Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
My Heart podcasts here, more Gold one on one point
seven podcasts.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Playlists and listen live on the Free iHeart app on.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
Slast floor.
Speaker 4 (00:46):
On the Captin Room floor.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
Today, the King's Birthday honors list has been revealed.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
It's some conjecture around former Prime Minister Scott Morrison getting
one for services during COVID nineteen and he's worked with
the ORCHUS agreement.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
M you know, I've had in two minds about that.
Phil Forscomo.
Speaker 2 (01:05):
He mucked up with the bushfire thing that's granted and
the COVID thing.
Speaker 1 (01:10):
A great job I thought.
Speaker 2 (01:11):
I think it did really well with the about holding
toilet paper and all that stuff, and also job keeper
and job seeker. There was a point that where we're
going to lose our jobs here at the radio station
because when you're in a war by pandemic, people don't
want to buy advertising. But because of that, it actually
they gave money to this business because we're a small business,
believed or it, and that kept us employed. So there
(01:34):
was a lot of businesses like us that were affected
by that.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
It's interesting retrospectively, a lot of people are saying, oh,
how heavy handed it was, but no one knew what
was going on. And I think we've also forgotten that
before we had a vaccine, people died. People are still
dying from COVID, but a lot of people died before
the vaccine came along, and we had those haunting images
from Europe, haunting images from New York with there were
more bodies than there were spaces in the morgue. We've
(01:58):
forgotten how terrifying it was at the beginning, and it.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
Was that thing about keeping people under intensive care, people
keeping out of the intensive care wards. And I think
in each state or each city, there was like seventeen
hundred beds, and I remember the Sidney Morning Herald used
to have this how many people were in ventilators.
Speaker 4 (02:16):
And there wasn't. I think we didn't really get above twenty.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
Like out of the seventeen hundred people we had in
New South Wales, we had twenty people that were under
full ventilation.
Speaker 4 (02:28):
But at the time, as you say, we didn't know
what was going to happen.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
We didn't mom when I got COVID, I thought, well,
what's going to happen? I wish I had a vaccine.
That was before they even invented the vaccine.
Speaker 4 (02:37):
Then when they got.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
The vaccine out of I'm not taking that. It's gonna
bloody kill me. It's got bloody five g in it
or something like that.
Speaker 5 (02:43):
It was.
Speaker 4 (02:44):
It was crazy. It was a crazy time.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
It was a crazy time. Other people who have been
honored in the King's Birthday list. Every time it comes around,
I think about when I got my Order of Australia.
It was the Queen's Birthday honors. Then look at you
pulling a face.
Speaker 4 (02:59):
I'm not pulling a face up to say.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
You don't think I'm worthy. I know that.
Speaker 4 (03:03):
Excuse me. I was the one that put you up
for it.
Speaker 1 (03:06):
No, you were.
Speaker 4 (03:07):
I was a part of that. I was a big
part of it.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
I said to Grand Scoop a Lois, let's get a
man to get it together, an obe an Oba.
Speaker 4 (03:14):
Whatever the thing you've got, what is it called? What's
it called?
Speaker 2 (03:17):
Order of Australia A companion? You know, it doesn't matter
that I don't have one.
Speaker 4 (03:22):
Everyone else has.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
Got one, but jonesy everyone out.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
And I've done a lot.
Speaker 1 (03:26):
What have you done?
Speaker 4 (03:27):
Motorcycling, lane fielding, for example?
Speaker 1 (03:29):
Well mine was too broadcasting and that's right to and
charity work.
Speaker 4 (03:33):
What's this now no, I know.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
I'm just saying that. I'm just saying and I'm very
very grateful that I received mine. And it was a
fabulous day. I wish my dad could have been there,
but there was limited tickets or seats that you're allocated.
Harley was there, both my sons were there. And it's
weird because you have to learn how to curtsy. It's
a government house, and you think you know how to curtsy,
but suddenly when you have to, you think, how does
(03:54):
a curtsy go? And so the kids at one point
looked out the window and saw me outside practicing my curtsy.
And there was one guy who went in because the
men bow, and this guy did half a curtsy, half
a bow and almost headbutted the governor general. All of
us just forgot how to do it. It's like if
someone says walk over there, and never you've got a
film crew and you say to like a beyond two thousand,
(04:16):
say to a professor, just walk from this side of
the room to the other. They can't. They don't remember
how to walk, so they walk with their arm attached
to their leg. People don't remember. It's like I saw
a police card the other morning. Something you don't remember
how to drive. It's the same sort of scene.
Speaker 4 (04:30):
But you don't know how to drive anyway, So.
Speaker 1 (04:31):
That's old trope, Brendan. In fact, I got an order
of Australia for my great drive, did you Yeah? I did.
Speaker 4 (04:38):
I'm a brock Award.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
I got it.
Speaker 4 (04:40):
I'd imagine would have hit it up on World's Wildest
Drivers at show and chat on ten at three in
the morning.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
Well, look, is it time for us to get you
in order of Australia.
Speaker 4 (04:48):
How do I get me one of those? You know
you get a.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Fight being gracious and having some humility.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
I tell you what if Carl Sandlan's gets one before me,
I don't think he will, do you.
Speaker 4 (04:58):
I don't. I would say i'd get one before the services.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
To bum talk. I don't think so much. I should
get you if he gets bummed talk before I get
bummed talk?
Speaker 2 (05:06):
What about my services to the music industry, not just
this but also as a music provider.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
Play it, Brendan. Play the montage of your band that
you're in when you were nineteen, and let's people think
you deserve it. It's element.
Speaker 6 (05:22):
More.
Speaker 1 (05:23):
Come on that.
Speaker 4 (05:23):
That's pretty much it. Come on and you.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Wonder why this accolade as.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
It lasted on your desk that just worked.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
There should be a bloody award for me, whatever it's called.
Speaker 7 (05:39):
Hey, hey, everybody, here's some more Chelsea and a man's
curtain room for hey. Hey, hey, get ready, everybody, here's
some more Chelsea and a man's curtain room.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
For Hey, hey, hey, why are.
Speaker 3 (05:52):
You ready for?
Speaker 2 (05:54):
On the cutting room floor, I've asked me, maybe, what
do you think about great shipwreck mysteries?
Speaker 4 (05:59):
What's your favorite shipwreck?
Speaker 1 (06:02):
I only know well, I know of the Titanic, Yeah, yeah,
and I've been to a few exhibits surrounding the itnic
Ite yep. I know Gilligan's Island ss minnow. I also
know the Gordon Lightfoot song the record.
Speaker 4 (06:18):
Does anyone know where the Love of God goes? When
the waves turned? The minutes?
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Two hours?
Speaker 4 (06:23):
Great great song that the Mary Celeste.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
What happened there?
Speaker 2 (06:27):
Mystery ship found floating off the coast of Maine, I believe,
and all the occupants of the ship were gone on
the In the galley there was some food untouched that
had been put out to prepare, and there was a
pipe smoking in the ashtray, but nothing else the family, the.
Speaker 4 (06:44):
Crew completely gone, so no one ever knew, No one
ever knew.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
That's not the Bermuda Triangle.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
No, no, not a Bermuda Triangle peak.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
A lot of people think it was carrying some various
things in a hold, and I believe some gunpowder and
some ammonia, and they believe that maybe those two things
gathered admitted a gas throughout the ship.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
Wouldn't there body still be there?
Speaker 2 (07:05):
Everyone got off the ship and they got in got
in a lifeboat and put a rope behind the ship
and we're getting towed along by the ship while the
gas or cleared out, and somehow the rope became untied
from the ship, so the people ended up just floating
around in the lifeboat.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Is that the theory?
Speaker 4 (07:22):
That is a theory.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
They never found a lifeboat or skeletons or anything.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Nothing, no human remains or anything like that. And then
there's other people that thought it was aliens that just came, and.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
That's the obvious second option.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
Researchers have discovered a vessel that's sunk over one hundred
and forty years ago, closing the book on one of
the UK's most enduring maritime mysteries.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
So this is recently they found one.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
Yes, the historic steamer the SS Nantes had sunk.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
You've done a few historic steamers, you know. I was
going to say, you know, I want.
Speaker 4 (07:52):
I put that in there and keep going. It's sunk
in eight eight.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
Wow, it's a long time ago.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
Twenty three odd souls on board, only three survivors. The
freighter then lay undiscovered for nearly a century a half
until twenty twenty four. A diver and an explorer dive
down any fansom dinnerware at the wreck site.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
Wow, some corning.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
Where do you think there were some plates you know
belong to Built in eighteen seventy four. She was a
good ship and crew and it was only fourteen year old.
Vessel used to carry coal and stuff things like that.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
What happened to it? Why did it sink?
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Well? The crew, the surviving crew reported they tried to
save the ship. It was struck by a German sailing vessel,
the Theodore Ruga, which tore a big hole in its side.
That'll do it, And for several hours the crew tried
to save the ship, using all manner of materials to
try and fill the hole. They get mattresses, but they
(08:51):
lost the fight with the ship.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
And so how did those three survive on a lifeboat?
Speaker 2 (08:55):
They probably could swim. A lot of sailors in those
days didn't swim. It was you considered to be a witch,
considering these to burn people at the stake, will throw
them in the water. The test if they were a
witch is they would float.
Speaker 1 (09:08):
And if you drown, to think, oh, everyone, she was fine.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
Man, she wasn't a witch after all. But then they
get you out of the water if you floated, and
then they burn.
Speaker 4 (09:16):
You at the steak.
Speaker 1 (09:18):
Choose your own adventure.
Speaker 4 (09:19):
Yeah, which one would you rather? I just love these
tales of the old sea.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
And so what have they done? So they researched, they
knew it in last year, they found it, yep, And
now they're going to bring it up. They won't bring
it up, still bringing it up because it's a because
it's a grave.
Speaker 4 (09:34):
Yeah, it will be a sea grave, yeah, of course.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
And also it's a pain in the neck to bring
up a ship, like you've lost a pair of sunglasses
in the water, and that's hard enough to get back.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
Remember when I went to Pearl Harbor, and not initially
I wasn't involved in the situation. I went as a
tourist just some years ago. And it's very moving. It's
a very It's an incredibly moving memorial, isn't it. And
we were hearing the story about what had happened. And
there's oil that still comes to the surface from the wreckage. Yeah,
(10:07):
it's oil that comes to the and Jack would heard
the story. And Jack was looking over and he said,
what a tragedy. He was only young. I thought this
is really hit him hard, and I said it isn't
He said, yeah, there's someone's sunglasses down there.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
He lives.
Speaker 2 (10:22):
That's a tragic occurrence.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
So you think someone will write a song about this?
Wells Nanty's anything wrong with that?
Speaker 4 (10:32):
I'm sure.
Speaker 2 (10:34):
I'm sure it's got the historic steamer in there as well.
Shouldn't you come up with something like that?
Speaker 1 (10:38):
I think so? When you steamers, Nanty.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when
the big steamer doesn't sink?
Speaker 1 (10:47):
Oh, let's be respectful, please, you're.
Speaker 4 (10:49):
The one that brought it up and on the cutting
room floor today.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
In the old days, when you left your job, there
was a farewell party, wasn't.
Speaker 4 (11:00):
There Depends on how you leave the place.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Well, that is true frog march farewell party.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
When you get frog marched out of a building, you
don't really get time from farewell.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
Someone else is carrying a cardboard box with you. If
your Hello kiddy posted notes in.
Speaker 2 (11:14):
There and pictures of your family and that got strewn
into the street with your good self, you know, are
we catching up for drinks later?
Speaker 1 (11:20):
When I was working at Simon Townsend's Wonder World, I
was my first job really as a researcher, and I
didn't realize the nature of the churn. People were leaving
every week and every Friday. I just thought there was
a party with a big bowl of cheesels and cask wine.
I didn't realize that they were people's farewell.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
You were seeing woodro get checked out on the street
with his Charll Dollson Chew toys and pictures of Simon.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
But these days, in the corporate world, or in the factory,
wherever you're working on any job site, so many people
are leaving. I don't think people afford farewells anymore. I've
been reading about George Washington's farewell party. You forget that
presidents and those big punsas would have a big farewell party.
He apparently was quite famous for propping up the bar
(12:07):
at the Warren Tavern in Charlestown. Might explain the wooden
teeth wouldn't eat. That's right, he had wooden teeth. He's
all his teeth had fallen out and replaced them with wood.
Speaker 4 (12:16):
He made himself, though, did he? Yeah, which shows that did.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
He chop down a cherry tree for his teeth?
Speaker 4 (12:23):
No?
Speaker 2 (12:23):
No, no, he was just a young fella and he said,
I cannot lie something in something.
Speaker 1 (12:28):
And then what's the cherry tree got to do with it?
Speaker 4 (12:30):
When he chopped down the cherry tree? And he was
asked whether he chopped.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
It down and why had he? Maybe it was for
his teeth because he was a kid. Maybe, Okay, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
Anyway, let me tell my politicians to deny the truth.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
Let me tell you what's been happening at his farewell party?
Do you want to know?
Speaker 4 (12:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Sure, Ardi Fardy had a party.
Speaker 4 (12:50):
All the farts were there.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
Did he fruit, he did a beauty or went a
for it? They all ran out for it. No, I'll
tell you what happened to his party. Apparently, the bar
tab in today's parlance, would be worth fifteen thousand dollars.
Speaker 4 (13:02):
That's quite it's quite a lash.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Making it one of American history's most impressive and expensive
send offs. So let me tell you what they drank
at George Washington's seventeen eighty seven farewell party. Attendees consumed
sixty bottles of claret, fifty four bottles of madeira. That's sweet,
isn't it? Ye if twenty two bottles of port yep,
(13:28):
eight bottles of whiskey, eight bottles of hard cider. Oh,
seven bowls of alcoholic punch yep. There were only fifty
five people at that party.
Speaker 4 (13:39):
No beer.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Maybe beer wasn't a big thing.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
Then you read a different one to me, because I've
got twelve bottles of beer, seven large bottles of punch.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Well that's two different reports.
Speaker 4 (13:51):
Which one of you read? Now one read enough? This one?
Speaker 1 (13:53):
All right?
Speaker 4 (13:54):
Well, I thought they would have had more beer.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
Well, look at the stuff they drank. You're looking at
it and thinking whether you would have enjoyed it. You'd
be saying I wouldn't have the madeira. When you break
it down with that, all of that, that's more than
two bottles of booze, per pose, And that doesn't count
all of that punch. The seven bowls of alcoholic punch.
Speaker 4 (14:14):
How many people? Fifty five? You say, yeah, I.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Know you're doing the mats in your head, and you've
had soires that would drink a lot more than this.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Now, we had an engagement party, which you were privileged
to be there, so privileged. Well, I was privileged to
see you there at the engagement party, because you know,
when someone like you goes to a party, you bring
the vibe, and people.
Speaker 4 (14:31):
Were very happy.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
We also brought the madeira.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
But at the engagement party, I noticed that, for some
reason someone told me that black the Blackfish or.
Speaker 4 (14:39):
Great Northern is the beer that the kids drink.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
So I bought I think four boxes of two Y's
new thirty can blocks, and then I know ten boxes
thirty cans of Great Northern. I'm still drinking the stuff now,
and that was two months, three months ago. Really, that
Great Northern's dreadful bit.
Speaker 3 (15:00):
Water.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Could you buy full strength?
Speaker 4 (15:02):
No, well, they're full strength is watery junk.
Speaker 2 (15:05):
I don't know whether the matter is give me a
beer the put hair on your face, not that stuff that.
Speaker 1 (15:10):
Much of I had. Remember when Jack went away to
our place down the south coast, five of his friends.
He took a fifty six liter keg for three days. Yeah,
and they emptied it. How many beers? Is that a.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
Fifty six leader keg? I know, the old school kegs?
Speaker 2 (15:32):
Was you get our eighty schooners have an old old
schoon old school keg?
Speaker 4 (15:38):
So the fifty six leader? And wasn't it that hipster
junk beer that he was working with that hipster brewery?
Speaker 1 (15:42):
No, no, no, you could choose what went in it.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
Yeah, the little kids these days, I like that passion
for a beer.
Speaker 1 (15:49):
You know you've just said kids these days like that
great northern kids these days. You got you sounding like
George Washington. You sounded the world's oldest man.
Speaker 4 (16:02):
To fix me up some teeth?
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Why don't you go and whittlesome teeth out of.
Speaker 4 (16:05):
A cherry tree that I did not chop down?
Speaker 8 (16:08):
Book?
Speaker 4 (16:11):
Here is some more.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
For more on the cutting room floor today. I love
evangelical ministers.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Well, yes, are they the most rational?
Speaker 2 (16:28):
Will?
Speaker 1 (16:28):
They will shoehorn their way in and out of any
argument and twist themselves inside out to to get their
point across. It's quite interesting. Now I've come across this
guy called David Lawrence Ramsey the Third. He's an American
radio personality. He offers financial advice, but he's also an
evangelical Christian, and every time he's giving financial advice, he
(16:50):
brings up Christianity. So this is a big part of
his platform. He was being interviewed here about whether the
fact that people like him have a lot of houses
makes them greedy and is that part of the Christian ethos.
Have a listen to his explanation of all of this.
Speaker 6 (17:07):
Is it considered ethical for to own so many houses?
I'm just wondering how as a Christian this isn't seen
as greed. Don't you know that buying up all these
homes is what's causing the housing shortage.
Speaker 7 (17:20):
Let's just start with not the spiritual part, but your
economic understanding. That's not what's causing the housing shortage. Investors
buying up houses is not causing their housing shortage.
Speaker 6 (17:29):
That is a thing going around that these massive hedge
funds or Blackstone like all these they're coming in by.
Speaker 7 (17:35):
But they don't have a soul Blackstone. Yeah, those guys
are buying up houses, that's true.
Speaker 6 (17:39):
Is that and is that affecting the housing market at all?
Speaker 4 (17:42):
Because it is.
Speaker 7 (17:42):
Probably is to some extent, But not as much as
tiktoks as it is.
Speaker 1 (17:46):
Yeah, but anyway, you're on TikTok though.
Speaker 7 (17:47):
I know that's that's just the truth that I'm lacking
in judgment. But I own I don't know. I don't
even know fifteen to twenty houses among a bunch of
commercial real estate as well. How is that not greed?
Because I don't own anything. I'm a Christian and that
means God owns it and I'm managing it for him out.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
There enough, God owns it and I'm managing it for him.
And those hedge funds don't have a soul. It's right
for people with souls.
Speaker 4 (18:15):
Sure, you're sharing a house with God.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
This is God's house, and in God's house you obeying
God's rules.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
And God has chosen me to look after this enormous
portfolio of show him.
Speaker 4 (18:27):
I think it's a big responsibility.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
Yeah, I'm good luck to it.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
I remember when I was because I went to a
Catholic school, there was a Bible passage.
Speaker 4 (18:34):
It is easier for a rich man a camel.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
It's easier for a camel to pass through the eye
of a needle than it is for a rich man
to pass through into the gates of Heaven, and that
I used to say to the teachers. I used to say,
it was give you rich, you can't go to heaven.
Speaker 4 (18:51):
And then what would they say, Well, they would.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
Say in Galilee and all those places over in the
Nazareth and stuff like that. The castle walls would have
a hole in the side and it was called a needle,
and that's and it was a camel sized hole. So
the cam would get into the into whatever, the palace
or whatever through this particular hole in the wall because
(19:16):
it was designed to accept the camel. So by that
reasoning it was okay.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
So it is easy for a camel to get through
with this.
Speaker 4 (19:25):
As the priest drived off, drove off in a late.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
Model safe waving to everyone with his role ex I said.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Fair enough, but you know, or power to them, because
they're just evangelical ministers.
Speaker 4 (19:36):
I just slick salesmen.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
The evangelicals are interesting because they rely on public money.
They rely on fundraisers. I once watched the show in
America where one of the like a Nunnish women was
taking donations because they were getting a new satellite dish
and she wanted to bless the dish and people would
donate Tammy Baker and her husband. You know that the
number of times are unmasked as being financially corrupt sexually corrupt,
(20:04):
it's quite extraordinary.
Speaker 4 (20:05):
They believe that.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
Do they believe? I don't know if they. Some do obviously,
but I wonder if these big high end ones really believe.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
Kenneth Copeland, for example, Remember he's a big time evangelical minister.
I see him on the telly when I come in
to work in the morning. Always wears a nice jilet
jacket and he looks very earnest and quite quite Bible passages.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
For anything you want straight out there.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
But he was questioned about his use of private jets
by this young reporter from Inside Edition.
Speaker 9 (20:38):
Do you ever use your private jets to go visit
your vacation homes for example?
Speaker 8 (20:43):
Yes?
Speaker 9 (20:44):
Okay, again getting back to the comment, you said that
you don't like to fly commercial because you don't want
to get into a tube with a bunch of demons.
Do you really believe that human beings are demons?
Speaker 3 (20:55):
No?
Speaker 8 (20:55):
I do not, And don't you ever say I did.
We wrestle not with flesh and blood, but principalitician powers.
Speaker 9 (21:04):
Can you explain what you meant by that.
Speaker 8 (21:06):
The well, let me ask you. But it's a biblical thing,
it's a spiritual thing. It doesn't have anything to do
with people.
Speaker 4 (21:14):
People. I love people. Jesus loves people.
Speaker 2 (21:18):
Jesus did love people, and he would want you to
fly out the front of the plane.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
So you don't have to mix with the German.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
And Jesus he'd get into the first class Lanmde and
he was always wearing sandals, which is outrageous.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
Well, he'd always find enough fish and bread up there.
Speaker 2 (21:32):
Yeah, of course the wine, as you say, he'd get
wine before ten o'clock.
Speaker 1 (21:36):
Interesting, as you say that, you'd find a Bible quote
for anything. He just went off on a tangent. The
Bible quote had nothing to do with that conversation.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
It is easier for the eye than new to pass
through the wind of the man that is speaking it.
Speaker 1 (21:49):
That's my favorite Bible passage.
Speaker 2 (21:51):
Ruberties twenty six your Ryberty's trouses.
Speaker 4 (21:57):
You mender these chassis?
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Have we offended enough people?
Speaker 3 (22:02):
Now?
Speaker 5 (22:03):
Oh for actual love for some mo Janzy and unmandas
Cordy
Speaker 4 (22:19):
Floor