Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
You're nessity just standing ground with Jeremy Lahy.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
The United States has conducted an operation that killed Osama
bin Laden.
Speaker 3 (00:09):
Aboo a car alved Doti is dead.
Speaker 4 (00:14):
The United States launched a targeted operation against that compound.
They killed Osama bin Laden and took custody of his body.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
He died like a dog. It just does not mark
the end of our effort. A beautiful dog. To give
thanks for the men who carried out this operation.
Speaker 5 (00:34):
They did a lot of shooting, and they did a
lot of grass, even not going through the front. You know,
you think you go through the door if you're a
normal person who say, knock knock, may I commit.
Speaker 6 (00:49):
I don't know where I dug up that one, but
I meant you, guys, oh that's from a while back.
Speaker 7 (00:57):
But it goes to show you that.
Speaker 6 (01:00):
Donald Trump, it's true. Knock knock, may I come in?
Speaker 7 (01:06):
All right?
Speaker 8 (01:08):
Someone knocking at the bottle, somebody ringing the bell, some
one's knocking at the double, somebody.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
Ringing the bell. Do me a favor, woman the.
Speaker 9 (01:22):
Doll let, A man.
Speaker 8 (01:26):
Who's yeah, someone's knocking at the dottle, somebody ringing the bell.
Some one's knocking at the dottle, somebody ringing the bell,
Do me a favor, woman the doll.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Me okaya?
Speaker 10 (01:53):
Even not going through the front doorway.
Speaker 7 (01:55):
You know you think you got through the door.
Speaker 5 (01:57):
If you're a normal person, you say knock, I mean
I come in.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Standing Ground is a production of Lahy Media.
Speaker 11 (02:21):
We start tonight with a plane that got turned upside down.
Scary moments out of Toronto, when a Delta Airline's plane
flips over and lands on its roof on the tarmac.
At least seventeen people were injured, including a child. Today's
crash follows a string of recent aviation disasters and close
calls in the US. We still don't know the exact
reason why that plane flipped upside down. So let's bring
(02:43):
a Devin Feely, who was following the very latest on
this investigation.
Speaker 12 (02:48):
Yeah, Ryan, These images they tell the story. Imagine being
a passenger on this plane that ended up upside down
on the runway after a rough landing. There were eighty
people on board, Thankfully all of them survived. The weather
condition we're likely a factor in this scratch and will
be a focus of the investigation.
Speaker 13 (03:07):
Like twelve nine.
Speaker 14 (03:08):
Now arriving at Gate nine, State ten, Kate thirteen, Kate
fourteen Day fifteen.
Speaker 15 (03:26):
Twenty three.
Speaker 6 (03:51):
Let me tell you, I am a nervous enough flyer
as it is.
Speaker 3 (03:59):
I mean, I.
Speaker 7 (04:01):
When I get on a plane, I'm a nervous wreck.
Speaker 6 (04:05):
But lately watching everything that's going on at airports in
our air.
Speaker 7 (04:11):
Traffic control system.
Speaker 6 (04:12):
Now that that was the one in Toronto, the one
that flipped over, right, But then just this past week,
we had a Southwest Airlines that came within fifteen hundred
feet of another jet on the runway. He'll say, fifteen
hundred feet that's a pretty long distance. I say, well,
(04:34):
not when you're going one hundred and sixty knots.
Speaker 7 (04:36):
It's not.
Speaker 6 (04:37):
Now, this is not the topic of my show here
on my special Sunday Weekend edition March second, twenty twenty five.
Speaker 7 (04:45):
Is is air safety.
Speaker 6 (04:47):
But I did see an interesting poll yesterday showing that
for the first time in a long time, Americans, a
notable amount of Americans, do not want to get on
an airplane right now. The FAA has serious staffing issues,
and there's more to it than that, but I don't
(05:09):
have time to get into it today because we have
other issues we need to address.
Speaker 7 (05:15):
The elephant in the room.
Speaker 6 (05:17):
I'm sure by now you have been inundated with it.
And that was the nice afternoon tea and crumpet's meeting
in the Oval Office between Donald Trump and mister Zelensky.
It did not go well for mister Zelensky. A lot
of people, well i'll get into more detail. A lot
(05:39):
of people seem to be shocked about this, the way
this went down. Uh, I'm not and actually I thought
it was pretty healthy, all right, So uh, we'll leave
with that, and then we're going to get into doge
you know, the the Gestapo, uh, the the nuts that
(06:00):
are that are going after wasteful, spending, horrible people. All right,
I'm Germany. This is standing ground, this is Mojo Fiber Radio.
It is Sunday, March second. Let's get going.
Speaker 12 (06:11):
Take a look at the plane, bellies up, belly up,
the wheels still intact, the snow blowing on the runway.
This was a delta flight. It was operated by a
regional carrier, Endeavor. It flew out of Minneapolis. Passengers described
a rough landing, with the plane eventually flipping upside down.
Speaker 16 (06:32):
One goes up, must come down, spinning wheel, cut Tom
do around Tom in dot your tumbles.
Speaker 17 (06:44):
It's a crying sin.
Speaker 18 (06:47):
A painted pony. Let the spin in wheels. You got
no Monday, you got.
Speaker 13 (06:55):
No home.
Speaker 18 (06:57):
Spinning wheel, talking about your trumples, and you never learn
ride a painted bony. Let us spind your food.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
You're listening to standing ground with Jeremy.
Speaker 3 (07:19):
Lady, I want to see if we can get this
thing done. You want me to be tough.
Speaker 19 (07:27):
I could be tougher than any human being you've ever seen.
I'd be so tough. But you're never gonna get a
deal that way. So that's the way it goes.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
One more question, Hey, I would respond to this.
Speaker 20 (07:38):
So look, for four years in the United States of America,
we had a president who stood up at press conferences
and talked tough about Vladimir Putin, and then Putin invaded
Ukraine and destroyed a significant chunk of the country. The
path to peace and the path to prosperity is maybe
engaging in diplomacy. We tried the pathway of Joe Biden,
(08:00):
of thumping our chest and pretending that the President of
the United States's words mattered.
Speaker 10 (08:05):
More than the President of the United States is actions.
Speaker 20 (08:08):
What makes America a good country is America engaging in diplomacy.
Speaker 3 (08:12):
That's what President.
Speaker 10 (08:13):
Trump is doing, can I ask you?
Speaker 3 (08:15):
Sure? Yeah?
Speaker 10 (08:16):
Yeah, okay, So he.
Speaker 21 (08:19):
Occupied it our parts, big parts of Ukraine, parts of
East and Crimea.
Speaker 10 (08:27):
So he occupied it on twenty fifteen.
Speaker 5 (08:30):
So.
Speaker 10 (08:32):
During a lot of years.
Speaker 21 (08:34):
So I'm not speaking about Jus Biden, but those time
was Obama, then President Obama, then President Trump, than President Biden.
Now the President Trump and God bless now President Trump
will stop him. But during twenty fifteen, nobody stopped him.
He just occupied and took He killed people.
Speaker 19 (08:52):
You know what the contact twenty fifteen, twenty.
Speaker 3 (08:57):
Fourty so how would he kills that here?
Speaker 21 (08:59):
Yeah, exactly right, yes, But during twenty fourteen till twenty
twenty two, what the situation the.
Speaker 10 (09:07):
Same that people have been dying on the contact line.
Nobody stopped him. You know that we had.
Speaker 21 (09:13):
Conversations with him, a lot of conversations, my pilateral conversation,
and we signed with him, me like a new president.
In twenty nineteen, I signed with him the deal I
signed with him. Macron and Mary Keill, we signed ceasefire, ceasefire.
Speaker 10 (09:31):
All of them told me that he will never go.
Speaker 21 (09:35):
We signed him with guest contract guess contract. Yes, but
after that he broken the cease fire, he killed our
people and he didn't exchange prisoners.
Speaker 10 (09:46):
We signed the exchange of prisoners, but he didn't do it.
What kind of diplomacy GGU speaking about? What do you mean?
Speaker 20 (09:56):
I'm talking about the kind of diplomacy that's going to
end the destruction of your true But if.
Speaker 7 (10:00):
Mister President, mister president, with.
Speaker 10 (10:02):
Respect, I think it's disrespectful.
Speaker 20 (10:04):
For you to come into the Oval Office to try
to litigate this in front of the American media. Right now,
you guys are going around and forcing conscripts to the
front lines because you.
Speaker 10 (10:12):
Have manpower problems.
Speaker 20 (10:13):
You should be thanking the president for me to bring
it into this county.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
Into Ukraine.
Speaker 10 (10:18):
That you say, what problems we have?
Speaker 20 (10:20):
I have been to I have actually I've actually watched
and seen the stories, and I know what happens is
you bring people, you bring them on a propaganda tour.
Mister president, are do you disagree that you've had problems bringing.
Speaker 3 (10:34):
People in your military.
Speaker 20 (10:35):
Ap and do you think that it's respectful on to
come to the Oval Office of the United States of
America and attack the administration that is trying to trying
to prevent the destruction of your country.
Speaker 10 (10:45):
A lot of questions. Let's start from the beginning. Sure,
hillst Wall.
Speaker 21 (10:48):
During the war, everybody has problems, even you, But you
have nice oltion and don't feel now, but you will
feel it in diffusions.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
I'm blessed you war.
Speaker 19 (11:01):
Don't tell us what we're gonna feel. We're trying to
solve a problem. Don't tell us what we're going to feel.
Speaker 22 (11:06):
I'm not telling you because you're in no position to
dictate that.
Speaker 19 (11:10):
You're in no position to dictate what we're going to feel.
Speaker 3 (11:15):
We're gonna feel.
Speaker 10 (11:16):
Very good, feel influence.
Speaker 3 (11:17):
We're gonna feel very good and.
Speaker 10 (11:19):
Very strong, feel influenced.
Speaker 3 (11:21):
You're right now not in a very good position.
Speaker 19 (11:23):
You've allowed you so to be in a very bad
position that he's apple to be right about.
Speaker 10 (11:27):
The very beginning of the war.
Speaker 3 (11:29):
Not in a good position. You don't have the cards
right now with us. You start having right now. You
don't explains spreads. You're gambling with the lives and billions
of people. See, you're gambling with World War three.
Speaker 19 (11:44):
You're gambling with world Here we go, and what you're
doing is very disrespectful to the country. This country it's
back to you far more than a lot of people
say they should have.
Speaker 2 (11:56):
Have.
Speaker 20 (11:56):
You said thank you once that large entire media that
you said thanks. Today you went to Pennsylvania and campaigned
for the opposition in October. Offer some words of appreciation
for the United States of America and the president who's
trying to save your country.
Speaker 21 (12:14):
Please, you're seeing that if you will speak very loudly
about the war.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
He's not speaking loudly.
Speaker 19 (12:20):
He's not speaking loudly. Your country is in big trouble. No, No,
you've done a lot of talking. Your country is in
big trouble.
Speaker 3 (12:27):
I know you're not winning. You're not winning this. You
have a damn good chance of going out, Okay.
Speaker 21 (12:33):
Because of President, we are staying in Yawa country, staying strong.
Speaker 10 (12:37):
From the very beginning of the war, we've been alone
and we have thankle I said thanks. You haven't been
gipping it.
Speaker 19 (12:44):
He gave you, this, stupid president, three hundred and fifty
billion dollars.
Speaker 3 (12:48):
You will. We gave you military equipment and use our
military one of you. If you didn't have our military.
Speaker 19 (12:56):
Equipment, if you didn't have our military equipment, this war would.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
Have been over in two weeks. In three days.
Speaker 10 (13:03):
I heard it from booting in three days.
Speaker 3 (13:05):
This is how maybe less in two weeks.
Speaker 10 (13:07):
Of course, Yeah, it's going.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
To be a very hard thing to do business like this.
Speaker 10 (13:11):
Tell you just say thank you. I said it, except
for American except that there are.
Speaker 20 (13:17):
Disagreements, and let's go litigate those disagreements rather than trying
to fight it out of the American media when you're wrong.
We know that you're wrong, but you.
Speaker 3 (13:25):
See, I think it's good for the American people to
see what's going on. I think it's very important. That's
why I kept this day.
Speaker 10 (13:32):
I agree.
Speaker 19 (13:33):
You have to be thankful. You don't have the cards.
You're buried there, your people that die, tell you you're
running low on soldiers. Listen, you're running slow on soldiers.
It would be a damn goodness. And then then you tell.
Speaker 3 (13:47):
Us I don't want to cease fire. I don't want
to cease fire. I want to go and I wanted this.
Look if you could.
Speaker 19 (13:53):
Get a ceasefire right now and tell you you take
it so the bullet stopped flying and your ment stuff.
Speaker 10 (13:58):
Courting kills those we wanted to stole the war.
Speaker 22 (14:00):
But they're saying, you don't want to see you I
want to see because you get a ceasefire faster than
any greets.
Speaker 10 (14:06):
Color people of all. It's just fire what they see.
Speaker 3 (14:09):
There wasn't me. That wasn't with me.
Speaker 23 (14:12):
That was with a guy named Biden, who was not
a smart person.
Speaker 19 (14:16):
That was that was with excuse me, that was with Obama,
who gave you sheets and I gave you javelins. I
gave you the javelins to take out all those tanks.
Obama gave you sheets. In fact, the statement is Obama
gave sheets and Trump gave javelins. You got to be
more thankful because let me tell you, you don't have
(14:38):
the cards. With us, you have the cards, but without us,
you don't have any cards.
Speaker 7 (14:44):
No, you don't.
Speaker 6 (14:45):
Without us, you are up Shit's creek. The President is
absolutely correct. Okay, I'm Germany. This is standing ground, this
is Mojo Fiber Radio. It is Sunday, March second. I
want to say this at the outset because a lot
of even you guys have been watching a lot of
the news reports surrounding this, this event in the Oval
(15:07):
Office that is shocking so many people. I can pretty
much guarantee you one under that there have been many,
many meetings in the Oval Office, that where things have
come to blows like we witnessed, uh this past week
with the President and mister Zelenski and JD.
Speaker 7 (15:30):
Vance and other people in the room.
Speaker 5 (15:32):
Right.
Speaker 7 (15:33):
I said to someone yesterday, you don't you don't think.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
That Jack Kennedy and and or and what was his name,
Andre Grimico? You don't think that Jack Kennedy and Andre
Grimico had a blow up in the Oval Office during
the Cuban missile crisis. You don't think that any other
president has ever shut the doors and said, all right,
sit down, we need to talk here and have what
they call a come to Jesus. The only different friends here,
(16:00):
The only difference here is what we got to see.
Speaker 7 (16:03):
It was it a setup? Yeah? Maybe? But do I
think it was a show?
Speaker 5 (16:11):
No?
Speaker 7 (16:11):
I don't.
Speaker 6 (16:13):
No, I truly believe if those doors have been shut
and they got into the old fashioned cones of silence,
the same thing would have happened. Don't want to spend
a lot of time on this, because you guys have
heard a lot about it already, but just put you know,
put my own two cents in, if you will. This
(16:37):
thing in Ukraine, we've now reached critical mass. It has
because it's it has, there's no end in sight. Donald
Trump wants to end it, wants to figure out some
way to end it. And it's fascinating to see the
media in a way kind of like what's he talking about?
(16:58):
Like they want the war to continue. All the anti
war people are all becoming warmongers. Donald Trump he hates
wor he doesn't like it. He's tough, but at the
same time he realizes in his mind that this is
(17:18):
a merry go round and if if if Zelensky is
not gonna come to the table and come to some
type of an agreement, it's never going to end. And
he basically came in to the Oval office and said,
you gotta help me keep this thing going.
Speaker 7 (17:36):
No, we're done. All right. It was great television, though,
wasn't it.
Speaker 6 (17:44):
I even I thought that the uh, well the President
said that himself, this is gonna make great television. But
when you turn on you watch CNN and MSDNC and
the rest of them and say, oh, it was a show. Well,
they're of course they're gonna say that they hate Donald Trump.
But ask yourself to question, oh, I did not know
that Rachel Maddow was in favor of war.
Speaker 7 (18:03):
I didn't know that.
Speaker 6 (18:05):
I thought she was a peace nick or well, not
joy read anymore. She got jettison or the view or
all these other ones. Donald Trump's right about this. Did
this has been going on way too long. We got
to end this thing. Okay, now with that, let's move on.
Speaker 1 (18:23):
And that was something completely different.
Speaker 10 (18:27):
What I mentioned that.
Speaker 24 (18:29):
I thought most people were not ampathetic.
Speaker 7 (18:31):
I think they're.
Speaker 24 (18:32):
Confused basically because you hear intelligent people from both political
parties or in the middle conservatives and liberals, and.
Speaker 25 (18:40):
They all seem to have different answers as to what is.
Speaker 10 (18:42):
Going wrong in the country.
Speaker 24 (18:43):
Some people say, well, let's let the government spend billions
of dollars, and then other people say, no, no more
federal spending. Let's give the tax rebase. Than the other
intelligent people say no tax rebase. We've got to do
this and do that. So everybody is confused. How do
you see the thing? How are we going to get
out of this?
Speaker 25 (18:59):
Well, Johnny, I think one of the things is that
people keep looking at government for the answer, and government's
the problem.
Speaker 7 (19:08):
Oh man oo man brother.
Speaker 25 (19:10):
You a moment ago you asked you know about people
and feeling not only confused, but low and down in America.
First of all, the American people, if they would just
take a little inventory and look around, you triple our
troubles and we're better off than any other people on earth.
And we've asked so much of government, and we've gotten
in the habit over the last forty years of thinking
(19:31):
the government has the answers. There's very little that government
can do as efficiently and economically as the people can
do themselves. And if government would shut the doors and
sneak away for about three weeks, we'd never miss them.
Speaker 9 (19:44):
Now, the.
Speaker 25 (19:47):
If the people were you had in mind particularly no
I said this while I was in government. Our biggest
problem is that we have built a permanent structure of government, federal, state, local,
the permanent employees, and they've come to the place that
they actually determined policy in this country more than does
the Congress.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
Of the United States.
Speaker 25 (20:09):
There are fourteen and a half midion public employees in
the United States. That's quite a voting block. And the
bureaus and agencies not in Washington. I heard you talking
earlier about some of the research programs. Well, there was
a senator the other day and he took up some
pages of the Congressional record. He was doing the same
thing you were, listing all these crazy research programs and
(20:31):
how much they were costing, and wound up his speech
by introducing his own he wants to study and a
research of transcendental meditation. So you know, there's a state
senator in Michigan and he just found out the other
day they got a ninety three thousand dollars study on
whether Chitlin's are bad for you. And he said that
(20:53):
as a fourth generation chiplandleader, he figured that he could
tell you how.
Speaker 7 (20:56):
For ninety three session that really happened.
Speaker 25 (20:58):
I guess, oh, listen there, you you have some beauties
and there's some others. What would you say if I
told you about one? A study in which this was
called the the Demography of Happiness. And in this study,
the government found out that young people are happier in
old people they'll kill.
Speaker 3 (21:18):
Well.
Speaker 25 (21:21):
They found out that people that earn more are happier
than people that earn less. And they found out that
well people are happier than six people.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
Yea.
Speaker 25 (21:29):
Yet this was two hundred and forty nine thousand dollars
to find out it's better to be rich, young and
healthy than old boorns.
Speaker 6 (21:41):
Okay, that's Ronald Reagan on Johnny Carson in nineteen seventy nine,
just as he was getting ready to run for president
seventy eight, seventy nine in that area. Well, I love
the Gipper, and he was great, and he's one of
my favorite presidents, second in line now Donald Trump being
my favorite. The issue with with Ronnie Reagan was like
(22:05):
a lot of presidents, is he went on about it,
but he really did not attack the issue. As a
matter of fact, under Reagan's eight years in the White House,
government expanded, it grew. It's taken someone like Donald Trump
(22:26):
to come in and basically say either we're going to
do this right or don't. We're not going to do
it at all. I refer to Donald Trump as the
drive through president. He doesn't want to wait, he doesn't
want to cook it. He wants it done, and he
wants it done now. And the American people, since this
(22:50):
all this stuff started getting out about the wasteful spending
and where the money is going, the American people clearly
have had it. This guy has taken a meat cleaver
and said no, this is this is ridiculous and of
course in Congress they're having hearings every day and they're
exposing stuff.
Speaker 4 (23:10):
If you think that the that the program under Operation
and Enduring Sentinel entitled Women's Scholarship Endowment, which receives sixty
million dollars annually, or the Young Women Lead which gets
about five million dollars annually, is going to women who,
by the way, if you read the Inspector General's report
(23:32):
is telling you that the Taliban does not allow women
to speak in public. Yet somehow you're believing and American
people are supposed to believe that this money is going
for the betterment of the women in Afghanistan.
Speaker 3 (23:48):
It is not.
Speaker 4 (23:48):
You are funding terrorism and it's coming through USAI.
Speaker 6 (23:51):
D you hear that? That to me that that's like
sending ten million dollars worth of inbow flags to a
Middle Eastern country that throws homosexuals off buildings. We're sending money.
Speaker 7 (24:07):
We're sending money to the women in.
Speaker 6 (24:10):
The Taliban that essentially can't talk, They can't say anything.
It gets better or worse, I should say, depending on
your perspective.
Speaker 4 (24:21):
AID spent eight hundred and forty million dollars in the
last year, last twenty years on Pakistan's education related program.
It includes one hundred and thirty six million dollars to
build one hundred and twenty schools, of which there is
zero evidence than any ofver were built. Why would there
be any evidence. The Inspector General can't get into seeing them.
(24:41):
But you know what, we doubled down and spent twenty
million dollars from USAID to create educational television programs or
children unable to attend the physical school. Yeah, they can't
attend it because it doesn't exist. You paid for if
somebody else got the money, you are paying for terrorism.
Speaker 6 (24:58):
You know, there's this indulge me for one moment, please.
There is this video that is gone viral on x
and on on Facebook, and what it is is there
are these there's this guy driving by and sorry, yeah,
he's in a car and he's driving down a highway
(25:18):
and there's a sign on the road and it says
something like get out of the get if you don't
like it here, get out of here, your liberal piece
of shit or something really really nasty. And the guy's
reaction to when he sees it is this, listen to this.
Speaker 15 (25:34):
Oh, once you'll look at what you look at that
how once you look at what you look at that.
Speaker 6 (25:43):
Look, I have a very sick, bizarre ability to import
something that and make it, make apply it to anything.
Speaker 7 (25:50):
But you could say, when the.
Speaker 6 (25:52):
Dough when the doge people go in and they open
up the books and they see the wasteful spending, what
is their reaction?
Speaker 15 (25:59):
Oh, once you'll look at the Yeah, well you look
at that.
Speaker 7 (26:03):
Okay, Well leave it.
Speaker 6 (26:05):
Leave it to me to uh find anything and put
it into something. I love doing it, all right. I'm
German l. This is standing Ground. This is Mojo Fiber Radio.
My email standing Ground seventeen seventy six at gmail dot com.
Standing Ground one seven seven six at gmail dot com.
Follow me on x formerly Twitter at lahy l e
a h y jeremy j e r e m y
(26:26):
at lahy l e a h y jeremy j e
r e m y and hit notifications So in my
show is ready or I've dropped a show, you will
be informed.
Speaker 7 (26:37):
All right, well, Sean Hannany.
Speaker 6 (26:39):
Sean Hannany recently did a sit down interview in the
Oval Office with Elon Musk and Donald Trump together, and
I thought, I thought it was very compelling to get
the perspective. Uh, with the two of them there working
with each other. I we we're gonna we're gonna get
into in a minute, were going to get into the hole.
(27:01):
Elon Musk is not elected to do anything, but until then,
have a listen to this.
Speaker 26 (27:08):
I would think liberals would love the fact that you
have the biggest electric vehicle company in the world.
Speaker 17 (27:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
I mean I used to be adored by the left,
you know, not anyone that killed.
Speaker 7 (27:19):
I mean, let's I really didn't.
Speaker 27 (27:21):
I mean, it's this whole sort of like you.
Speaker 2 (27:23):
Know, it's they call it like Trump duration syndrome, and
I don't know, you don't realize how real this is
until like it's you can't reason with people. So like
I was at a friend's birthday party and alleg just
a birthday dinner, and it was like a nice quiet
dinner and everything was everyone's behaving normally. And then I
happened to mention, this is before the election, like a
month or two before I have to mention the president's name,
(27:44):
and it was like they got shot with a dart
in the jugular that contained like myth beat.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
I mean babies.
Speaker 27 (27:49):
Okay, what guys like you can't have like a normal conversation,
and it's like, it's like that to become completely irrational.
Speaker 15 (28:00):
How would you look at that? Yeah, would you look
at that.
Speaker 6 (28:05):
I've got some great audio coming up soon of the
of the media and their whole reaction to this.
Speaker 7 (28:10):
But I want to say this to you.
Speaker 6 (28:12):
The problem with the left right now, with everything that's
going on and all these stones being overturned the emperor
has no clothes, you get it right, is that the
left is boxed in. They're stuck. There's nowhere to go
because they cannot They cannot say that this spending, this
(28:33):
wasteful spending, is okay because they can't.
Speaker 7 (28:38):
The most left left.
Speaker 6 (28:41):
Leaning freak cannot give a justification to spend forty dollars
to produce Sesame Street in Iraq. So what they do
is they go after the people who are overturning the stones.
Speaker 7 (29:03):
It's like it's like.
Speaker 6 (29:05):
A wife comes home one day early from work and
finds her husband in bed with another woman, and she
she opens the door into the master bedroom and she
catches him in flagrante delecta and he gets up and
he says, you know what, you really should call before
you come home, and next time you really should knock.
(29:29):
Screw the phone call, screw the knocking on the door.
You've been busted.
Speaker 7 (29:33):
It's just it's it's they can't justify it now.
Speaker 6 (29:40):
So what they do is they say, well, in the
process of this, our rights of the laws are being broken,
laws are being broken. Well, Edward Snowden broke the law
to what expos are wrong. Daniel Lelsbrok back in the
seventies broke the law to expose the United States involvement
(30:05):
in the extent of the United States involvement in Indo
China because of the leftist belief.
Speaker 7 (30:11):
We have a right to know.
Speaker 6 (30:15):
So Elon Musk goes in and they say, oh, oh,
he's breaking the law.
Speaker 7 (30:19):
I mean, I don't believe he is.
Speaker 6 (30:21):
But if that's going to be their argument that he's
breaking the law, you'd have to say, well, what about
Edward Snowden and the others in the fforementioned. If the
law is getting broken to expose the United States taxpayer
for getting ripped off, oh they're calling it treason. Oh
(30:42):
it's treason. Well, to quote Patrick Henry at the House
of Burgess in seventeen seventy five, when Great Britain was
accusing the founders of being of committing treason, and Patrick
Henry said, if this is reason, let's make the most
of it.
Speaker 7 (31:06):
Okay, well, let's move on. Here's some more for you.
Speaker 6 (31:08):
Did you guys happen to see the Social Security age timetable.
We now know that there are Social Security payments that
are going to individuals overseas, This unaccounted for money that's
just being it's just going out the window. And Donald
Trump was giving a God, this guy's been in front
(31:31):
of the camera since day one, but he's he got
out and he was reading this timetable that's been established
by the Social Security Department where they lay out how
many people are living within a certain age bracket. And
it's disgusting what they're doing. But the way it's presented
(31:51):
is hysterical.
Speaker 7 (31:52):
Here you go, but.
Speaker 19 (31:53):
Look at this from ninety to ninety nine social Security
six million, fifty four thousand people. Well, that's okay, maybe
that's possible, you know, ninety to ninety ninety nine, maybe
it's possible. It's a lot of people though at that
But people that live to one hundred to one hundred
and nine four million, seven hundred and thirty four thousand.
Speaker 17 (32:14):
Wow, that's a lot. That means over one hundred years old,
they're four million people.
Speaker 7 (32:18):
I don't know.
Speaker 17 (32:19):
I don't know too many.
Speaker 19 (32:20):
I know people that are doing great in their nineties,
but not too many people over one hundred, but over one.
Speaker 17 (32:26):
Hundred and twenty.
Speaker 19 (32:27):
From one hundred and twenty years old, people that are
one hundred and twenty years old up to one hundred
and twenty nine, three million, four hundred and seventy two
thousand people.
Speaker 7 (32:38):
Wow, modern medicine.
Speaker 19 (32:39):
You know that can possibly be because the record is
like I think it's one person, a woman lived to
one hundred and twenty seven, but they have three thousand,
four hundred and seventy two. Okay, But now we're going
really in people from one hundred and thirty years old
to one hundred and thirty nine year old.
Speaker 17 (32:56):
Three million, nine hundred and thirty six thousand. Wow.
Speaker 19 (33:01):
I wonder if people are getting paid with all this,
I mean, are these checks and that's what we're checking
right now. People from one hundred and forty years old
to one hundred and forty nine years old, three million,
five hundred and forty two thousand, one hundred and forty
years old and beyond.
Speaker 17 (33:18):
Now now we're really going.
Speaker 19 (33:20):
Because we're looking to break the record by twenty five years.
People from one hundred and fifty years old. Oh, to
one hundred and fifty nine years old, one million, Yeah,
three hundred.
Speaker 17 (33:31):
And forty five thousand. These are in the by the way,
these are in the computer files. He said, this is
what they do.
Speaker 19 (33:36):
Well, they're super I asked Elon, who are these those people?
He said, they're super brilliant computer people and they love
the country.
Speaker 17 (33:46):
It's simple. Wait a minute.
Speaker 19 (33:48):
People from one hundred and sixty years old to one
hundred and sixty nine years one hundred and twenty one thousand,
So one hundred and sixty year old people, one hundred
and seventy to one hundred and seventy nine thousand, six thousand,
eighty seven.
Speaker 17 (34:01):
But now let's go into the real numbers.
Speaker 19 (34:05):
From two hundred to two hundred and nine years old,
eight hundred and seventy nine people. How what's your walk
at the what you'll look at that from two hundred
and ten years old. I haven't met any of them,
and if I did, I would bless them.
Speaker 17 (34:23):
I would I would, I would worship the ground they
walk on.
Speaker 19 (34:27):
Two hundred and ten to two hundred nineteen year olds,
eight hundred and sixty six, from two hundred and twenty
years old to two hundred and twenty nine years old,
one thousand and thirty nine. And then you have two
people from two hundred and forty years old to two
hundred and forty.
Speaker 17 (34:43):
Nine years old.
Speaker 7 (34:44):
It's getting up there.
Speaker 19 (34:45):
One person and there's one person that's three hundred and
sixty years old.
Speaker 17 (34:53):
That's just that.
Speaker 6 (34:54):
There was a news report I saw the other night
about Look, by the way, I'm not encouraging anybody not
to pay taxes or lie in your taxes or file
false returns. I'm not saying that you got you gotta
do what you gotta do, right, But there was this
guy who got a letter from the I R S
and he was being audited, and he wrote a letter
(35:18):
back to the I R S where he said, you
can audit me when we're done auditing you. He's not wrong.
It's like, if you're gonna come after, we got to.
We want to find out what the hell you guys
have been up to all these years.
Speaker 7 (35:37):
We know it's going back.
Speaker 6 (35:38):
They're saying, now since since two thousand and three, not
that long ago, right, The US government has wasted three
trillion dollars. Hey, I, in my own mind have hard time,
have a hard time being able to fathom that kind
of money. Three trillion dollars down there's talking about five
(36:02):
thousand dollars check saying hey, we're sorry.
Speaker 7 (36:05):
They owe us a hell of a lot more than that.
But anyway, look.
Speaker 6 (36:10):
A little, a little, a little extension of the olive
branch and say hey, we're sorry.
Speaker 7 (36:15):
We're sorry for screwing you over your entire life. The
list continues.
Speaker 3 (36:21):
Five hundred and.
Speaker 19 (36:21):
Twenty million dollars for a consultant.
Speaker 17 (36:26):
On the environment.
Speaker 19 (36:28):
It's called Environmental, Social and Governance Investments in Africa and
mobilized private sector resources five.
Speaker 17 (36:40):
Hundred and twenty million dollars.
Speaker 19 (36:41):
Somebody got five hundred and twenty million dollars for an
environmental sounds like an environmental.
Speaker 17 (36:46):
Studies most I've always been one that paid.
Speaker 19 (36:49):
A lot of money for my environmental studies. But they
you know, I paid like fifty thousand dollars, not five.
Speaker 17 (36:54):
Hundred and twenty million. Five hundred and twenty million dollars
for ESG.
Speaker 19 (37:02):
Twenty five million dollars to promote biodiversity conservation and promote
illicit livelihoods by developing socially responsible behavior in the country
of Columbia.
Speaker 15 (37:14):
How what's your look at that?
Speaker 7 (37:17):
What you look at that?
Speaker 19 (37:18):
Forty million dollars to improve the social and economic inclusion
of sedentary migrants forty million. Forty two million dollars for
John Hopkins great place to research and drive social and
behavior change in Uganda forty two million?
Speaker 17 (37:37):
What about us?
Speaker 6 (37:38):
As I'm listening to this myself, I feel like the
character in Goodfellas. You guys remember Maury Mary when he
when he felt like he was getting jip. This is
what I feel like when I hear this stuff being
read off.
Speaker 3 (37:53):
That cheap cigarette hi.
Speaker 7 (37:55):
Jacket, right exactly, Mory?
Speaker 10 (38:00):
What about I?
Speaker 17 (38:00):
Okay?
Speaker 7 (38:01):
So it gets better now because, like.
Speaker 6 (38:05):
I said, the media, the media is in no position
to complain because how do they defend it now? Stephen Miller,
a deputy White House Chief of Staff, has been all
over the place and has been doing a phenomenal job.
But there's two great cuts I have of him. I
have of him here now. This is about a week ago.
(38:28):
This is with CNN's bubblehead. I think it's Brionna Keeler
where he boxes her in and says, I don't know
what your issue is.
Speaker 7 (38:39):
Listen to this.
Speaker 26 (38:40):
The US government has thirty six trillion dollars in debt.
The interest payments on the debt exceed the national defense budget.
The American people are exhausted and tired of watching their
tax dollars be corruptly spent, abused, wasted, and in every sense,
robbed and stolen from them. This president, for the first
(39:00):
time in history, is committed to restoring accountability at every
level of the federal government. You may assert there's no
waste in the Pentagon. You may assert there's no waste
in Trance.
Speaker 10 (39:14):
Stephen, I don't think anybody why.
Speaker 26 (39:16):
Are you not celebrating these cuts? If you agree there
is waste, if you agree there is abuse, if you
agree there is corruption, why are you not celebrating the cuts,
the reforms that are being instituted. Every day that no
action is taken, the entire salaries of American workers that
are attached disappear forever.
Speaker 28 (39:33):
Stephen, let's calm down.
Speaker 10 (39:34):
This is not not.
Speaker 11 (39:36):
There's no reason about whether there are well.
Speaker 26 (39:40):
You are clearly trying to debate me, and I I
will be as excited as I want to be about
the fact that we are saving Americans billions of dollars,
that we are ending the theft and waste and grift
and corruption, that we are stopping American taxpayer dollars from
subsidizing a rogue federal bureaucracy that has been relentlessly weaponized
(40:01):
against the American people.
Speaker 3 (40:04):
That cheap cigarette hight.
Speaker 6 (40:08):
That that right there is a prime example of what
I was talking about earlier. When it comes to they
can't defend it. They've got nowhere to go. And you
can understand Stephen Miller's frustration with the Bubblehead because he's like,
(40:29):
you're saying, what's good that work, but you're complaining What
I mean, what are you complaining about? Well, speaking of
Stephen Miller, because when we Doze got in and started
finding all this shit, right the the memo went out
and was all over you can see it all over
(40:49):
the place. Elon Musk wasn't elected to do anything the
entire government other than the president, the vice president, and
the Congress. No one in the government is elected. The
cabinet is not elected. So the media.
Speaker 7 (41:05):
Has been going on about this.
Speaker 6 (41:07):
So Stephen Miller came down into the press briefing room
and laid it out on the line and gave the
infants a little civics lesson on how it was like
schoolhouse rock. This is gold. You're gonna love this.
Speaker 26 (41:26):
It is true that many of the people in this
room for four years failed to cover the fact that
Joe Biden was mentally incompetent and was not running the country.
It is also true that many people in this room
who have used this talking point that Elon is not elected,
failed to understand how government works. So I'm glad for
the opportunity for a brief civics lesson. A president is
(41:49):
elected by the whole American people. He's the only official
in the entire government that is elected by the entire nation. Right,
judges are appointed. Members of Congress are at the district
or state level, which is one man. And the Constitution,
Article two has a clause known as a vesting clause,
and it says the executive power shall be vested in
a president singular. The whole will of democracy is imbued
(42:13):
into the elected president.
Speaker 4 (42:15):
That president that.
Speaker 26 (42:16):
Appoints staff to then impose that democratic will onto the government.
The threat to democracy, indeed, the existential threat to democracy
is the unelected bureaucracy of lifetime tenured civil servants who
believe the answer to no one, who believe they can
do whatever they want without consequence, who believe they can
(42:36):
set their own agenda no matter what Americans vote for.
So Americans vote for radical FBI reform, and FBI agents
say they don't want to change, or Americans vote for
radical reformat or energy policies, but EPA bureaucrats say they
don't want to change. Or Americans vote to end DEI
racist DEI policies, and lawyers of the Department of Justice
saying they don't want to change. What President Trump is
(42:59):
due doing is he is removing federal bureaucrats who are
defying democracy by failing to implement his lawful orders, which
are the will of the whole American people.
Speaker 6 (43:13):
Blew them out of the water. Gather around, children, It's
time for a little civics lesson. It was, it was so,
it was so well done. And he's a very bright guy. Now,
not everybody out there has studied the constitution or a
political science, and that that's fine. You know, there's something
(43:33):
called a library. You can go online, you can do whatever. Well,
I'm no constitutional scholar, but I have a degree in
political science, and I'm I've studied the Constitution backwards and forwards,
and I understood what he was talking about. But I
could have never ever gotten up at a podium and
(43:54):
put it that way and explained it that way like
you have to explain it to a bunch of children,
because that's what they are. All right, I'm germanly, this
is standing ground, this is Mojo vibr Radio.
Speaker 7 (44:04):
I have run way over here.
Speaker 6 (44:06):
I've never done a forty five minute break before, so well, anyway,
it is Sunday, all right. My email standing Ground seventeen
seventy six at gmail dot com, standing Ground one seven
seven six at.
Speaker 7 (44:16):
Gmail dot com.
Speaker 6 (44:17):
Follow me on Twitter at leahy l e a h
y jeremy j e r e m y at leahy
l e a h y jeremy j e r e
m y hit notifications. All right, I'm gonna take a
quick break and uh more upon my return.
Speaker 29 (44:30):
Fifteen million dollars was awarded to Taliban controlled Afghanistan to
distribute oral contraceptives and condoms.
Speaker 11 (44:39):
With so many children condoms to choose from, finding the
right one will get good.
Speaker 3 (44:46):
And messy.
Speaker 29 (44:47):
As AID spent thirty two thousand dollars in Peru to
create a comic featuring a trans heroo to address social
and mental health issues.
Speaker 25 (44:55):
Sound crazy someplace else, We're all stocked up here.
Speaker 3 (44:59):
What is that have to do with diplomacy?
Speaker 29 (45:02):
I guess the US is now the travel agent for
the entire world, since they spent fifty million dollars on
Tunisia's tourism.
Speaker 1 (45:09):
I I guess I am.
Speaker 13 (45:11):
Wrong, your host welcome.
Speaker 29 (45:16):
USAID gave eighty seven point nine million to help Afghans
farm and incidentally farm poppy, the plant from which opium
is extracted.
Speaker 3 (45:25):
Happy hobby will put them.
Speaker 29 (45:29):
With flee as if twenty twenty one, Afghanistan supplied ninety
percent of the world's heroin. I thought the saying in
the US would just say no to drugs. How about
we just say no to wasteful for an aid?
Speaker 30 (45:42):
The United States should not be the sugar daddy for
the entire world.
Speaker 26 (46:00):
You are my can't go.
Speaker 3 (46:03):
And you got me wanting you.
Speaker 13 (46:09):
Honey, sugar, sugar, you are my cant.
Speaker 3 (46:19):
And you got me wanting you.
Speaker 6 (46:24):
I just can't believe the love and me of love.
Speaker 10 (46:27):
And I just can't believe.
Speaker 3 (46:32):
I just can't believe the world of this feelings.
Speaker 27 (46:36):
I just can't believe.
Speaker 3 (46:39):
A suggy.
Speaker 6 (46:50):
I had it up the head that cheap cigarette hike Jack,
I want my buddy.
Speaker 1 (46:56):
You're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy Lady.
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Speaker 1 (47:56):
You're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy Lady.
Speaker 17 (48:00):
Would you look at that?
Speaker 7 (48:02):
Would you look at that?
Speaker 28 (48:40):
He was standing in a country where free speech was weaponized.
To kentuckt a genocide and he met with the head
of a political party that has far right views and
some historic ties to extreme groups. The context of that
is changing the tone of it, and you know that
(49:04):
that the censorship.
Speaker 31 (49:05):
I disagree with you specifically about the right. Now I
have to disagree with you. The free speech was not
used to conduct the genocide. The genocide was conducted by
an authoritarian Nazi regime that happened to also be genocidal
because they hated Jews, and they hated minorities, and they
hated those that they had a list of people they hated,
but primarily the Jews. There was no free speech in
Nazi Germany. There was none. There was also no opposition
(49:27):
in Nazi Germany. They were a sole and only party
that governed that country. So that's not an accurate reflection
of history.
Speaker 7 (49:33):
I'm not going to elaborate on that. Idiot.
Speaker 6 (49:38):
Margaret Brennan over at CBS last week, Ooh, Jade Vance
had been in Germany and she blamed the Holocaust on
free speech. This woman, this woman is so dumb that
she doesn't realize that under the reign of Adolph Hitler.
(50:00):
If you if you ever spoke your mind about anything
that he disagreed with, you'd either be dead, apprehended, tortured
a lot of things. So to say that there was,
it's like he had to educate her. There was no
free speech in Germany under Hitler. Well there was for
him and his minions, but not for anybody else. So uh,
(50:24):
put her, put her, Put Margaret Brennan into a time machine,
send her back to Germany in nineteen thirty nine, and
have her hold up a sign written in German Adolf
Hitler sucks, and watch what happens to her.
Speaker 7 (50:36):
All right, Uh, moving right along, I'm germanly. This is
standing ground.
Speaker 6 (50:40):
This is Mojo five, our radio special Sunday edition here
March second, twenty twenty five.
Speaker 7 (50:44):
All right, last.
Speaker 6 (50:45):
Week on Saturday Night Live. Uh, this is the kind
this is the kind of thing that I It disturbs
me because it is mean and it's stereotypical. But at
the same time, it's kind of like the Hillary Clinton
deplorable thing. Just keep doing it, Keep keep up bashing
(51:09):
Trump supporters, keep doing it, keep insulting us, keep keep
the more you the more you do it, the more
you harm yourself, you get hoisted by your own batard.
Speaker 3 (51:19):
Right.
Speaker 6 (51:20):
Well, anyway, you guys might have seen this, you might
have didn't.
Speaker 7 (51:25):
But Tom Hanks, Tom Hanks.
Speaker 6 (51:29):
Tom Hanks went on Saturday Night Live and did something,
in my opinion for him, was really stupid. But at
the same time, I'm glad he did it in a way.
That boy needs to be careful because there's some discussion
that he may be on.
Speaker 7 (51:50):
The Epstein list.
Speaker 12 (51:51):
Here's my impression of Tom Hanks finding out that he
was on Epstein's flight log.
Speaker 32 (52:00):
O.
Speaker 6 (52:03):
No, they have a record of my wood.
Speaker 29 (52:13):
It's an awful lot you can tell about a person,
buy thy shoes, where they go, where.
Speaker 13 (52:18):
They be in.
Speaker 32 (52:25):
Oh well, uh stupid, it is stupid. Does Tom Hanks
was on Saturday Night Live and he dressed up as
this stereotypical trumps up yeah, Trump supporter with kind of
(52:46):
a Levi's shirt and a Maga.
Speaker 7 (52:49):
Hat, and he just I mean it was it was.
Speaker 6 (52:54):
It was obvious that he was just snl was throwing
Trumpers under the bus. It was clear wait wait here,
it is his force come and once again listen to
what he's doing. Now you also have to know because
this it's visual too. The host of the Jeopardy whatever
they were doing Jeopardy, Uh, he's black. So when he
(53:19):
goes over to shake Tom Hanks's hand, Tom Hanks backs
off like, oh, black person, black person.
Speaker 7 (53:27):
It's sick, but it was great. Here you go, Oh well.
Speaker 3 (53:35):
Thank you.
Speaker 25 (53:35):
Hey.
Speaker 3 (53:36):
Speaking of church, can I say something.
Speaker 13 (53:38):
If more folks weren't to church, we wouldn't be in
this mess we're in now.
Speaker 18 (53:44):
You know what.
Speaker 3 (53:44):
I agree with what you're doing.
Speaker 7 (53:45):
I'd like to shake your hand, sir.
Speaker 3 (53:46):
Here we go.
Speaker 7 (53:47):
So he walks over the bay. Oh no, no, just
a handsh.
Speaker 5 (53:52):
You.
Speaker 9 (53:52):
Welcome to back every time.
Speaker 3 (53:55):
Thank you my mind by brother. Now, maybe I'll.
Speaker 18 (53:58):
Start a show for you to and we'll call it
what Jeopardy.
Speaker 10 (54:02):
No, we don't need it.
Speaker 24 (54:04):
We don't need it.
Speaker 7 (54:05):
Ah, the old hedonistic calculus.
Speaker 6 (54:08):
It might have been fun for him, and it might
have been fun for Trump aids, but in the long
run that sort of thing has been shown the pedigree right,
it doesn't work. So in essence, it was not a
very smart thing to do on Tom hanks part.
Speaker 13 (54:25):
Anyway, stupid does.
Speaker 7 (54:27):
Sir, that's right, and also de boy.
Speaker 6 (54:31):
If Tom Hanks, if your name Tom is on the
Epstein list is going down there on the Lolita Express
to have sex with underage girls. When your name appears
on that list, this is what you're gonna hear exactly. Oh,
by the way, just an amendment to my previous statement,
it was not a smart thing for Tom Hanks or
(54:54):
for NBC to do, I mean politically, it just it
just it's the it's the kind of thing that is.
This is why they're going to continue to lose by
behaving like this. And by the way, the bit itself
was not.
Speaker 7 (55:10):
That really funny. I didn't think it was that that
funny at all. Putting all that other stuff aside.
Speaker 6 (55:15):
Okay, quickly, before we go to break, have you guys
heard this story about the Trump mugshot outside the Oval Office.
Speaker 33 (55:23):
We want to continue on with some other related news
with President Trump getting a lot of buzz right now,
and it's b because of a photo that is inside
the White House, really close to the Oval Office. Do
want to show you this look right now? Yes, it
is the iconic mug shot of Donald Trump. Look at
(55:45):
that as we blow it up a little bit bigger.
Look at this hanging right outside of the Oval Office,
and you can say yes, the White House definitely embracing
the mug shot.
Speaker 6 (55:58):
The way the photo has been positioned, is anyone walking
into the Oval Office and unless they just close their eyes,
they're gonna see the picture.
Speaker 7 (56:10):
They're gonna see it.
Speaker 6 (56:12):
So yeah, there will there are times, maybe it's already happened,
where Chuck Schumer has to come into the Oval Office
and meet with Donald Trump and he's gonna see that
photo and say, yeah, nice, try, nice, try.
Speaker 7 (56:24):
Look there's my mug shot. Now you come in and
look where I'm sitting. Love it.
Speaker 6 (56:28):
It's beautiful, all right, I'm germanly. This is standing ground.
This is Mojo Fiber Radio quick break right back.
Speaker 34 (56:33):
The Oval Office has sure been a whirlwind of activity
for the last three weeks as world leaders file through
for meetings with President Trump. It's an impressive setting. The
walls adorned with dignified portraits of our nation's great presidents.
Now right alongside them, there's a portrait of a different sort.
Is that Trump's mug shot?
Speaker 1 (56:54):
Yep?
Speaker 34 (56:55):
He has proudly hung his mug shot from the front
page of the New York Post in a old frame
right outside the Oval Office.
Speaker 35 (57:18):
I've seen your picture. Your name is lads of love it.
This is your big day. It's lacks of dream so for.
Speaker 7 (57:38):
I know I done. I love it day. I like
your big shot.
Speaker 1 (57:46):
At Donny, you're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy.
Speaker 36 (58:08):
Lady, have you been crying like a bitch over elon musk?
Do you find yourself sobbing at the thought of your
taxpayer funded transgender basket weaving club losing its funding. You
may be suffering from a common condition known as libtardism
induced meltdown, but don't worry. There's help introducing Grow a Pair,
the revolutionary prescription solution designed to help you accept reality.
(58:31):
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(58:51):
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Speaker 20 (59:01):
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Speaker 36 (59:08):
Ask your doctor if grow a Pair is right for you,
because adulting is hard, but it doesn't have to be.
Speaker 1 (59:14):
You're listening to Standing Ground with Jeremy Lahy, I may be.
Speaker 13 (59:18):
So blood who gives a shit?
Speaker 18 (59:54):
I the Lonely, the.
Speaker 15 (01:00:00):
Boloney has a second Minx and Aye.
Speaker 35 (01:00:05):
I love and if you love.
Speaker 18 (01:00:08):
Me loveing, Cavascamaya have a wayless theology.
Speaker 7 (01:00:16):
And Oscar Meyer the first name in Bologna.
Speaker 6 (01:00:20):
I'm now you're wondering, uh, what the hell is with that?
That's something interesting to come back with, right, Well, you know,
this show, depending on the mood I'm in, depends on
the type of show I do and the topics I
pick or mine whatever. I admit, my show is just
basically a crock pot. It is mainly politics, current events, whatever.
(01:00:43):
But every so often something comes in deep into my
mind or something that I see or read that makes
me think about something. Well, so today, you know, we
started with something kind of fun and humorous, and there's
no reason why we can't end with one. I play
that commercial that is the infamous Oscar Meyer commercial nineteen
(01:01:07):
seventy three. That little boy now is in his sixties,
and it's one of those everybody knows that commercial, and
there's others. Right, you could do a whole bunch of them.
You're soaking in it, Paul Malive, you could do whatever.
Speaker 3 (01:01:24):
Well.
Speaker 6 (01:01:25):
To me, a lot of these commercials, I'd say that
they're like historical gems, but they are what's known as
natural history, right. I mean, I know it sounds strange,
but that little fishing pole that that kid is that
I think that.
Speaker 7 (01:01:44):
Commercial still runs. I think it does. That fishing pole
he has should be in the Smithsonian.
Speaker 6 (01:01:50):
I mean, you think I'm crazy, but in the Museum
of Natural History. Things that are kind of permanently embedded
into our Museum of recollections as something that is artistic.
Speaker 7 (01:02:02):
It's marketing, but it's art.
Speaker 6 (01:02:04):
No one, I mean, in my generation anyway, no one
forgets that little kid sitting at the end of the dock.
Speaker 7 (01:02:10):
But the book for Oscar Meyer, it's a classic.
Speaker 6 (01:02:12):
Well, there's one that the one that flew under the radar,
that to me is iconic and I have it here.
Speaker 7 (01:02:19):
Someone sent it to me and I got I gotta
give you the vista.
Speaker 6 (01:02:24):
I gotta tell you that because it's the audio you're
gonna get, but I gotta give you the idea.
Speaker 7 (01:02:29):
Okay.
Speaker 6 (01:02:29):
So the commercial is for this. This aired around the
mid to late nineteen eighties, maybe even ninety well I
shouldn't say it, probably about eighty seven eighty eight, because
I remember like walking by people and we would quote
this commercial back and forth.
Speaker 7 (01:02:46):
And what it is.
Speaker 6 (01:02:47):
It's a commercial for for a you know, an album
of all songs from the sixties and the seventies, right,
and it's the two records and you can get the
CD and the cassettes and it's all the great songs
put together. You've seen these, right, like KTEL presents. Well
(01:03:08):
this was called Freedom Rock. I'm sorry, Maury cracking up.
And the commercial is two guys and they're sitting in
front of a camper, small little camper, and I think
there's like a bong sitting next to the to the camper.
And then they're both sitting in these lawn chairs and
(01:03:29):
you can see like their laundry hanging off the back.
You know, they're living the life of the nomadic. It's
it's you know, they look like they look like they
could be Charles Manson Followers or something right. And the
opening to the commercial is opening line is what became
this iconic thing?
Speaker 7 (01:03:49):
To me?
Speaker 6 (01:03:49):
There needs to be a display of this commercial of
these guys in the Smithsonian.
Speaker 7 (01:03:54):
So let's have a little fun. Listen to this. I
think it's great. All right, here we go.
Speaker 16 (01:04:03):
Hey man, is that Freedom Rock?
Speaker 20 (01:04:04):
Come? Man?
Speaker 7 (01:04:05):
Will turn it up?
Speaker 3 (01:04:10):
Turn it up.
Speaker 7 (01:04:12):
Let's see how many mans you're here? Hey man, man.
Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
Glad.
Speaker 33 (01:04:20):
Turn it down?
Speaker 19 (01:04:21):
Man, hey man? Remember the good old damn you know,
war protagoning to jail man.
Speaker 7 (01:04:27):
You's on this new album called Freedom Rock.
Speaker 1 (01:04:29):
It's got all those great songs we used to group.
Speaker 3 (01:04:31):
To their way there. Just listen.
Speaker 7 (01:04:34):
Wow, good god, Joe.
Speaker 3 (01:04:39):
Freedom Rock has it all?
Speaker 22 (01:04:40):
Man?
Speaker 33 (01:04:41):
Thot original rock hits by the original Aryan on four records,
three concents or two TVs.
Speaker 13 (01:04:46):
Here's more.
Speaker 8 (01:04:49):
With black carcass You see a man had.
Speaker 3 (01:04:55):
Man.
Speaker 7 (01:04:56):
You should get free of this too.
Speaker 4 (01:04:57):
Four records were three cassents are.
Speaker 8 (01:04:59):
Only nineteen ninety five US only twenty four.
Speaker 3 (01:05:03):
Here's how to.
Speaker 17 (01:05:04):
Order credit card?
Speaker 7 (01:05:06):
Yea, hey man, is that Freedom Rock?
Speaker 13 (01:05:10):
Come out?
Speaker 6 (01:05:10):
Who will turn it up? Okay, there you have it
and the show on a little yuck yuck as they say.
Right anyway, I'm German Lee, this is standing ground, this
is Mojo fiber WeDo. Don't forget follow me on Twitter
at lahy Jeremy at lazy Jeremy. That's l e A
h y Jeremy j E r E M y hit
(01:05:32):
notifications and you'll be notified when in whenever my show drops. Okay,
Now keep in mind today being Sunday, with all the
talk shows coming on, right, it is going to be
wall to wall the Oval Office meltdown. Uh, not the
White House. They're calling it the fight House, and it
(01:05:55):
is this one story of this fight in the White House.
Speaker 7 (01:05:58):
Now I did it in the billboard.
Speaker 6 (01:06:00):
I can wall it in the first break anyway because
it was worth mentioning. But what we saw is what
we saw, and that was it.
Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Uh.
Speaker 6 (01:06:08):
But but the media is going to take the ball,
of course, and they're going to run with it. So
enjoy all right till next time. I'm Germany.
Speaker 3 (01:06:14):
So long you have to be thankful you don't have
the cars.
Speaker 19 (01:06:18):
You're buried there, your people that die. Tell you you're
running low on soldiers. Listen, you're running slow on soldiers.
It would be a damn goodness. And then then you
tell us I don't want to cease fire. I don't
want to cease fire. I want to go and I
wanted this. Look if you could get a ceasefire right
now and tell you take it so the bullet stopped
(01:06:39):
flying and your ment stuff courting kills.
Speaker 10 (01:06:41):
Course, we want to stow the war.
Speaker 3 (01:06:42):
But they're saying you don't want to see.
Speaker 22 (01:06:43):
I said to you, I want to see, because you
get a ceasefire faster than any great in this color
of people.
Speaker 10 (01:06:49):
Of all, it's just file what they think.
Speaker 3 (01:06:51):
There wasn't That wasn't with me.
Speaker 23 (01:06:54):
That was with a guy named Biden, who was not
a smart person, but that was your That was with
the excuse me.
Speaker 19 (01:07:01):
That was with Obama, who gave you sheets, and I
gave you javelins. I gave you the javelins to take
out all those tanks.
Speaker 3 (01:07:09):
Obama gave you sheets.
Speaker 19 (01:07:11):
In fact, the statement is Obama gave sheets and Trump
gave javelins. You gotta be more thankful, because let me
tell you, you don't have.
Speaker 3 (01:07:20):
The cards with us. You have the cards.
Speaker 35 (01:07:27):
No when the fall down, no when to walk away,
and no when to run Juniff, count your whole money
when you're sitting at the table.
Speaker 18 (01:07:40):
There'll be time enough to count when the deeds time
you got no, and the whole, When the whole no,
when to fall down, no, when to walk away, and
no when to run?
Speaker 7 (01:07:56):
Junif counted your own money when you.
Speaker 18 (01:08:00):
Sitting at the table, there will be time enough coming
when the deal is.
Speaker 13 (01:08:07):
You got no, when the holder, no, when.
Speaker 17 (01:08:12):
To holder, No, when to walk away?
Speaker 10 (01:08:16):
No, when to running?
Speaker 17 (01:08:18):
Junior, count you.
Speaker 3 (01:08:21):
When you're sitting at the table.
Speaker 10 (01:08:24):
There will be time enough counting when the deals.
Speaker 1 (01:08:32):
Ending ground has been a production of Lakey media.
Speaker 15 (01:08:36):
Once your look at that?
Speaker 7 (01:08:39):
What's you look at that?