Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George
Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty Armstrong and
Gatty and he Armstrong and Yetty. The White House is
(00:24):
already all in.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Yesterday we got our first peek at the Biden's holiday decorations.
It's beautiful, so festive. The official theme is the Season
of Peace and Light, which is much more hopeful than
all the other Democrats Christmas theme. Drink three old fashions
and openly weep.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
In front of Charlie Brown. Eh, not a muse, are you? So?
We have at our store a new hoodie, Yes, a
premium ang Adidas hoodie Wow Armstrong in gedddy dot com.
And then got all the other stuff too. Adidas very popular. Brown. Uh,
(01:07):
I have a text I'm supposed to look at Let
me look at this according to Hanson. Oh yeah, look
at that. Oh that's the hoodie there. That's good looking.
That's a good looking hoo set it down there. Yeah,
I like it. What was I going to say? I
was gonna say something? Oh, Adida's very popular of course,
with the uh what are those shoes of your kid got?
(01:28):
And my kid's got? And everybody's got I've got a
pair myself, the Adidas, the the soccer shoe that are
the most popular shoe in America. But the I just
saw Sambas. Yeah, very cool. Nike keeps announcing like losses
and everything like that, there's a new version out today.
(01:48):
They're down fourteen or something like that. I'm kind of
surprised by that, and some of it is blamed on
they got too woke. And but I don't know AnyWho.
My son, who is a sneaker guy, and that is
a crowd. I mean, there are certain people that are
into sneakers and the whole deal, and he's one of them.
And he regularly points out we walk into a story
(02:09):
and said, dude, that guy over there has got on
a pair of two thousand dollars Travis Scott's. I mean,
he just he spots all these different shoes everywhere, and
other people's passions seem so odd. Yeah, don't share them,
including my own. I freely admit that, yes they do.
They do, which is just the way human beings are made,
(02:29):
I guess. And then he'll look on his phone real
quick on Anybay, look at these. The cheapest pair I
can find is eighteen hundred dollars and he's wearing them
over there. And so there's tons of really expensive collector nikes,
but I guess they're not selling enough of just the
regular stuff to please Wall Street. Yeah, you got to
go up to that guy and say, how did you
(02:49):
find those in size ten? He'd say, I'm a ten
and a half. And if your son's a ten and
a half, you bap them over the head, you strip
them of his shoes. And my son's are twelve. I
can't wear his shoes clown shoes for me? Wow? Uh?
Do they hold value? I mean, are your two thousand
dollars nikes gonna be worth two thousand dollars in a year?
Or is this a blip? Or I might as well
(03:11):
ask me why people spend eight thousand dollars on a handbag?
I don't know, right, So well, status, I guess I
do know the But okay, but that's interesting too, because
it's only status for other people who know about it. Right,
So if there are only two people in the grocery
store that know you're wearing two thousand dollars Nikes as
(03:34):
opposed to the other one hundred people that are wearing
eighty dollars nikes? What is that? And I'm not denying
it because I do the same thing with other stuff.
It's just it's an interesting facet of human nature. Yeah,
I don't. I don't know. And at the risk of
getting too far down this road, if you want status,
you are much better, well, depending who you want status
(03:56):
with buying a ten thousand dollars Rolex than a why
that is worth five times that much because it will
be a tiny percentage of people that recognize you're wearing
that watch. But if you want to impress those anyway,
I don't know, or is it for your own personal
How much of it is just your own personal I
have this, Yeah, I don't know, because I feel try
to suppress others with my sculpted physique. Obviously that's why
(04:19):
you're shirtless most of the time, whether you know depends
all the way. Too bad, it's so cold the day
I can't be shirtless. You sometimes say, yeah, because I
get a little purple on those days. It's not attractive.
So I think I'm tired of talking about the Hunter
Biden pardon, but there's a new wrinkle on it, and
(04:40):
it is going to emerge as over history. The worst
thing Joe Biden did. The uh, we're the grown ups
in the room. We're going to restore norms after the awful,
awful Trump administration, I mean, one of the lowest points
in American history. We're going to restore norms. And then
he parts D's son and writes that letter blaming the
(05:02):
Justice Department for playing politics with the law, et cetera. Well,
a lot of the Justice Department and the judges ain't
digging it, including last night, while I was in bed,
the federal judge who presided over Hunter Biden's criminal tax
case scolded Joe Biden for claiming his son was the
victim of selective prosecution. The guy's name is Judge Mark Scarcey.
(05:24):
He issued an order on Tuesday night acknowledging Hunter Biden's pardon.
Because that's the way the whole thing works. President pardon somebody,
and then a judge I say, okay, well it's over now,
and then he signed some piece of paper, and the
whole thing is over. Here's the statement from the judge.
The President's statement illustrates the reasons for the court's disapproval,
as representations contained their instand blah blah, Blah. The President
(05:45):
asserts that mister Biden was treated differently from others who
were late paying their taxes because of serious addictions, implying
that mister Biden was among those individuals who ultimately paid
taxes due to addictions. Scarzy said. The judge pointed out
that Hunter Biden said in court filings he was addicted
to drugs and alcohol through May twenty nineteen, and in
his guilty plea admitted to dodging tax payments after becoming sober.
(06:06):
We went through all this stuff earlier, but the judge
gets into the damage that has been done at so
many different levels to the justice system, to federal judges
expressly rejected mister Biden's arguments that the government prosecuted mister
Biden because of his familiar relation to the President and
the president's own attorney general and Department of Justice personnel
(06:29):
oversaw the investigation leading to the charges. In the President's estimation,
this legion of federal civil servants, the undersign included are
unreasonable people. The Constitution provides the President with brought authority
to grant reprieves and pardons, but nowhere does the Constitution
give the president the authority to rewrite history. Yeah, I
saw that quote. Ya, he said honor something. So the
(06:51):
restore norms President may have done more damage to people's
respect to the Justice Department than anything true could ever do. Yet, right,
it would have been better if he had waited until
the eleventh hour and just done it out of paternal sympathy,
as opposed to concocting this false I mean, it's the
(07:16):
opposite of true and damaging narrative that his own Justice
Department perverted justice and was politicized and all even as
he pursued lawfare against Trump is just this word is overused,
but it's bizarre. Well, as somebody pointed out yesterday, however,
many different judges appointed by six different presidents rejected these
(07:38):
arguments at so many different levels. I mean, this had
is fair of viewing by a wide variety of levels
of the justice system. Different judges appointed by different Democrats
and Republicans. They all said, no, there's nothing wrong going
on here, and the President of the United States pretended
(07:58):
there was to his own ass. I guess again, like
you just said, why wouldn't you just say, I'm a dad,
I'm not gonna have my son go to jail. You
know it's it's it's a drag that you can't do that,
but I can. I'm going to right in effact or
just you know, be mute about it. But no, he
invented again this this awful, awful, bizarre indictment of his own,
(08:20):
you know, administration. I think it may have been Charlie Cook.
Somebody pointed out that, and it's it's quite right. This
is not a strange and shocking twist in the saga
of Joe Biden. This is who Joe Biden has always been.
He's congenitally dishonest. He has lied at every single step
of the conversation about his influence, pedaling, money laundering family.
(08:44):
As the IRS whistleblowers pointed out, I think we read
that at the end of last hour, was it, Yeah,
toward the end. This is exactly who Joe Biden is.
Got Joe, he's not your classic liar, though I don't think.
I mean tells things that are He says things are
not true, so that's the definition of a lie. But
he's not your classic liar. I think this all fits
in with his weird I was a truck driver, I
(09:07):
graduated top of my class. He just he just says
things that make him feel cool at the time. I
think true at all, in all kinds of ways, things
that don't matter and things that really really matter, like
claiming the Justice Department is But he just says whatever
(09:27):
makes him look cool in whatever setting. Then go, yeah,
he's he's a fabulous I would also argue that he's
just a good old fashioned liar, but yeah, go what
a weird personality. So I had another point on that,
the blah blah blah, but anyway, Chris Steileerwalt writes in
(09:51):
The Dispatch today, the age of corruption roars on. An
age of corruption is a time when power is routinely
abused for personal purposes, and going back several years with
and wherever you want to start, executive orders that are
unconstitutional but get signed anyway by Republicans and Democrats. And
it's been growing over the years. And just so we
(10:13):
are into or headed to maybe already into a very
high period of corruption and using all of these tools
for personal reasons. That is not good. And it doesn't
look like it's slown down anytime soon. No, and the
voters need to reject it. Although well, I don't really
(10:33):
have time to get into this, But I understand, given
the horrific policies of the left, a certain number of
Americans has said, yeah, Trump's got a whole hell of
a lot of flaws, but boy is he good on
those awful, awful policies the left. So we're going to
go with them. I get that and one more thing
for me, and then I'll shut up. And this is
the worst sort of what about is a my guess,
(10:54):
But I've got to point out, you remember when Trump
was president the first time, and the Trump Corporation continued
to rate that big hotel in Washington, d c. That
used to be the big post office, and the left
was pretending to be just outraged and horrified by the
notion that foreign leaders and others might seek to curry
(11:17):
influence from through on Trump by saying, Hey, I stayed
at your hotel and it's really nice. The bed was
comfy by getting a three hundred dollars a night hotel room,
which probably puts ten bucks in his pocket right well,
and to the extent that he would even notice. But
that was outrageous, but selling influence around the globe to
(11:42):
foreign powers, including some hostile to the United States, making
millions of dollars at it, then feloniously evading the taxes
on those ill gotten gains. That's no problem. But somebody's
staying in the Trump hotels outrage. That's what about the
ellument's clause. The emolument's clause. Oh for God, this is
(12:05):
the people. This is the worst thing Joe Biden has done.
Not the pardoning of his son. The pardoning of his
son and claiming the Justice Department is corrupt. That's the
worst thing he has done because it allows everybody to
do that from here on out, and it's made everybody
so cynical. Is if we weren't cynical enough. I would
(12:29):
love to see I will never see it, but I
would love to see some sort of orchestrated movement by
prominent Democrats to stand on the steps of the Capitol
Building and sing from the same hymnal or recite in unison.
Or appointed spokesman probably be handier to issue a swift
and unequivocal condemnation of the blanket immunity, the perverse and
(12:51):
dishonest description of how Hunter came to be prosecuted. Say, look,
you want to you want to pardon your boy? The
customers gives you the power, but the rest of this
crap is no good. That is the only way they
conceive save even a shred of credibility on these issues
going forward. So we got one of these stories, interesting
(13:14):
tragic if you're involved. But it's a couple of kids
switched at birth parents been raising them a while. It's
in California, just found out trying to figure out what
to do. We can lay out the details for you
on that. I don't I don't know what I would do.
And that's a juation, that's a rough one. Among other things.
On the waist to hear said that the McDonald's ecoli
(13:37):
outbreak is over. YEPLI is gone. Apparently whatever's in the
mccrib killed it. That's pretty funny. Maybe we'll get to
later the whole switch at birth thing. We got one
of those stories going on in California. I think both
the girls are seven. Couple of families raising these girls
and find out that it's seven years in Yeah, And
(14:00):
to me, I mean, do you keep raising the kid
you've been raised and got attached to her? Do you
go back to the one that's biologically yours? To me,
it's pretty easy, since you know who's getting better grades
or how well behaved they are. That's that's how you
make the discs, so you like flip a coin for
the more uh desirable. I think my girl's better behaved,
so I'm going to keep this soh dary you suggest that, Sarah,
you're gonna like this story. This is like an Anne
(14:21):
Landers thing, if you're old enough to remember what this is.
I came across this on Reddit. Do I tell my
wife the truth? After eleven years? When we first started dating,
my girlfriend asked me what my favorite meal was so
she could cook it for me for our one month anniversary.
We were sixteen years old. I told her my favorite
meal was chicken parmesan. She cooked it for me from scratching.
It was delicious, harmer. I realized that what I had
(14:44):
meant to say was chicken alfredo. I felt bad. That
sounds like me. I can't keep my sauces straight. I
don't know many well. I felt bad that she went
out of her way to cook what she thought was
my favorite meal, so I didn't correct her or myself sport.
Now we've been together for eleven years, married for two,
and once a month or so, she still makes chicken
(15:05):
parmesan because she thinks it's my favorite meal. It's good,
but it's really just not my favorite At this point,
is it too late to tell them the truth? Oh
my god, that's hilarious. Years you've been making me this
meal thinking is my favorite meal, and I like it.
But if you really want to make me my favorite meal,
it's chicken out free. I so want to do an
(15:27):
advice colin. Oh good, that's funny. Yeah, that is. It's
absolutely hilarious. You talk about a conundrum that's all fun
and not a lot of Yeah. And my guess is
they're a good couple because, you know, if that's the
level of ones really committed to making the other one
happy though other one's really worried about, you know, hurting
(15:48):
their feelings and yeah, yeah, so it's a good say
exact way around. But yeah, you know what, Yeah, I
think it's It actually could be a depending on the woman.
I assume she's sane, but it could be a hell
of a bonding moment. Explain it to her, say all right,
I got to tell you something hilarious. Maybe you know,
fancy it up, have some champagne or something, and making
(16:10):
the occasion of it, so she's curious and tell her
you know when I told you that it's because I
can't keep my sauces straight. I really meant this, and
then let her know your chicken parmesan is out of
this world. Yes, Katie, but I didn't want to tell
you because I care about you. I did. It's a positive, yes, Katie,
And what a great story to tell the kids later on.
(16:32):
Oh it's hilarious. My god, I had your mom making
me chicken palm for eleven years, and for eleven years
he didn't tell me that he really meant it. Oh,
it's that's that's a story of love. That's charming, and
it is charming, Katie. You already for my transition to
the tea's of course, maybe her secret for eleven years
and she's on OnlyFans pleasing lonely people across America to
(16:55):
make money. Not nearly so charming. No, uh, what is
the deal with the only fans? We talked a little
bit yesterday. How does it scale? Nobody understands? Do you
know somebodyho's making tons of money? We've got an amazing
story for you and an email from a beloved listener,
shocking yet true. Stay with Us Armstrong and Geeddy. So
(17:16):
the headline, if you haven't heard of Wall Street Journal,
seems to think of old Pete Heggzeth nominee for Secretary
of Defense. It's just a matter of hours twenty four
or forty eight before he drops out part of it
because of NBC and a whole bunch of stuff they
came up with yesterday about his lifestyle, to which this
tweet I thought was really good. So NBC runs with
(17:39):
anonymous sources who say Pete Heggzeth is a drinker and
a womanizer, but ignores everyone who is on record saying
Doug m Hoff had hit his girlfriend. That is why
the liberal media deserves the death that is dying. That's true,
well said, Yeah, very well said. But more on that
in some of the other nominees later only fans on
(18:01):
our radar screen again, I came across this. It was
somebody who you constantly hear these ridiculous amounts of money
they make twenty thousand dollars a month, they make one
million dollars a month or whatever on only fans, and
I came across a business sort of person tweeting out
I don't understand how this scales. Will somebody explain it
(18:21):
to me. And part of the explanation, which a link
to a magazine article about it, was apparently, only fans
if you reach a certain level, they've got an army
of people and bots that will engage your clients. What
do you call them fans? I guess it's fans. You're
an only fan following your followers engage them constantly, so
(18:45):
as you as a semi attractive And I say that
just because you don't have to be super hot apparently
to make a lot of money on only fans, based
on everything I've read, But you're a semi attractive you know,
I don't know, receptionist at whatever business, and you post
pictures at night, and you make so much money you
don't have to call these guys all day long. They've
got a call center and or bots who regularly check
(19:08):
in with your fans, say hey, woke up thinking about
how you doing today? That sort of thing. And apparently,
and this is where it gets sad and takes some
of the fun out of it, that there are enough
people that desire a relationship, apparently, but for whatever reason,
can't or don't want to have all the mess of
(19:30):
a real one that that feeds them just enough to
get by the somebody checking in with you with a
text every day or send you hey, I just bought
these shoes. What do you think, picture or something. I'm
just I'm imagining all this. I don't actually know. There's
a sexual interaction of some sort, which is the part
of many healthy relationship, right, But I don't think it
can be the sexual part. That's the part that's always
(19:52):
confused me. There's no way it's the sexual part, because
there's too much porn out there for people to be
pouring money into the only fans. It's got to be
the personal connection part. It's the combination. As I've tried
to explain, it is not merely an anonymous human showing
her naughty bits. For instance, I'm speaking as a heterosexual male.
(20:13):
It's somebody with whom you've communicated and perhaps communicated and asked,
you know, show me your right elbow. I got a
thing for right elbows, and there's a right elbow. It's
it's a very different interaction. Left elbows flashes right elbow weird. Ye, Katie,
you had a friend who was doing only fans and
that was the other thing.
Speaker 3 (20:32):
Well, I do have a friend that is doing OnlyFans,
and I'm sure she's not making nearly as much as this.
The girl that we mentioned earlier during the headline segment,
who is Sophie Range. She's twenty years old and says
she's a devout Christian and a virgin who made forty
three million dollars last year on only fans.
Speaker 1 (20:48):
Keeping in mind, of course, you could say anything. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
Actually I went to her only fans page and it says,
this is my page where you see my naughty side.
I may be a virgin, but I'm not as innocent
as you think. Fully nude content available. And also there's
a guy that paid her four point seven million dollars
last year.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Wow, do various stuff? Yeah wow, it's it's the ancient
archetype of the virgin whoror I am pure of heart
and body, but I will perform all sorts of wild
circus acts for you. That's an ancient and understandable male desire.
Ah wow, wow wow, so devout she's okay, So she says, interesting,
(21:32):
got this note from a devoted listener. We were talking
about whether if you were an attractive woman or whatever sense,
there might be a market if you'd get on OnlyFans,
and she said, I would absolutely get on OnlyFans if
success in the first say, three months, was guaranteed, I
wouldn't even be embarrassed about it. The part that stops
(21:54):
me is fear of failure. If I was making great
money from only fans, I would not give an f
if people saw it, family excluded, but we'd survive. But
the phase I cannot bring myself to face is the
building period, because if you have an OnlyFans and you
don't make a lot of money, you seem low moral
and stupid. If you have an only fans and you
make a ton of money, it's hard to argue that
you haven't hacked the system. I bet that's why a
(22:16):
lot of people don't do it, not because they're too
proud to make money on only fans, but because they're
too scared that it wouldn't be worth it. If you
try and fail, you get all the bad with none
of the good. It's too big a risk. Well yeah,
and then just the personal rejection of I thought I
was more attractive than that or more wantable than that,
just to like, if you get a no reaction or
just a whole bunch of men that would make you
(22:37):
feel good about yourself. Well, sure, yeah, you're offering your
wares up. Like I'm not twisting myself into pretzels here.
This is not easy to do. Nothing.
Speaker 3 (22:45):
What I have a feeling if you asked a woman
if she's ever considered being on OnlyFans and she said no,
she's lying.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
Most of us have thought about it. Oh well, how
such thing you think through? Yeah, sure you not. And
if I had a you know, wife, girlfriend, or daughter
who was attractive enough to do it, and I don't
know what my argument would be exactly. I mean, there are,
from what I understand, levels of only fans of things
you do. But if you're just if you're by yourself
(23:16):
in sexy clothes more or less whatever, and you're making
enough money to make your house paymer or who cares
tart yourself up make yourself a sexual object, perhaps I'll
lend you my Bible, Jack and you could peruse that
and understand a little bit. Well. But the other end
of it that I'm more focused on, because I think
it's going to doom society, is I know people, I
(23:38):
actually know people who seem to be getting by with
uh Because every human being has the natural need for
human relationship interaction. It's just the way we're built. I
know people who are getting by with just a tiny
amount of stranger's interaction and there's not even any sexual
stuff involved, just a little bit of Look, I have
(24:02):
lots of friends and this person I'm pretty good friends with,
and it's just practically nothing. But it's enough to keep
you going and not actually go out into the world
engage in anything. I read a great piece by a
gal who was an influencer with six figures of followers,
mostly art stuff, and I almost brought it to the show,
(24:24):
but it was a little long, and she talked about
how she would get the most reaction and the most
praise for her art if she paired it with some
emotional like crying because it didn't come out right, or
faking up some sort of deep emotional distress. And she
realized that was the way to really goose her followers,
and started to think that was a little weird, and
(24:47):
to cut to the punchline, she found herself miserable and
alone at one point and said I had hundreds of
thousands of followers and no one to call, and she
unplugged completely that's interesting because I was thinking about it,
or did I read this part anyway, just the idea
of it's kind of a even a lower level of
(25:07):
like the woman who's having in a relationship with a
married man. He's never leaving his wife, blah blah blah
blah blah. It kind of feel like he got a
real relationship. How about my favorite, you got a quote
unquote relationship with a convict who's cars for most of
his days. From another great example. I had another argument
with Jim today. We were writing back and forth, and
(25:28):
sometimes he can be so stubborn a sweetheart. He's in
a federal penitentiary and he's never getting out. It's a weird, fake,
faux relationship. But apparently the way we're built we just
need like the bar for enough is lower than we fought.
And I just I don't know how we're not going
to have eighty percent of society doing some version of that,
(25:54):
either with other human beings or profiting from it or
AI bots in the near future. Well, then we die
out as a species. Yeah, you don't think that's a problem,
or you don't care. I'm here, it's not my problem. No, Well,
and I just seriously. I don't. I don't. I'm not
worried about it, Like am I worried about my kids
or their kids or whatever being involved in that sort
(26:17):
of thing. Yes, that being a miserable existence while humanity lasts,
I do worry about that. Humanity dying out doesn't bother
me because no humans will be suffering. No, no, there
are no humans, I agree. And the road there could
be uncomfortable, Yeah, I would. I would hate it if
my kids get into their twenties and they don't have
a relationship and I find out they've got kind of
(26:38):
a little bit of one of any of the kind
we just described and it's enough for them to get by.
I just I don't know. It looks so sad. Yeah, yeah,
but how much money did these so called virgin make
forty three million in a year? Wow?
Speaker 3 (27:01):
And she has a list on her page called sugar
Daddies where there's a guy who has spent forty four
point seven million on her in the last twelve months.
Speaker 1 (27:10):
Well, that person is obviously incredibly wealthy and nuts. Because
you got that kind of money, you can get a
real girlfriend. I guarantee you show. Hey, O, Tani's thinking,
I wouldn't have to work out and all this working
on hitting the curveball. I need to show my bits
and make that sort of money. But you know, the
other people with their I don't know what they spend
(27:33):
one hundred dollars a week or thousand a month or
whatever to I just I don't know. I find it
very hard to believe it's occurring, but clearly it is.
Oh yeah, it is the entry level, like just to
be a sub subscriber, like five ten bucks a months,
and then do you get access to thousands and thousands
of onlyfan pages? And then no, you subscribe to a
(27:56):
person per And I don't. Just for the record, I
knows a lot about this. I read goraciously about everything,
including this in between making an own account. I have
no idea. I have never done this. I just I
know a fair amount about it. No, if you are
a dude as you have described, and you subscribe to
(28:17):
say three accounts, you're looking at twenty five thirty bucks
a month. You know it's interesting custom made like porn
end or a little bit of interaction. It's interesting like
the email you read about the person, you know what
they'd be judged in. I know Macaro people think my
judgment's all the other direction. Attractive women who can make
money doing this, I can. I like I said, I'm
(28:39):
not exactly sure what my argument is why you shouldn't
do it. The guys, you guys who are on there
giving them money, I think that's sad and pathetic that
would want to hide that. I would want to hide
the fact that I put on a scoregirl outfit, you know,
with some soft lighting to make money the object. I
would want to hide the fact that I'm a dude
paying these people and this is my relationship. I think wisdom,
(29:04):
both ancient and modern would answer you. And Kurt Vonnaget
wrote about this, among other people. But you are what
you do. You can claim to be whatever you can claim. Well,
I could have been this, But you are what you do.
(29:24):
Your life is what your life is. But cha, but
what if I teach or orphans to read all day
long and then fifteen minutes I'm in the schoolgirl outfit
at night. That is a more difficult answer to come
up with unless a person has a specific moral code
(29:45):
about lust, sex and sexuality. But you know, to each
their own, I say, I mean, I could be scrolling
through Twitter for this half hour, I lay on bed
in my heels and guys send me money? Is it?
High heels are the schoolgirl thing? I don't know. You're
gonna go what's popular these days? You know what? I'm
canceling my subscription to your channel. It's that one day,
it's this, the other it's that I ain't never again theme. Exactly.
(30:08):
It's called branding stupid. Yeah, exactly. Are you gonna sit
on balloons and pop them in pigtails or not? Okay? Right?
Have you ever seen that stuff? We talked about that
years ago when we became aware of it. Have you
ever seen that before? People that get off on hot
hot chicks sitting on balloons until they pop. That's a
big thing. Yeah. And then the much more horrifying women
(30:29):
who like squash mice with their high heel right like that,
there's all the sub bizarre. It's really bizarre. God, if
that's your kink, your whole life though, And you think,
oh my god, finally there's a website where a woman
steps on mice and high heels. My ship has come
in because your whole life have been it's not easy
(30:50):
to find that. No, I wouldn't. I've never tried, but
I imagine it's it's it's difficult. Yes, God, I mean,
you got a girlfriend, she's attractive, and she's like, you
don't have any in your apartment. You had to go
to the store and buy mice to put in your apartment,
and you say, oh my god, there's a mouse. Would
you kill it for me? In these shoes? I mean
it would be hard to get that going. The rest
(31:10):
of this segment is going to be Jack solo. As
I am checking out at this point, I wish everybody well,
have a great day. All right, we got more stay here,
so many texts. They're thinking of starting a homely fans
for people like them. Got this note as a man
who's signed up for only fans to see naughty bits.
(31:32):
It's a lot like going to a strip club and
they pretend they like you. I'm recently divorced, not a
good looking guy, and struggling with anxiety going out into crowds.
Only fans give you something that regular porn doesn't, and
is a bit of a human connection. Is it sad? Yes,
but it is getting me buy in these struggling times.
I think that's what a lot of people would say,
is it? I think they would say, is it sad? Yes?
(31:52):
Does it get me through the day? Yes, Yeah, that's
the problem with a lot of stuff like that, you know,
drink and eating bad food, just all kinds of things.
I'm getting by. I got through today, so right, And
we all have those coping mechanisms. And I'm not here
to judge anybody seriously depending unless your coping mechanism is
(32:13):
like to beat up people or whatever. But uh, the
only problem with those half measures is they drain the
energy it takes to get what you really need, right right, Yeah,
that's that's that's interesting. I always like the hashtag activism
lowers real activism because you feel like you're doing something
and you're not. That's a very good example some texts
(32:37):
we got you got Kavanaugh and my Hegzeth. You got
Hegzeth and Mike Kavanaugh. We've got more of that in
our four of the kavanaughing of Pete Hegzeth, which may
actually drive him out of the running. Also a brilliant
takedown of the idea of slave reparations that it contains
all sorts of really interesting information about the history of slavery,
(32:59):
believe it or not. Next Hour, you don't get next hour.
Grab the podcast Armstrong and getting on demand. In fact, subscribe.
This is a funny text Joe will like, will doctor
Jill go back into private practice after Joe's retirement correction
of a misperception they're not a real doctor, so the oh,
we ought to mention this. The CEO of United Healthcare,
(33:22):
the biggest health insurance company in America, was assassinated. It
would appear today in New York. Well, he's dead, but
it was a targeted killing. The person that killed him
was lying in wait for several minutes, according to CBS News,
and is on the loose in New York and they're
looking for the guy. But why is this getting so
(33:46):
much attention? Is there some sort of implied it has
something to do with healthcare, which we're all unhappy about,
and something there. He's a big time business executive who
was rubbed out. That's that's interesting interesting enough. I think
maybe I'm not sure if they knew which door mister
Thompson was going to enter and shot him several times
(34:07):
from a few feet away, then fled on a bicycle.
I'm not sure if there's a CEO of Home Depot
would be getting the same coverage I think it's got
something to do with our feelings about healthcare. There's going
to be some attempt to claim that because people are
not getting the healthcare they need, somebody was so upset
and will read their manifesto and all that. Anyway, that'll
(34:27):
play out through today. Yeah, I only have a minute.
The Supreme Court is taking up a trans issue. A
lot of issues need to be taken up by the
Supreme Court, so we can once and for all get
up ruling on it to whether or not states can
ban the mutilation of kids to get sex affirming signa.
But anyway, I've got this chart on the percentages by
(34:49):
generation of people who self identify as LGBTQ plus and
it's pretty interesting. Maybe we'll get to that aw or four. Also, Wow,
sounds like a blockbuster revent tormation. Maybe you don't get it.
I don't know what you do then, So not only
is the reparations thing important, but it utterly disproves the
(35:10):
sixteen nineteen Project fraud. If there was ever a fraud,
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