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February 17, 2025 36 mins

Monday Feb 17,2025  edition of The Armstrong & Getty Replay...

  • Hard 75 Nudge Word
  • Cutting the Government is Good!
  • The Pushback Against Trump, Immigration and the lies
  • Wild bus driver & New Trend- Responsibility

Stupid Should Hurt: https://www.armstrongandgetty.com/

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio the
George Washington Broadcast Center.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
Arm Strong and Getty and he Armstrong and Getty Strong and.

Speaker 4 (00:28):
Welcome to a replay of the Armstrong and Getty Show.
We are on vacation. But boy, do we have some
good stuff for you. Yes, indeed we do.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
And if you want to catch up on.

Speaker 5 (00:37):
Your ang listening during your travels, remember grab the podcast
Armstrong and Getty on demand.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
You ought to subscribe wherever you like to get podcasts.

Speaker 4 (00:43):
No On with the infotainment Transform your life.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
Maybe you'd like to transform your life.

Speaker 4 (00:49):
Maybe you wouldn't transform your life in just seventy days
with the seventy five Hard, which I guess has been
around for a couple of years, but I hadn't heard
about it till now because one of my nieces said
she's doing the sick medium. She made up her own
list of how she's going to do it. This is
the seventy five Hard, A tactical guide to winning the
war with your something or other. Before I get into

(01:11):
some of it, what do you know about it, Katie?

Speaker 6 (01:14):
I know it's very difficult and it requires I think
two workouts a day. You have to do one inside,
one outside.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
You have to diet here well right right, right right, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
you scare.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
You skipped right to the one that makes everybody say, well,
never mind then, because on the list you go through
some of them and you think I could do that.
Drink a gallon of water per day. Okay, I'm not
sure that's going to do me any good, but whatever.
Read ten pages of a self improvement book daily. If
I get to choose the book, I can do that.
Take a progress picture every day, okay, effortless, come up

(01:48):
with a diet plan and follow it. Okay, kind of
trying to do that. Two forty five minute workouts daily,
one outdoors. Okay, well what else can we do? Because
that ain't gonna happen. That's why none of these fitness
resolutions work.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
You take it way too far.

Speaker 4 (02:08):
You're not gonna go to the gym and work out
for an hour every day. You do it for a
couple of days and you quit. You got a set,
modestc two forty five minute workouts, Yeah, I got it,
even if you've got time.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
Which I don't.

Speaker 4 (02:21):
Did be impossible, No way you're gonna do that consistently,
and with.

Speaker 6 (02:25):
The diet, there's no cheat meals and no alcohol for
seventy five days. So forget your month of no alcohol, Joe,
this is seventy five days.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
You know.

Speaker 5 (02:35):
One of my good friends has for years and years,
with almost no exceptions, he has and he's a drinking man.
He's good at it. We've gone round and round. He
drinks on New Year's Eve. He does not have another
drink until Saint Patrick's Day in mid March, virtually every year.
I admire it. I'm not sure I want to imitate it,

(02:55):
but I admire it.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
Why does he do it?

Speaker 5 (03:00):
Hey, physical health, emotional health, doesn't want to be dependent
on alcohol.

Speaker 4 (03:07):
I guess same reason I do it for a little while.
He just takes it a lot further. He's in good
shape too, for a guy of his age. And then
we have another friend, actually a great mutual friend, who
when confront he's a Southern guy. When confronted with that news,
he said, I haven't taken that long a break since

(03:28):
I was eleven.

Speaker 3 (03:33):
It's a different way to approach life.

Speaker 5 (03:34):
But interestingly, in contrast to the hard seventy five in
the medium sixty and the leisurely thirty.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
We might have.

Speaker 5 (03:42):
Something to talk about My daughter, my beloved twenty five
year old who just today headed back to law school.
Is she's using a nudgeword, which I would have mocked
were my beloved daughter not doing it. And there's a
piece in the Washington Post and they have a graphic
that shows people unveiling their nudge word, which includes ease, pivot, wonder, pause,

(04:08):
and bliss.

Speaker 4 (04:09):
You got to back up a second. Is this a term,
I know, nudgeword? What is a nudgeword?

Speaker 5 (04:12):
Well, you're about to and I apologize. A nudgeword can
help you clarify your goals. It can symbolize your values,
help you set intentions and guide your actions in most,
if not all, areas of your life. How do you
want to be or feel? For instance, do you want
to be more playful? Balanced, or compassionate?

Speaker 3 (04:30):
Playful?

Speaker 4 (04:32):
Yes, I want to be more playful. Who starts a
new year? You know what I'm going to be in
twenty five?

Speaker 3 (04:37):
Playful? More playful. You know I would not phrase it
like that.

Speaker 5 (04:43):
I could definitely see somebody, perhaps me, saying, you know,
I got to stop worrying about crap.

Speaker 3 (04:50):
That doesn't matter. You got to lighten the hell up
about a lot of stuff. So I get it.

Speaker 5 (04:57):
Interestingly, though, my daughter's word that she keeps trying to
mind yourself of is sustainable and not like in the
environmental grita Tunberg bullcrap way. But she's telling herself, Look,
don't start an exercise plan you.

Speaker 3 (05:11):
Can't possibly sustain. I've always been starting a diet that
you can't live with.

Speaker 4 (05:15):
Yeah, I've always been big on that, and I think
that is a good idea, or you know, any kind
of regimen, just yeah, start with something you could actually
do right, right, Start small, see how it goes.

Speaker 5 (05:28):
Increase a little bit. But and look, I've done the
iron willed weight loss fitness thing a couple of times
and it's worked.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
But it's not sustainable, right, and it's it's the problem
with sustainable is it's so slow. You know you're gonna
lose weight, but it's gonna come off really slow, but
it'll come off and stay off, and people want or
at a very lace you'll maintain, Yeah, anymore or you're
gonna you know, you're you're gonna build muscle and look

(05:57):
more fit. But it's gonna be real slow, and it's
gonna take a while, but once you get there, it's
a it's certainly nice. That's a good one. Pensive will
be mine. Pensive should try to be overall more pensive
in the new year.

Speaker 5 (06:10):
I think mine's vengeful. I'm gonna I'm gonna give people
what they've earned.

Speaker 3 (06:20):
A Vengeful is your nudgeword. People are gonna get what's
coming to them. Hit June ju Lie.

Speaker 5 (06:27):
I'm gonna have not taken vengeance for a couple of weeks,
and it's gonna be easy to give up. I'm gonna
remind myself, Hey, this is my nudge work. Find somebody
who's got it coming.

Speaker 3 (06:37):
Start small.

Speaker 4 (06:38):
Remember that time in high school when you did the
thing to me, Well, here's here's your right. Maybe it's
just a store cl clerk who's road and as you
walk out you hurl a tomato adam. Start small, Start easy, yeah, yeah, anyway,
sustainably vengeful.

Speaker 5 (06:53):
You want to hear a good one. It's a little
heavy speaking of a year ending slash beginning rituals. I
was reading about this dude. He's like an entrepreneur and investor.
It doesn't really matter who he is, but every year.
At the end of the year. His birthday happens to
be December thirtieth, which I think factors in. But he
does a little vacation over the holidays like many of

(07:15):
us do. Does does do we do? And he does
what he calls his pre mortem. He imagines being on
his deathbed. Wow, yeah, I know, I know this is heavy,
and he gets into it. He really describes, like, I
imagine my body old and fragile, my breathing shallow, my

(07:36):
life energy almost extinguished, and I try to evoke the
feelings I want to have in that moment, a sense
of peace, completion, and most importantly self respect. Then I
asked myself, what am I going to do now to
ensure that when I reach that ultimate destination, I've done

(07:58):
what I need to do. I will feel the things
I want to feel on my deathbed. And then he
sets goals for the year.

Speaker 4 (08:06):
You know, we have a boss who actually has a
quote on his wall from of all people, Keith Partridge
David Cassidy, TV star of the seventies. You don't need
to know, you don't need to know where you're going,
you don't need to know who that is. But he
was as big a star in America as you can
get for a while. And on his deathbed he said,

(08:27):
I think it was his last words. So much wasted time,
and our boss has that on his wall.

Speaker 3 (08:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (08:33):
He was a resentful, bitter, alcoholic. Yeah, clung to the
past and so much wasted time.

Speaker 3 (08:41):
That's a good one. I don't, I don't. I don't
think I have that to worry about it at this point.

Speaker 4 (08:45):
Mast that's this guy's philosophy.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
What would your last words be and what do you
have to do to make them? Wow? You know what,
it's been great as he sailed it. That's what I
want my last words to be. Nailed it.

Speaker 5 (09:04):
He wants a sense of peace, completion and that Look,
my race is run.

Speaker 3 (09:09):
It was great. Good luck y'all. Or this is stressing
me out. I know, big task. I know. I'll just
summon my breath for one last boo.

Speaker 5 (09:20):
Yeah, I'm gone take one last bit of vengeance, Michael.

Speaker 3 (09:29):
My last words will be pass me that pizza. Yeah,
one more, one more more like pizza. Yeah, I was.

Speaker 5 (09:35):
You know, reading a book by a songwriter, doesn't matter who,
but he's he's big on the you know, try to
create one new thing a day and how to do it.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
Of course, his job is writing songs, so we write songs.

Speaker 5 (09:47):
But nobody has ever on their deathbed said I wish
I hadn't written that poem, or I wish I hadn't
tried to unless it's you know, did something horrific, But
go ahead and try and fail, don't don't you know
be next to this entrepreneur guy thinking why didn't I

(10:08):
at least try?

Speaker 3 (10:09):
So there's my.

Speaker 4 (10:10):
Life affirming death, fearing deathbed positive philosophy for the year.
You know, the whatever that thing was with having a
nudge word grateful would be a really good one to
to try to stay in.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
But of course for everything there must be a backlash.
And that's the people who somehow are so swept up
in crazes they've like taken that to an extreme and
and like refuse to acknowledge things that needed to be
fixed in their lives. What and so I've been reading lately,
there's the great the pressure to be grateful has now

(10:46):
become so shut up but shot up shot trying to.

Speaker 4 (10:51):
Yeah, I go into the office every day in my
list the balls, and I'm it's your work.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
I need a name, be greatful.

Speaker 4 (10:59):
I want the name of where you whoever wrote that
that you read that, I'm going there today. I'll get
on a plane. I don't care if the weather's bad.
Michael drive and I'm gonna choke them and you'll take
your vengeance.

Speaker 3 (11:09):
It's healthy.

Speaker 4 (11:09):
I'm going to punch that person right in the throat.
That is the most annoying. That is the single most
annoying thing I've ever heard, certainly this year. You know
what people take to the danger of being too grateful.
I can see the headline the.

Speaker 3 (11:22):
Cit Oh shit, you nail it.

Speaker 5 (11:25):
You nailed it, and Katie I can probably get an
amen out of you. See what the bitter old man
doesn't understand.

Speaker 4 (11:31):
Is this stuff is so much more a part of
young women's worlds, oh yeah, than dudes.

Speaker 5 (11:38):
It's like they tell this anecdote. It's actually pretty funny.
I don't see if I can find it. Woman's walking
through the store and they got a display of like
dish towels, and the dish towels are emblazoned gratitude. And
this woman's comment is all right, now, even my dish
towels are badgering me.

Speaker 3 (11:56):
These things become such a craze.

Speaker 4 (11:58):
Oh yeah, in ways that you know, I hear stuff
like that and I think, yeah, whatever that's for you, goodbye,
I'm busy. Yeah, I think it's a good idea. But
if you got it on your towels, I don't know.
For whatever is that's just a little too much for me.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
Armstrong, heyety, the Armstrong and Getty Show.

Speaker 4 (12:21):
Here's something I realized today, and I think this is
the first time in twenty fifteen is now ten years ago,
so probably not in the last nine and a half years.
The name I heard the most as I went through
all my different channels on TV and radio was not
Donald Trump for the first time in nine and a
half years.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
Wow, the Muskmelon.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
Elon Musk everywhere, no matter what you flip to Elon
Musky line Musky line Musk, the way it was, it's
always been Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump.

Speaker 3 (12:52):
Right now, that's part of the whole Trump thing. So
it's Trump adjacent.

Speaker 5 (12:55):
But it's interesting, So does Trump get like thirty percent
at it for each mention of Elon Musk, Because you know,
it's like a pyramid scheme.

Speaker 4 (13:03):
He recruited Elon's exactly share of his mentions. And by
the way, I'm sorry if you have more on that go.
I was gonna say that I really really wanted to
get to our honorary honorary general general manager, which was
dudes playing women's sports. Fellas, you had a good run.
You whooped up on those girls. You showed them men
are better at everything, including being female athletes.

Speaker 3 (13:25):
You won all those medals.

Speaker 4 (13:27):
You stood on the grand stand with your attempt at
makeup and your manly physique and jaw and the rest
of it and really showed those stupid girls. But I'm
afraid all good things must come to an end. It's
fun while lest it wasn't.

Speaker 5 (13:41):
Yeah, next prisons, you know fifteen percent of female inmates
or dudes.

Speaker 3 (13:48):
No it is not. Yes, it can't be that.

Speaker 4 (13:50):
Yes, all the blue stints where all you have to
do is self identify just because it comes time to
go into prison. You're a bad, bad dude like corn
Pop and you have to go to prison, and you think,
you know, I'd rather be in a chick prison than
a dude prison. I mean, there ain't no girls. I've
seen those prison movies. This ain't gonna be fun. Think
I'll go on the prison where the girls are.

Speaker 5 (14:12):
You're much less likely to get your arse kicked or
get shived or you know, have to get into some
brutal gang to protect yourself.

Speaker 4 (14:18):
Sexual opportunities are a little better also as well. I
was getting there. I was getting there, Valentino or what's
what was the old lover? Uh?

Speaker 3 (14:28):
What was the the old.

Speaker 4 (14:29):
It doesn't matter, stupid old reference. But anyway, Yeah, I
was gonna get to the level. First.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
I want to make sure my ass doesn't get kicked.
If you don't mind. Fifteen percent, that's crazy, Casanova, that's
what I was looking for. Fifteen percent. I'll have to
do about a bad dude.

Speaker 4 (14:45):
Those statistics. The Free Press was writing about that. Wow,
that is something. Wow, it's insanity and the well because
they've been convinced that to he woke is to be
a good person, and they really want to be a
good person. They really really want to be a good person,

(15:06):
an independent thinker who asserts herself when she sees something wrong.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
Not so much.

Speaker 5 (15:11):
I want to be accepted. I want to be told
I'm a good person. That's a huge percentage of population
are desperate for that.

Speaker 4 (15:18):
So I'm not paying close attention to the whole elon
Musk thing. But the way it's portrayed by the left.
Tell me if I'm right or wrong. If I'm I
could be wrong. If I'm wrong, that's fine. But this
whole unelected bureaucrat attempting to the word they used in

(15:39):
MSNBC yesterday, got the federal government, which is a word
I love. I mean you you were using it like
prejudicially to scare people. I think gut away what PCT?
What a great word? Kenny, Kenny a complicate? Where do
I sign up for him? Gutting the federal government? That
sounds awesome. Wait a minute, honey, I need to turn
this up and listen. That sounds metastic. But nobody elected him.

(16:01):
He's been given these kingly powers to do whatever he wants. Now,
Am I right or wrong about this? He's not signing
any pieces of paper that can get rid of agencies
or employees. He's recommending them to Trump's executive branch, and
they're signing the pieces of paper.

Speaker 5 (16:17):
Yes, yeah, exactly. He is making recommendations to his boss.
He is an advisor, so this is just a presidential advisor.

Speaker 4 (16:26):
This fits in with my This is the first time
I've heard somebody's name more than Trump in nine and
a half years hearing Elon's name all the time. So
they must the left must feel like as a political win,
making Elon Musk a bad guy is better than making
Trump the bad guy, because Trump's the guy who wants
this done, is ordering it, and is the then signing
off on the recommendations.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
Yeah. Well, Trump just.

Speaker 4 (16:49):
Got elected and not only whooped tiny in the Swing States,
won the electoral college handily, but won the popular vote,
which really shocked Democrats. And they've been howling that he's
the Antichrist and is going to come eat your infant
since twenty fifteen or twenty fourteen. And so perhaps the.

Speaker 5 (17:09):
Smartest horses over there on the left side of the
island following me are saying, look, let's go after Elon.
Maybe we can get people's attention because he's rich and evil,
and they like the superhero movies where there's a rich,
evil super villain. Maybe we can stir people up with
that they're desperate for a message.

Speaker 4 (17:26):
Yeah, I wonder how well it's working. Maybe it's working.
I don't know what most people think about Elon.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
I know what I think Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty,
the Armstrong and Getty Show, The Armstrong and Getty Show.

Speaker 3 (17:48):
There you lifts off these streets.

Speaker 7 (17:50):
DHS Secretary Christy Nome on the ground in New York
City leading this early morning ice rate across the Big Apple,
looking to remove violent criminals are not supposed to be
in this country in the first place. Noam says she
asked President Trump for this job.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
I said, I would like to be the Secretary of
Homeland Securities, sir, because it's your number one priority.

Speaker 5 (18:12):
Alexis ms Adams McAdams of Fox News there with Christy Homes.
One thing that really gratified me about that story yesterday
was I was delighted to hear Christin Homes say we're
getting these dirt bags off the streets, and there was,
at least in the media. I took in none of
the utterly automatic In the past few years, the.

Speaker 4 (18:32):
Administration is trying to characterize all immigrants as dirt bags.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
They're on the back foot. I think, how would you
not be? I think it is sunk in.

Speaker 4 (18:43):
Finally, eighty five percent of Americans want criminal illegals booted
out of the country. That's not a controversial issue. That's
a one sided issue. As you're practically ever going to
get in the United States.

Speaker 5 (18:58):
One thing that Jake Tappers and the David Muhrs of
the world are trying to gather their courage and take
deep breaths to do soon is make a big deal
over Okay, when you're rounding up a Venezuelan gang member
rapist and his brother who's also an illegal is there.
The brother gets snatched up too and is probably going

(19:19):
to get deported, and they will try very hard to
build the narrative that they're casting too wide a ned
they're bringing innocent people in blah blah blah. Again, this
is squarely I think in the middle of the field
that we're discussing last couple of days, which is y'all
created a ginormous mess.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
We're kicking up a little dust.

Speaker 5 (19:43):
When we clean it up, quit yelling that we're the
bad guys because we're kicking up dust.

Speaker 3 (19:49):
All right, We're way past that.

Speaker 4 (19:51):
Yeah, I know we're going to get into some of
this sort of stuff. But I was looking at the
New York Post story of New York City minority communities
cheer ice raids. They're actually cheer on the street as
they rounded up violent criminal migrants. Some of these who
had been tormenting these people as obvious criminals in these neighborhoods,
and they're happy to see ice cream. And these are
black people and brown people are like, yeah, come in,

(20:12):
get these scumbags out of here. As you're just hearing
the dirt bags. And this morning I was watching Fox
and they had the big giant military transport planes. They're
really giant ones like my brother and so many of
you have ridden on, you know, headed to South Arabia
or whatever, filling them full of illegal criminals and sending
them back to wherever the hell they came from. You

(20:34):
talk about a win, a political win. Oh my god,
what a video. Before we go on, just a quick point.

Speaker 5 (20:42):
The response to those immigrants cheering the roundup of these
predator scumbags, the response by the people who've been in
charge of America for like the last four years would
have been a lave internalized white supremacy, and we would
have been supposed to have taken that seriously, a bunch
of lunatics. The fact that they ever had the upper

(21:03):
hand is hurtful to me, but.

Speaker 4 (21:05):
It's frightening to say, yeah, yeah, it is, to see
how far off track you can get sometimes, but the
up Trump has solved Germany's immigration problems or damn near Seriously,
it's crazy, stay tuned for that. But in terms of
a political win, the videos of loading up illegals on

(21:26):
giant planes and flying the back and then how about
the whole if you followed this over the weekend when
the president of Columbia said you can't send them here,
and then Trump had to threaten them with the tariffs
and a bunch of different stuff, and then the Columbian person.
How about countries that say, no, don't send them here.
They're bad people, we don't want them. When does that
ever happen for a country refuses to take back their
own citizens.

Speaker 5 (21:46):
Well, and speaking of narratives that should have been slapped
out of the public conversation as quickly as possible, the
idea that Trump is wrong about them being criminals and
gang members, how dare he disparage.

Speaker 3 (21:56):
Blah blah blah.

Speaker 5 (21:57):
So you go to Venezuela, you go to Columbia, you
go to mex even in a lot of cases, and
say hey, these are your nationals. You need to take
them back, and they're like, whoa, no, no, these are
dangerous scumbags.

Speaker 3 (22:07):
We don't want them. You got to keep them.

Speaker 4 (22:10):
Okay, a little more from Alexis McAdams speaking of the
sort of folks we're talking about.

Speaker 3 (22:15):
Forty one, please, Michael.

Speaker 7 (22:16):
This was a multi agency effort that ended in several arrests,
including this Venezuelan illegal migrant whose sources day is part
of the South American gang trende Aragua taken in. I'm kidnapping,
assault and burglary charges. DHS says Anderson Zembrono Pacheco was
hiding out in the Bronx and had a warrant out
for his arrest in connection to this takeover at an

(22:39):
apartment complex in Aurora, Colorado.

Speaker 4 (22:42):
Violent violent, horrible guy that the government knew exactly what
sort of violent, horrible guy he was, and they weren't
going to boot him out because of the weird crazy
fanciful were a sanctuary city, sanctuary state and nonsense. You're
going to put your own citizens at risk in their

(23:04):
own neighborhoods for your strange ideology.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
That makes no sense, right right.

Speaker 5 (23:11):
I'm sorely tempted to replay the opening clip with Brandon
Johnson and Chicago.

Speaker 3 (23:15):
Why don't you explain what it.

Speaker 4 (23:16):
Is before we hear it, so people understand because it's
a good one.

Speaker 5 (23:20):
Yeah, well, it's explained in context. I think Johnson, as
a far lefty, has been proudly decrying any immigration raids
and saying that America is a sanctuary city and the
ICE was just in Chicago and rounded up some truly
dangerous scumbags. And this is a reporter asking him, asking
him about it.

Speaker 8 (23:41):
Tom Holman showed up in Chicago and within twenty four
hours found a convicted sex offender who has been living
in our city since two thousand and nine, flouting the
sex offender registry. If he can do this, why can't you.

Speaker 3 (23:58):
That is their job.

Speaker 9 (24:00):
Our jobs not to chasm response, to make sure that
individuals who are undocumented, who have been charged with convicted
of a crime. It is the federal government's responsibility to
do their pardoner pold the law.

Speaker 4 (24:15):
The people of Chicago, California, Los Angeles, all kinds of
different places should be so outraged at their leadership that
they're forced from office over this sanctuary nonsense. Yes, absolutely,
it is nonsense. It's outrageous, it's dangerous, it's perverse. Speaking
of which, and the theme being all of those arguments
that were thrown at us for years, when we you

(24:39):
folks like us, just said, look, I don't care how
many brown people are here or whatever the hell. We
have laws, we need to enforce the laws, or what
we have is lawlessness. We don't want lawlessness. Now you're
a racist. You just don't like brown people. Here's William
Lauginess reporting from Mexico. How they feel about all the

(24:59):
elie leagals in Mexico.

Speaker 6 (25:01):
Fifty Michael, It's a huge problem in our neighborhood. The noise,
the contamination, the garbage, the violence.

Speaker 10 (25:10):
Longtime Mexico City resident Hugo Sanchez, whose child has a
heart condition, is fed up with illegal immigrants in Mexico.
He's worried the government resources will be diverted to deal
with migrants, the fake they defecate and urinate in public,
says neighbor and retiree Letitia Melendez, who hope President Trump
will help Mexico close its southern border.

Speaker 4 (25:34):
He may have some influence with our government, so together
they can solve the problem. I think you're wrong about this.
I think natural born US citizens defecate in public at
a higher rate than illegals according to a Harvard study
in the case of drug abuse, but one more all
when they use the E word. In clip fifty one, Michael,

(25:55):
it's the eye word. Cover your ears if you're sensitive
a key stick.

Speaker 10 (25:58):
Francisco Rosas lives near a migrant camp housing mostly Cubans, Haitians,
and Venezuelans. He calls the migrant influx an invasion and
worries about the drug and alcohol abuse.

Speaker 3 (26:10):
He sees, we.

Speaker 4 (26:13):
Don't know these people where they come from, if they
have a criminal record.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
Most are unemployed because they don't do anything. Oh my god.
The racism, The racism. He use the I word invasion.

Speaker 5 (26:27):
Oh my god. Well, we've been right along. You've been
right all along. It's got to be at least somewhat comforting.

Speaker 3 (26:34):
It's not.

Speaker 4 (26:35):
Actually, I'm not feeling that much comfort I am. I'm
feeling fear that we got so off track. I can't
believe that we that It disturbs me how easily a
minority opinion can win if they're highly motivated.

Speaker 5 (26:53):
Yeah, I was gonna describe it as a small but
aggressive minority who are willing to to use strong moral
arguments and ruin lives, making the claim that anybody who
opposes them is an awful human being, and how effective
they were in spite of the complete illogic of their

(27:16):
point of view. It is disturbing, especially in a country
like this that at least, you know, ostensibly has the
free exchange of ideas and free speech. I want to
talk more about that down the road, but the idea
that a group of extremist crack pots have successfully, for instance,
gotten you can choose to be a man or a

(27:37):
woman into our nation's elementary schools is horrifying.

Speaker 4 (27:43):
I don't know, that's pretty crazy, but I don't know.
If it's crazier then no, No, we're not going to
turn over a rapist to ice because we're so up
with illegal immigration or something.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
I don't even understand your philosophy.

Speaker 5 (27:59):
Well right, if you try to spell it out in
simple declarative sentences, you just you can't in a way
that makes any sense.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
But it was the winning.

Speaker 4 (28:06):
Theory among the people that matter for quite a while.

Speaker 3 (28:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (28:13):
Yeah, And the argument that well, are immigrant communities, they
need to know they can trust the police, et cetera,
et cetera. There is some truth to that, and I
get that, But when you see the rubber meet the road,
and the folks in those communities so glad. The predators
and the rapists and the murderers that allegedly they were
afraid to report when they see them remove, they're so joyful.

(28:34):
I mean, that tells you the lie. But always remember this,
these that small vicious minority that is trying to silence
you or tell you white people shouldn't talk, or that
you're a bigoter transphobe. If you don't want the gendervating
maness tauught in schools, how they will ruin you. Always
remember this and this, quoting James Lindsay, Marxists just lie.

(28:58):
They lie so overtly and blamely that people begin to
question their own perceptions. It works because no one expects
another person to lie so overtly. They use words and
arguments as weapons. They're not trying to reach some sort
of meeting of the minds.

Speaker 4 (29:14):
They want you to back up, shut up, and let
them take over whatever. Oh I need to explain how
Trump has solved Germany's immigration situation.

Speaker 3 (29:24):
Maybe after the commercials. This is all very good.

Speaker 4 (29:26):
It's kind of a harshen my mellow though on this.
The Chinese New year to begin the Year of the Snake,
which I'm very excited about because I am a snake.
When I sit down at a Chinese restaurant and look
over the little chart where it tells you what you
are based on your birth year, I am a snake,
so it's my year.

Speaker 3 (29:42):
Michael's always saying that about you. So yeah, Happy Chinese
New Year, the Year of the Snake.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
I'm gonna have American tradition, Jack, the snake is seen
to be what likewise and smart, I don't know, slithery
or something.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
It's a middle aged is this superstition.

Speaker 4 (30:01):
I'll probably door dash Pan Express for the kids tonight
in honor of the Chinese New Years.

Speaker 3 (30:06):
That's the proper way to celebrate it is. That's Pan
Express Chinese culture.

Speaker 4 (30:15):
Uh maybe I will just use my iPhone made in
China or some cheap plastic Chinese crap also made in China.

Speaker 3 (30:22):
Also to honor the Year of the Snake. Maybe raise
a glass.

Speaker 5 (30:26):
With all sorts of people who've been put out of
work by our importation of cheap Chinese crap.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
Hey no, Jack.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
Armstrong and Joe The Armstrong and Getty Show, The arm
Strong and Getdy.

Speaker 4 (30:42):
Show, apparently didn't talk until students screaming in the background.

Speaker 3 (30:52):
We were scanning stop the bus. We were just like
getting mad over the little stuff.

Speaker 4 (30:55):
He was getting mad over little stuff. That's the kids
in a nine to one one call? Who nine one one?
Did one of the kids called nine one one as
a school bus seventy two year old bus driver arrested
for driving drunk with the kids in the bus.

Speaker 5 (31:07):
That's yes, they called nine one one because the drunk
ass bus driver wouldn't stop at any of the stops.

Speaker 4 (31:13):
That's a pretty old bus driver to start with. And
you're getting up there, I mean twenty seventy two year
olds and can drive fine, but they getting pretty up
there in terms of reaction time and all that sort
of stuff. Uh, and drunk, and so you wouldn't stop
at the stops. He had to be really drunk, ragging
it to kids and the rest of it, and just yeah,

(31:34):
he wasn't just I'm gonna have a quick one because
I can't handle the nan and the kids today.

Speaker 3 (31:40):
He was hammered.

Speaker 4 (31:41):
Yeah, reminds me of when I ride the school bus
every single day for uh, like my entire school career
both ways.

Speaker 3 (31:48):
And we had a Gladys of telling.

Speaker 4 (31:50):
The story from the way back in the cars. The
harps out, thank you, Gladys. Gladys went to school in
a horse drawn carriage, just like my dad. Uh. One
time we had a school bus driver, like for one
day maybe, and he was like Otto from the Simpsons.
I'm atto and I love But there was this one
like dip in a road and he would hit it
really fashioned. We'd all sit in the back of the

(32:12):
it's coming up and we'd all move to the back
seat carson seatbelts, and he sat in the back and
he'd hit it and we'd all fly like three feet
in the air. Wow. We thought it was hilarious. But
he was only bus driver for a couple of days.
I think I wonder if he was drunk, he might
have been well.

Speaker 5 (32:26):
And that speaks to a certain attitude about life, doesn't it.

Speaker 3 (32:30):
Doing that that is.

Speaker 5 (32:31):
You know, might not square with being the classic school
bus driver.

Speaker 3 (32:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (32:35):
Man, the school bus was so like Lord of the
Flies though. And I don't actually know if I think
that is better for me or it's I don't know,
but it was definitely Lord of the Flies. I mean,
you had to you had to learn to navigate lots
of different situations. It could be scary and uh and

(32:56):
very intimidating.

Speaker 3 (32:57):
Yeah, toward the back of the house, and nobody cared.
That's just the way it was.

Speaker 4 (33:01):
Christopher Hitchins in his memoir he was talking about how
there was so much bullying and beatings from the teachers
and everything like that when he went to private school
as a kid in England and its sexual assault, sexual assault,
and in his book he says he thinks that society
was better when they had some of that. He hated
it at the time. I don't know that I'm willing
to go there, but I can kind of see the point.

Speaker 3 (33:22):
Yeah, it's a.

Speaker 5 (33:23):
Grim assessment and a difficult conversation to have.

Speaker 3 (33:27):
Yeah, it's pretty darmned interesting. Actually, the latest.

Speaker 5 (33:30):
Internet trend, Jack, because everything's got to be an Internet trend,
is shockingly being responsible. They're calling it no by twenty
twenty five, in which e y or be you y,
be you hy Okay. That's good, good clarification. Those are homonyms.
As we say in the HOMINYM business business. The trend

(33:53):
is to reduce spending and payoff debt amid rising inflation
and economic uncertainty. Individuals are cutting back on none essential purchases,
focusing on using up existing products and implementing strategies like
Project PAN to minimize spending.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
I don't know about this trend.

Speaker 4 (34:11):
Can I just whistle the national anthem with a mouthful
of eggs or something?

Speaker 3 (34:14):
Does it have to be?

Speaker 5 (34:16):
This one's not nearly as much fun as that, Jack so,
And of course it's hot on Instagram and TikTok as.
Everything is people displaying instead of what they've bought. Now
great it is they're displaying how they're buying nothing. The
no buy twenty twenty five trend encourages people to purchase
as little new stuff as possible.

Speaker 3 (34:37):
I would love this if I thought it could catch on.

Speaker 4 (34:40):
It just it runs counter to you know, human nature
of you know, pleasure. But it'd be awesome if, for
whatever reason, people decide no stuff is a bad Buying
stuff is a bad idea. Planning ahead is is the
best way to get pleasure. That'd be great if that happen.
I just don't know if I believe it.

Speaker 5 (34:58):
Well, yeah, I think it's more specific that And I
found myself wondering whether this is another example of how
the breezes have definitely changed in America because a lot
of it when again in the specific examples, is this
Gal Rachel, part time nurse, stay at home mom. She
came across these no buy videos and she wanted to
pay off her family's ten thousand dollars credit card debt,

(35:18):
and she and her husband wanted to stop living paycheck
to paycheck. So she's cutting out hair treatments, manicures, and
unnecessary purchases like new water bottles.

Speaker 3 (35:27):
It's been very empowering to live within our means.

Speaker 5 (35:29):
They paid down their debt and are living like financially
responsible human beings.

Speaker 4 (35:35):
Yeah, all those things you just mentioned you probably shouldn't
be buying if you're got a ten thousand dollars credit
card bill. Absolutely. So again, it's kind of goofy and
JIV that it's a TikTok trend like everything. But if
the trend is people living within their means, reducing their
debt and getting rid of luxuries they can't afford, I'm
not going to condemn it. How about the trend of

(35:56):
how long can you hold your hand over a candle?
I think that'll probably get were owling. You remember owling
that was really armstrong and Getty
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