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December 8, 2025 45 mins
Atty.–Auth. Dennis Brennan exposes the explosive parallels between today’s election and Aaron Burr’s era—public fury, trials, propaganda, duels, and the political warfare that shaped a nation. His book reveals how America’s past conflicts echo through modern power struggles.

THE SWAMP STRIKES BACK! - BOOK

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Kiss keep the simple, stupid. I promise you this is
not a John from the deep in the pool. Set
up the move turn radio. Set up the move turn radio.
Set up the move turn on radio. Set up the

(00:21):
set up the moo, sit up, the the mo sum
the sit up, the.

Speaker 2 (00:30):
Let's make the posits into the back of knowledge. Welcome
back to the Treble Show formerly known as Paranorid Radio.
Ladies and gentlemen, I am a troubles guard see and
I want to thank the Lord for me to be
here today. And I want to thank every single one
of you for a loma we went.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
To your space. That is right, guys.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
We have an amazing episode lined up for all of you,
guys with an amazing special guest.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
First of all, I want.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
To remind you that the best thing that you can
do for the shows word of mouth. Check us out
a Paranori radio.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
Wait forgot. I was just used to saying paranoid radio. Guys.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
This is my fifth episode for travel show. I'm trying
to get used to the ropes here. If you're on
YouTube like Shaing, subscribe like shad, subscribe like shamp subscribe.
If you're on Rumbo like sharing, subscribe if you're anywhere,
drop a five serving up a podcast on Spotify that
allows other people to enjoy the show as much as
I enjoy making it. It's an amazing time. I want
to promote this for you, guys. The YouTube is for

(01:16):
the entertainment purpose, okay, guys. The rumbo is for all
my conspiracy junkies that want to listen to the stuff
that we used to talk about four.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
Hundred and forty four episodes ago.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
And the Instagram account is if you want to listen
to any government rents, Flash from Flash, Underscore News one
still and.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
I still go hardcore Lives.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Every single Monday, we give you fifteen to twenty five
minutes of live action and conspiracy topics of the deep state.
You know where I stand on that stuff, and I'm
not trying to promote anything, but if you are into
the politics stuff, find us on Instagram. The link is
in the bio. Let's jump in from a deepening of
the points set the freaking mood. My next special guest
has never been here before. He's an amazing author and

(01:54):
also an attorney. Please give me a warm welcome to
Dennis Brennan. What's up, Dennis?

Speaker 1 (01:58):
How's it going.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
Oh, it's going great. Thanks Troubles for having me on.
I really appreciate it and I love that opening a
lot of energy.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
Oh yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
We try to keep it as much as much as
powerful as we can. I feel like the intros are
a lot better than the way I feel inside. I mean,
but I'm trying to reflect positivity to everybody and uplifting.
Hopefully at the end of this episode, everybody else is
uplifted with me. Dennis, you have a book, talk to
me about it.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Let's go.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Yeah, I have a book. It came out in May.
It's called DC Swamp Strikes Back Aaron Burr Donald Trump,
and they're similar battles. That book. What it looks at
is the trouble that we all know Donald Trump went through.
Several cases were filed against them, criminal and civil. We
break down those cases on why each of them really

(02:49):
shouldn't have been brought, but also comparing it back to
you know, early colonial days and then when the government
was formed. Aaron Burr, most of us don't know much about.
Aaron Burr was vice president. Most of us I think
probably think, oh, he's the guy to Chad Alexander Hamilton. Correct,
he is, but there's more to that, and Aaron Burr,

(03:12):
like Trump, was an outsider I think in the research
that I did, I think Aaron Burr Moore than any
other person, deserves the credit for getting Jefferson elected the
first time because they both ran together in the first election,
Jefferson against Adams, and that everybody might remember also that

(03:36):
Jefferson was a vice president to Adams. Even though they
ran against each other, Jefferson lost to Adams, who was
the vice president of George Washington. So it's the very
early time in the country when that happened. When they
lost the first time, Burr went back to New York
where he was from another similarity with Trump, and instead

(03:58):
of stewing about the lass like a lot of Jefferson's
friends in Virginia did and what they were looking to
throw knives at Burr and other people to say it
was their fault. Burr went back and made sure he
got everybody elected in New York in the legislature because
at that time the electoral votes, you basically had electoral
votes out of the legislative system, so each state got

(04:21):
the vote for whoever they wanted as president on the
electoral votes. So you had to have your party in charge. Burr,
he was a master. He went back, got his people elected,
swung New York over to Jefferson's side, and Jefferson was
able to win in the second election against Adams. You know,

(04:42):
there's always controversy following Burr, and much like Trump, it's
almost like they walk out the door and there's controversy.
And even in that election where Burro done so much,
the problem at that time Burr and Jefferson had the
same amount of votes and even though one was running
for vice president, didn't matter. Our system wasn't perfect yet,

(05:04):
so there was basically a runoff in Congress where Congress
gets to decide, and Jefferson had some enemies. They were
trying to cut backroom deals to deny Jefferson the presidency.
Burr again just went back to New York, set it
out and said he'd wait see what happens. But some
of Jefferson's people thought he should have stood up and said, hey,

(05:26):
I ran for vice president, don't vote for me. It
took several ballots. I think there were fourteen. Reminiscent of
you know, our recent speaker, when Kevin McCarthy was Speaker
and it went I think seventeen votes. It just kept tying.
They couldn't get out of it. Eventually, Jefferson cut a
deal with the other side to give them some appointments.

(05:49):
Jefferson became president. Burrow was the vice president. And that's
what you know at the beginning of our country. Basically,
this is the kind of controversy we saw. You know,
there were Burr you know, didn't run in the second term.
Jefferson basically dumped them as the vice president. He he

(06:11):
had controversies with the duel. Dueling was illegal. I don't
know in grammar school or that they made that clear
to us when they you know, all I remember them
telling us is they had a duel two angry guys,
and that Hamilton died. You know, Hamilton is the one
that challenged them to the duel. He You know, if
you if you watch the musical or if you read

(06:33):
some of the books that are written about Hamilton, they
claim Hamilton shot the gun either into a tree or
in the air and wasn't trying to kill Burr. Doesn't
make any sense. If you're gonna challenge someone to a duel,
you probably should point the gun at them. Burr. You know,
pointed the gun at him and shot him. So, you know,

(06:55):
Hamilton ends up dying a day later. Most of us
think that's where the care ended. But Burr was still
he was active in you know, more like international affairs,
and it was with that that he was accused of treason.
He stood trial for treason twice under what they call

(07:15):
the Burr Conspiracy, where they claimed he was trying to
form his own army and fight against Spain, which controlled
a large portion of what we know is the US
now in Mexico, but Spain had controlled Mexico in the
southern southwestern part of the country. So he was accused

(07:35):
of that two trials, one trial that was dismissed, the
second when he was acquitted, found that guilty. So that
should have cleared his name. But he never ran again.
He didn't have a great ending, so to speak. But
you know, we compare that in the book to Trump,

(07:56):
who battled all the way. Burr was a lawyer. He
put all his faith in the law. It worked out
for him. I think anybody that watched Trump knows he
put none of his faith in the law. He uh,
he put his faith in the people. And I think
it himself and himself right, he would walk out of
court and hold press conferences, which seems to be the

(08:18):
new thing. It's like, all these people that have been
indicted recently are James Comey, who's a lawyer. He's holding
a press conference? Who does that? Every defense attorney has
to be sitting there saying, are you nuts? You can't
you can't get it dieted and then walk outside and
talk to the press about your case. You're gonna say
something and it's gonna be bad. Yeah, you know. Trump

(08:42):
turned all that upside down.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
It's it's funny all the similarities and even gunshots resonate time.
I like saying this, my buddy from Flash Flash Flash,
I'm just going to one might. My political analyst told
me the same thing. He goes time does an ankle echo, Bro,
But it does no, no, no, Time doesn't repeat it tough,
but it does echo.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
And I was like, you know what, Bro, that makes
a lot of sense.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
It's just back then in the day, people didn't have
social media and computers in their pockets to videotape everything
or record everything and then stream it directly into your consciousness,
directly into your face, and or control the narrative.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
Right, and it's you know, yeah, Burr disadvantage compared to Trump, right,
because Trump walks out cameras around him, He's tweeting or
truth social or whatever, the truthing, I don't know what
they call it, but you know, he's everywhere. And then
he has other people doing it too. And you know

(09:45):
the news media, the twenty four to seven cable news,
everybody is covering them with err you know, weeks would
go on before someone read it. And you know what,
the old fashioned newspapers back then, which were no better
than what we have now. You know, they were really
advocates rather than you know there it was called the
party press era. I dig into that in the book

(10:07):
to talk about the similarities about the media, which I'm
no fan of. I'm actually a bigger fan now that
we are able to go on x or whatever you use,
and that we have independence, whether it's blogs or podcasts.
You know, of people that would have been blocked, there's

(10:28):
no way the media would have hired almost all the
people that are are out there doing that, right, There's
some that were in the media that now we're either
kicked to the side or whatever and are doing their
own podcasts or blags, but they're hardly independent. I mean,
they're part of the problem in my mind.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
Yeah, and quite frankly, the money.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
One of the biggest reason why we haven't had any
major sponsors on the show. And everybody that I've applied
for has told me no is because first of all
the name, and second of all, because you're too loud
about your political beliefs and I'm bro like, your too divisive,
and people sometimes bro the backing of the money makes.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
You look flashy.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
Before we started this conversation, you started telling me about
Riverside and stream Yard and.

Speaker 1 (11:19):
How other people use it right and x's and oh's.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
But and I told you Zoom for me worked, and
it's been working for the past four hundred something episodes,
and I have data, like you said, there's data to
prove that it works.

Speaker 3 (11:31):
Right.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
It's simple.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
It doesn't have all the graphics or anything. It doesn't
have crazy sound systems and stuff. It's just very basic conversation.
And then we are the show, right, But a lot
of people don't like that. A lot of people like
to be entertained, and the people providing the entertainment have
big bucks backing them up. Lobbyists and other people from
the opposite or people that like to control the narrative. Again,

(11:53):
it's very it's an impactful thing. The mainstream media. Now
it's not legacy media. It's us leave it or not,
and a lot of us in a conspiracy movement. And
even to this day, I believe that the Mega movement
has also been split into splintered.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
It hasn't been split, it's been splintered.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
By different factions, and those are the ones that they
have been using to weaponize us and keep us divisive. Think,
if you think about it, the Democrats might be a
little weak and they might be scared, But when an
animal is against the corner and it's damaged, it's her,
that's when it's mostly aggressive, and that's when it's most dangerous.

(12:31):
But something that they have the left of the radicals
is that they're very united. They know how to keep
one narrative, they know how to control it, and they
know how to ally each other. They know how to
rally up us any other way. In the other hand,
we rallied up for one man, which made us look
coldic and then for example in California, the Dodgers win

(12:53):
and then we'll forget what we stand for.

Speaker 1 (12:55):
It's we're entertained. Believe it or not.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
We had we had an election just a week go,
and everybody forgot to riley up and actually stick it
to the man, stick it to news them.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
And I was showed up and I was a single
red dude wear my hat. I was like, what that, bro,
There's nobody here.

Speaker 2 (13:09):
And it's disappointing because all the people that we said
that we're going to rally up on social media didn't
because oh, the day before everybody had to go to
the parade and it was too drunk.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
Everybody was too drunk to go vote. The next day
they did it purposely.

Speaker 2 (13:21):
Man. The Dodgers won and they won the election. And
see that's how it happens. People love being entertained, man,
So let's give them some entertainment. Tell me more break
it through, man.

Speaker 3 (13:33):
Yeah, I mean, you know, we touched a bit there
on the media. There's a lot of relationships in the media.
You know what they call the legacy media. I put
connections together the show. It's really been the demn media.
There's only three percent of newsrooms identify themselves as Republican.

(13:54):
So when you think about that, and that includes all newsrooms.
There's some conservatives out there. When you think about that,
it tells you what kind of bias there is in
the media. And we see it if you're if you're
looking at a newspaper. I'm in Chicago, I'm in the
suburbs of Chicago, but I get the Chicago Tribute. That

(14:15):
paper used to be very conservative. It's very liberal now.
And I don't think it's me. I don't think I've
just moved so far to the right. You read stories
and there's opinions within the stories, and these are news stories.
They're supposed to be basic who what, when, where, why,
when and how. It's not supposed to be your opinion

(14:36):
or you know, often during the Trump years, we've heard
you know, Trump said, and then right after it they'll say,
but that that's already been debunked. It's like, wait a minute,
who debunked it? That's you're putting your opinion in the
say it's been debunked. And unfortunately, it's not only the

(14:56):
reporters that are being trained to be advocates. It used
to be the you were supposed to be unbiased. Now
they're teaching them in journalism school to advocate for a side. Well,
that's a problem. You're you're supposed to be the referee, right,
someone commits a file, you call it. Whether it's a
blue team or a red team, you won't care. And

(15:17):
they I think years ago it may have been like that,
but it's it's been slowly creeping into this, you know,
just propaganda. So what do you do when you read
a story? I often find, you know, I'll read something
whether it's on the Internet or in the hard copy paper.
I still do that because I'm old and I look
at it and think that can't be true, you know,

(15:40):
or the reporter's opinions in there. So I have to
look it up, and you have to go through a
lot of different sources to find it, you know. It's
it's uh And it's not only the media, although I
think they're a big cause of it. It's ourselves, you know.
If you're on social media. When Charlie Kirk was killed,
there were people, you know, celebrating his death and saying, oh,

(16:05):
he was a racist anyhow, he was a misogynist, he
was you know, he was fascist, And I'm like, I
didn't know much about it. I knew who he was,
but I couldn't have told you what he really had
said over the years. I'm like, I don't think so,
because the stuff I've seen him say, I don't think
that's true. I went back and I must have looked
at I mean thousands of his videos. You know, they

(16:28):
have them all with the organization. Everything's on the internet.
Never and you know the things they would point to racist,
It's like, that's not racist. He might disagree with the
guy on some issue, but that doesn't make him a racist.
You know. It's kind of like this idea with immigration, Well,
if you're against open borders, you're a racist. No, I'm

(16:52):
against open borders. You know. It's and I think that
shock people when you had Hispanics vote for Trump before, right,
you probably Oh my gosh.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
I went viral on the Post in June early June
where I talked about the.

Speaker 2 (17:11):
Last they lost Latino I could look up to in
the media that it has impacted the country.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
Was Caesar Travis.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
Caesar Travis was against immigration because don't remember that.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
You know what's funny. You know what's funny.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
You guys get pissed off about the kids that have
no representation in courts. At least we know that we're
in the courts and going somewhere. They're going back to
their families. What about the thirty three hundred thousand kids
they got lost in the boarder during the Biron administration?

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Where the when? When when the doors were welded open?

Speaker 2 (17:41):
You guys don't want to talk about that because it's
not emotional for you, because it wasn't your kid, Because oh,
it's not about against Trump.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
You see, you guys are building a narrative. A lot
of people in the Internet rather be first.

Speaker 2 (17:56):
To get the clicks and get the likes and get
the get the get the I want to say, the attention,
the fifteen minutes of fame. They want to be first
with the information instead of being the ones with the
right information. That's why when Kirk died, and I know
what's an assassination.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
I'm a conspiracy theorist, bro.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
I understand how things work out, and I probably think
and in my gut, I think that it probably was
a big organization out there that has a lot of
power in our lobby political lobbyists. I know, I know
what's going on. I'm not gonna mention the name because
then I'm gonna get ingged on YouTube.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
But I am gonna say this.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
That made me recheck my posture in the MAGA movement.
I'm a patriot. Yes, I voted for Donald Trump. Yeah,
I think he's divisive. I think he's not narcissist. But
I'd rather have the divisive narcissists than the guy that's
gonna destroy our country. It has zero zero spine, all right,
Or the girl that nobody voted for, you know, and
they just put her up there, They propped her up

(18:54):
there without anybody voting for her until the.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
Last day for the election.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Then you have something that's called the propaganda machine, the
well shopping propaganda machine that keeps us divided.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
I'm not be honest with you, bro.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
Everything that Trump does the moment he walks out there
and you can lie.

Speaker 1 (19:12):
No one here.

Speaker 2 (19:13):
Everybody knows every single There's never been a moment where
being the president of the United States of America has
been more on camera, or has more FaceTime, or has
been on headlines more than two day. I mean, ninety
eleven was close and that was a tragic day in
history for the United States. So it's like everybody, he

(19:33):
doesn't matter if he spits a gum out if he's
spits to do it, they're making a wave out of it,
and then everybody's profitable because he brings ratings up, regardless
it's so good or bad.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
You know.

Speaker 3 (19:44):
Oh and I think, you know, you hit it at
something and he always takes this hit. And I agree.
You know, Narcissism might be his you know, his weakness
the Superman, you know, Superman d kryptonite. But every politician
is narcissistic to him.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
Word.

Speaker 3 (20:01):
You know, if you're going to run for office and
you're basically telling everybody, I know how to fix this,
I know how to I have the answers, you have
to be a little narcissistic. And that's okay. Someone has
to be the guy that stands up there, right, I
mean there's people, whatever they do in life, you know,

(20:22):
you have to have some confidence that you can do it.
Trump obviously has confidence. There's no doubt about it. And
you know, and I think he does a good job.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
You know.

Speaker 3 (20:33):
I think the the idea that they attack him if
the worst thing they can say about him is he's narcissist,
well so are you. We all are to an extent.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
Whatever it's called the trebles, show Man I'm you know,
I'm a narcissist in myself. I kicked out everybody and
I said, no, it's me now, you know. It's funny,
so full circle, right when viral on a video.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
That Latino's for Trump put up and they repost.

Speaker 2 (21:00):
And it went viraln there on their page on Instagram,
and it went viral mine too.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
You should have seen.

Speaker 2 (21:05):
I was flooded, flooded with this crab like behavior from
the Latino faction, from us, from my rasa, from my peoples.
They were telling me, oh, we're gonna freaking find you all,
you freaking sell out, all you coconut you brown from
the outside and white from the inside, and I am
a coconut.

Speaker 1 (21:25):
Forget you guys, all right, guys.

Speaker 2 (21:26):
Then they were telling death threats, bro threats against my life,
against my kids.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
They were so threatening about my channel. And then on
top of.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
That, there was the wave of patriots from all different creeds, colors,
and sizes that came to back me up on a
comment section.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
It was massive.

Speaker 2 (21:44):
I was I was really mostly ashamed of the people
that were threatening against my life instead of saying, man,
you know what, and then people, people forget the more
you protest.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
The more you take it to the streets, the more
American that you are.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
You and I are not so Afra because I've never
met a group of people that's more racist against their
own kind than Latinos.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
We have a crab like structured lifestyle.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
Bro with Mexican's hate Savadorians, and he speak the same
freaking language and they live in the same third world country.

Speaker 1 (22:12):
It's retarded. All of that.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
Central America, South America's the whole same thing, different country.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
It's it's the United.

Speaker 2 (22:18):
States background, Bro, It's it's it's it's retarded that you
guys talk about Pupoosa's tomalities and tacos and then battle
each other and then talk each other behind each other's back.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
And viciously go to lunch together.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
It's retarded. It's retarded anyway, Sorry for ranting so much. Yeah, Man, Brandman,
keep talking to me about your book.

Speaker 3 (22:35):
Well that's interesting to the self. But you know, I
think we always have these, uh, these factions and politics.
You know, back in Burr's time, he had the enemies
like Alexander Hamilton, but he also had when they when
they picked him as the candidate to run with Jefferson
the first time, and then you know, Jefferson was kind

(22:57):
of like whatever, he didn't he about an narcissist. He
kind of thought it didn't matter who the vice president was,
he would be president. That's good, and you know I
love Thomas Jefferson, right, but but of a narcissist when
you think about it. So, you know, Burr really was
plocked out of relative obscurity. He had held office, but

(23:18):
not at that level. You know, Trump himself comes out
of you know, TV, basically in business, but mostly I
think his celebrity really was really born in the development
and then he became a huge mega celebrity with TV,
with his TV shows, which you know, I'm not sure
I was really a fan of. I didn't really.

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Watch those, but I never watched it either.

Speaker 3 (23:43):
But people people did watch it, you know, as he
would say, had great writings. So these two guys who
really didn't understand I think, you know, both bright, but
I'm not sure they understood the politics of Washington, d C.
And you know, when you go to Washington, DC, you
get an enemies that are sitting with you. You know,

(24:05):
you talk about Hispanic people fighting each other. You've got people.
Now if you're a Republican that are fighting with you,
and I think Trump found that out when he got there.
It's like, wait a minute, other Republican doesn't matter. There's
people that care about themselves. They're narcissists too. And then
you have the Democrats who are dead set against anything
you want to do for whatever reason. That's continued now

(24:28):
ten years and will probably go on for the rest
of his term. And when you look at that and
you see the fighting, that didn't really change your friend
talking about the Echo. Yeah, there was a lot of
that back then. You had Madison and Monroe who were
very tight with Jefferson, and they had this plan for
the Virginia presidency that would go on and on, and

(24:51):
Burr was kind of interrupting it. He was the New Yorker,
you know, the guy, the well spoken guy from New York.
You know. Trump is kind of blowing the whole picture
up too with the you know, the Bush family had
their plan. Jeb was going to be president. You know,
I thought so. I mean when when Trump entered the
race in twenty fifteen, I thought it was some kind

(25:13):
of publicity stunt that this guy he can't be serious,
that he thinks he's going to be president. He's been
you know. Now, I will admit I didn't really I
knew of him, but I didn't know there is depth there.
There's depth to what he does. I mean, and if
you look at the policies he's had, I think the
first term wasn't anywhere near what the second term here is. Yeah,

(25:37):
as far as bringing in the people and being dedicated
to a purpose, realizing a little bit more about what
Washington is. You know, you've got to watch the people
in front of you, but you're also going to watch
the people behind you because they're all, oh yeah, trying
to stab you and in undercut you. You know, they're
throwing things that you're going to trip and fall. You know,

(25:58):
there's a lot of people, I think in both parties
that would like to see him fail. And that's pretty sad.
I mean, it should wipe the president to succeed.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
I it's because of the money play. There's a lot
of money involved with different different areas.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
I'm not a millionaire.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
Few people I'm not, dude, I'm nowhere near being a millionaire.
But I'm gonna say something. It's are more upset about EBT,
which it's already lifted right. But the EBT SNAP thing
is coming out already came out.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
But when it was not, when it was.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
Held at thirty days twenty nine days, and November first
came around, people were like, oh, oh, you know there's
going to be looting now and this and that and
but he's still building the left wing of the White
House into a nice millionaire ballroom by millionaires and stuff.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
And I'm like, look, bro, let me tell you something.

Speaker 2 (26:48):
But you guys are pitching and screaming about him breaking
down the left wing of the right wing of the
of the White House to make a ballroom.

Speaker 1 (26:57):
For special guests.

Speaker 2 (26:58):
But when Black Lives Matter was and and and throwing
bricks and everybody was burning the city, the same city
where your mom grew up, in the same liquor store
where you get your milk from, was burnt down to
the floor.

Speaker 1 (27:10):
You guys were bitching about that. Now you're bitching.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
About a ballroom just because you don't have your SNAP
benefits that's in a different pocket of money, Like that's
not even coming out of your taxes for you to
bitch at. Well, that was privately made by private owners
and people that are cooperating with him.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
For the future.

Speaker 2 (27:26):
It's not about freaking government money out of my rib
that you're gonna be getting fed out of.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
You guys are freaking dumb. Just see to be just
you know, just read a book. Chat Gimbt. If you're
being gonna you're gonna be lazy about it, Chat Gibt.
It's easy right there.

Speaker 3 (27:43):
I think, although I think Elon would say us is
it Crock or Groke whatever they want?

Speaker 1 (27:48):
Rock. Yeah, Crack is pretty good to I heard great
things about Rock.

Speaker 3 (27:52):
But I think, you know, the problem is people want
to believe, like the people complaining about their benefits, they've
been Democrats that are complaining, and they're they're going to
be Democrats no matter what it appears, even though when
you see this play out, it was the Democrats who
wouldn't extend the continued resolution. They didn't care that you

(28:16):
weren't getting your money. Yeah, I would make the argument
that they used you. You know, they didn't. You know,
it's like you're just going to be a pawn in
our little fight with Trump because we want to get
whatever they wanted with insurance with the Obamacare. It's like
when they didn't end up getting that, so what are
we talking about how could you still back them. If

(28:38):
I was a recipient of that money, I'd be I'd
be wondering, like, is anybody on my side? I mean, Trump,
to his credit, has said the people that deserve it
should get it. And when you see that forty two
million people get snap benefits, you do have to wonder, like,
we can't be that poor of a nation. And I

(28:59):
know there's poor people, poor culture, yes, yeah, right, and
it becomes I'm entitled to it. And I don't know
what you can believe on the internet because you know people,
you know, they video themselves or other people with these things.
They say that makes it sound like I want my money,
I'm coming after you for it. Is that an act

(29:20):
or is that someone actually doing it?

Speaker 1 (29:22):
I don't know, no, Hugh, I'm from the streets.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
I canna tell you this right now. I know people
that have been on EBT for generations.

Speaker 1 (29:31):
I know I grew up with them. I was adopted
at twelve years old.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
By a Mexican family. I can tell you came from
the streets. I'm telling you right now, I know people
that have been on EBT. That's not what it was
designed for. It was designed for for example, my wife
asked Lippus, I spend so much money on hydroxy and
all her medicines.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
She's on six seven different pills every single day. This
is personal to me.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
I don't qualify for Medicare, neither does she because I
work full time time. Do you understand how hard it
is to be a single provider in California with a
sick wife too kids and not be able to get
assistance from the government, and watching everybody else that doesn't
even have a freaking job go to Disneyland with their
kids when they get a tax return and still get

(30:18):
eight hundred dollars worth of benefits monthly. It's retarded, it's
fucked up, and it's broken, and it's not right. This
is why it's personal to me. I don't care if
you're brown, white, aging, but I don't see color. I
see fuckery and I see a lot of it. So
sorry for my language. At the end of the day, bro,
I don't care if you're brown. It's not designed. If
I have to work one hundred and twenty hours every

(30:41):
two weeks to feed my children and be the sole professor, provider,
and protector of my family, you should be able to
work twenty hours of community service to.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Collect that check.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
If I have to pee in a cup to hold
my job, you should be able to pee in a
cup to collect that check. It's not hard math, it's easy.
Let's make America grade again.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
Guys. Come on, come on, guys, get a little patriotic.
What's your soul? You know it's And then the culture
behind it. People are active.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
My mom when I was a child, before I was
taken away, my mom was ashamed to pull out the
freaking food stamps and pay with that at the cashier.
Now people are freaking slashing, not card proudly.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
Oh the relief and stuff.

Speaker 3 (31:24):
Yes, I do well. There's a changing culture, right. I
mean people years ago, if you fell on hard times
and you might have to use food stamps for other assistants,
you really didn't want to. I mean, the mindset was,
I want a job. I don't want that. I want
a job. Just put me to work. I'll do anything.
Now it's more of well, i'll take the free assistance.

(31:49):
And if I don't get the perfect job, and I don't,
I gotta tell you I've had other jobs, and there's
no perfect job. I don't think that's out there even
Donald Trump today would say, yeah, there's there's no perfect job,
and he said some pretty good ones. Right. I mean
you look at president and you go, yeah, that's not
a great job. It sounds great, but there's a lot.

Speaker 2 (32:12):
And it's not greatly paid. To be the leader of
the free world is not great and paid.

Speaker 3 (32:17):
No, it's not, especially when you're a millionaire or billionaire
whatever it is. Yeah, but even you know, for most
of these people, I think the only guy that probably
made more money in there was Biden. You know, he
seemed to turn that into most of them, whether it's
Obama or whoever, did it after they left, Like Obama
made a lot of money after leaving. That's that's common.

(32:39):
You might not like it, but it's common. The idea
of making money while you're in office. That's that's Nancy
Pelosi stuff, right.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
Oh man, you look, if you look at her portfolio,
you're like, well, she she rules the world.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
If you look at her stuff, man, you're you're gonna
be shocked. Yeahould be in jail, bro, that's nuts. It
would have been at least investigated.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
I would have liked to have just had you know,
when she was talking to her husband and they were
deciding what stacks to buy. I would have liked to
be listening in, like, you know, go with that one
you call your own guy.

Speaker 1 (33:16):
Yeah, yeah, you know, it would be awesome.

Speaker 2 (33:18):
I think it would sell if she would make a
documentary and hey, man, I'll buy that documentary.

Speaker 1 (33:24):
Bro, I'll support the cause.

Speaker 2 (33:25):
If you guys, if you if she made a documentary
of all of those conversations that have passed right from
all those from all those purchases and sales, and then
this is how it became rich and bail. She puts
it on in public, it'll make her look good, you know,
and people would.

Speaker 1 (33:41):
Take after her.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
Maybe she could be the next star for the Democrats.
I mean it's uh, well, you know.

Speaker 3 (33:48):
When she was first elected, and this is in the
book too, you know, she actually said that she was
going to Washington to drain the swamp. Yeah, and that's
you know, it's like, yeah, she didn't drain the swamp.
She became the swamp. I mean, I don't know if
there's anybody in the history of the country that's done better,

(34:11):
you know, serving in the House and being speaker and
making so much money, whether it's your husband or yourself
it's all the same. It's a joint account. Knock it off.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
You know.

Speaker 3 (34:24):
That's it's kind of amazing that she would go say it,
I'm draining the swamp, but you're actually becoming the swamp.
And yeah, I think if she was to come out now,
assuming she couldn't be prosecutor to stature limitations or whatever,
and really tell the real story how you know, or
even be the one. You'll get some people like burglars

(34:45):
that become security system analysts and consultants, and they'll tell
you how to secure your business or how to make
sure people can't rip you off. And often they'll say, well,
how do you know, Well, because I did it. I
ripped off for millions of dollars. I'll show you how
it will happened to you. And they're popular to be

(35:05):
so she could do the same thing. I can. I
can tell you how the next congressman won't be able
to rip you off. I buy that book, I watched
that movie.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
You're you're an attorney, you're a small or smart individual.
Let me ask you something. It's just came up right
now when you're talking. So she's she's she's up.

Speaker 1 (35:23):
There in age man.

Speaker 2 (35:24):
I don't want to call her old for respect, but
you know she's a woman at throw, but then a mother.

Speaker 1 (35:28):
So look, bro, you're already on your way out almost.

Speaker 2 (35:34):
You're pretty up there, and you you are you could
live eight times your life with the amount of money
you have.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
What do you what do you want all this money for?

Speaker 2 (35:45):
You're you're always gonna be followed by a camera because
you're a politician all your life? What do you what
are you gonna do with all that money? What do
you put it so that you could enjoy it? You
have to be hiding, like it's not like if you
can live a public life or a quiet one, because
it can't be quiet because you're a celebrity, right Like
you're you're in the system. I don't know what out

(36:07):
of your what's your point of view on that? How
do you do you live happy with all those millions
and not be a problem?

Speaker 3 (36:13):
Right? You know it's always the problem when people talk
about what would you do, like if you won, I
don't know if it's mega millions or powerful. One of
them is like nine hundred million, right, and if you
won that, you know, all of a sudden your life
has changed. I mean you you're walking away, you know,
with about half of that if you take the cash
payment and if you just invest it, you know, even

(36:36):
at five percent, you know you're going to be making
ten million or so every year. But what do you do?
Your life has become totally different if people know about it,
and they're gonna know that you have money, just even
someone has money. Now if you're recognizable, whether you're a
former president or Pelosi is just the same. Everybody knows her.

(36:58):
She's been there so long, but he recognizes our You
almost need security all the time, and especially now the
way politics and you know, our advocacy for those politicians
or our side or their side has become you know,
nasty and now violent as we saw, you know, where

(37:20):
people think nothing of settling their their argument. Like it's
the playground. Like you're in fifth grade and you know,
Jimmy throws something at you, and now you tackle Jimmy
and you're fighting with them, and it's you're called each
other names, but you're trying to really hurt Jimmy. Luckily,
you're only in fifth grade and you can't really hurt
each other that much. But these people now are out there,

(37:42):
you know, firing guns at each other. It's it's a problem.
And if you're well known, yeah, what are you going
to do? You're it's almost like you have too much.
And I think Nancy Pelosi is too much. You have
to live behind the gated, you know, house, and even
that can be penetrated. You know, I have to have security.

(38:04):
It's not a great life. I mean in some ways.
I mean even though all of us think of boy,
if I was a billionaire, isn't all that good? I mean,
you know, even even Charlie Kirk. He appeared on Bill
Maher's show, his podcast, and I one of the comments,
you know, i'd seen, you know, Maher said you have security?

(38:28):
And you know this is only like a week or
so before he was killed, and he said, yeah, it's
I have to, you know, fact of life. I have
to have security, which at that time, I think Bill
Maher was saying, You've got to be kidding me, buddy,
how why would you need security? People are that crazy?
Yes they are. I'm surprised, you know. I guess the

(38:51):
difference is it's been the left that's that crazy. So
Bill Maher, although he spoke it out against some of
those people, he's still considered it, and maybe he's not
in danger. It's certainly you know, Charlie Kirk was pretty
far right, so he was in danger as a celebrity.

Speaker 2 (39:10):
The same people that don't want guns are down to
shoot you. Shoot you with one of them. I'll tell
you that much if you don't think I like them.
The same people that told your kids and yourself to
put a mask over your body and take a million
shots and boosters and saw your grandparents die you weren't
able to freaking put them down in the ground because
you were going to get contaminated and all these other stuff.

(39:31):
Those same people are the same ones that are down
to take your life, take your habits, take everything that
you own, have or belong to.

Speaker 1 (39:38):
It is sad. Now I'm not talking. Look, I see
if you guys, you could be whatever you want.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
But when you're damaging the identity of children at a
very young age, you are going to have repercussions. Dennis,
I have one more question on the way out, and
I asked this question to everybody right before we end
the show. I want to thank you again one hundred
million times for being It was a fun conversation.

Speaker 1 (40:03):
I don't think we've spoke too much about your about your.

Speaker 2 (40:06):
Book, but we are going to put that on the
description of the show and then you're gonna have one
NAT's message in a way out. What is your favorite emotion?
Has it changed your life and have you weaponized it?

Speaker 3 (40:16):
Wow? My favorite emotion. That's a that's a very good question.
Thank you. You know, I guess it depends how you
defind emotions, but I think you know it's it's happiness
for me where you you have this feeling of just

(40:37):
happiness at that point, Yeah, because you find you not
only have happiness for yourself but for your family members,
your friends, other people. And when you have that in
your soul, I think people you view the world differently.
You know, the people that walk around who are you know,

(40:58):
negative about everything. They're tough to live with and they're
they're tough to even talk to.

Speaker 1 (41:05):
You know.

Speaker 3 (41:05):
So you know, if you have anger, you've got a problem.
But if you're if you try to look at it,
you know, from our viewpoint of trying to be happy
about everything, it it actually helps. And even even in
these times when we have politics, I think you can't
make it. You know, your identity that you're you know,
the angry nutball all the time because those are the

(41:29):
people they climb up on the roof in you know,
Pennsylvania and shots that are president. You know, that's not
gonna I mean, even if you were successful with some
stupid violent act, it's not going to change anything. Maybe
your life is going to change because you're either going
to be dead or in prison a long time. And
I think the two prominent shooters we saw that with,

(41:52):
you know in Butler dead and then Charlie Kirk's you know,
murder in prison so or in jail right now, but
will be in prison. So that's that's a problem. But yeah,
I don't know what about you? What do you what
do you say?

Speaker 2 (42:07):
I think you're spot on at the point of happiness. Well,
my favorite emotion is ah, the moment where you receive
a question and you get stumbled and you're oh, I
got to react that moment. That emotion is my favorite
one because it makes you be the realist. You you
don't have a script in front of you, there's nothing
that you've planned for.

Speaker 1 (42:28):
It's just on the moment.

Speaker 2 (42:30):
It really shows your character and yeah, being happy for yourself,
finding peace, happy for someone else when you see them
succeed now living in a crab structured lifestyle and the
crabs in a bucket right like Latino's. Most Latinos are
and I'm talking about my own kind here because we're
the ones that damage each other the most.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
Guys. Come on, this is just the truth.

Speaker 2 (42:50):
But guys, I want to really suggest, strongly suggest that
you take a whip and with and and spend some
time looking it up instead of watching as on TikTok
all day, take five seconds to the search bar and
search up something productive. Search up something that's going to
give you a benefit in life, like the book by

(43:11):
Dennis Brennan. Dennis, where can people find you? What is
the book name?

Speaker 1 (43:15):
One more time? Give me the links, Go ahead and
plug it in.

Speaker 3 (43:18):
Okay. The book name is DC Swamp Strikes Back Aaron Burr,
Donald Trump and their similar battles. It's available on my website,
which is author Dennis Brennan dot com. Also available at
Amazon dot com, Barnes and Noble, and pretty much anywhere
they sell books. I'm on x at Dennis Brennan sixty one.

(43:42):
I'm also on Facebook. I don't know what the link
is for that, but it's Dennis Breaded and there can't
be that many of them out there. You know. I'm
told now that we've graduated into other social media outlets
of which I have no idea, there's someone handling it
for me, so they haven't really let me touch that

(44:02):
for probably a good reason.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
Yeah, by all means, if you can get hold of
any of those links, send them over to me in
an email, please, And I'm gonna put those on the
description of the show. I'm gonna put that also on
the thumbnail art on that goes on everything.

Speaker 1 (44:19):
And also on Instagram.

Speaker 2 (44:21):
And again this episode comes out right towards the middle
of December. Ladies and gentlemen, Boys and girls, If you
guys enjoyed anything that we spoke about today, we drop
more doses of this type of conversations live every Monday
with Flash or Flash Underscore News One, my political analyst
and myself only on Instagram.

Speaker 1 (44:38):
Again, only on Instagram.

Speaker 2 (44:40):
If you want anything political, anything aggressive, anything rowdy, check
us out on Instagram.

Speaker 1 (44:48):
Then if you want to be entertained, you want this
nice stuff.

Speaker 2 (44:50):
You want the cryptit, you want the serial killers, you
want the documentaries on successful people and how to make
money and all the great stuff. Sex life, food, furniture, culture,
pop music, everything that you enjoy.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
Check us out on YouTube, like, share, subscribe. This is
a Treble Show.

Speaker 2 (45:07):
Dennis Brennan, thank you so much for being here today,
and ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, I want to
remind you to drop a fist in review and apple
podcast on the Spotify that allows other people to enjoy
the show as.

Speaker 1 (45:16):
Much as I enjoy making it. Peace. That was good Radio.
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