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October 14, 2025 31 mins

A ceasefire reads clean on paper—until you watch what fills the streets after the soldiers leave. We dig into the uneasy trade at the heart of the latest Gaza deal: hostages brought home, thousands of prisoners released, and a promise that Hamas will police “internal security.” Can any agreement survive when executions surface on video and disarmament is already a sticking point? We unpack the power vacuum created by the IDF withdrawal, the rush of rival factions to stake control, and the real‑world incentives that make or break fragile peace.

From there, we turn toward the political theater around who gets credit and who gets blamed. You’ll hear a sharp take on Biden, Trump, and the choreography of public praise, plus a blunt assessment of how AI‑driven search shapes perceptions of “new wars,” counterterror operations, and accountability. If you’ve ever felt gaslit by headlines that redefine terms mid‑conversation, this segment will resonate. We also wade into NYC politics, anti‑Semitic rhetoric dressed up as activism, and the risky fantasy of policing without credible deterrence.

To end, we connect something personal: the eerie children’s media many Gen Xers grew up with—The Hobbit’s nightmare spiders, Rikki‑Tikki‑Tavi’s cobra duels—and how those stories quietly trained our sense of threat, courage, and consequence. It’s not just nostalgia; it’s a lens on how narratives hardwire our instincts about danger and justice. Come for the geopolitics, stay for the cultural x‑ray, and leave with a clearer view of how power, stories, and security collide.

If this conversation challenged your thinking, tap follow, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review so more curious listeners can find the show.

👉 Timestamps:
00:00 Intro Rant
02:15 Trump’s “Deal with the Devil”
15:40 70’s Cartoons That F*cked Us Up
30:10 Why Gen X Still Doesn’t Care

#trump #peacedeal #genx

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
SPEAKER_04 (00:01):
What you just said is one of the most insanely
idiotic things I've ever heard.
At no point in your rambling,incoherent response were you
even close to anything thatcould be considered a rational
file.
Everyone in this room is nowdumb for some.

SPEAKER_03 (00:30):
I told you what I'm doing.
I'm thinking five.
If I want to spend my words,five minutes and go on to this
point.

SPEAKER_04 (00:46):
Do you understand the words that are coming out of
my mouth?

SPEAKER_03 (00:52):
You want to find a fruit.

SPEAKER_01 (01:07):
Supporting God for people themselves, but we don't
want to find anything having todo with bloodshed, hate grid, or
terror, as has happened in thepast.

SPEAKER_00 (01:18):
For the same reason, we're also agreed that Gaza's
reconstruction requires that itbe demilitarized and that a new
honest civilian police forcemust be allowed to create a safe
condition for the people inGaza.
As I said earlier, I intend tobe a partner in securing a
better future.
We're going to be working,you're going to be working with

(01:39):
the United States, and we'regoing to make sure that the
Middle East is going to be asafe and secure place.

SPEAKER_02 (01:45):
Oh, it's it's big aspirations and it's big dreams.
This is Tim.
This is Get Off My Lawn.
The Mad Ramblings of a Gen Xer.
Uh, want to talk about this thispeace in the Middle East, this
deal with the devil.
And can you really really trustHamas?
Can you really trust the peoplein Gaza?

(02:06):
Technically, can you reallytrust the Palestinians?
That's going to be the bigquestion.
One of the best things that cameout the last couple days was the
release or the patriation of the20 remaining Israeli hostages
that were taken over two yearsago, that were held in captivity

(02:26):
over two years ago, that wereheld in tunnels, who had not
seen the daylight, who weretortured daily for two years by
Hamas.
And I always think of thesesympathizers that you see on the
streets.
You remember people tearing downposters.
You remember people stillchanting from the river to the

(02:48):
sea, not knowing exactly whatthe fuck they're even chanting
about.
You are dealing with people withhumanity that in my mind are so
inhumane they don't deservehumanity.
But to bring peace into theregion, Trump and his team
secured this deal with Hamas,secured this deal with Israel.

(03:10):
Hopefully, Hamas will abide bythe rules and the 19 remaining
points of this deal.
But I've already I already havemy concerns.
Evidently, the last couple days,Hamas has carried out public
executions.
I shouldn't even say last coupledays.

(03:48):
And there is video coming outshowing men badly beaten,
kneeling in front of thestreets, and each shot in the
back of the head by Hamas gunmenas the crowd cheered.
These were people that uh thatthe terrorist group, because
Hamas is still a terroristgroup, were saying and claiming

(04:09):
these were criminalcollaborators with Israel.
Well, that's that's that's notthat sounds like a peaceful
solution.
Among the people that weremurdered were basically
responsible for recruitingagents to a rival non-Hamas
aligned militant group, whichthe Israelis said, which

(04:31):
Israelis have come out and said,and they're like I said, this is
all following the withdrawal ofthe IDF.
And they're quick, and there'sthere's rumors and speculation
that Hamas is quickly looking toreassert its control over Gaza,
targeting the clans or thefamily-based groups, armed
militant groups that kind ofgained strength and popped up

(04:53):
during this conflict or war,because that's what it is, it's
a war.
And this is what's gonna happen.
You are you have with thiswithdrawal, and I don't I do not
agree with the withdrawal, and Iunderstand why, why you did it.
You wanted to bring home thehostages, you wanted to try to
bring peace to the region, butas soon as you withdraw the the

(05:14):
the Israeli troops, the IDF,there is gonna be a power
struggle.
There are there are clans uhwithin this this this region
that are now going to befighting for power, fighting
control, fighting for controlover Gaza.
There are what they're referringto as massacres in the streets

(05:35):
by Hamas.
Now, Trump came out andsuggested that he had given
Hamas approval to manageinternal security in Gaza as it
sees fit, as part of the peacedeal to return the remaining
living hostages to Israel.
It's one of those things.
Can can you truly make a dealwith the devil?

(05:58):
The answer is no, because thedevil's always gonna lie.
He's always going to deceiveyou.
He is always going to think thatyou have control when there is
no control.
The only way to to end what thethis conflict that that that was
started by Hamas, by thePalestinians, is total

(06:21):
annihilation.
Is to maintain complete control.
Does anyone really think thatHamas is gonna lay down their
arms as part of this peaceagreement and go away
peacefully?
No.
It's not gonna happen.
And and I'm not sitting theretelling you that this is not a

(06:42):
good thing.
I'm not sitting there andtelling you this is not a great
thing.
If there is any opportunity forpeace, that this this should,
you know, this should happen.
But there's also other rumorsand speculation that Hamas has
deployed 7,000 troops to cleanseGaza.

(07:04):
And again, like I said, this isall because we're creating uh
it's it's like Vietnam.
We are creating a power vacuum.
This this is a recipe for civilwar.
And it doesn't matter and unlessyou have some co total control
by some occupying force.

(07:25):
It doesn't have to be the IDF,it could be a it could be a
multi-coalition you know force,it doesn't have to be NATO, but
it could be a multi-coalitionforce.
But you have these groups.
Let's have no bones about this.
During the the war in Gaza, thisrecent war in Gaza, even

(07:50):
beforehand, you had people gointo Gaza and speak to the
Palestinians about the Israelis,about everything else.
And I believe it was somethingcrazy, like 90% of the people
that they spoke with all saidthat the Israelis deserve to die
and they should be wiped off theplanet.
These are the people that we areclaiming humanitarian aid to.

(08:12):
These are the people that we arelooking to restore order in
Gaza.
As Hamas is trying to claim andrestore its own order in Gaza.
You cannot deal with this.
Now, phase two of the peace dealcalls for the disarmament of
Hamas.
But so far, the terrorist group,they have rejected the idea,

(08:34):
seeking further talks to thenext step.
Well, that sounds that soundspromising.
And I understand why Israelreleased 2,000 Palestinian
prisoners, prisoners, includingthose charged and convicted of

(08:56):
murder and terrorism.
That was part of the HostageExchange.
I and I understand that.
I get it.
It seems like a large number togive up for 20 people, but you
you have people, like I said,that were violently removed from
their homes.
You have one gentleman who camewho just came back after the two

(09:18):
years of being held hostage, andthe only thing he spoke about
that kept him going was seeinghis wife and his young daughter.
Only to find out when hereturned that Hamas murdered his
wife and daughter in the bunkeras he was taken captive.
There is something very wrongwith that.

(09:42):
I am I am not one of these thesethese people that that that is a
warmonger.
I'm not one of these people thatthat you say you know that think
that that you can't achievepeace, but sometimes you have to
achieve peace through strength,and sometimes you have to
eradicate something.
It's it's like termites.

(10:04):
You don't leave a termite, youdon't decide that you're gonna
kill all the termites in yourhouse, but two because you feel
bad for the termites.
No, you eradicate all thetermites, and you hear the
stories of the hostages whorecruit who basically recount
brutal daily beatings,starvations, not being able to
shower, not being able to seethe sun, digging their own

(10:25):
graves, having understanding ifthe IDF is anywhere near their
location that Hamas soldiers aretold to murder the hostages
instead of allowing them toreturn.
And then, like one gentleman wassaying, he did the treatment
even grew harsher once IDFresumed ground operations in

(10:48):
March.
It's it's crazy to think aboutthis.
They had times where they wereforced to cook food for their
captors and not have anything toeat themselves.
It's it's it's disgusting beyondbelief what these people went

(11:11):
through.
And to think that we exchangedor the Israelis exchanged 2,000
convicted criminals.
Convicted criminals.
These are some people that wereconvicted of terroristic acts
within Israel, tried andconvicted, and we have to return
them so we can make a deal withthe devil.

(11:34):
I I hope this goes well.
I hope this goes as planned.
But I I just I just don't seeit.
And I love Joe Biden.
You gotta you gotta you gottalove Sleepy Joe.
He gives rare praise to Trumpfor the peace deal, but then he
kind of says, Well, blinking andmyself, we laid the groundwork

(11:56):
for all this.
This is this is kind of harddoing.
Oh dear lord.
We have our own power vacuumhere.
You have the Zolhan running formayor in New York.
And I know Mandami isn't is notthe Zolhan, but I call him the
Zolhan, which makes it evenfunnier because if you ever saw

(12:18):
the movie with the Zolhan withAdam Sandler, he he is a he is a
Israeli counterterrorist agent.
But the Zolhan finally makes afinally makes a comment as he is
losing steam in his Mariolarace.
I can't even talk today.
His race for mayor in New York.

(12:38):
He calls for the end ofoccupation occupation and
apartheid as he finally issues astatement in reference to the
Gaza Israeli ceasefire deal.
This guy's a fucking winner.
This guy, this guy in York is sofar up his own ass, it's not
even funny.
Because he he's never worked aday in his life.

(12:59):
He he comes from a wealthyfamily.
He had this wedding, thismillion-dollar wedding in
another country, but he is forthe little people.
He is for socialism.
He's been a vocal critic ofIsrael of Israel forever.
He he to me, he's anti-Semitic.

(13:26):
He is a guy that that just justdoesn't get it.
And if the people in in New Yorkelect this moron, you are gonna
get what you elected.
You are gonna get a socialist,you're gonna get someone that's
gonna tax the rich, taxcorporations, and basically
force companies out of New York.

(13:49):
He is going to not disband thepolice, but he's gonna he's
gonna have policing officersthat, you know, don't carry
guns, but they're gonna go outthere and talk to people.
That really works well withcriminals.
This is the guy that you have.
This is the guy that denied theHolocaust.
This is a guy that is is is likeI said, he he he's anti-Semitic.

(14:10):
Let's let's just be honest aboutit.
He's made so many anti-Semiticcomments, it's not even funny.
But that's alright, though.
That's okay.
Because he just he supports thePalestinians, he supports
Palestine.
There is no Palestine! For thelove of fucking God, can people

(14:31):
remember that?
There is no Palestine! Oh, theZolhan.
I found it funny the other day.
I I was uh I was Googling stuff,and AI always AI always makes me

(14:51):
laugh because you you look at itand you're like, yeah, this is
the most liberal shit that I'veever seen.
Jokingly, because of everythinggoing on, I typed in and went to
uh went to the open AI mode onGoogle and typed in wars under
the Biden administration.
And then I also typed in warstarted under the Biden

(15:13):
administration.
And I love it because they talkabout how the when you type it
in for Biden, you they talkabout how there is um there is a
broader term to be used, and thethe the term war should should
uh should be expanded becausewhile there were multiple

(15:37):
conflicts under the Bidenadministration, none could be
directly attributed to Joe Bidenhimself or the Biden
administration himself.
Uh and I love it though becauseyou have to type, you have to go
a little bit more in depth anddetailed.
Because when you type it in,it's almost like, well, there
wasn't there was nothing thatyou know started under Joe

(15:58):
Biden.
And then you finally get it andyou finally type it in the right
way.
And it says, since the beginningof the Biden administration, the
United States has withdrawn fromAfghanistan.
Now, the the question is newwars started under the Biden
administration.
He successfully navigated warsin Ukraine and Gaza and
conducted counterterroristoperations in other countries.

(16:25):
That's not the question I had.
The question I had is what arethe new wars that were started
under the Biden administration?
And again, I typed it in, youknow, new war started, and we're
gonna type it in again under theBiden administration.
And I'm hoping this is gonnachange the metrics or change the
thought process because it'ssilly.

(16:48):
It's kind of stupid.
Because you type in Trump, yougotta wait and see what happens.
Because it it goes for it goes awhole different direction.
Because then they start talkingabout, you know, if you type
that in, they says, uh they'llsay, uh, here are the top U.S.
counterterrorism operationsunder Joe Biden.

(17:09):
No, that's that's not that's notwhat I typed in.
I typed in new wars startedunder the Biden.
We're gonna type it in again.
Uh come on, come on, open AI.
That's why you gotta love Googleunder the Biden administration.
So you you start waiting, itgoes through it's thinking, it's
kicking, and it says, No, I lovethis one.

(17:29):
This is the best one.
You type it in, you type in newwar started under the Biden
administration.
While no major uh this nowagain, this is reading directly
from Google itself.
And I'm gonna rephrase thatagain.
This isn't under Google, this isthe AI mode under Google.
While no major new wars wereinitiated by the U.S.

(17:50):
under the Biden administration,it has significant it has
provided significant militarysupport to nations embroiled in
conflicts.
The primary conflicts thatdefined the period are the
Russian invasion of Ukraine.
I think that's a war.
And then I love this one theIsraeli Hamas war.
But don't worry, there are therewere new there were no new wars

(18:10):
initiated by Joe Biden or theadministration of the United
States.
The administration alsoconducted airstrikes against
Iran-backed groups and oversawthe final withdrawal of U.S.
troops from Afghanistan.
Now, of course, this is nothingthat I asked for.
But then they get into it andthey talk about the the invasion
of Ukraine, which started in2022.

(18:31):
They talk about the IsraeliHamas war, and the only other
thing they talk about is the endof the war in Afghanistan, then
everything else, and there'slike 17 other things that have
gone on under the Bidenadministration, they list those
as counter-terrorist operations.
Now you type in new warsstarted.

(18:51):
I love open AI under Trumpbecause it's just so fucking
stupid.
Type in New Wars started underTrump, and again, it distinct
goes for like, you know, and Ilove it because the first thing
it starts with, the first thingit starts is although former
president and current presidentTrump often asserts that he's
avoided starting new wars, hisadministration overtook

(19:12):
significant military actions andproceeded, uh presided over
periods of heightened conflict.
These occur in the context ofgoing conflict and the rising
particular tensions in theMiddle East and East Asia.
Where do you think that camefrom?
It came from the previousadministration, it came from the
Biden administration.

(19:36):
It literally and this one andthis goes in talking about the
deployments in Yemen.
This talks about the North Koreatensions.
This this talks aboutAl-Shabaab.
This talks about Afghan, the warin Afghanistan.
This this goes into ISIS countercamp, excuse me, ISIS
counter-campaign terrorism.
This goes into the right Iran,Iraq, this literally goes into

(19:59):
everything.
This is why open AI is full ofshit.
This is what, and I should sayAI mode on Google is full of
shit.
We've known there's this liberalgap, this liberal bias in it.
We we understand that.
We get that.
We're not stupid.
But this is how you teachchildren.

(20:20):
I I go back and I think aboutit.
There were there was a uh therewas encyclopedias uh that were
put out um years ago that werewrong.
That the data that they thatthat that they just made up.
I mean, truly, they they theyjust made up information.
Um and and I can't remember thename of the book, but uh there

(20:44):
part of it also was in the therewas new multiple areas in the
cyclo Encyclopedia Britannica umthat they just they just got
shit wrong.
And they didn't and they didn'teven they they didn't even hide
it.
They they literally tried, youknow, they literally just made
shit up.
Now, the Encyclopedia Britannicaand the other encyclopedias is

(21:04):
how we learned in the 70s andthe 80s.
You know, the encyclopediaBritannica has been around for
260 something years, but this ishow we learned.
This was the information we got,and they just made shit up.
So to me, open AI is just doingthe same fucking thing, but
slightly, not slightly, butreally slanted to the left.

(21:32):
Halloween's coming up.
I love Halloween, Halloween andthe house of spooks.
And actually, it was the worldbook encyclopedia set that was
one of the ones that was one ofthe worst ones that was wrong.
Um, but I was talking about somefriends because you know, we
grew up in the late 70s and inthe 80s, and it was just

(21:52):
different then.
There was some scary shit thatwe were allowed to watch on
television, and I'm talkingmidday television.
You know, I'm talking abouttelevision like in the middle of
the afternoon on a Saturday thatyou would probably never want
your children to watch today.

(22:13):
And and one of the things that Ithat I looked at was the um was
the TV movie The Hobbit.
Now this this was a uh this waswas a um what was it, Bass and
Rankins?
It was the same, yeah, Bass andRankins.
It's the same guy, and this wasfrom 1977.
These are the same guys thatproduced all the Christmas
shows.
These are the same guys thatbrought you Rudolph, these are

(22:34):
the guys that brought you, youknow, the abominable snowman,
which makes a lot of sense.
These are the guys that broughtyou, you know, the winter
warlock, all that fun, all thatfun shit.
And of course, this is the storyof Bilbo Baggins living in a
hobbit hole, goes off toGandalf, and they and they
they've revewn it ad nauseumwith Peter Jackson over the last
couple years, or more than thelast couple of years, last like

(22:57):
someone's like 10, 15 years.
And of course, it's about thehobbit that goes on the great
adventure, and it's a cartoon,but it's the freakiest fucking
cartoon you will ever watch.
And I thought about this.
This is something that we got tosit through as kids.
It was the greatest adventure.
That's what we got to sitthrough.

(23:19):
And we literally watch giantspiders cocoon, his fellow, the
fellow dwarves, the dwarf king,and and poison them and suck the
blood out of them, and thenattack and kill the spiders.
You you got the damn thing withmy bushes.
That is one of the scariestthings I've ever seen.

(23:39):
You got smog the dragon, whichthe guy kills, and you literally
see the arrow go through intothe dragon and kill him.
You have the multiple waragainst all the fighting
factions.
And if you watch it and you takea look at it, you think to
yourself, this is some fucked upshit.
The dragon kills everyone inLake Town.

(24:00):
And this was something that as anine-year-old or a 10-year-old
or an eight-year-old, you werewatching on a Saturday afternoon
or a Tuesday afternoon.
There was no parentalsupervision on this as the
goblins rode in on the wargs.
It was one of the freakiestthings you had ever freaking

(24:20):
seen in your life.
But it was normal.
I still I I I tell the storythat uh I'm not afraid of a lot
of things in this world.
One of the things I'm afraid ofare spiders, and one of the
reasons why I'm afraid ofspiders is because of the
hobbit, the 1977 Hobbit, becauseof the big spider and the

(24:42):
hobbit, which Bilbo Bagginskills, and you get to watch.
Um, so that that spider, Iwatched it as a kid when I was
like seven or eight, used tofucking freak me out.
So I I moved to Miami from NewYork, and you know, I don't I
don't know anything about thesebig ass bugs they have in
Florida.

(25:03):
So they have something called abanana tree spider, and this
banana tree spider is fuckinghuge, it's like 12 feet long.
Well, probably not 12 feet long,maybe like two feet, maybe a
foot and a half, I don't know.
But we're gonna say it's 12 feetfucking long.
And I remember moving in to atownhouse and um opening up the

(25:24):
pantry, and I'm filling up thepantry, and it's a very tall
pantry, and I look up, andthere's this big ass spider
staring at me.
There is the spider from thehobbit staring at me, ready to
jump and cocoon me and poisonme.
So, what do I do, being from NewYork?

(25:46):
I go grab a gun.
Because you know what?
I evidently I have to this thisis what you do, and this is what
you do in Florida, because youknow you're not in Florida.
Florida, of course, is likeTexas.
You grab your gun, I'm gonnashoot the spider.
Then I thought better of itbecause I was like, well, I
don't really want to put a holein my new roof.
So I so I I called uh I they hada maintenance, they had an
on-site maintenance, so I calledthe on-site maintenance and had
them get the spider.
But I've been I was sotraumatized by the hobbit that I

(26:11):
couldn't even kill a spider inmy new townhome.
That's how fucked up this shit.
This is how fucked up this shitis.
Then I think a Ricky Tiki Tavvy.
Ricky Tiki Tavvy is about amongoose.
And it it started, it was abook, um, of course, and they um

(26:35):
they they made it into a it wasa short, it was part of a short
story collection, I believe, bythe author of the jungle book.
Um show so they they of coursehad to make it into a film.
Now, this again, something thatwas done shockingly in 1975.
And it's basically about thisfamily that goes and lives, I
forget where they live, they golive in Africa or something, and

(26:56):
and they befriend a mongoose.
They save a mongoose from dryfrom drowning, and uh the
mongoose becomes a friend andprotector for the young child,
the young boy.
And they live in this gardenwhere there's all these snakes
and Ricky Tikky Tabby killskills the uh this one little
poisonous snake to save the boy.

(27:18):
But there's these two cobrasthat live in the garden, Nag and
Nagaina.
Well, Naga Nagaina are theycontrol everything, they're
badasses.
But so but they don't like thefamily being where they are,
they don't like the familyliving in this shit.
So they want to get rid of thefamily.
And they also don't like themongoose around because they

(27:40):
have they have baby eggs.
Of course, mongooses go afterbaby eggs, cobra eggs, and
destroy them.
Teddy was the kid's name.
I had to think about it.
Or no, was it Teddy?

unknown (27:49):
Teddy.

SPEAKER_02 (27:50):
Uh was it Teddy?
Was the kid's name?
Or was it John?
I don't I don't remember.
I don't I don't remember.
Oh no, it is Teddy.
Yeah, Teddy, Teddy, Teddy isTeddy is the kid.
So what happens is the the thecobras, because they can talk
because it's a cartoon, decidethat they're gonna get rid of
the family.

(28:10):
So Nog decides that he is gonnawait in the bathroom at night.
He sneaks in, he's gonna wait inthe bathroom at night, and he's
gonna attack the family as theygo into the bathroom.
He's gonna he's gonna attack thefamily on the shitter.
So what happens?
Ricky Tiki Tabby Man, he hearsthis plan, he's fucking waiting.
He's waiting for Nog.

(28:32):
So Nog comes in, he sits there.
Now, anything you know anythingabout mongooses and no mongooses
always attack the back of thecobra so they can break the
cobra's, I don't know, so theycan kill the cobra that way.
So what happens is Ricky, Ricky,and we're gonna call him Ricky,
jumps up, gets gets on Nog'sback.
You know, he can't kill him.
The the dad comes in and shootshim with the shotgun.

(28:55):
Nog Nog.
So, of course, kills Nog andthey throw it over the fence
because that's what you do inAfrica.
You just throw shit over thefence.
That's what you do, that's whatyou do anyway.
So, what happens is Nagaina nowis pissed, and she ain't playing
around no more.
But she's got she's got the babyCobra eggs to protect, but she's
still gonna get rid of thisfucking family.
So one day the family's outsideenjoying a nice lunch, and then

(29:18):
Nagaina comes up.
And now remember, this is somefucked up shit to watch as a kid
in 1976, and they would showthis in school, and all of a
sudden Nag cut Nagaina comes upand she's about to strike the
boy.
And of course, they can talk theanimals, but the humans don't
understand it.
And I love it because she sitsthere looking at Ricky Tab Ricky
Tiggy Tabby and telling him, Ifthe boy moves, I'll strike.

(29:43):
If the boy doesn't move, I'llstrike.
I'm like, what kind of fucked upshit is that?
You're gonna kill the kidanyway.
You're gonna kill the kid eitherway.
But Ricky was smart.
Ricky was smart.
He went to their nest, thecobra's nest, and smashed.
All the cobra eggs, except forone.
Except for one egg.

(30:04):
So as Nagaina is tormenting thefamily, Ricky brings over the
egg, like, hey, bitch, I got oneof your eggs.
You want it, you gotta comefucking get it.
And there's a race.
Nagaina grabs the egg and runsoff, and then she runs down the
cobra hole.
Now, no mongoose has eversurvived going inside a cobra

(30:24):
hole because there's no room tofight.
But somehow Ricky comes out.
He killed Nagaina, smashed theeggs, and everyone lives happily
ever after.
Except the fucking kids thathave to watch this.
You just killed two mongoose,two cobras, shot one.
This kid's being attacked leftand right, almost drowned.

(30:50):
You're throwing snakes over thefence.
There's dead things.
There's there's talking cobrasthat want to kill you.
No wonder Gen X is so screwedup.
No wonder we don't knowanything.
No wonder we don't know anyfucking bad.
Because we had to watch shitlike this and it was normal.

(31:14):
Oh just an just another day inparadise.
Once again, this is Tim This Gunof My Lawn.
The Mad Ramblings of a Gen Xer.
Like, subscribe, follow, leave acomment, or you of course can
leave a five-star review everyplace you see podcasts, every
place that they're found.
Enjoy the rest of your day, andI'm out of here.
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