Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
Secretly recorded
from deep inside the bowels of a
decommissioned missile silo.
We bring you the man, onesingle man, who wants to bring
light to the darkness and darkto the lightness.
Although he's not always right,he is always certain.
So now, with security protocolsin place, the protesters have
been forced back behind thebarricades and the blast doors
(00:33):
are now sealed.
Without further delay, let meintroduce you to the host of
HuttCast, Mr Tim Huttner.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Thank you,
sergeant-at-arms.
You can now take your post.
The views and opinionsexpressed in this program are
solely those of the individualand participants.
These views and opinionsexpressed do not represent those
of the host or the show.
The opinions in this broadcastare not to replace your legal,
medical or spiritualprofessionals.
(01:06):
Happy Sunday, 12-8-2024, onHuttCast.
Guess what?
We're going to have all kindsof conversations, so follow me,
stay with me, keep up to speed.
Today's episode the Economy.
Today's episode the economyconversations of a democratic
victim base Mr Walls Walls.
(01:28):
Mr Walls, I don't want to usethe word governor, but hey, I
don't know, sometimes it is whatit is.
He's back at his oldshenanigans.
And then BT, which is for BrianThompson, a local guy from
around my parts, and we're goingto have kind of a little
conversation about that.
Sorry as it is, sometimesyou've got to talk about this
(01:49):
stuff to just find out what goeson.
I mean, it's kind of crazy.
Stand by podcast.
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Speaker 2 (02:27):
Welcome back to
HuttCast.
As mentioned in pre-roll, wehave a couple of things to get
over, and I literally mean getover.
I'm going to start out with ourconversations of a Democratic
victim base, the victims, thefeel-gooders, the guys who, gals
and gals, the people who thinkthat they've been victimized by
(02:48):
our current presidential status.
How do you feel about that,guys?
Whether you win or lose,whether you're cheering or
you're screaming, whether you'reecstatic or crying, this is
still our current situation.
I don't even say it's asituation.
I say it's enough about how wedidn't put up with the last four
(03:10):
years to not have anythingdifferent to happen.
Make it this way.
I mean, look at the wholepicture here.
You know, everybody says I'm aTrumper, a Trumpansy, whatever
those little knickknacks arethose euphemisms for what we do.
As a conservative, as a, Ialways think of myself as a on
the fence, both sides, and Ialways have.
(03:31):
I always told you guys that.
But now you got these peoplewho are traumatized.
They're going to throw theirfeelings in this.
They're upset, they're mad,they're screaming.
I've talked to some people.
I'm in a position of my jobwhere I can actually get out and
talk to a lot of people, andsometimes it's some pretty good
information.
You got to wonder why would yoube so traumatized by a
(03:55):
president?
He wasn't a good pick, but hewas the only pick we had, Just
like Kamala was their only pick,and we've had discussions in
the past about Kamala was theironly pick, and we've had
discussions in the past aboutKamala how she was installed.
Not chosen by you, by any ofyou left right centers.
(04:15):
That wasn't a choice, that wasa democracy was on the ballot
this time.
It always has been, but now iseven more so.
So what was our only choice?
The Trumper, the guy, the guywho is the narcissist.
He's just what he is.
So we had someone that youdidn't put in there from the dnc
and you have someone who is putin there by the rnc.
A lot has going on with this.
So these, these victims, they'rethey're so-called victims now
(04:38):
the victim base.
I call the victim base becausethey're never going to switch to
a Trump and the Trumpers nevergoing to switch to a Dems.
But if you listen to them, Ihad a couple of guys come in.
They were conservatives let'ssay that Conservatives,
republicans, could be a Democrat, conservative and they tell me
(04:59):
how their younger kids, theirfamily just blew gaskets all
over the place as soon as theyfound out, crying and holding
each other.
And I looked at the guy and Isays, dude, what did you do?
And he says, well, what could Ido?
I said, well, a, you couldstraighten them out.
B you could fix theirdelusional whatever.
(05:19):
And all he said which was mademe think of why the left
constantly kicks the right'sbutt I didn't want to get
involved.
I did not get involved with yourown family.
I did not say you know, youguys need to shut up.
Where was the tough love?
You have to remember thatnothing's going to change like
you think it is.
(05:40):
Nothing's going to be as bad asyou always say it is.
We lived through the, the oldbiden years.
We lived through the both ofbiden years.
We I don't think we could havehad a really very prosperous
economy with uh camellia at thehelm, because she just had, she
had zero policy.
All she had was lipstick andbullcrap.
(06:02):
So these victims, theseDemocratic victims and I say
Democratic socialist victims,not the real Democrats, not the
JFKs, not the people who in theold days are considered
Republicans now, not thosepeople, not the polarized, but
the crazies, the so far leftthat, and we have them on the
(06:24):
rights and we have them in the.
There's all over the place.
There's no better, there's justdifferent.
We're all saying the same thing, we're just saying it
differently.
And when they play this victimand they have these tantrums and
they jump up and down and theycome on, come on, people.
You know, I would think thatmost people listening to this
show other than across the pond,different countries.
(06:47):
You have your factions andwhatever that equates to.
In your factions, everybody hastheir home base.
They have their pick, butnobody really engages it, except
this time in the USA, weengaged.
Now, if you look at theelection, trump's numbers in
this year, in 2024, were wayless than he had in 20 when he
(07:11):
was beating Biden.
Where did all the numbers go?
I mean like a lot of numbers.
So where did all these voterscome from last time?
How do we have 108% turnout?
I'll give you my theory.
I don't want to do theconspiracy theorists, but
turnout.
I'll give you my theory.
I don't want to do theconspiracy theorists, but,
however, I'll give you a pointof order on this, because
sometimes you just got to go.
(07:32):
Really, this doesn't even makesense from any point of view.
Okay, so here's the gig wetalked about in the past being
installed Biden and Trump havetheir conversation.
It was on televised.
Trump just sat back and letBiden speak.
He couldn't even botherinterrupting anything because
Joe was digging a hole so deephe couldn't do better than what
(07:55):
Joe did for Trump's campaign,and he absolutely did an
excellent job.
So then the Dems go oh crap,they knew that Biden was going
to run this whole time.
They knew joe was going to beon top of the thing.
So if you were the factions ofthe left and you wanted to
organize a setup election andthis election has certain
(08:20):
factions of it that get kind ofmagically put involved 108
turnout never happens, shouldhappen how would you orchestrate
that?
Here's how I would orchestrateit.
Okay, we know Sleepy Joe isgoing to run.
We know he can't.
If I was the DNC, pick in doingall this, we know that he can
certainly clear the DNCprimaries because he's the
(08:40):
president.
Then he can say no to them.
He's the president, then youcan say no to him.
Then his mental statedeteriorates fast.
I mean super fast, or was italways deteriorated?
They won't tell us the truth.
I mean think about it.
He had enough cognitive theoryto stand up there and talk to
Trump, and what a good job hedid for Trump.
Then Sleepy Joe comes up andsays, okay, I just can't do this
(09:04):
, and he's really screwing up onthe debate.
So the debate's in there, it'sdone.
He's getting his butt kicked.
Trump sits back, giggles andnow they realize, oh crap, we
can't do this.
So, okay, now, follow me.
Now, if all these people havevoted and they're going to vote
early, and they're going to votethis, that, the other, but they
can have any type of vote.
(09:25):
And remember, in the 2020election, where Trump was ahead
by like 12%, we went to bed, hewoke up and he was 40% behind.
I don't know about you, but Idon't believe in magic or
coincidence.
So, magically, from the 2o'clock in the morning to the 5,
6 o'clock in the morning, theworld takes those numbers and
(09:46):
magically puts them in place.
Well, why didn't it work thistime?
I'll tell you why Because theyweren't planning on Sleepy Joe
to be that sleepy they had.
My opinion is and this isstrictly my opinion they had all
these ballots printed up, theyhad them all set up, and this is
a very big, big process.
You look at the big process inthe world and this is a huge,
(10:10):
huge section of printing.
Do you think you can print thatmany ballots to be not that
many unknown, to be not noticedby somebody, someone or
something?
I mean, you'd have to have ahuge, huge Shutterfly type of
printing program to print thatmuch stuff, to keep it quiet, to
keep it in the back of a truck,to get it dispersed to all
(10:33):
these voting stations.
I mean, think about thelogistics of that.
That takes months, months andmonths of planning.
But they didn't plan on that.
When Sleepy Joe couldn't hold acognitive sentence, what did
they do?
Well, they did the best thingthey could they put in Kamala.
So here comes Kamala nopolicies, no common sense, no
(10:54):
things that I would say arepresidential in a way, to throw
her in this and say, okay,you're in, but we can't
guarantee your vote because nowwe've missed that vote.
Are you following me now?
They had it planned, it wasrigged.
If Sleepy Joe could have justmade it happen some more, then
they would have just put thewhat is it?
27th Amendment I've got tocheck that and then slide her in
(11:15):
position because he wanted tosound mind to run.
A company or a corporation oreven a country.
Couldn't run it, couldn't do it.
They slide her in there.
Boom, done happens.
The next election is going tobe an incumbent election.
When Kamala finishes out the 24to 28 version, I don't know,
maybe I'm reaching, but thinkabout the big term thing.
(11:37):
Sit back and say really.
Someone once told me if youwant to get somebody's attention
, blame them, poke at them.
What you do is you blame themof exactly the same thing you're
doing.
I think it was Stalin said thisyou blame them the exact same
thing you're doing, before theyblame you of actually doing it
(11:57):
because you're doing it, and youwill shut them up and they will
be the bad guys because they'refirst ones to talk.
Think about this, people.
A lot of things happen in thiscountry, a lot of stuff going on
.
Am I worried?
No, does it bother me?
Yeah, it bothers me that shewas installed versus she could
run for it Again.
You know my feelings on this.
The DNC had some pretty goodtalent on their side and yet
(12:20):
they neglected to use thedemocratic process to obtain.
That's where it bit them.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
I'm okay with that.
Let them bite it.
Speaker 2 (12:28):
Let them get that
taste of hey, let's run things
fair instead of unfair, which,again, I cannot prove.
Therefore, it becomes myopinion, as the header says in
front of this video or for audio.
It's not that I'm always right,but am I always certain?
And I am pretty certain of this.
Okay, so what do we got here?
We got the conservatives on theDemocratic victim base See,
(12:52):
hear, react.
Okay, we got that one covered.
So let's talk about some localstuff for us.
But I have to take a commercialbreak.
I have to stand by because Iactually have to take a
commercial break.
So for Headcast, stand by.
We're about 12 minutes intothis first segment.
We'll be right back.
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Welcome back, guys.
Thanks for coming back.
Okay, what a crazy world welive in.
How about that?
All right, I told you in thelast end of the last segment
(14:44):
that we're going to have a TimWalls conversation.
Now, nobody knows this guybetter than most Minnesotans.
You might not know him acrossthe world.
You sure as heck don't know himin other countries.
You probably don't want to knowhim.
But here's what I can tell younow.
He's back to his old tricks.
That's what I meant by this.
He's back to his old say onething, do another, spin it
(15:05):
around, blame it on somebodyelse, point fingers.
But this time I mentioned to youthat I feel a little different
about it.
This time it's with intent,this time it's with demeanor.
It's like he's mad, he's angry.
When you see him talk about it.
You can see the eyebrows tweakand the nose snarl up and the
(15:30):
face and the jaws get tight.
I wonder what's happening to MrWalls, because right now he
seems like a tyrant.
That's what I see, that's whatI'm seeing right now.
He had a press conference withsome people I don't know what
the station was, but it was.
You know who cares, who careswhat he was talking about and he
(15:54):
snapped at this dude, thisreporter, and not like he would
snap at a reporter, not likehe'd get cranky and upset, upset
of some sort, you wouldn't getthat he just got nasty, mean I
guess the campaign trail is alittle harder than you think it
is.
Huh, this ain't the same guythat runs out on stage
hip-hopping and slapping hishands and pointing fingers, and
(16:18):
that ain't the guy you've seenon the news.
And if anybody's ever read thebook by paul kazalka, paul
kazalka, he has a very, uh, veryunique position about mr walls
because he worked at the senatemajority leader of minnesota for
many years the republicansenate majority leader, by the
way and he has some pretty goodintel.
(16:40):
Better, pick up his book.
Paul kazalka google that name.
Buy his book.
Paul E Kozalka Google that name.
Buy his book.
Get it, for instance, foryourself.
Judge your own opinions, makeyour own whatevers.
Yeah, kind of funny, but he'scranky.
And here's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to do this justbecause, well, I know what it's
(17:01):
like to run.
I personally have taken makingruns for office and it ain't
what you think it is.
It's a lot of work.
I don't care if you're at thenational level or local level, I
don't care if it's whatever itis.
Think about things like oh God,where do I start?
First of all, you've got tofund this thing.
You've got to realize if you'regoing to take money or if
you're not going to take money.
(17:22):
Now on a local level.
If you take money from acompany, a person, an individual
, you have to justify that moneyon your report, your SOS, the
Secretary of State reports.
They have to be licensed people, licensed business licensed
people who want to give to yourcampaign.
And don't think that it's notwithout some baggage people.
(17:44):
You will have baggage.
One of our cities, close to us,has some situations going on
where an individual took moneyand now he's in front of the
same individual that hasoversight to these people.
Now do you think that, withthis oversight that he has, he's
donated to his campaign?
And the people that gave themoney aren't you think they're
(18:06):
looking at him going?
Yeah, it's time for a favor, apayback, Absolutely, absolutely.
But here's the twist that thisDemocrat did.
He said, yes, I took money, butit was in the last election,
not this one.
And boy did the people come outof the woodwork to support that
and all the true people, allthe real people, pretty much
(18:29):
knew what was going on.
I don't care if you took moneyin the 80s.
The 2000s are in George Jetsonworld.
If you take cash, you owe themforever.
But see, some of these peoplein their city didn't think that
it was a thing.
Oh no, no, it was last time.
I've already disclosed that.
(18:50):
Well, if you've already come out, back to what I said earlier,
if you're going to blame oraccuse the people of doing what
you're doing, you blame themfirst and then you keep on doing
what you're doing, becausethat's what happened, that's
what's going down, it's what hedid.
Well, I did take it, but I tookit then and he just couldn't
put that together and that costhim his election, because people
pay attention, and people payattention quickly and they're
(19:13):
saying hold on here, you tookcash.
This person that cashed you isin front of you.
They're in front of you forsome type of a political favor,
and here they are.
And you don't think that's a CI, a conflict of interest.
Absolutely it is.
So think about that, people,when you're out there doing
things like this.
And with Mr Walls God, I hopehe gets out this last term, this
(19:40):
next term, because now he'smidterm, he's two years in and
he'll make the next two, whichwill be an off cycle for us as a
city, as a state, and we almostflipped this state to begin
with.
I mean really almost flipped it, not scaring the snot out of
the left as it should.
And that was a presidentialTrump thing that we're trying to
(20:01):
win.
Speaker 4 (20:01):
And they did win.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
So there, figure that
out.
But I was going to tell you whyI actually support running for
office and doing things, becauseI've been in that shoe, I've
pounded on that door, I'veknocked on all those doors.
You've done the process.
You've done the democraticprocess, the earning of it, not
the appointment of it.
And it doesn't mean that ifyou're appointed, it doesn't
(20:23):
mean you're going to care anyless.
You take the same oath as theone who worked and pounded the
doors.
You absolutely take the same.
You absolutely take that sameoath of office.
But when you are on that trail,the campaign trail, it's 24-7 of
your day, it's nights, weekends, it's holidays.
There's no taking time off.
(20:43):
It's strategy, it's who's goingto be doing what for you, who's
going to be doing setups and dowe have a candidate forum?
And oh, yeah, it's kind of athing.
I ran twice, didn't make it,got my butt kicked twice Twice
by incumbents.
So I know how to run anincumbent race and lose.
Yeah, that was the easy part.
(21:05):
The hard part was getting overit Eventually get over it.
But hey, I'm telling you it'sreal and Waltz is coming off the
trail.
He's got the hate in him.
People are seeing it.
It takes a lot of audio.
He's no spring chicken.
He's in his what?
Early 60s, late 50s.
He's no spring chicken.
That ain't easy.
He had unlimited funding by theDNC, and when I mean unlimited,
(21:34):
I mean unlimited.
He could spend money.
He could pay money to spendmoney, to waste money All in the
same dollar Unbelievable.
And they still couldn't getpast.
But again, I remember that Itold you in the last segment
that, absolutely, ballotharvesting is a thing and they
couldn't get past it.
It was there, they were stuckon it.
Nothing more could be more truethan that.
Yeah, so for Mr Waltz to feelthat way, I get it.
(21:56):
I see his point.
I've been there.
You got the hating for all kindsof things and now he's got to
come back to his job, which heshouldn't have never had.
He should have had to.
Anytime you run for an office,a higher office, and you're in
an office, my opinion is youshould be able to.
You're supposed to be able tomove on and be uncovered by the
(22:19):
actual.
You're doing this, but hedidn't.
He still kept his office.
And how do we allow that as astate?
How do we say oh, you go rightahead, your job.
We voted you in to run thisstate and now you're on the
campaign trail.
Would you have dumped us in aheartbeat?
Well, that's got to saysomething.
That's got to say a lot ofsomething.
Can't blame him for taking it,can't?
(22:40):
You cannot blame the guy fortaking it, but you can blame the
guy for not resigning hisposition now and letting our
Peggy Flanagan take over and runthe rest of the two years.
I'm more okay with that.
Come on, peggy, show us whatyou got.
Yeah, you can't write thisstuff.
This stuff happens.
I'm not making this up out ofmy bag of magic tricks and
(23:02):
saying, oh, we're doing this andthis and this, because it is
actually doing it, it'shappening.
Yeah, kind of crazy, isn't it?
Kind of really weird how thingsare just happening.
It came in again.
You can hear the disgust in myvoice sometimes and I'll be
doggone if I can mask that,because I can't.
(23:23):
It's that stupid.
It's that stupid.
Speaker 4 (23:25):
It's that stupid.
Speaker 2 (23:27):
So for Waltis to be
that way, I do get it.
If you've ever tried it, liveit go do it.
Go see how easy it is or isn't.
But it's his old bag of tricks.
He's all spitting up, he's allgot his old.
I don't know if you payattention to state politics.
Wrong choice in the beginning,wrong choice in the end.
(23:47):
Even the DNC voters are like,yeah, we're not going to push
this through.
You talk to some people out ofstate, they say, well, he seems
like a good guy.
Yeah he could be Not for us, notfor your vice president no
better than the vice presidentwe have now.
Camilla, I'm kind of interestedto see how Vance is going to do
(24:10):
.
I don't know Vance, and if Ilook at Vance like someone looks
at Waltz, how's this going togo?
Do I not know enough aboutVance to be like Waltz is now
for someone else at anotherstate?
Oh, he looks like a good guy.
Just because he's got an R nextto that, that don't mean
nothing.
Maybe a loose nut behind thewheel?
We wouldn't know the difference.
So pay attention to how he doesthings, how engaged he is, how
(24:31):
engaged Trump will let him be.
It's a thing.
Pay attention.
This is why we have politics.
Don't let the politics do you.
You do politics.
Actually, weirdly enough, asenator told me that once.
Hey you do politics, don't letpolitics do you.
Actually, weirdly enough, asenator told me that once hey,
you do politics, don't letpolitics do you.
Makes sense.
People who get things done showup.
(24:51):
If you don't show up, you don'tget things done.
Go back under your rock.
Don't worry about the economy,don't worry about your anything.
Don't worry about kids peeingin cat litter boxes because they
want to be free for animals orwhatever you call those Furries.
That's what they are.
They're called furries and ifthey're called furries and our
(25:12):
states and our school boards andour people are letting this
happen, you should probablyfocus on that, a little Focus on
what's going on.
Even if you don't have kids inschool, kick back and say, hey,
hold on here now, hold on.
What's going on?
That's at our state level.
That's happening in this stateof Minnesota, in my undisclosed
(25:33):
location of a bunker.
Does that happen in your school?
Is that what's happening aroundyou?
You know, look at the map,pretty red map.
There are just certain areasthat are blue and that's all it
takes to kind of win A couple ofblue areas.
Even the Democrats won't voteDemocrat, the conservative
Democrats, how do I put it?
But anyway, pay attention.
All right, what do we got herewe are, oh, 15 minutes.
(25:54):
All right, we're going to moveon to the next segment here and
we're going to take anotherbreak.
We're going to kick back andlisten to another commercial
that these guys are.
They support us, so I'm goingto support them.
That's just the way it is, andthey are wonderful people for
our show.
Some of our show sponsors aregold sponsors.
They've been on the show, lovethem to death and I think I'm
giving them their homage.
(26:15):
Hey, thanks for supporting theshow.
So, hudcast, stand by, I'll beback with the next segment and
let's talk our economy and thesebusinesses.
I next segment and let's talk.
Let's talk our economy andthese businesses.
I'll tell you what I'm seeingout in the world.
Stand by.
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And welcome back to Hoodcast.
This segment is going to beabout the economy.
I want you to pay attention tocertain things around you in
this economy.
They always said the last fouryears were the best of ever.
You know I'm not disputing theyhad good times.
(27:24):
They had bad times, but youknow, you had the times.
What I don't understand is whena loaf of bread costs you $5,
when it used to cost you $0.29,consider that not being a good
time.
You can't believe that.
So in your own life of things,and you go to the gas pumps, you
(27:44):
go to the grocery stores, youpay your insurance bills how
about those being out of control?
I want you to focus on a couplethings, and here's what it's
all going to come down to.
I'm going to show to you inthis segment that there are
certain things that happenelection pre election, and I
want you to take notice out inthe world when you're out doing
your things.
Just to remember this segmenton HotCast Say hey he was right.
(28:06):
Again, I'm not always right, butI am always certain and I'm
certainly going to tell you whatI think right now.
Pay attention.
Let's look at the TV shows.
Okay, who noticed when Obamacome in Way back and in between
commercials you have all thesewant to sell you a car, whatever
it is.
And all of a sudden, all theactors now are all black actors
(28:29):
Everywhere.
Bet was a big thing.
It's just huge.
And this ain't a race thing.
This has absolutely nothing todo with that.
This has something to do withthey're priming their next
customer, their next base.
How about when?
Oh, biden jumps in?
Now, everything's happyholidays.
Because Christianity, itoffends me.
(28:51):
I can't say Christmas,everything's happy holidays,
everything.
And now look what's happeningin the 24 election.
That's right.
Look what's happening.
Merry Christmas, happy New Year.
There's a little more God backin the TV world.
I mean, it's just, it's what'shappening.
There's a little more God onsocial networks.
(29:13):
There's a little more God in,and whatever your God is I mean,
I don't know, it's your thingPay attention to what they're
doing there.
They're priming this, they'redoing that, they're settinging
this, they're doing that.
They're setting you up thismind control thing which the
dumb public radio and public TVsand that's why I like streaming
(29:34):
.
I can cut the commercials out,cut the stupid stuff out.
I don't have to watch thepropagandist crap.
Of course, someone might bethinking this is propagandist.
It could be.
I don't plan it that way.
So if I'm propagandizing you,maybe you got the wrong channel
here.
Flip the channel, because I'mtrying to get the truth out here
, paying attention to what'sgoing on.
So let's look at things.
The economy You're seeing.
(29:57):
What are you seeing out in thebusinesses?
Well, I can tell you one thingas a business, you can see
certain things that are trendingdifferent now.
You used to sit back and go ohGod, what plant is going to burn
down now, so that the supplyyou need isn't going to come
around, so that now you're goingto pay $18 for a $2 part or $7
for a gallon of fuel when it'snormally maybe $2.
(30:18):
Fuck $80.
Do you think we'll see thosethis year?
Think we'll see those whenTrump starts spinning things up,
turns the pumping back on inNorth Dakota, because when Biden
shut that off, there's a wholelot of friends of mine who
listen to this show who are outthere saying really, now what
are we going to do?
They can get fuel in our ownstores, in our own ground.
(30:40):
They want to buy the foreignstuff, probably because Biden
has financial interests withHunter and offshore oiling from
Saudi Arabia or whoever place.
Really, come on, guys, that'snot America.
First Go to the store, buy somebread.
You can't go to a grocery store, a local around here and fill
(31:02):
up a cart and not be $700 for acart.
Think of what $700 buys you 10years ago.
You roll the damn truck up tothe front door and start loading
it up for $700.
Now what do you get?
Some foo-foo-foo crap and someherbal, grown, natural whatever.
And I get there's a lot ofstuff.
(31:24):
Okay, if before you startsending little emails, hold on
to your pens.
I understand chemicals andfoods and yes, it's always
cheaper to hormonally growsomething versus homogenally.
So don't go all freaking outand getting these emails.
Let it up and on my facebookpage because I get you, but pay
attention to how things are.
(31:45):
Let's see what the Kennedy guydoes when he takes over the food
egg.
I'm kind of excited about that.
The Health and Human Servicesportion of the LeVie gal guy
thing.
I'm glad LeVie's out.
I don't know about you, but ifyou think that that's the human
human, I wonder what's the wordI'm looking for If that's what
(32:06):
the America thinks is healthy.
Take a look at this thing.
I'm not a fan.
I wouldn't care if it's a guyor a gal.
If it was a guy gay or a galgay, it wouldn't matter to me
there.
But this thing was a guy at onetime and he's gendered, or
whatever.
It is Okay, all right.
And a guy at one time and he'sgendered or whatever, it is Okay
(32:26):
, all right.
And and and there's our healthand human services director, our
, our, our general for the forthe whole United States.
That's a, that's the thing.
And.
And the guy with the no hairand lipstick and a beard and a
goatee wearing dresses.
I don't even know what he does.
I don't want to know, I don'twant to Google him and let my
browser get tasted with thatcrap.
Yeah, how does that work?
Come?
on guys, it's America, commonsense.
(32:48):
You want to do your stuff, doit in your own privacy, don't
force someone else on it.
But anyway, you got mesidetracked.
Gosh, darn it.
You guys.
Okay, back to what.
Are you seeing out in the world?
All right, four years ago youcouldn't buy a pickup for
$80,000, $100,000.
Now they're coming down.
(33:12):
Oh, and now everybody'ssticking electric cars up your
butt.
Gm's going to do the globalinitiative.
Ford has stopped theirelectronic production of their
Ford vehicles, the EV vehicles.
I guess it don't work Really.
Us gas and piston guys knowbetter.
You really didn't think thatwould work.
It's gonna.
I absolutely am crossing myfingers that it will.
It just ain't yet, but it ain'tgonna for a while until.
(33:33):
And they made big strides onthis battery thing.
There's a lot of strides onthis battery technology, but
they can't get rid of thetemperature compensation stride.
Batteries get cold.
They don't produce the sameamount of electron flow as they
do when they're at a temperaturethat are above freezing.
Then what If you can get thathurdle?
(33:54):
They're already past thecapacitance hurdle that a
battery can absorb more energy.
Keep it in itself and then putit out and save it.
The lithium polymer phosphatesare the ones that corrected that
problem, because this thingwill do 100% output and then
just shuts off done and it'sthree times longer than a
(34:14):
flooded battery.
Now let's go to the temperaturecompensated thing.
Some manufacturers are puttingheaters in there.
They heat the battery to keepit going.
So now you're using energy tokeep the energy, to put the
energy in so you could match aflooded one.
I don't know, it's a viciouscycle, but this industry, this
economy of electric vehicles, isnow on its ear.
(34:35):
Be interesting to see whatVance and Trump do on this one.
Yeah, you heard me right, vanceand Trump, not Trump and Vance.
Kind of a Vance fan so far.
But anyway, let's see what theydo with this, let's see if they
can make this happen.
Let's see if they can nowsocially point our country in
certain directions Again.
When I started this said wehave Merry Christmas again.
(34:58):
We have Happy New Year.
We have the things that.
Merry Christmas again.
We have Happy New Year.
We have the things that used tobe in our daily lives and if it
offends you tough, you'reoffended because I say Merry
Christmas, I don't care, I don'twant to be around you and you
shouldn't want to be around me.
People on the left are nowopting out of engaging on social
platforms.
Now I'm noticing that becauseof this economy and this current
(35:22):
president Vance and Trump.
Yeah, how do you think aboutthat?
Spin that around.
Let's light this candle and seewhat we get with it, because
I'm all up for it.
Let's see here what else we gotin my notes Business C scenery,
christmas.
Yeah, we got a lot of stuff.
Just pay attention to yoursurroundings.
(35:42):
These business things are goingto be a pretty kick-butt deal.
The next so-and-so.
We don't want to keep pushinginflation through the roof.
We don't want to keep adding tothe debt ceiling.
We've got a lot of debt ceilingright now and we'll never get
out of this debt ceiling.
It ain't going to happen.
Trump will never make thathappen.
I don't care if he's JesusAlmighty coming down and saying,
(36:03):
hey, we can fix this in twoswipes.
That ain't going to happen.
He can't do it.
He'll get better, I don't know.
Economy's going to changebecause of the migration policy.
Oh, you betcha.
Yeah, you're going to see thatin a heartbeat.
He's not anti-Mexican, he's notanti-Mexican, he's not anti,
he's just.
If you want to come to thiscountry, you do it the right way
(36:24):
.
Imagine if you were a Mexicanfamily and you came into the
United States the right way, thenaturalization way.
You did the procedure, you didthe everything's all there.
It's all.
You've done this and all of asudden, the border doesn't
matter anymore.
Why does it not matter?
I would be upset, kind of likehow they install a candidate on
the DNC.
It didn't go through theprocess, they just circumvented
(36:47):
the process.
Come on in everybody.
We need voters.
That's what I saw.
If you want us, you vote DNCEvery time.
Oh, where do you live?
Can you prove where you livethere?
Speaker 4 (36:58):
No, well, come on in
anyway.
Speaker 2 (37:03):
I don't know, guys,
take a look at the, take a look
at things.
I'm I'm very hopeful.
I'm very hopeful that we canmake this economy a little nicer
, a little more palatable.
Can we, can we make this sothat we don't fail and faint at
the cash register buying ourgroceries, buying our stuff?
So?
So back to the trucks, cars.
(37:23):
If our economy was to heal orbetter itself, let's ask the
question of the old school if webail them out, will that help
them?
Well, how many people understandthe Rivian?
Rivian R-I-V-I-A-N, the Riviantrucks.
Choose your RT1, you chooseyour RT2 dual and your R1T Tri.
(37:44):
Now, this is a truck companylight duty, small fleet.
And there's a very small thinghere.
Our economy decided to bailthis company out and all they
make is electric vehicles.
Their job is to only make thosethings that we, hey, we're
going to do the electric push.
And what do they take?
(38:07):
20, some billion dollarsbailout.
Now let's look at the total.
From what I understand in thenetwork news from Detroit called
the Detroit News, they'vepublished a information piece
that says the Rivian got thebailout, which equaled to
$100,000 per vehicle that theybuilt.
(38:27):
Well, their trucks are $70,000,$80,000.
They got a bailout to produce$100,000 of these trucks to get
back on their feet.
I'm sorry, when they saybailout, they say give them my
money, your money, give them ourmoney to bail this company out
because they were on thisinitiative for the O'Biden group
(38:49):
or for the O'Biden Electric forthe O'Biden Again, I covered
this in the previous.
So what do you think of that?
How does that sit with you?
How does that sit with you inthe regular world that we bailed
them out Again another companyand are we bailing people out
now because they went theinitiative electric ways?
I don't know if it's a goodvehicle or not.
I have never seen one in myshop.
(39:10):
I wouldn't know if it was anice vehicle or a piece of crap.
When I see them online, I'veseen what's out there.
I don't even know where there'sa dealer.
I think there's one, two.
I've seen like 15 dealersArizona, illinois, joshua Tree,
washington, spokane, skogi.
I mean, get on the website andlook around, shop the gear.
(39:31):
You can see it.
They're using Rivian chargestations, which I'm assuming
there's an adapter for all theother Tesla charge stations.
I don't remember bailing outTesla.
Think about it, think aboutwhat's going on with this.
Right now you could go to adealer and their MSRP or their
retail, which back in the daynobody ever paid retail.
(39:53):
You always negotiated yourvehicle.
You can actually buy a trucknow work truck, nothing fancy to
do what you need to do andyou're paying $35,000, $30,000
with incentives.
Couldn't buy one before.
You were paying just as muchfor a small truck as you were a
half-ton truck.
And if you're paying that muchfor a half-ton truck, well then
you might as well buy athree-quarter ton, one ton.
Speaker 4 (40:15):
Kind of a thing.
Speaker 2 (40:16):
Yeah, our economy,
it's changing.
It's changing.
Let's see what happens.
Pay attention to yourcommercials.
Pay attention to what's goingon on TV.
Watch your news channels.
See what's going on in theworld.
Buy American, for God's sakes.
Yeah, buy American, like.
Your job depends on it, becauseit does.
Okay, what are we at?
(40:38):
Oh, 15 minutes in this segment.
All right, we're going to cutthis one off.
The economy is pretty muchcovered in today's show.
Our next one is a very somberand law off.
The economy is pretty muchcovered in today's show.
Our next one is a very somber,a very somber conversation the
Brian Thompson question.
It wasn't even a question, itwas just insane.
I'm going to give you someinsight on who are friends of
mine and who are friends of his,and how they describe them.
And oh boy, yeah, big mistakedoing that one.
(41:00):
Whoever did that, it's in thenews.
If you, whoever did that, it'sin the news.
If you live under a rock, it'sthe CEO of healthcare.
Took a bullet and yeah, standby, I'll be right back.
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(41:45):
Or 833-383-5912, SuperFuel.
Welcome back to that cast.
All right, this is a kind of aone that brings some symmetry
around here, just because we youknow some people, that we know
(42:07):
people, and and of course, brianThompson is a Minnesotan, he's
a corporate figurehead, he isthe guy in the local area, that
is, you know, just one of us.
So I want you to hear theverbatim, which I'll play here
in a minute, wikipedia's versionof what they say out in the
world about this guy, and thenI'm going to let you listen to
(42:28):
it, and then at the end of this,I'm going to come back and I'm
going to tell you exactly whatthe real people are saying about
him, his friends, his peoplearound him.
And it's a sad, sombersituation that we actually have
to do this.
It's a very sad, sombersituation, but I want to play it
.
I want to play it and you seeboth sides of this fence, but at
what point ever does it end upas this?
(42:49):
So stand by.
I'm going to play the verbatimfrom the Wikipedia, if you
haven't looked it up already,and you'll hear the 13, 14, 15.
You'll see some numbers inthere which there's nothing I
can do to take them out of there.
I'm going to have my AI read itto you.
It's pretty intelligent stuff,so stand by.
Speaker 4 (43:14):
Brian Thompson,
businessman For the article on
the murder of Brian Thompson onDecember 4th 2024,.
Brian Robert Thompson, 1-2, july10, 1974, december 4, 2024 was
an American businessman.
He was the chief executiveofficer CEO of United Healthcare
, the insurance arm ofUnitedHealth Group, from April
2021 until his killing inDecember 2024.
(43:35):
Education Thompson was born onJuly 10, 1974, in Ames, iowa.
One of two sons born to Dennisand Pat Knee.
Hunter Thompson, 3-4-5.
His father was a grain elevatorworker.
He was raised in the nearbyarea Jewell, iowa, and graduated
in 1993 as the classvaledictorian of South Hamilton
High School in Jewell Junction,north of Ames.
(43:56):
He then attended the Universityof Iowa in Iowa City, where he
received a bachelor's degree inbusiness administration with a
major in accounting in 1997, andmet his future wife 7.
At the University of Iowa, hewas also valedictorian Career.
From 1997 to 2004,.
Thompson worked atPricewaterhouseCoopers as a
manager in the TransactionAdvisory Services Group of the
(44:16):
audit practice.
He joined United Health Groupin 2004, and was named the CEO
of UnitedHealthcare governmentprograms, which included
Medicare and retirement, as wellas community and state
divisions.
In 2021.
His total compensation was$9.60, $1.21, $9.80, and $10.20.
Under his leadership,unitedhealthcare's profits
(44:37):
increased from $12 billion in2021 to $16 billion in 2023.
At the time of Thompson's death, the company was the largest
health insurer in the UnitedStates.
13.
The Associated Press saidThompson kept a low public
profile.
However, he received attentionduring an investor meeting in
2023 when he announcedUnitedHealthcare was shifting to
a value-based care model bypaying doctors and other
(45:00):
caregivers to keep patientshealthy rather than focusing on
treating them after they getsick.
Reports of increasing rates ofprior authorization denials
prompted investigations byProPublica and the United States
Senate, investigations whichwere described as a stain on
Thompson's time of leadership byFortune.
The Senate report published bythe United States Senate
Homeland Security PermanentSubcommittee on Investigations
(45:21):
focused, in particular, ondenials for Medicare Advantage
plans serving the elderly anddisabled.
Fifth, the investigationrevealed that in 2019, uhc's
prior authorization denial ratewas 8%.
He became CEO in 2021, and by2022 the rate of denial had
increased to 22.7% For bothMedicare and non-Medicare claims
.
Uhc declines claims at a ratewhich is double the industry
(45:43):
average.
12.
In 2021, thompson wascriticized in an open letter
from the American HospitalAssociation regarding a plan
from UnitedHealthcare to startdenying payment for what it
deemed non-critical visits tohospital emergency rooms.
Unitedhealthcare responded bydelaying rollout of the change.
Additionally, under hisleadership, unitedhealthcare
began using artificialintelligence to automate claim
(46:04):
denials, resulting in theircustomers either incurring
significant out-of-pocketmedical bills or being unable to
receive needed medicaltreatment.
A lawsuit was filed againstThompson, unitedhealth chairman
Stephen J Hemsley and two othersenior executives in May 2024
for alleged fraud and insidertrading due to failing to
disclose an antitrustinvestigation into the company
by the United States Departmentof Justice and by selling stock
(46:27):
options before the probe wasmade public.
17.
Data concerning theseallegations and notice of its
report to the Securities andExchange Commission was
initially published in theMinnesota Star Tribune in
February 2024.
9.
Personal life Thompson wasknown to friends and colleagues
as BT.
He was married to PauletteNerevese Thompson, a physical
therapist and fellow Universityof Iowa graduate.
(46:47):
20.
They had two sons, brianThompson and his death.
Brian Thompson and his familywere residents of Maple Grove,
minnesota At the time.
He visited Ireland on severaloccasions as UnitedHealthcare's
sister company, optum hasoperations in the country, and
he was known to have enjoyedplaying golf in Donegal, ireland
.
24.
He was the honorary co-chair ofthe 2026 Special Olympics USA
(47:07):
Games and was noted to be apassionate advocate for the
Special Olympics movement and asteadfast supporter of our
mission to celebrate theabilities of athletes with
intellectual disabilities.
25.
Death On December 4, 2024,thompson was in New York for an
annual UnitedHealthcareinvestors meeting.
26.
He left a Marriott Hotel wherehe was staying which was across
the street from the New YorkHilton Midtown where the meeting
(47:29):
was held.
As he was walking along West54th Street toward the Hilton
Midtown, at around 6.45 am localtime, he was shot by a person
dressed in a hooded jacket.
27.
Thompson was taken to MountSinai West Hospital in Manhattan
where at 7.12 am, he waspronounced dead.
Twenty public officials, whichincluded Minnesota Governor and
former Democratic Vice Presidentnominee, tim Walz and Senator
(47:49):
Amy Klobuchar, expressed dismayand offered condolences to
Thompson's family after theshooting.
Twenty Democratic USRepresentative and former 2024
presidential candidate, deanPhillips, wrote that he was
horrified by the assassinationof my constituent Brian Thompson
this morning in NYC and havehis family in my prayers.
In contrast, many ordinarypeople celebrated the killing
and shared their contempt onsocial media for Thompson,
(48:12):
unitedhealthcare and theAmerican health insurance system
.
31, 32, 33, 34.
The Washington Post said thatmany people mocked Thompson's
death and others feltsatisfaction.
5.
One lecturer at ColumbiaUniversity was quoted by the
Financial Times as tweetingToday we mourn the deaths of
68,000 Americans who needlesslydie each year so that insurance
(48:33):
company execs like BrianThompson can become
multi-millionaires.
While one physician told theDaily Beast that they sympathize
with the family and said theperpetrators should be brought
to justice for the killing, butalso said that Thompson's role
as CEO had led to a great numberof suffering Americans on the
order of millions, in WashingtonSquare Park, at least six
masked men competed in alook-alike contest for the
(48:53):
shooter At the house.
39,.
Shortly following the death,rival insurance company Blue
Cross Blue Shield canceled aplan to stop covering the cost
of anesthesia for longersurgeries.
41-40.
Likewise, shortly following thedeath, two of the houses owned
by Thompson's family wereswatted.
Three a number of healthinsurance companies removed
details about their leadershipteams from their websites or
deleted the pages altogether.
Speaker 2 (49:16):
Okay, that was again
Wikipedia's version of Mr Brian
Thompson's bio.
What I'm going to play to younext is a very critical piece of
information, because a lot ofthe state's information, a lot
of the New York state, theydon't have this out there.
Nobody's done any research onit, so I'm going to play you
(49:36):
this section of it.
So I want you to stand by andlisten to what's actually going
on, why they actually had thesebullets that were printed and
written on.
So hold on a sec here I'm goingto queue this up.
Speaker 5 (49:50):
Inscribed bullets,
like those reportedly used in
the killing of Brian Thompson,are highly unusual and are
typically not standard issue forany branch of the military
intelligence services or lawenforcement agencies.
However, they might be used inthe following contexts, haber 1.
Psychological Operations PSYOPsPurpose Sending a symbolic
(50:12):
message to intimidate orinfluence behavior.
Ops Purpose sending a symbolicmessage to intimidate or
influence behavior.
Examples inscribed bulletsmight be part of a staged
incident to deliver a direct orimplied threat.
Known users, intelligenceagencies, paramilitary groups or
rogue elements conductingcovert operations or two
assassination techniques.
Specialized equipment andintelligence agencies such as
(50:34):
the CIA, mossad or KGB havehistorically been linked to
tools designed for precisionkillings with unique identifiers
or messages.
Purpose Inscriptions on bulletscould signal a claim of
responsibility, issue a warningor create confusion around
attribution.
Hamsh.
3.
Covert paramilitary ormercenary groups Use.
(50:55):
Such groups might use symbolicbullets for intimidation or to
enhance their mystique.
Examples Private militarycontractors or rogue actors with
access to military-gradeequipment.
4.
Propaganda or terrorism MessageInscribed bullets could be used
by terrorist organizations tosymbolize grievances or to
(51:15):
amplify fear through symbolicviolence.
5.
Special Forces or IntelligenceAgency Experiments.
While standard military andintelligence procedures would
not typically includepersonalized or inscribed
ammunition, specialized unitsconducting black ops might adopt
unconventional tools forpsychological impact or
(51:35):
strategic deception.
Okay, you hear what's going on.
You see why I wanted you tohear.
Speaker 2 (51:39):
First of all, let's
put the human back in brian bt,
(52:02):
because I said, like I saidbeginning, there were some
friends that I have, a friendsof his and and they are, they're
hurting right now and I getthat.
But I also want you tounderstand what this mass
information thing that's comingout, because, I mean, unless you
live under a rock, you don'thear this.
Then this is what's going onand for you guys in other
(52:22):
countries, this is what's goingon here in the country.
Get a chance, google it up.
Our hearts go out to Brian andhis family.
And now I'm going to tell youwhat Brian's legacy is.
I mean, what his friends saidabout him.
He's an upstanding guy.
He is one of the few thatactually fought for better
coverages for their patients.
(52:44):
He was the opposite of whatWikipedia was saying towards the
end there, that he was probablythe only guy that was out there
fighting for let's have abetter model and I don't know
the intricacies of this AI modelthat they're using on their
side value-added model.
I mean, whose value is it for?
I don't know, but let's notforget he's a Minnesotan, he's a
(53:05):
family man, he's a friend.
There's all these people outthere that care about him and if
you want to assassinatesomebody, I mean really the head
of companies.
But you know, I see the pointof you take the snake and cut
the head off it.
That's why there was a Trumpassassination attempt more than
once.
How many assassinationsattempted did Biden and all the
(53:28):
other guys get?
They didn't get any.
Who's the last president to beattempted assassination?
Reagan, and before that you hadJFK, and before that you're back
in the 1800s and how can youtrust the data from that?
1900s, 1909, I think there wasa couple One.
So if you think about, justbecause you're the head of a
(53:50):
company, why you would take thatshot at someone who, well, I
mean probably didn't make thisup, I mean it's probably under
his leadership, but no differentthan anybody else in the world,
whether you're a company heador whether you're a head of a
committee, if you're a head of astate organization, I don't
(54:12):
know, this is a tough one.
This is pretty tough because ithits so close to home to a lot
of my friends that knew himpersonally, used to hang out
with him, used to yeah, kind ofa tough one.
I don't have enough good intelto say and I would never bring
them people on the show and say,okay, what's your thoughts,
because I know what they think.
Speaker 4 (54:31):
I know what they're
thinking this is insane.
Speaker 2 (54:34):
They're finding more
and more clues.
They're finding the waterbottle.
Let's see where this thinglands.
Let's see if this is a guncontrol thing or if this is a
mental illness thing or if thisis a vengeance thing.
I mean, if you listen to thatsection of the actual bullets
part pretty interesting researchon that I dug pretty deep into
that and I says, okay, how do we, how do we, what do we know and
(55:01):
how do we play that and how dowe make this sound like?
Okay, is this a conspiracything or is this a?
Well, I think we can end theconspiracy thing because they
shot him.
That's pretty much done.
Now we just got to figure outwhy we can't turn our
conspiracies into, why we haveto figure them out and say, okay
, if they catch this guy alive,if they catch him, I don't know.
I watched the video.
There's a lot of things Ididn't see that made sense and I
(55:23):
know if you're a, if you're apaid professional, first of all,
they don't see you on tv, theydon't.
You're not buying coffee,you're not got a mask on Again,
a mask thing.
Here's a guy in plain out viewseven in the morning got a mask
on, got a hoodie on.
Now just imagine pre-COVID.
Now this is what kind of getsme about this whole mask crap.
(55:48):
Pre-covid, you'd walked out in amask.
You'd have been the guy on thestreet going okay, what's going
on here?
What'd they do back in the olddays when you robbed somebody,
you put a mask on.
Well, now you could just walkdown the street with a mask and
they don't know what you'regoing to do, because you've
taken away that element ofcaution.
It's gone.
You can't go back and say, oh,I saw this guy walking with a
mask.
It didn't draw your attentionbecause of some plandemic.
(56:11):
Pretty crazy, isn't?
It Got a hoodie.
Okay, back in the 70s you worea hoodie.
You were a thug.
They knew exactly how to callyou out.
Now, today, you wear a hoodieand a mask and you're just some
guy on Tuesday.
People, there's got to be abetter way of picking people out
of crowds.
And the pictures of these guys'shirts, these jackets, you know
(56:34):
if you look at them, one's got abutton down and the other one's
got a buckle down and it's notmaking any sense.
So this is where I can't trustmy news to give me the good
information Again they're goingto give us rotten Intel Jake
Giles-looking people.
You know the guy, the actor,who looks just like him.
I mean, if you look at his eyesyou can't trust it, you can't
(56:57):
say okay.
Well then something happened,something changed.
Look at the pictures foryourself.
I mean incredible, incredibledifference of jackets.
We can't see enough colorbecause it's grainy and it's
dark and fuzzy and there's nodefinition there.
But that's typical securitycameras.
Unless you spend some realmoney on cameras, you get what
you get.
(57:17):
You see, big pictures do bigthings and detail is very
minimal.
And I know this because I havea ton of cameras.
I know which ones I'm paid thereal money for and the ones that
are just showing me a body.
Strategic places requirestrategic cameras, very
definition-related.
I've got cameras that'll tellyou an LPR, a license plate
reader, from a quarter mile away.
(57:38):
I mean, you get within aquarter mile of a certain
facility of mine and I'vealready got your numbers.
So yeah, I'm kind of glad wehave some security.
Some security footage was justto get these guys closer.
And another thing don't makeany sense to me.
He's got a battery in hisbackpack.
As far as what they're saying,I'm not sure about that and
(58:00):
you're left on a bike, but thenyou get there in a cab.
How do you get there in a caband leave on a bike?
Now I do understand why theydid the battery pack thing,
because those battery packsaren't on the bikes, according
to what someone says.
(58:20):
In New york, you take the bike,you run, you got to buy a pack
or you got to get a pack out ofsome vending machine and then
you unlock the bike.
Well, you got time to unlock abike, carry a battery, do all
this stuff.
Come on, they don't even makeany sense.
Again, it's an activeinvestigation.
They're still hunting forpeople, but they want to.
They want the public help, butthey're giving them sideways
information so that maybe youcan milk something out of the
intel.
I think Mary would do betterthan that in New York.
(58:40):
There's a family grieving overhere in Minnesota, not far from
where I'm at, and you can't dobetter than that.
You've got two boys, 21 and 22,years of age, that are now
without a dad and soon to bewithout a grandpa.
If these guys get married andhave kids, I mean, and a wife,
come on.
I think New York needs to do alot better than this.
(59:01):
But I'm not criticizing becauseI'm not in the mix.
I just see what I see because Igot information given to me by
news organizations I cannottrust.
Form your own opinion, people,what do you say?
What's in your mind?
Engage yourself, look at it and, for God's sakes, if social
media puts out a program forthis guy's funeral, please,
(59:23):
please, give to this guy.
I mean not that he needs it,but support.
Give him support.
Give him something for theirfamily to look forward to,
knowing that, hey, you took afather from somebody, a husband,
a brother, a friend.
Pretty insensitive world we'rein.
It's only going to get worse ifwe don't stop this.
Either way, guys, I wanted tothrow that at you and I
appreciate you.
(59:44):
Thank you for listening to theshow.
Form your opinions, be heard,be vocal and show up, because
people who show up get stuffdone other than that.
Uh, happy sunday.
I'm going to launch this outand you have a rest of your
wonderful sunday.
Sorry to leave you on such abummer note, but I appreciate it
.
And you ukrainians?
(01:00:05):
Yes, I did get your messages.
I do hope trump kind of spinsaround on you and helps you out,
and officially we're, I don'tknow.
I just yeah, I hope it worksout.
I hope we can help.
All right, signing off.
I've cast until next time andthat's a wrap for hut cast.
(01:00:30):
Hut cast is again a pragmaticapproach to seeing things how
some people see them.
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Again for HuttCast.
Thank you again.
Have a wonderful evening, thankyou.