we have
a few days to an election in New York City
and it's important that you go out there and vote.
Man New York City, please understand what's happening here. To
some of you young people, especially, this is not what
you think it is. It's all smoking mirrors. This guy
that's coming in, this young radical will shape your lives
(01:16:48):
in a very terrible way. For the next four years,
possibly eight years. It's important you understand because experience is
the best teacher. I'm sixty years old. I've been living
in this city my entire life, and I've seen it come,
I've seen them go, and this is gonna be one
of the worst. And to some of you people, especially
you young liberals idealistically speaking speak thinking about, you know,
(01:17:09):
changing the world, that's not gonna happen. What's gonna happen
is you're gonna and suffer more than you are already.
His proposals are weak, he cannot support them, not to mention,
he's going to contribute to crime. Another thing is for
the folks out there that sit on their asses all
day on social service programs, welfare, Section eight and everything else,
you can't hide.
Speaker 1 (01:17:27):
This is gonna impact you even more.
Speaker 9 (01:17:29):
Why because they are going to blame the Trump administration
while not giving you the resources that they're supposed to
give you. Once these resources are removed, they're just going
to blame up and it's gonna get worse and worse
for you.
Speaker 1 (01:17:42):
Why Because they don't care about you.
Speaker 9 (01:17:44):
They need someone in twenty twenty eight to politicize, and
that's gonna be you. Section eight is never going to
be awarded to the people that it used to be
awarded to. It's gonna be awarded to foreigners that are
coming in. As you can see, public housing, subsidized housing, right,
and you have Brent Control. All these initiatives are not
for you or for me. Therefore, these people that are
(01:18:04):
slowly creeping into the city of New York, wake up.
Speaker 1 (01:18:08):
Put down the drugs.
Speaker 9 (01:18:10):
Yes, I'm being tough, and I'm being hard because in
the long run, when my bones are dust, you'll think
to yourself, I remember that guy was mentioning now on
some clip, and now look how we're living. I can't
believe we didn't listen. So remember, if you don't vote,
you don't count. Okay, it's important you understand that. So
(01:18:31):
we expect to see you on November at the ballot box.
I don't care where you come from, where you hail from,
how much money you have, right, how poor you are,
whether you're on a public assistance, whether you're not.
Speaker 1 (01:18:42):
Get yours out there.
Speaker 9 (01:18:43):
Man, we need you. And again, this is j Perez
on my platform with one love New York City. Hey,
why the long face just spelling the delusion hit me
up on my comments.
Speaker 1 (01:18:57):
Love you? Oh, that's that's fighting words. That's fighting words.
He loves the people, He's given them advice. He's sixty
years old. He's seen the city his whole life. He
sees how it's going. He doesn't think it's a good
way to go. This is a terrible thing to do.
You're warning the people. Oh no, let us just find
(01:19:20):
out on our own. Is that pot hot? Let me
touch it? Ooh, I burn my hand. You want to
touch it again? Ooh, I burned my hand again. How
did that happen? I don't know. That's incredible. Darn it
coming up. Why is Gavin Newsome so upset that he
didn't get invited to kick it with Joe Rogan. We'll
(01:19:42):
dive into that. He's so frigilly. So are you guys coming?
Are you guys coming tomorrow? Come say a spend some
time with us over at the Heighst Brewery and Barrel Arts.
(01:20:05):
It's gonna be absolutely awesome. Make sure you got your tickets.
It's gonna be great. By the way, special guest will
be in attendance in that regard, but I'm not gonna
tell you who it is. Not gonna spend I'm not
gonna spoil it. Not spoiling it. Seven oh four five,
seven eleven ten. Gavin Newsom? Why is Gavin Newsom so fragile?
He is a very fragile man. I mean yesterday he
(01:20:28):
was so confident with the wonderbread and and and and
how many times he would he would throw five hundred times,
he would throw the ball five hundred times every every day.
Then his dad showed up and everything was cool, except
there's a whole bunch of stuff that's debunking what what
he said. But nevertheless, Gavin Newsom is ready. He's ready
(01:20:51):
to be interviewed. He's ready to talk to the people.
He said yesterday that he is considering running for the
presidency of the United States. So yeah, I know he
said it. He said it. That's why he wants to
be on with Joe Rogan and he feels like he's
being left out by Joe Rogan. Joe Rogan's afraid of
Gavin Newsom. He he him and Sean you know, Sean,
(01:21:11):
what's his name there, Ryan, He's afraid they're afraid of him.
They're afraid of Gavin Newsom because he's he's that man.
Speaker 7 (01:21:19):
Is that man is.
Speaker 1 (01:21:22):
Let me just tell you suave Rico Swavee. All right,
let's go cut twenty five. What's up, Gavin Go, Well.
Speaker 12 (01:21:31):
Look, he hasn't for years and years. He's been attacking
me and it's one way, and he won't have me
on it. He's consistently not me on. By the way,
I'm moving on. I have no interest.
Speaker 8 (01:21:39):
You're done with him.
Speaker 12 (01:21:40):
Joe Rogan's the Facebook of podcasting. He was sitting across
one of the brightest minds in podcasting right now. The
guy was in the mic, and there are a lot
of people at the mic doing extraordinary things.
Speaker 8 (01:21:52):
In podcastretty big audience. Still, you know what.
Speaker 12 (01:21:56):
But with all due respect, if he's if he has
a big audience, and he but you don't have big
enough confidence. I didn't go there to have me on.
Well you've called him a chicken, but he's been attacking
for me. But here's the thing. These guys they all
have something in common. It's one way.
Speaker 8 (01:22:12):
They attack.
Speaker 12 (01:22:13):
They belittle, they demean, they take things out of context.
But this is a serious thing, and so often we
just sit back and go, oh god, I really would
love to go on. Oh if Kamala Harris just went
on Joe Rogan, she would have won. It's not so
much deeper than that. And the unwillingness for a guy
like that to even have the common courtesy to attack
someone and not have the DC say, you know what,
(01:22:34):
why don't you have a chance to come on, let's
have a civil dialogue. I've watched you on podcasts with
like Sean Ryan, who's a close buddy of this.
Speaker 8 (01:22:42):
He had the curse on me have four hours, right,
Sean Hannity. Folks like that. And so if I go
on Sean Ryan and Sean Hannity, what are you worried about?
Speaker 1 (01:22:50):
You?
Speaker 8 (01:22:51):
Joe? You're gonna cook me or I'm gonna cook myself.
Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
Okay, I'm going to turn the microphone over to Isaac. Isaac,
what do you take from what he's talking? He says,
He says, it's the Facebook of podcast is what is
he talking about?
Speaker 2 (01:23:11):
Well, first of all, if he's trying to belittle Joe
Rogan's podcast, yes, calling him the Facebook of podcasters. Gavin
Newsom himself has a podcast and we'd have to consider
that the MySpace at best of podcasts. Second of all,
if you go back and listen as a big jri
gut myself listened to him for years. Yes, he hates
(01:23:34):
Gavin Newsom because he loved La. He lived in LA
for over a decade and Gavin Newsom ruined LA. It
is a terrible place now because of Gavin Newsom's policy.
Oh awful, it's a dangerous can't go anywhere, You can't
go anywhere.
Speaker 1 (01:23:49):
Yeah, it's terrible. It's terrible. One of the most beautiful
places on the Oh my gosh. Yes, ruins, but you
can't go to the beach. Absolutely not. I mean it's
terrible and everything burned down. So so let me ask
you this, because you're you know, you're in the No,
do you think he would go on a podcast with
(01:24:10):
Dana White? No, I don't think you would go on Rogan.
Speaker 2 (01:24:15):
He would bury himself on Rogan because I listened to
him on Sean Ryn and yeah, yeah, big fan of
Seowan Ryn as well.
Speaker 1 (01:24:22):
No hate really really good, really talented guy.
Speaker 2 (01:24:24):
Yeah, great guy, former Navy seal, Yes, sir, but uh,
Sean Ryan didn't really hold his feet to the fire.
He asked him tough questions, but then he let him
give a politicians answer and skate on it. Right, But
Rogan wouldn't do that Rogan, and that's what he does
with all of his guests. He presses every issue, sure,
just because just out of curiosity, just to get a better.
Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
Understanding of it. He would be eating alive on row.
Do you think. I don't even think Gavin Newsom could
sit there for six hours, five hours, four hours? I mean,
I like, what, like what unless they gave him like ayahuasca.
I'll tell you what.
Speaker 2 (01:24:59):
If he uns for president, I would love for him
to go on Rogan because that would be the Indies campaign.
Speaker 1 (01:25:04):
Brogan would take him Rogan, he would take him and
he'd say, listen, you destroyed a beautiful city. Yes, and
I had. I then had to move someplace else. Yes,
I mean, leave me alone. Come on, now, what's going
on with that? I appreciate that analysis. That's really good analysis, Isaac.
I think it's a tremendous happy to do it as
a podcaster expert.
Speaker 6 (01:25:23):
Here.
Speaker 1 (01:25:24):
Well, listen, listen, let me tell you that's that's really
good stuff. Okay, So with that in mind, what if
I told you that Ribs that Ribs never alluded to
Donald Trump being like Hitler? Is that true? That's listen, Ribs,
(01:25:44):
Ribs is ready, we've got it cutt number twenty nine.
Ribs is lying.
Speaker 13 (01:25:49):
Listen, go I haven't suggested that Donald Trump is Hitler.
The dangers that we saw uh in you know, Nazi
Germany are the dangers that we need to react to.
Speaker 8 (01:26:01):
Now.
Speaker 13 (01:26:02):
Well, I think everybody understands that at this point we've
got an authoritarian in office. It doesn't take very long
to tear apart a constitutional republic. Indeed, the Nazis did
it in fifty three days.
Speaker 1 (01:26:16):
That's not the country we live in.
Speaker 13 (01:26:17):
You know, you shouldn't have to walk around papers the
way that they did in the early days of Nazi Germany.
I do not invoke the specter of Nazis lightly. I'm
watching with a foreboding dread what is happening in our
country right now. A president who watches a plane go
down in the Potomac and suggests, without facts or findings
(01:26:37):
that a diversity higher is responsible for the crash. The
authoritarian playbook is laid bare here.
Speaker 7 (01:26:44):
How can you possibly compare what happened in Germany and
World War Two to what's going on here in the
United States.
Speaker 13 (01:26:51):
Well, we're talking about the death of a constitutional republic.
That's what happened in Germany in nineteen thirty three, nineteen
thirty four, and we're seeing to day that you've got
an administration in Washington that's ignoring court orders. This is
literally the end of the Republic as we know it
if we don't allow, if we don't stand up to
(01:27:13):
Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (01:27:17):
I'll take three calls. I'll take three calls with one question.
What is different between what this guy is peddling and
actually Nazi Germany? There is a differential?
Speaker 9 (01:27:31):
Do you know what it is?
Speaker 1 (01:27:32):
I would expect you to know. Seven oh four, five
to seven oh eleven, ten, News Talk eleven ten, nine
three WBT, It's the Brett Waterble Show. Good to be
(01:27:54):
with you. I'm just I got to be honest with you.
I'm just exhausted with the everything is Hitler. It's just
it's just it's insane, it's crazy. It doesn't result in
any sort of Well, let's talk to Matt next. Matt,
welcome to the program. What's on your mind?
Speaker 5 (01:28:12):
The talking man? Hey, you said you were going to
take a few calls about what's the difference between the
Nazis and us? Yes, all right? Can I have three
guesses or only one guy?
Speaker 1 (01:28:21):
You can get three guesses, go ahead, go float.
Speaker 5 (01:28:23):
Okay, first one is we're not trying to take over
the world, now, that's right. Okay, We're not killing innocent
citizens for because of their religion.
Speaker 1 (01:28:32):
That's correct.
Speaker 5 (01:28:33):
And our leader is not jacked up on meth amphetamines.
Speaker 1 (01:28:37):
Okay, that's a pretty that. I didn't even think about that,
but you are right. Hitler was he was a He
was a he was a fiend for drugs. Yeah, no,
no doubt about. I was thinking, see, I'm going I'm
going total old school here. Okay. The difference between Nazi
Germany or even Germany, but falling to the Nazis, let's say, okay,
(01:28:58):
and US is I don't know what the number would be,
but I'm gonna guess it's probably about four hundred million
firearms in our country. I mean, I mean, look, what
was what was the purpose of the Second Amendment?
Speaker 4 (01:29:16):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:29:17):
The Second Amendment was to defend your rights, you know,
I mean, that's the it's the there's a reason why
it's the Second Amendment. And I'm not called I would
never call for for that kind of a thing. But
like they confiscated all the stuff from the Germans, and
then they and then they beat people up in the
streets and then they were suddenly then caged and they
were done.
Speaker 5 (01:29:38):
Yeah, it's not just Hitler either. That's the first thing
most most dictators do is disarm the country. Oh my gosh,
the citizens end up throwing rocks at tank.
Speaker 1 (01:29:49):
Right a hundred, like I think. I mean, you're old
enough to remember the the Tentemen Square where by the way,
by the way, where Tim Walls went and toured and
was very enamored by what was going on over in China.
I mean, these these there are countries that respect firearms.
You know, you want to know, you want to know
(01:30:11):
who I think it's. I think they're mandated to have firearms?
Speaker 6 (01:30:17):
Is in is In?
Speaker 1 (01:30:18):
Uh is in Switzerland you are mandated, Yes you are, Yes,
you are mandated to have firearms. And I do believe
and I do believe uh bb net and Yahoo and
the folks over in Israel are are are very proud
folks who are willing to defend what they need to
(01:30:39):
defend because they're such a small country. And so there
are countries that that that are that are okay with
firearms and they don't lose their minds.
Speaker 5 (01:30:48):
Why why do you uh now is that also why
Israel requires certain age men to serve a certain term
in the military.
Speaker 1 (01:30:57):
Yeah, and that's why, that's why they would have firearms, right,
because that's that's that's a whole that's a whole deal,
different deal.
Speaker 5 (01:31:02):
I also heard there was a town, some town, little
town in Texas are somewhere down there, you know, your
neck of the wood, where there is like a law
and they don't enforce it, but there is something on
the books.
Speaker 1 (01:31:14):
It's just supposed to have a firearm. You're supposed to
have firearms. Yeah, they're they're they're there. You get those
things from every now and again, you know. But but
the fact is, like I don't I think the worst.
Let me just let me put it this way. Okay,
do you remember a movie called Red Dawn?
Speaker 5 (01:31:33):
Of course, Patrick Swayze and Charlie Sheen and then and.
Speaker 1 (01:31:35):
Then they remade it. It was terrible.
Speaker 5 (01:31:37):
The remake was terrible, but remake was horrible.
Speaker 1 (01:31:40):
But that's all you'd have to say, Like our generation
would understand, you know what, Hey, we're getting invaded by
AI and whatever it is, an Atlas AI or whatever,
and we're just gonna it's Operation It's gonna be Operation
red non and people would know what that means, and
they'd be like, Okay, uh, that's that's what's gonna happen,
(01:32:03):
and so that's that's the thing. But but you guys
like Ribs, you know, he's just sitting back and he's like,
I never said that that Donald Trump was hitler. They
called they called Trump hitler fifty two times a day.
Speaker 5 (01:32:14):
I mean, it's like they throw it around like it's nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:32:17):
Yeah, which is so horrible. Which is so horrible.
Speaker 5 (01:32:19):
By the way, you know, when Red Dawn came out,
you and I were probably in junior high even middle
school when that when that came out, that that was
you know, eighty three or four or something like that.
Speaker 1 (01:32:32):
Yes, but when that.
Speaker 5 (01:32:33):
Came out, it was I would I almost would say
that was a different world because we were worried about
the Communists. We were worried about Russia, we were worried
about North Korea and all this stuff. But the truth
of the matter is is we're still worried and need
to be worried about the communists, but just not in
the same way because instead of coming across the North
(01:32:55):
Paul with a nuclear weapon on an end of a
missile they're coming into New York City in the Mayor's office.
Speaker 1 (01:33:03):
Yes, look for whatever reason. And I've never understood this, Okay,
I have never, for the life and he ever understood
why it is that people are enamored by the Soviet
Union and the Soviet ideas that that came that way.
All you end up with is less freedom and impossibility
of travel anywhere. And then and then they just confiscate
(01:33:26):
your stuff. I mean, why why would you, I don't
know anybody would want that, and.
Speaker 5 (01:33:30):
Then take all the food off the shelves of the supermarket,
just to show you how competent they all are.
Speaker 1 (01:33:35):
Yeah. Yeah, And that's what that's what it is. I mean,
it's it's it's a terribly unfortunate thing that we have
to go keep repeating the same lessons over and over again.
I just I don't I don't get it. And Donald
Trump is the problem.
Speaker 5 (01:33:51):
I guess so he and Brett. You know, I don't
know if this Gavin Newsom character is an actual full
card carrying communist. No, but I do know this, he
is straight out of Compton.
Speaker 9 (01:34:02):
Straight out of Compton.
Speaker 1 (01:34:04):
That's very good, though, good stuff, Matt. I appreciate you, man, Hey, listen.
Speaker 5 (01:34:08):
If I see you down at the News and Bruise,
I'm gonna buy you a beer.
Speaker 1 (01:34:10):
Okay, are you? Are you coming to the News and Bruise.
Speaker 5 (01:34:13):
I don't know if I can or not, but if
I do, I'll be the I'll be the loud mouth
irishman with the clients in.
Speaker 1 (01:34:20):
All right, and I'll intro I'll introduce you to some
secret friends that you need to meet.
Speaker 5 (01:34:25):
And you do have a surprise coming, you said, I
do have a surprise. Yes, this is surri Maybe I
will show up then, all right, buddy.
Speaker 1 (01:34:30):
All right, man, thank you very much. That's that's Matt.
I love the I love you too. I love the show.
We we love everybody. We're very We're very We're very
you know forward people here.
Speaker 8 (01:34:40):
I like that.
Speaker 1 (01:34:41):
See, I feel like my dream when I was thinking
about doing my shows, and I mean it's not like
I'm not gonna not do my shows anymore, but but
my dream of doing my shows was like hanging out
at a bar having a conversation. And then tomorrow night
we'll be hanging out at a bar having a conversation,
talking to all the cou people. Because we really do
(01:35:02):
have an incredibly cool group of people who are coming
in and I think it's gonna be really awesome. And
I always I always like this kind of stuff. All right,
here's the final thing. Mars spacecraft observed this interstellar comet.
And no, it's not an alien space ship. I'm not
buying that. You can try to you can try to
(01:35:23):
tell me that that's what it is, but I don't
know about this. By the way, this is from Canada,
Kannada CBC Radio, a Canada. An alien visitor passing through
our Solar system made its closest approach to Mars earlier
this month, and to European robotic spacecraft orbiting the red
(01:35:43):
planet turned to take a look. Three I Atlas is
truly an alien visitor, having come from another Solar system
somewhere in the galaxy. It's a comet which was cast
away from its home star, perhaps due to a close
encounter with a giant planet, a planet like Jupiter. That's
(01:36:05):
the theory. Is it is it? It then traveled for
billions of years in interstellar space, was drawn into our
Solar System by the gravity of our son and is
now passing through before it continues on its journey, never
to return. Now who's being naive?
Speaker 7 (01:36:28):
Now?
Speaker 1 (01:36:28):
Who is being naive?
Speaker 2 (01:36:30):
My friend?
Speaker 1 (01:36:32):
In fact, its trajectory suggests it could be the oldest
comet ever discovered, making it potentially older than Joe Biden,
Nancy Pelosia. No, I'm kidding, potentially older than our four
point six billion year old solar system. We'll see coming up,
(01:36:54):
ladies and gentlemen, Charlotte FC. It's going to be a
great game. Stick around. My name is Brett Whitterble. Thanks
so much for spending time with me here today. We'll
be back again tomorrow, and again and again. Let me
tell you it's gonna be one heck of a game.
(01:37:14):
You want to listen to it. You're gonna want to
listen to it twice because I'm calling the win right now.
News Talk eleven, ten ninety nine three w B two