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March 24, 2025 149 mins
We make every attempt to leave it all on the court when we're recording. Tonight was no exception and some of what, while tongue and cheek, was excweptionally brutal. It didn't matter the subject, we were upfront and blunt. The JFK files were released this week, AI Copywrite was overturned by US Appeals Court, Tim Walz, Bernie, and AOC start running for President, and the Tesla Takedown is still in effect. We took aim at big pharma and Jefe opens our eyes to Peter the love dolphin. 

Think Critically
Act Accordingly

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Voltaire said, every man is a creature of the age
in which he lives, and few are able to raise
themselves above the ideas of the time. Plato said, wise
men speak because they have something to say, fools because
they have to say something. George Bernard Shaw thought that
the reasonable man adapts himself to the world. The unreasonable

(00:21):
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
all progress depends on the unreasonable man. This is Whisky Hell,
Think critically, act accordingly.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Sorry, March twenty second, seven forty eight, in the evening,
This is Whiskey Hell podcast. This is your news show.
And I am here Steve mc shane and I got
fits with me. How you doing?

Speaker 3 (01:04):
I am with you?

Speaker 2 (01:06):
All right?

Speaker 3 (01:07):
We are together, We are we are together, frolicking through
the fields of absolute buckery.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
Why do birds suddenly up here every time you are near?
Just like me? They long to be doing a podcast
with you?

Speaker 3 (01:34):
Okay, all right, that's good, that's good.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
Decided to dip on that because otherwise it's going to
be kicked off of YouTube or wherever else that we
I don't think I can have the lyrics, writes to them.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
So.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
Well, all right, it is a uh, it's been a week.
I think we were very happy to have been done
with it. I don't know mine's actually done yet, but
I'm very happy to be here. This is like the well,
this is the therapy session. It's given me a lot
of therapy, and I I.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
Think, yeah, yeah, I'm I'm I'm on the couch, I'm
leaning back, I'm I'm ready to divulge where the bad
man touched me. I hope you have lots of dolls close,
because because he touched me in a lot of places, man,
a lot of places.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
It's yeah, it was a it was a bloody week.

Speaker 3 (02:27):
We couldn't Yeah, yeah it was bad. It was a
bad week. Weird week, weird weird stuff. You know, who
would have thought that we're we get to talk about
and we are not going to linger on this guys,
because I don't think there's much to say, but we
at least get to mention that the JFK files has
been have been released.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
Finally and all their o nip the glory.

Speaker 3 (02:52):
Yeah, in all their confusing eighty thousand pages worth of
who knows what the fuck happened? I'm more confused now
than I've ever been. And I'm and I'm well, I'll
wait till we get to it, but I'm fairly certain
we're not seeing the truth.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Still, you know, the best I think, the best way
that I heard it put was that you're everybody is
going to be finding looking for the needle in the haystack,
even though the whole haystack looks like needles, and what
you're really looking for probably isn't there anyway.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Yep, yep, You're you're looking for a needle, and a
needle stack is what you're looking for.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Yeah, it's uh, it's messy. Literally, some of the pictures
came out from the autopsy. It's just it's just absolutely
it's it and it's probably why it wasn't one of
the big reasons why it wasn't put out earlier. But
still there's a little bit to talk about, so we'll

(03:58):
definitely get into that. Uh, it looks like the Democrats
are running for president already, so we've got some news there.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
Yeah, they are so lost. It's it's it's actually, it's
really kind of fun to watch, but also it's a
it's a train wreck, like you, I mean, it's really
kind of sad. It's it's sad.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
It it's like the mother or father eating it's young
at this point. Yeah, they're just it's just, it's just,
it's just a ship show. It's an absolute ship show.
Which is which And because i'd want I want competition,
I want a competition of ideas, but we're not.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
Gonna get it. Yeah, but you remember when when the
Republicans cannibalize themselves, right, remember when Trump won the first time.
You know, there were those like never Trumpers out there
who were Republican all the way, but they wouldn't they
wouldn't tolerate Trump and and so they started eating their young.
And so we we're going through like this is a

(05:01):
major political upheaval. It's happening in very slow motion. But
but make no mistake, this is a this is on
par with any of the great sort of political upheavals
that have happened throughout history. We're watching at real time.
It's just happening slowly.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
Yeah. Yeah, Aarons and chat. Aaron's name, by the way,
is self immolating tesla protester tonight, which is fantastic.

Speaker 3 (05:31):
There needs to be more of those, Like if you
set a tesla on fire, you should also catch on fire.

Speaker 2 (05:37):
Well one of them did this one.

Speaker 3 (05:39):
Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
He did Maltov and he let himself on fire and
then he's spreading down the road on fire. Yep.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
Yeah, I hope he uh, I hope he really got
hurt on that. Sorry. Yeah, I'm usually not sadistic in
that way, but.

Speaker 2 (05:56):
But well I'm not going to cry over domestic ares
getting what they deserve. No, no, no, and sorry. Aaron's
comment was the Democratic Party race for president is the
political equivalent of the special Olympics.

Speaker 3 (06:13):
I agree, fun to watch, and you're pulling for him, Yeah,
but it's you know at the end, like this isn't
the real Olympics.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
No, yeah, I think Aaron might and are well, Aaron,
you're making a strong, a strong pull for winning this evening.
That was that was good right out of the gate. Yep.
Department of Education was sort of shut down. We'll get
into that. We got a little bit of Soros news
climate ittocy, that idiocy that you want to hit on,

(06:44):
and uh, we've got other government stuff and it's a
full doc. I think we've got what two pit Yeah, yeah,
we've got two pages. So we should probably get into
beers and start hammering through some of this stuff.

Speaker 3 (06:56):
Let's do it all.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
Right, what do you got over there?

Speaker 3 (07:00):
Oh right, I'm first, Okay, mystery beer. This is from
hold On. I wrote it down. Cellar Maker is the
name of the brewery. Okay, never heard of them before.
Sounds definitely promising it. Yeah, I so a name like

(07:23):
cellar maker. I was thinking, you know, something like bourbon
barrel aged or but it poured very light with kind
of a really kind of foamy head smells of an
I p A A piny maybe a little bit of
grapefruit side of things on the ip A spectrum, you know.

(07:46):
I pas are kind of like like the autistic spectrum,
Like you have your really light like you can barely
tell that someone has a touch of the of the tism,
but then you got all the way to like people
that are non verbal and can't really function in life.
This one's kind of I mean, I'm gonna say midway
like maybe like a four or five out of ten

(08:08):
on the spectrum of an I p A. And I
feel free to edit that out because I basically just
I'm sure I disparage someone there in that in that comment.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
I will check it out. People like kids, no one
likes ip as.

Speaker 3 (08:31):
Oh oh.

Speaker 2 (08:34):
Oh, oh, definitely an I p A.

Speaker 3 (08:38):
Right, oh yeah, definitely an I p A. Not for
the faint of heart. So if you have a heart
condition or you just haven't worked out in a while,
this is not the beer for you. Here's the thing
is that there's a lot of i pas that can
save themselves by being you know, sort of on the
higher end of ABV, like you know, an nine plus

(09:01):
and you go, okay, well it tastes like shit, but
at least it's gonna, you know, get me a buzz.
I don't think this is a hiabb And it tastes
like shit, very very piny, very dirty, like I'm tasting
a lot of earth tones. And it's for some reason
my tongue is going numb, like I like the the

(09:25):
bitterness literally just burned out the taste buds on my tongue.

Speaker 2 (09:30):
Oh this is gonna be a great night then, okay
o God West West Coast, uh East coast? Hazy.

Speaker 3 (09:44):
I guess I'm gonna.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
Go heavy heavy alcohol at all.

Speaker 3 (09:48):
No, no, no, that's what I was saying. There's no
alcohol to it. No, like I'm gonna I mean, I
won't say none, but I'm gonna say it's sub seven.
I can usually taste it when it's above seven. I'm
gonna go, it's just the straight West Coast. But I don't,
I don't know. I don't know what this thing is.
I'm unfamiliar with this brewer, so I don't. I don't
want you all to think that this is a, you know,

(10:10):
a statement about all of their beers. This is literally
the first beer that I've had by them. So let's
do the great unveiling here, Oh.

Speaker 2 (10:20):
West kept secret? What is it? Is it a pilsner?

Speaker 3 (10:24):
Dude? I'm sorry. This is one of those beers that
completely misfired. And when I tell you what this is,
you're you're gonna go, oh, I know what happened. So
this is called wild Gooseberry Chase. It's supposed to be
a hazy Verry infused I p a okay Nelson seven suball,

(10:54):
a hop variety grown exclusively in New Zealand, known for
its gooseberry, white gray, and diesel aromas. Yeah, oh there,
it's it's diesel, al right, it's fucking gas. Is one
of the hardest hop varieties to produce, along with having
a frustratingly wide fluctuation in quality. We are fortunate to
partner with Freestyle Farms in New Zealand, grower of the

(11:17):
finest Nelson Sabon in the world, the literal end to
our wild goose Chase. I I'm sorry you guys should
never use these hops again. What I don't know if
it's low quality hops, I don't know what happened.

Speaker 2 (11:35):
But it's interesting because seller maker is actually a really
good brewer. So that's that's that's actually really surprising to me.
They also coordinate Rare Barrel too, which is another fantastic
offshoot of them. So they just so what what was
the name of it again, Gooseberry Chase.

Speaker 3 (11:52):
Yeah, wild Gooseberry Chase.

Speaker 2 (11:54):
Okay, is there.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
This was just a misfire.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
No, no, because I'm wondering, let me see something wild
Gooseberry now, because it actually seems to me like that
might be one that that's a few years old.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
It sounds like, I mean, you know, it could be.
It could be because you know, my wife goes to
the discount barrel to get some of these beers. Yeah, yeah,
so it might have just not sold for a while.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
Interesting, All right, Well, that's okay, this is why we
do it.

Speaker 3 (12:35):
Yeah, yeah, I mean you win some, you loose some.
I am gonna take the loss on this. It's okay,
it's drinkable. I'm not gonna say it isn't. Certainly far
from crushable, certainly far from enjoyable, but it is tolerable.
I mean, I'll get it down.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
All right. Cool. I am drinking a resident culture and
it's called willful blindness. It is a Baltic porter.

Speaker 3 (13:06):
Another fine brewery.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
Yep, let's see if I can find the actual beer.

Speaker 3 (13:11):
Though I dig their art too. It's there.

Speaker 2 (13:16):
Art is fantastic.

Speaker 3 (13:19):
Wuck. Who is that guy that always he drew all
the during the nineties? What was his name? Efforting?

Speaker 2 (13:25):
Hold on, we'll just go and continue on with with
this while you're oh yeah, yeah, I'm gonna post a
I'm gonna post a picture of this and chat to
see you guys have it eight point five percent. It's
a Baltic porter, so I'm expecting it to still be dry,
but a little bit more meaty, a little more protein tasting. Yeah,

(13:50):
that's a good Baltic. A little dry, a little bitter,
a little angry. That's good chocolate. They're malty, super malty. Oh,
happy with that. I'll drop a picture of this and chat.
I probably should have done this earlier, but here we are,

(14:14):
all right, and you guys can get into our chat
by joining the Patreon. Just go to Patreon, look up
Whiskey Hill Podcast or follow us at Whiskey Underscore hell
on x and you guys will be able to get
to the Patreon from there as well. So good stuff,

(14:34):
good stuff. We'll have to see how yours warms up
and maybe that'll be a little bit better. But this one. Yeah,
pretty happy.

Speaker 5 (14:41):
With this one.

Speaker 3 (14:42):
I'm kind of hoping that that's what happens. I'm not
I'm not confident that'll happen, but that's what I'm hoping for.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
Yeah, that's all right, we'll see, we'll see. That's why
we do it, all right. So housekeeping wise, I don't
think we have really anything doing.

Speaker 3 (15:03):
I don't think so.

Speaker 2 (15:05):
Okay, I don't.

Speaker 3 (15:08):
Yeah, no, I other than you know, thank you for
everybody for being here as always. Once again, you know,
not to repeat it every week, but you guys are
why we do the show. You keep us honest, you
keep us kind of humble, and also you keep us
a kind of irrelevant, you know, So many news stories

(15:28):
come in from our our chat group, and I just
I just value that so much because we're all busy
and so any one of us can't find all the stories,
but between all of us we find all the stories,
which is just it's just awesome. So thank you all
for your contribution to.

Speaker 2 (15:48):
The show and in everybody. It's nice knowing that we're
actually on track and a lot of stuff sometimes because
we can't see it all, but like Lisa drops a
ton in chat, Jay drops two and yeah, really really
really good stuff at Lisa or El's been putting a
lot of stuff in there too, so it just really
really helps. So as far as row call goes, Tabby Die, Lisa, justin,

(16:17):
l Aaron and Mike are all in chat tonight. Mike
does want to let us know that, uh, he's naming
some new beers. Stretched me with a vice, grips blonde aale,
perhaps my ass with a baseball bad I p A
looking forward to your brewing, Mike. It's gonna be hard

(16:38):
to market, but.

Speaker 3 (16:42):
Hey, there's a there's a sub section out there that
will be interested in a beer called that.

Speaker 2 (16:47):
Oh oh totally.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
You know, the SNAM crowd is going to love that.

Speaker 2 (16:51):
Yeah, yeah, oh you can totally make that work and
beat Mike Cock with a tire iron logger. God damn,
what what got into you? What got into you tonight?

Speaker 3 (17:06):
Yeah? Who?

Speaker 2 (17:07):
Who?

Speaker 3 (17:08):
Who puts you down this path?

Speaker 2 (17:10):
Mike?

Speaker 4 (17:10):
Who?

Speaker 2 (17:11):
I don't know? Just wow?

Speaker 3 (17:14):
Who hurts you? Who hurt you?

Speaker 2 (17:18):
Happy birthday to Buttercup? I think she's what twenty five today?
That's that right?

Speaker 3 (17:25):
Oh geez, no, I thought I think she's only twenty four?

Speaker 2 (17:28):
Oh four?

Speaker 3 (17:29):
Yeah, that's awesome.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
Yeah, I will not be singing anymore tonight, So if
somebody else wants to do that, you guys can can
can get after that? I'm gonna pass so.

Speaker 3 (17:42):
But happy birthday, yes, huge, Happy birthday. You are to
be celebrated for the person that you are. Thanks for Thanks.

Speaker 2 (17:53):
For being absolutely that's really good. Just thanks for being. Yep,
till I'm gonna work on Monday, I'm just gonna say, hey,
thanks for being. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (18:05):
It's a it's actually a powerful statement. You know. It
doesn't have any qualifiers to it. It's not like thanks
for being you, or thanks for being cool or fun
or pretty or whatever. It's just thanks for being, Like,
just thanks for exist. Well that too, you know, it's
pretty non denominational in that way, which is fun. God,

(18:30):
this spear is terrible.

Speaker 2 (18:34):
Well, let's get onto something that's equally as terrible. The
GfK files were released this week, and we really don't
know what the what the hell to do with it.
There's no revelations, there was nothing other than confirming just
how fucked up governments are, not only ours, not just
the ci A, KGB, Israel, the UK. We have news

(18:58):
from Cuba, It's all over the place, and I don't
think anybody thought that that was what was going to
come from this, but this is what we were given.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
Well, I think I think we were all hoping for
a smoking gun, and what we got was just a
bunch of smoke, you know. And I mean, and you
have no idea where the smoke is coming from. A
lot of people are trying to say, they're trying to
simplify it and say, well, Kennedy didn't want to give
Israel nukes, and so Israel had him, had him you know,

(19:31):
xed out. Yep, they had him deleted so that they
could get their nukes. I'm I'm definitely not saying that
that's not plausible, because it definitely is it's not above
Israel to do whatever it takes to. I mean, in
all fairness, they're in a very vulnerable spot in that
part of the world. So I get that. And if

(19:52):
you're going to do anything to assure your own existence,
I mean, okay, killing a US president, I guess isn't
outside of the the realm of possible. But I still
feel like So I saw a documentary, I guess it
was a quasi documentary because you know, although the guy

(20:14):
that was the focus of the documentary did have receipts
for a lot of his stuff, towards the end there
was some conjecture. He extrapolated a lot of theories from
what he had found. But at the end of the day,
it looked like JFK, by the way, whose father worked
closely with the mob, and the mob kind of fucked

(20:36):
his dad over, And so JFK always had it out
for the mob. He was going to get back at them,
and he was setting them up. He was partnering them
with the CIA, the FBI, and he was setting them
up for a huge sting and the mob didn't didn't
want that. And so was it a mob hit, No,

(20:58):
not necessarily, but working with the CIA and all of
their sort of contacts, and you know, you got Oswald
and Ruby and I mean just all of the ties
to the CIA that you have there. I just so,
So I guess what I'm getting at is there are
more plausible theories out there than just Israel not not

(21:21):
getting their nukes. I'm not saying that didn't play a role.
I'm saying maybe the Masad was like, hey, you guys
want to kill him too, let's all work together. So
that may have been a part of it, but I
to say that's the end all bl that's a way
over simplic simplification to justify and execute a plan this big,

(21:43):
that this intricate. You've got you know, Oswald going down
to Mexico like two days before and he had I
think he had lunch with Ruby, you know, so like
these people knew each other. This isn't This isn't as
clean cut as like, oh uh, you know, uh what

(22:08):
the fuck spy agency wants to kill a president and
they pulled it off. It goes way deeper than that.
So I I don't know what to think of it
all other than we're more confused than we ever were.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
So here's here's here's my biggest takeaway. And I and
I and I think going back to the smoke comment
that you originally had from the beginning was I'm looking
this at a lot as a lot of fog of war. Okay, Yes,
we have so many storylines that are happening now with
We've got Israel, we've got Ukraine, we've got Russia, we've
got South America. Uh, there was even a connection in

(22:44):
there that there there I think there was Venezuela at
one point. There was six different occasions that Castro they
attempted to say Cia knocked off, tried to knock off Castro.
They tried to throw in that maybe it was Cuba
that did it. There are so many pieces out there

(23:05):
that really didn't do anything more than just so more
discord with what's actually happening now.

Speaker 6 (23:14):
Yep, Yep, it's exactly right because some of it, some
of it supports the theory of like we were saying,
KGB right, Russia totally could not knocked them off.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
But there's also parts of the of the documentation that
KGB warned the US that it was going to take place,
We did nothing about it. The UK knew, we did
nothing about it. For me, my takeaway is that we
knew ahead of time. We decided not to take it
or take it, take care of it, and let him
get killed. That I'm very confident on. Is. As far

(23:47):
as being part of the theory, who drove it, who
actually pulled the levers to make sure that it happened,
I don't know, but it seems to me that it's
very apparent it could have been avoided.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Yeah, yeah, and I don't. I mean again, I I don't.
I read a book called thirty Seconds to Midnight, and
I don't buy the KGB angle of things, just because
you know, Kennedy and Khrushchev were both trying on their
own ends. They were trying very hard to avoid nuclear

(24:23):
war and the Cuban missile crisis and all that was
initiated by the CIA, the Bay of Pigs. We all
know that that whole story. And so and here's my
just final thought on all of it. There's more doubt
now than ever as to who did it. Like, all
of this information coming out didn't assuage any of our

(24:44):
fears that there are you know, deep dark actors that
are willing to take out a US president just to,
you know, advance their own agendas. And and if if
you think that everything that was released was everything that
ever existed on this case, like you don't think that

(25:06):
people spent hours into the early hours in the morning
shredding documents that will never see the light of day,
that no one will ever ever know about, then you're lost.
You don't you don't get it because they released what
they wanted us to see or what we were allowed
to see. They didn't release the real fucking story. I'm

(25:29):
convinced to that. So that's my final thought on it.

Speaker 2 (25:36):
Was it just an attack on the deep state? Because
there's a lot of justification for taking out the deep
state right now? Right what's a better hammer than to
go ahead and release just how confusing and filthy everything
that was in the JFK files was. Because I that's
I mean, if anybody looks at this from either side

(25:57):
of the aisle, because you know, there's a hell of
a lot of Democrats, a lot of liberals out there
that still love their JFK and are very interested in
why he was offt because it's still one of those
lynch pins that he was. Often everything's been shitty since
how much of this was released in this manner just

(26:19):
to scream, Hey, you guys were trying to take down
the deep state, and now look at this. This is
the pinnacle of deep state action and it's only gotten
worse from here.

Speaker 3 (26:30):
And look how hard it is to even get the
truth out of something like this, even with eighty thousand
pages of documents. We don't fucking know shit. We don't
know shit. We've only confirmed what we already thought we knew.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
But I guarantee you we're going to have documentary after documentary,
Netflix special after Netflix special on six seven, eight different
takes on all of the documentation that came out. And
all it's happening is some people are gonna make some
movies and we're still not going to get to the

(27:08):
bottom of it.

Speaker 3 (27:09):
Yeah, I agree with that. I you know then I've
this is unconfirmed, but I a little birdie told me
that the Netflix special on this Kennedy will be played
by Samuel Jackson.

Speaker 2 (27:23):
Oh that's gonna be outstanding.

Speaker 3 (27:25):
It's gonna be so good. It's gonna be woke all
over your fucking trans penis. It's gonna be great.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
I was really pulling for Michael B. Jordan, but Samuel
Jackson's fantastic.

Speaker 3 (27:38):
Oh yeah, he has the right amount of angry.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
Yeah, yeah, that's that's good. I'm glad they're moving forward.

Speaker 3 (27:44):
Motherfucker, ask not what your motherfucking cut you could do
for you. It's gonna be great. Sorry, that was a
really bad Samuel Jackson. I apologize to all the Samuel
Jackson fans out there.

Speaker 2 (27:59):
But we got it though. I think I think you
got I gu think you captured the essence of Samuel
Jackson though, And.

Speaker 3 (28:07):
I mean, can you imagine, you know, he gets shot,
but he's still like, you know, the Jackie's trying to
crawl out of the car and he's like, tell that
bitch to be cool, Say bitch, bitch, be cool. Come on,
you know, the possibilities are endless. We got this all day,
all right.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
Who's playing Jackie?

Speaker 3 (28:28):
Oh God, isn't it?

Speaker 2 (28:29):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (28:30):
Who is that? Who's that fat rapper that lost the
case against Lyft? I think that's who's playing in Jackie.
What was her name?

Speaker 2 (28:39):
Like? I was gonna go for Liza when you said
fat rapper, but now you're talking about the other one,
the one it's even worse.

Speaker 3 (28:44):
Yeah, to Dick Lizzo or something I don't remember front front,
but Betty, but Jesus Christ, God, what are we ten
minutes in and we're already going to hell? Everybody on
the express train to satan Land. I don't remember what
her name was, but anyway, she lost her case against

(29:06):
Lyft because they wouldn't send a big enough car for her. Yeah,
which is which made me happy to see that she
lost the case, causez fuck you, you know, oh you
know what? I saw the weirdest thing today. This is
kind of off topic, but it also plays right in.
I was driving I went and got my haircut, actually
got several hairs cut today, and I was driving home

(29:29):
and I look ahead on the on the road. I
tend to drive a bit faster than everyone else around
here because it's a sleepy, fucking forest town or something.
I don't know. Everybody, if the spell Liss says thirty five,
fucking at least do that, but everyone does thirty two
around here, and I'm doing forty five. So I'm catching
up to this car and uh, and I'm like, is
that a hearse? What is that? It's like a giant

(29:51):
It's like a hearse on steroids. So I get closer
and It was a an escalade that had been slammed
to the ground. Painted yeah, painted like a like a
mute black, like a flat black, and had huge giant
I mean they must have been like thirties. The fucking
rims were huge, and just just thumping biggie just I

(30:15):
could hear. I knew exactly what fucking song was playing.
I could hear the oh oh, I mean, just thumping it.
I'm like, holy shit, what are you doing in the
literally the widest city, Eugene, Oregon on the planet. Anyway,
I saw that today and I just thought, you know,
that fat bastard that sued lift like that would be

(30:37):
a perfect lift car for her, because it was. I mean,
it's huge.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
Not to not to belabor.

Speaker 3 (30:42):
This, no, right, I mean she might, but I for
all I know that thing was on hydraulics. So you just,
you know, hump it up to level two and she'll
be Okay, We've.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
Got a few minutes untill hefe comes in. I think
I want to let's I don't. We don't have to
spend a lot of time on this, but it'll be
a good segue before he gets in here. I have
a problem with this. So apparently US Appeals Court ruled

(31:16):
that artwork made entirely by artificial intelligence cannot be copywritten
unless a human is credited with it. I don't agree
with that. If those are my ideas and I'm basically
coding it to create what I wanted to create, I
just lack the ability to go ahead and you know,
draw it myself electronically or otherwise. I should still be

(31:41):
able to copyright it. That was my idea, yea, and
that was shot down by the US Appeals Court. I
hope that gets pushed up.

Speaker 3 (31:52):
Here. Okay, here's my I hear you, and I'm and
I'm not saying i'm I'm I'm against you. But if
I put in uh, Sarah Jessica Parker, but with a
normal face into AI and I horse face, and you're

(32:18):
right exactly like with the normal face, all.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
Right, I feel where you're going. I'm sure corrected very
sweets that were made.

Speaker 3 (32:25):
I'm correcting God's design and so again jump on board.
But so I put that into AI and I get
I get some artwork, right I I I get a
I get a an image. You could do the same
thing and get the same image. So I mean, I

(32:45):
mean we might have both had the same idea at
the same moment. I mean, how would we how would
I copyright that? How would you copyright it? How would
we say I was the first one to do it?

Speaker 2 (32:57):
Well?

Speaker 3 (32:57):
Sometimes I guess.

Speaker 2 (32:58):
Split copyrights too. I mean, you there's been numerous times
where you're like, Okay, we can't tell who's this actually was.
You guys work, you guys were at the same school.
We're going to give you guys both, you know, copy
you guys both get the copyrights or something along those lines.
So I could I could see something like that happening,
But I don't know. There's probably there's also digital time

(33:19):
stamps too. When you're when you're placing AI, when you're
writing AI, that that'll you know, that could possibly go
back and say.

Speaker 3 (33:27):
That I think. I think. I think when you do
something like, you know, you've been using AI to create
our our show art, correct, I think once once you
put that out and you say like this is this
is whiskey hell number five O four, you know, once

(33:49):
it's tied to our show, then I think it becomes
our property. But I think before that, anybody could type
in those same words and get that same image, and
so you don't own it. It's it's not tied to
you or to to you know, your business, or how
for whatever reason that you made it in the first place.

(34:11):
So I I all I'm saying is I can see
both sides of this. I agree with you. I think
this needs to go. This is a whole new branch
of law.

Speaker 2 (34:19):
Right.

Speaker 3 (34:20):
I mean, we have intellectual property lawyers out there who
know their ship and have been doing this for years.
But this is a whole new level of intellectual property
because I have also seen the argument that the people
who wrote the code to the AI actually deserve credit
for the art that you made.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
Wow, gyikes, that's okay, So the artists have to give
credit to the person that made the.

Speaker 3 (34:48):
The exactly exactly.

Speaker 2 (34:52):
No, I would disagree with that one.

Speaker 3 (34:55):
There's a yeah, but there's a fine line there.

Speaker 2 (34:58):
I'm gonna throw a ranch in it. What if I
slap that blockchain behind that? Well?

Speaker 3 (35:04):
Okay, so now you've tied it to something.

Speaker 7 (35:07):
Now I think it's yours, it's my digital signature. Yeah,
it's an EFT Now.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
I think that's got to be that's got to be uh,
that's got to be copyright At that point.

Speaker 3 (35:20):
I agree.

Speaker 2 (35:20):
I don't see how it can.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
I agree, interesting, it is interesting, and I actually, you know,
it's kind of one of those things where you know,
it's like it's one of those sort of social issues
that you just I mean, when we were you know,
fifteen and learning about the world, like you just never
would have thought we would get here. Like there's literally people,

(35:46):
you know, at Tesla. And again, I know Tesla's a
hot button company these days, but there are literally people
at Tesla who are called the what's their title, ethical programmers,
and they they when they're programming and they're writing the
code for the self driving mode in a Tesla, they're

(36:08):
they're having to write code that will decide if there's
an emergency situation, if the Tesla's going to kill its
passenger or kill the pedestrian in the crosswalk.

Speaker 2 (36:21):
They have rules of robotics kind of a thing.

Speaker 3 (36:24):
Yeah, exactly, Like and and your passenger is like some
kind of meth head or something or whatever, so kill
him because that little child might be sure, might might
cure cancer. Right, and so, but that's an actual job.
No one fucking told me, no counselor told me that
could be a job. I would love that job.

Speaker 2 (36:41):
I think that's cool.

Speaker 3 (36:42):
I loved ethics. I took ethics in college. I didn't
learn anything from it, but I loved it. Clearly, I'm
still working on it. Yeah, I mean, I don't have
any ethics, but I like learning about them.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
Okay, anyway, let's go off on the ethics part. Because
we didn't get to this. This didn't get added to
the doc tonight because it was already stupid long. But
we saw just today the hot off the presses. We'll say,
oh good, Hefe's here. Glad, glad, glad, glad you're joining
us FA because we're going to talk about ethics and

(37:19):
influencers getting paid. It dropped tonight that Big Soda Pepsi
Coke and the likes. Those guys are paying influencers to
put out tweets or posts that are against the government's

(37:41):
snap decision against RFK.

Speaker 3 (37:45):
Junior RFK yep yep.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
Uh. It's filthy and they're getting paid. I mean, I
don't know how much they're getting paid. Allegedly it's about
a grand a post, but some of the folks that
we follow, they're on there.

Speaker 3 (38:03):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, and I appreciate Riley Gaines, who
again a way to stand up for your fucking morals,
Like she actually has scruples and she stands behind them.
But they apparently they offered her money to do the
same thing, and she was like, fuck off, I absolutely not.
I will not. So Riley Gaines, once again, you are

(38:26):
you just moved up in my cool book, which is
you know, it's fairly small, but you're like on page
one now and black book. So well, I mean she's
really really pretty.

Speaker 2 (38:38):
Oh she's very pretty and very athletic.

Speaker 3 (38:41):
Great, exactly right, that's my type. That's my type.

Speaker 2 (38:44):
That's that's your warehouse. That is so the whole idea
is that they want to go ahead and ban basically
anything that's unhealthy being able to be included in snap benefits.
And this is the limited income, low income like food
stamps types type type stuff.

Speaker 3 (39:03):
And by the way, it is, it's not even up
for argument that soda is bad for you, Like.

Speaker 2 (39:07):
There's not, there's not there's no do there's no doubt, no.

Speaker 3 (39:09):
Studies that can test that, no period exactly.

Speaker 2 (39:12):
Yeah. But here here's so four that were brought which
which one of them really bummed me out because I
really like not your own Powell, very funny account to
follow smart funny, but he put one out his This
is his government overreached strikes again. This time it's SODA's turn.
They want to restrict soda purchases through Snap. This time.

(39:34):
This is an unwanted, unwarranted attempt by the government to
dictate what Americans can or cannot consume, which is extension
of the government. We're not nobody's saying they can't consume it.
We're saying that you correct, tax are taxes exactly to
pay for it?

Speaker 3 (39:52):
Exactly? What the fuck are you thinking? Not your own pow?

Speaker 8 (40:02):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (40:05):
Good god?

Speaker 2 (40:07):
So how.

Speaker 4 (40:10):
Damn man, how can I say that with a straight face?

Speaker 3 (40:18):
Like I don't know exactly exactly mean the well cast,
but yeah, exactly, that's yeah, that's how that's how you
say it with a straight face. Is that you know
you're getting the thousand dollars butt plug at the end of.

Speaker 4 (40:32):
This right, Yeah?

Speaker 2 (40:35):
Yep?

Speaker 4 (40:36):
I mean, damn, this is this is crazy, how everything
is developing, The sides are getting split, Yeah, it is.
It's really it's really not a hand Yeah.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
Those are conservative influence that are supposed to allegedly Yeah,
I mean.

Speaker 3 (41:04):
You say that with air quotes. Now at this point absolutely, Yeah,
and hefe We were actually talking about that before you
before you came on the beginning of the show. Just
you know that the Democratic Party is just eating itself alive.
But the Republican Party did that, you know when Trump
first won, because there was a lot of Republicans that
fucking hated him. Yeah, they you know. And so I

(41:26):
mean my argument and this this sort of backs that up.
But my argument is we're seeing in real time a
major political upheaval that that politics in ten years will
be unrecognizable to what politics was ten years ago. In
twenty years, we're seeing a huge flip flop. It's like
going from you know, hey, slavery's okay to somebody's like, hey,

(41:49):
that's immoral, we shouldn't do it anymore. And and I'm
not saying there's a civil wark coming. I'm just saying
that that was a huge sea change for this country
to to say that slavery is immoral, we can't do
it anymore, and so Southern states, you need to stop it.
That that caused major upheople, and I think I think

(42:10):
we're going through the same sort of upheople that we're
not okay with the status quo. We're not okay with
the deep state. We're not okay with these frivolous spending
of our money on ridiculous government programs. I mean, it's
all coming to a head right now. And I've said
it before, but you know, apocalypse, everybody thinks, oh my god,

(42:31):
that's bad. Apocalypse just means like the unveiling, you know,
the like taking the sheet off of the hidden is
what it translates to. So we're just seeing the light.
We are in the middle of an apocalypse right now.
We're seeing the stuff that's been hidden from us, and
we're pissed off about it. And that's okay. Like that,
that's a good thing.

Speaker 4 (42:53):
Did you did you share that clip with the the
insiders that went to media and talking about California slavery reparations?
Was that or just us?

Speaker 2 (43:06):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (43:07):
But it looks like remember running in Rob Schneider. I
don't know if that was him or not.

Speaker 2 (43:11):
I didn't see the Rob Schneider one.

Speaker 4 (43:13):
I don't know what the comedian that talked about California
in this in the slave reparation thing. It's it reminded
me of him. I don't know if it was.

Speaker 2 (43:24):
Was it today?

Speaker 9 (43:25):
No?

Speaker 3 (43:26):
No, it was a few days ago, like I kind
of remember what what you Yeah, yeah, I mean yeah.

Speaker 2 (43:36):
But that's I mean that that's I mean, that's another
thing that that you this the the whole we are.
The media business does not move the needle. If they're
going to be able to be bought, they can't. I
don't want everybody to be just I don't want them
to be just be a conservative camp either. I want
you to report the fucking news. If you okay, you

(43:57):
could have your opinion, that's fine. Yeah, but don't ride
anybody's dick. Don't take a dime from it. Get followers cool,
get subscribers great, get monetized on X fine, but don't
do things to sway the fucking message. That's frustrating. And yes,

(44:21):
we've never been approached by any of that stuff. So no,
we're not definitely not taking any money.

Speaker 7 (44:25):
But and I and that's like those guys have six
seven hundred thousand followers either.

Speaker 3 (44:31):
No, but that's a that's a great point and I
and I feel like that's one of the reasons why
you know, somebody like like Ian Carroll, I think we
can all appreciate him because he's not he's just like
a like he was Unrogan, and he's like, I'm just
a guy that goes out and researches stuff, and I
just I just find what I can and I and

(44:52):
I report on it, and I leave it up to
you guys to go and find your own truth. Like
I'm just telling you what I found. You I find more.
You might find something that sways you one way or
the other, but I'm just telling you what I found.
And I really appreciate that that philosophy and that way
of tackling all of this. And I think I think

(45:13):
as soon as somebody is willing to take money from
from some organization that clearly has an agenda, because why
else would you pay someone right you're paying, You're paying
someone because you have an agenda that you need backed
up or forward.

Speaker 2 (45:27):
The outcome I'm looking for an outcome.

Speaker 3 (45:30):
As soon as that happens, I immediately don't trust that
You're done. You're You're dead to me. I you know,
fuck off. I don't need you in my life anymore
because I need right now and to your point, MacShane,
which is what I'm trying to get at, we need
we need truth tellers. To the best of our ability.

(45:51):
I mean, yes, we might get some things wrong on
this show, and we have and we do our best
to go back and and editorialize and retract and and
give apologies if we need to every time. But we
do our best to find the truth. And that's what
we need more of these days, not people being like, yeah,
I'll take the thousand, one thousand dollars, come on to

(46:12):
sell your soul. That's that's all you're going to sell
your soul for is a thousand bucks. Fuck you, you're
dead to.

Speaker 2 (46:18):
Me now, Just to go just on the record here
Aaron and Chat, I had to say it. Pod he's
totally a whore and he's up for sale. So you
guys can reach out to him. There follow him an
next fantastic show. Please reach out to him.

Speaker 3 (46:33):
Oh yeah, great show, hef a.

Speaker 2 (46:37):
How's yeah happen?

Speaker 3 (46:38):
Man?

Speaker 2 (46:38):
I know, I know you're shorter time now. We kind
of waylaid you. But how are things going?

Speaker 4 (46:42):
Uh? It's okay. It's it's two typical Saturday kind of spot.
But it should cook clear a little bit.

Speaker 2 (46:52):
Maybe any any birthday wishes for Buttercup.

Speaker 4 (46:57):
Of course, yeah, happy birthday to Buttercup. Man, I am
man I've known her for a long time.

Speaker 3 (47:07):
I was just gonna say, I don't I don't want
to date any of us.

Speaker 2 (47:11):
But I don't want to pay any of us either.

Speaker 3 (47:16):
I'm gonna say we're going on thirty years. Not quite
maybe maybe more like twenty eight years, twenty six.

Speaker 4 (47:27):
Well, no, it's like twenty eight, twenty nine.

Speaker 3 (47:29):
Maybe, Okay, Okay, So I was I was in the neighborhood.
I mean, suffice it to say decades plus, Yeah, of
knowing this person. And and you know, thank you, hefe
because because you know her and and knew her and
and you had your relationship, we also got to meet

(47:52):
her and know her. So so thank you for bringing
her into a whiskey hell nation. And we've known her
as long as you have almost yeah, and so yeah, huge,
huge birthday wishes.

Speaker 4 (48:03):
It's been like thirtish years and somehow, miraculously she's still
twenty nine. It's really weird.

Speaker 3 (48:11):
Oh see, Okay, I was off.

Speaker 2 (48:13):
We were both I was off.

Speaker 3 (48:14):
Rick Shane, Yeah, we were both.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
Yeah, alright, I.

Speaker 3 (48:18):
Thought she I thought she was going on twenty four.
But I was a little, a little on the young side.

Speaker 2 (48:23):
I said twenty five. I had no idea twenty nine.

Speaker 4 (48:26):
Oh yeah, she's getting long in the tooth of twenty nine. Yeah, ah.

Speaker 2 (48:31):
God, no, we wish her nothing but the best.

Speaker 4 (48:37):
Absolutely happy birthday, butter Cup.

Speaker 3 (48:39):
I had one of my employees this week call me
daddy very wide nope, nope, a very wise man. And
I I almost took offense to it, and then yeah, no, no,
I will well because like, fuck you, I'm still twenty eight.

(49:03):
I'm not wise.

Speaker 4 (49:04):
Yeah exactly, I'm.

Speaker 3 (49:05):
A youngin and I'm not wise. But but then I
was like, holy shit, that's actually like, yeah, that's actually
like a huge, huge compliment coming from a twenty four
year old kid. And she's she's like trying to make
her way in the world, and and kind of fucked
up a little bit, and I just gave her some
words of wisdom that were given to me years ago,

(49:27):
and and then now I'm this on this stage. It
was really it was kind of an out of body experience,
but I definitely took it. I took it with grace.
I at first I started it like fuck you, and
then I was like, actually, that's a huge compliment.

Speaker 2 (49:41):
And then that was a compliment. Yeah, she's true, she
doesn't know any better. So a lot of these kids
just don't know any better. They don't know a better way.
They see some buzzwords, some dog whistles, and he's just
kind of thrown out their times. Yeah, half a, you're
what you're on? Pace for a nine to forty.

Speaker 4 (49:59):
Correct, depending on the mucker situation.

Speaker 3 (50:06):
Okay, right, A long show. Well, here's the thing. I
have a I this may this may make everything. Okay.
I have a short speech to give later in the show.
And so if so, here's the deal. If the show
runs along, you can just cut out my speech and

(50:27):
then and then so when we release the show, it'll
still be about two hours. We'll still get half a,
still get the farm report, but you don't have to
hear my bullshit.

Speaker 4 (50:35):
All right, We'll see you guys a little bit, all right, brother, Okay.

Speaker 3 (50:39):
Some money?

Speaker 4 (50:40):
All right.

Speaker 3 (50:45):
I'm gonna go on record, by the way, and just
remind everybody we are the only show which has a
co host who is also working tonight and takes his
and dealing cards and takes his breaks to come and
talk to us. God, what a fucking idiot. Oh what's

(51:09):
wrong with you? Hafe? God? Go live your life, man.

Speaker 2 (51:13):
He's a good. He's a good man.

Speaker 3 (51:15):
He is a good man. God, he is a good man.
I Uh, I wish I was a good man. I
wish I was a good man. All right, what's next?
What do we got here? I'm gonna tell you, dude,
I I don't like this beer, but it's put me
in a really good mood. And I don't know why.
It's like just enough ABV that it's kind of, you know,

(51:37):
tickle in my buttole a little bit. And I'm and
it's it's good.

Speaker 2 (51:41):
I like it all right. Well, that that's good. That's
that's fantastic. Yeah, let's uh, let's go here, let's go uh.
This is Jimmy Door talking to an XCBS reporter Cheryl
at here we.

Speaker 3 (51:52):
Go, Yeah, okay.

Speaker 8 (51:54):
Junior in the early two thousands to talk about his
research on vaccines, and he thanked him for his work.
Joe Scarborough had RFK Junior on and he commiserated and
said that his son was injured by vaccine and then
all of a sudden it just all went away. So
what happened, Well, I learned.

Speaker 10 (52:16):
Only with the benefit of hindsight that at the time
we were starting to feel pushed back over these sorts
of stories. The pharmaceutical industry was making new partnerships with
media organizations, including CBS News at the corporate level, and together,
pharma and these media corporations were lobbying as partners on

(52:36):
Congress to loosen up the rules to allow more pharmaceutical
advertising on TV and other media. People may not know,
if they're not old enough, this was forbidden against the
law until what I think is relatively recent history, and
it's forbidden in most other countries to advertise prescription drugs.
But that meant billions and billions in overtime, trillions of

(52:57):
dollars for the media companies with this partnership. As that
partnership was being forged at the corporate level, we were
starting to feel the effects of it in the news
division at CBS, and I'm sure that happened in the
other media outlets as well.

Speaker 8 (53:12):
And so when you refer to it as a partnership,
what do you mean by a partnership.

Speaker 10 (53:18):
Well, I was told specifically that lobbyists from the corporation
at CBS went together with pharmaceutical industry lobbyists on Capitol
Hill to lobby members of Congress to make sure that
there was more advertising allowed on the network, so literally
a partnership to try to financially benefit both sides of

(53:39):
the equation. But I would argue maybe at the expense
of public.

Speaker 8 (53:42):
Health, So that's quite a partnership. So it just sounds
like corruption, right.

Speaker 10 (53:51):
Listen. I have my own thoughts over time about whether
those types of partnerships should be allowed ethically and how
they could be firewalled, at least from the news divisions,
but they are not. I expect that these pharmaceutical companies
would want to increase their bottom line the best they can.

(54:12):
I am not shocked, especially with what I know now
that they might hide or cover up the things that
they've done that you know about side effects from drugs
and dangers and harms has been well documented because they
have a fiduciary duty to their shareholders or whoever they're
reporting to to make money. But we in the media
were supposed to be at least I thought so, a

(54:34):
firewall for that so we can at least provide some
independent oversight, particularly when Congress also fails to do so.
Because both parties, Republicans and Democrats, get so much of
their money from the pharmaceutical industry.

Speaker 8 (54:46):
Now, so what I often say.

Speaker 2 (54:48):
Is that it has to end. Pharmaceutical companies need to
be taken off of They need to not be able
to advertise. They can't to exist. How about that can't? Well, no,
I want to. I wanted them to exist. As long
as they're moving things forward and solving disease, in fixing
sickness and fixing cancer and finding cures, I don't any

(55:14):
problem with that. But it's the corruption behind it that
has to end. I'm tired. I am beyond tired of
hearing commercials that yes, we can cure psoriasis, but you
might die in the process because of all the other
shit that can happen to you, including dysentery and dying
on the Oregon Trail, which ends up being part of

(55:36):
the speed written red disclaimer during their cute little video
montage of mom and dad running with the kid that
there might not have seen otherwise through a field of daisies.
It's fucking disgusting. And the fact that they were able

(55:59):
to go through COVID and they're able to sponsor this
crap to make sure that we got the Pfizer JAB,
the MODERNA JAB, the Johnson and Johnson jab. This shit
should not go on. They should not be able to manipulate,
leverage and basically provoke the public into taking their drugs.

(56:27):
It needs to go back. It should be doctors, doctors
that are actually being doctors and not this this bullshit
that we have.

Speaker 3 (56:39):
Now, I agree with everything you just said, and I'm
gonna also fucking napalm the shit out of it because
I'm convinced that probably ninety to ninety five percent of
the problems that pharmaceuticals purport to to cure to help,

(57:04):
they're also causing. Yes, Okay, okay, So so I mean
it behooves them to cause a problem that they can
then fix that they're the only ones that can then fix.
So that's what I'm saying. I seriously, I think they
should be done way with. I think pharmaceutical companies. You know,
I've heard the justification. Well, you know, they need to
make money on this drug over here, so they can

(57:26):
invest more in R and D for these drugs over here. Okay, a,
they still haven't cured cancer, which, by the way, cancer
was almost a non issue one hundred and fifty years ago.

Speaker 2 (57:38):
Correct, people did.

Speaker 3 (57:39):
People didn't die of cancer, They died of mailaria diphtheria. Yeah, exactly,
there was no autism. There was no I mean, you
had your weirdos. But again, and I'm not saying we
need to go back to a pure, you know, survival
of the fittest sort of scenario, although that would certainly
fucking separate the wheat from the chaff.

Speaker 2 (58:00):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (58:00):
But but I'm not saying that either. I'm I you know,
as a society, I think we should rally around those
of us who are weaker. But I don't. I've seen
what pharmaceutical companies have done to children and continue to
do to children to this day, with with a d
D drugs ADHD drugs, with with vaccinations that are and

(58:25):
I mean seventy two or some vaccinations that they have
to have before they can start kindergarten. It's it's it's
it's a fucking travesty and it's a money making machine
and they know it, and they don't they don't want
that truth to come out. And so yeah, I'm I'm
for doing away with them entirely.

Speaker 11 (58:47):
You know.

Speaker 3 (58:47):
It's it's well, one last thing it's coming out now,
that high blood pressure, you know, let's say a blood
pressure of one ten over one ninety that that's actually
that that was normal one hundred years ago. They've made
us think that that's not normal. And so we're all
worried about cholesterol and blood pressure and we're all freaking

(59:08):
out about it, when really that's how the human body functions.
That's when it's at its highest most know, it's best
functioning state is higher blood pressure because that means the
heart is really working and it's and it's getting blood
to where it needs to go. And so, you know,
all of the statins and all the shit that people
are on, it's it's just to make money, you know,

(59:32):
I I and I and I'm passionate about this. You know,
when my grandmother passed away and we actually went and
cleared out her room at the nursing home she was at,
and we found out that she was taking twenty eight
pills in the morning and and and more than that,
I don't remember what the number was in the evening,

(59:53):
but it was it was like thirty plus pills in
the evening. This pill was to counter that, you know,
side effect, and this pill was to counter that side effect.
And imagine, I can't help but think what would have
happened if we would have just taken her off cold turkey,
taken off all of it all at once. Just you're done.

(01:00:13):
How much longer would she have lived? How much more
healthy would she have been? How much more khojent would
her mind have been?

Speaker 2 (01:00:19):
Would she I was just gonna say, would she was
still has Alzheimer's exactly?

Speaker 3 (01:00:24):
And so I am passionate about this. I've seen it.
I see it every day, we all see it every day,
and I just I don't think they serve a function
other than to make money. So fuck them, You're out. Sorry,
I'm done now. That wasn't even my rant.

Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
That's okay. This is why we do it, though I
don't see as ever being able to get rid of it.
I do. I'm with you on we're over drugged? Were
I completely agree with you on all those accounts, And
I blame doctors, but I also blame Why does the
FDA let this shit happen?

Speaker 3 (01:00:57):
Exactly?

Speaker 2 (01:00:58):
Why is the FDA right by people from Pfiser? Why
does somebody be on the board in the FDA and
then move to Pfiser Revolving or Nova Nordisk. We've got
a story tonight that Nova Nordisk actually financed a study
on processed foods to try and makes ultra processed foods good.

(01:01:25):
That was the whole project, and they had to walk
it back this week. If there's this kind of level
of manipulation, we're doing it wrong and somebody needs to
rain these guys back in. You're never going to get
rid of them, but you have to rein them back in,
and the institutions that are supposed to look over them

(01:01:48):
need to be the ones that are saying, hey, we're
completely separate from you. You can't you can't bribe us,
you can't tain us. This is our mission. No, you
guys are done. I think we're closer to actually getting them,
you know, completely done away with. Probably easier than what

(01:02:09):
I just said, because human nature is they're all fucking corrupt.
But it has to end at some times, at some point,
it has to.

Speaker 3 (01:02:19):
It means you know what this is?

Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
This is what's killing people.

Speaker 3 (01:02:22):
Yeah, it is. It is one hundred percent killing people.
And I you know what kills me is that when
you get below a certain level, like as far as
a company that makes certain a certain level of money,
you get below that. And so so for instance, my
where I work, we're subject to uh, state oversight. We

(01:02:46):
have inspectors from Department of Health Services come in and
inspect us once a year or more often if they get,
you know, complaints, which you know they don't, but but
they come in and they they expect us. It's a
it's an outside agency that doesn't know us, doesn't like us,
doesn't give a shit about us. They come in objectively

(01:03:07):
and say you're either passing or you're not. You have
the pharmaceutical industry who those people that are coming into
quote unquote inspect them or regulate them used to work
at that company and still have friends at that company
and are probably still being paid from a pension from
that company. Right, how how is how is it that

(01:03:30):
the rest of us eighty percent of us are are
we fall under this regulation and we have to mind
our piece and queues and we have to restaurants have
to pass health codes and and you know, restrooms have
to be a certain amount of cleanliness public restrooms. But
they can operate with impunity. Fuck you, I We're done.

(01:03:52):
We're done that. It's it's it's it's you guys get
a different set of rules than we do. No, we're
tired of that. We're all going to operate by the
same accountability or you're not going to operate anymore. You're done.

Speaker 2 (01:04:08):
How's that beer treating?

Speaker 3 (01:04:09):
You know, I slammed it because as it warmed up,
it got almost intolerable. It's it's a totally yeah, total reject. Actually,
as it warmed up, I started to taste a little
bit of the uh bod what I like to call

(01:04:30):
no no, what I like to call the vomit index.
So you know, okay, you know the vomit index. If
it's a ten like that means you just vomitate in
your own mouth. But if it's like a two or three,
you're like, I kind of taste vomiting that. That's what
That's where this went it. It was the I It

(01:04:52):
was a very unpleasant beer from start to finish. And
I and I I one hundred percent know why my
wife grabbed this one for me, which was no which
was like the purest I mean, was something like a
name like wild Gooseberry Chase that sounds delicious.

Speaker 2 (01:05:11):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (01:05:11):
It just they just they missed the mark. And again
I'm not disparaging Cellar Maker as a as a brewery.
I think they probably have some fine beers. They just
completely like they were shooting at a target. Yeah, they
were shooting at a target on this one, and they
actually hit their best friend in the eye with the ear.
This is terrible. It's terrible. So how about you what

(01:05:34):
what's your.

Speaker 2 (01:05:36):
It was a good warm up beer, it would I
would totally have a four pack of this in the house,
six pack of this in the house. Absolutely very uh,
just easy drinker, very easy drinker. But you're not. It's
not impactful in any way either though. So just a
just a dry, meaty Baltic porter, lots of malt, enjoyable

(01:05:59):
but subtle. Just just a very nice, pleasant drink. This
would be a nice one to have at the very
end of the day. I'm gonna have one beer. I'm
gonna go to bed, that kind of thing. The ABV
is mid range eight point five, not too bad, so
it's not gonna get you, you know, all kinds of
fucked up. But it's uh, it's it's pleasant. I don't

(01:06:19):
understand if you guys can see in the in the
the artwork in the chat, why there's why there's bombs
falling around this guy walking, But I dig the the
artwork on it's it's fantastic. It's bizarre and I love it,
so anyway, it's a good broop.

Speaker 3 (01:06:37):
I'm uh, I've just decided that the this beer the
I p A and this beer stands for irreparably prolapsed asshole.
That's how bad that beer was.

Speaker 2 (01:06:55):
All Right beer too? And on the second half of
the shows coming up next that all right beer too.
I had a little bit of a dilemma fits when
I went downstairs. I really there was a a I

(01:07:16):
get my beers week to week. I don't stock them
up because I try not to keep a lot in
the house because I really like to drink them. So
I try to say that stuff for the show now.
But I had a dilemma because the one I have
one in there that's an Energy City beer and it's
called Samoas and they do some really nice, really fun beers.

(01:07:39):
But then I had another resident culture in there, and
I already did one resident culture, and I'm like, you
know what, maybe I'll well, it's a it's a colab too,
it's with bottle logic and it's a barley wine. So
I think I'm gonna ahead and try and save the
samoa for next week. This is cultivated wisdom. I will
end up dropping something in a chat here. Uh it is,

(01:08:04):
I cannot it is this is this smells barley wine.
It smells angry.

Speaker 12 (01:08:13):
Caramel fruit. Holy shit, there's so much going on there.

Speaker 3 (01:08:26):
I've got this is what you want from a barley wine.

Speaker 2 (01:08:29):
Well it's it's barrel aged.

Speaker 3 (01:08:30):
Also, okay, I've got.

Speaker 2 (01:08:38):
Maple. It smells thick. Oh no, well that's trouble. It's
not a sex beer. Okay, this is your this is this,

(01:09:00):
this is you. Let's get into some trouble. Oh okay,
that's what it is. We're gonna go ahead and we're
gonna make some it. Yeah, this is this beer is
absolute trouble. This is it's a collab between Resident Culture
from Charlotte and Bottle Logic from California, Anaheim and Barrel

(01:09:21):
h barleywine made with our friends at Bottle Logic, aged
for eighteen months in Buffalo trace bourbon barrels and transon
French apricot brandy barrels. Uh it's only an.

Speaker 3 (01:09:34):
Eight, it's only a but you could have like six
of them.

Speaker 2 (01:09:41):
Oh yeah, absolutely, no doubt. Yeah, there's no doubt. There
is absolutely zero doubt. I'll post a picture of this chat.
It is not boozy, it is smooth. It is this
is a nice end of the night beer or something
that's gonna wreck your fucking weekend if you have too
many of them. This is this a fantastic beer, well constructed,

(01:10:02):
nice clean end to it to not overly complex. They
didn't try to do too much with it. They let
the barrel and honestly, the the the apricot brandy barrels.
That's that smoothed out a little bit of a French
or not French, excuse me, a little bit of a
fruit twist to at the end, really really nice.

Speaker 3 (01:10:20):
That's that's unusual to get those apricot brandy barrels in there.
That's that's kind of cool. And I and I agree,
like that is totally like me because like one of me,
you can contain it's okay, but imagine six of me
that would be that would be trouble.

Speaker 2 (01:10:38):
No, nor it's too good. It's it's it's too yeah
right right, memorable night for sure? What do you have
over there?

Speaker 3 (01:10:47):
Well, I was inspired by your first beer, my friend,
I was inspired by your first beer. I again, I
I was the same. I had a dilemma. We have
a I have a garage fridge, which you know, it's weird.
I just never thought I would be that guy. But
I love having a garage fridge, and so I went

(01:11:09):
out to the garage fridge to peruse my beers that
I have saved up for the for the show. And
I like to have a I like to have a
variety because I just never know what kind of mood
I'm in or where I'm gonna go. But the fact
that you had a Baltic porter kind of influenced this
this pick. And I'm I'm actually I'm not sure, but
I'm fairly certain you've had this exact beer on the

(01:11:32):
show a while back, maybe six eight months ago. But uh,
this is from Oak Union Brewing, which is they do
a lot of really solid stuff Oak Union. And this
is the Guilty Baltic style porter. Yes, Guilty is a

(01:11:53):
mythical basically like a grim Reaper with the scythe and
the fucking min tongue and the artwork on this can
is is fabulous. But this is a this Guilty and
is brewed with German and American malts hall or towel, uh,
middle fruit, middle frau and pearl hops thirty four seventy

(01:12:17):
yeast and pure Pacific Northwest beast water darkness awaits you. Indeed,
it poured jet black. Definitely a thinner head, which you
get from porters. Stouts, their their heads tend to linger
a bit, but porters go away. This is a nine percenter,

(01:12:39):
so nothing over the top, but also definitely enough for
you know, to help me forget that first beer and
my irrea colapsed asshole. Very clean. You know how some
porters can almost have that battery smell to them. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,

(01:13:00):
this this has that. It's a it's a very battery
smelling beer. Uh and a little bit of chocolate, a
little bit of booze mostly just like the malts and
the and the just that porter solid porter flavor of
the of the roasted malts in there.

Speaker 2 (01:13:18):
So great choice. I'm gonna post the history of the
Balti Porter because it's it's pretty it's pretty neat. I'm
gonna post that in I'll put out for our patrons.

Speaker 3 (01:13:30):
Yeah, yeah, that'd be that'd be great because it's such
a unique beer style and it does it has a
really cool history. I mean, so does the I p
A Honestly, I know people bag on I pas and
they hate them, but the I p A has a
really cool history. But this okay, very smooth beer. I'm

(01:13:50):
kind of with you. I'm kind of in the same camp.
Like you could. You could easily drink three or four
of these in a night and think that you're okay
to drive home and you would not be you. Very smooth,
very very good tasting beer, very smit finishes, very clean,
leaving you wanting more. Kind of a dry porter, And

(01:14:14):
what I mean by that is just like it's it's
in your mouth, it does its business and then it
gets out, you know, like any good prostitute, and it's
just it's God. It's really very clean beer, very good.
I'm very happy with Guiltine. I, like I said, said,
I think you reviewed this beer on the show a
while back. I've had this beer personally before, but I

(01:14:35):
never reviewed it on the show, so I wanted to
kind of give my take. But really, well done.

Speaker 2 (01:14:40):
I'm glad you did there. They're really unique beers. So
if you have a porter, it's it's your Baltics are
going to be between seven and ten percent. They're going
to be a little bit heavier, a little bit more
to them a little more. There's there's a little bit
more that goes to them than a lot of porters. Porters.

(01:15:03):
Porters like the basic you know, malt dark beer, which
is good, don't I love it, love a good porter.
But Baltics you start they start getting a little bit
more complex. Like I said, I don't want to give
away the you know, join the Patreon check out the well,
I'll drop the the history of it in there. But uh,
but it is Northern European, it's eighteenth century the most

(01:15:25):
of the the way they're brewed, that stuff hasn't changed.
How they get there, what they put into it obviously has,
and then the different variations of them. But very it's
a fantastic stopp beer. And it's a very difficult find too.
If you've got a brewer, brewer that actually will try
to do a Baltic because it's not the easiest of
beers to brew. Uh, that's a brewer that knows their ship.
So uh, you're typically going to get some really good

(01:15:47):
imperials from them. I'll hang my hat on that, and
some really good stouts, very good dry porters export stouts too,
So fantastic, fantastic brewers do those those kinds of things, they're.

Speaker 3 (01:16:00):
Yeah, and don't you feel don't you feel like when
you're drinking a Baltic it's you're really getting like an
old world you know, like when you drink a Mars thin,
You're like, you know this, this recipe hasn't changed in
like four hundred years. It just it just feels like
an old world recipe when you drink a Baltic. And

(01:16:22):
it's not like if you get a chocolate porter or
something like that, you're like, oh, that's a new spin
on maybe an old recipe, but I'm not getting of
any of the old world flavor. But with a Baltic,
it's like pure, like a straight stream, yeah, from from
the old world right into your mouth, which is you know,
I'm pretty sure I saw that porno and it was great.

(01:16:42):
I got off real quick.

Speaker 2 (01:16:47):
Stouts, porters, laggers ales, those are your basics. Everything else
that's that's around. Those are newer I pas, that's a
newer thing. Barley wines. Barley wines are old school. Barley
wins are old school too. Yeah they are farmhouse old school.

Speaker 3 (01:17:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:17:07):
But a lot of this other stuff, especially when you
get into like we need to put this on steroids
and make this the super the most fucking hoppy. That's
a quadruple I p A or an imperial stout that's
like nineteen percent or whatever it is.

Speaker 3 (01:17:19):
Or the smoothies and the shakes.

Speaker 2 (01:17:22):
The shakes, yeah, well a lot of sours for that matter. Yes,
those are more newer stuff. So you want to get
into some of the old school stuff, the stuff where
beer began. This is where you start. And a balding.
It's a it's a fantastic beer fits. I think it's
time to get into some democrat lunacy. You ready for this?

Speaker 3 (01:17:48):
Oh, I'm so ready for it. This is going to
lead right into my U my rant.

Speaker 2 (01:17:53):
Excellent. All right, let's see if I can thread the needle.
You ready here, Let's do it.

Speaker 3 (01:17:57):
Let's do it.

Speaker 2 (01:17:57):
This is actress Cynthia.

Speaker 13 (01:18:03):
Most importantly, I am here today as a mother of
a proud transman.

Speaker 2 (01:18:09):
Why I am here today as.

Speaker 13 (01:18:16):
The aunt of a proud transman. My best friend's kid
is trans.

Speaker 4 (01:18:24):
And while kid's.

Speaker 13 (01:18:26):
Best friend is trans, my wife and.

Speaker 5 (01:18:31):
I our lives aren't filled with the most amazing, beautiful,
brave trans people, young and old, but especially young.

Speaker 13 (01:18:47):
My trans kid had his top.

Speaker 5 (01:18:50):
Surgery at NYU a number of years ago.

Speaker 13 (01:18:57):
His doctors were fantastic. Surgeon was the best we could
have imagined. And the idea that the city is filled
with young people who thought they had a place to
go where they could receive the highest care and that
place has now been shut to them sickens me.

Speaker 10 (01:19:19):
Sickens me to my clo.

Speaker 2 (01:19:24):
Every kid she knows trans fits. It's really beautiful this.
Every every kid is the potential to be trans right
out of the gate. As soon as you're born, you're
trans It's just it's this is how the thinking is.
This is what we're dealing with. This is one of
the the latest protests. I I I shouldn't have started there,

(01:19:52):
but it just I just I needed to get that
done with.

Speaker 3 (01:19:56):
You're welcome, No, I I know, I appreciate you started there.
I What always kind of surprises me is And you
heard some some people commenting from the video as she's
as she's talking, you know, when she's like, you know,

(01:20:17):
we we had my son or whatever she said, my
child had their surgery right here at this hospital. And
you hear in the background like wow, like it's like
you know, like like it's a big fucking deal. It
always surprises me that none of them take a second
to stop and back up and be like, oh, you

(01:20:37):
know what, I'm here because a heterosexual male's penis went
inside my mother fucked her senseless, and God her pregnant,
and that's why I'm here. They never stopped to think
about how the fuck they're there to even have this,
to even have the rights to have this discussion in

(01:21:02):
this country, because you know, if you were born if
you roll the dice and instead of a fucking four
to three you came up with a one to six,
you're born in fucking Saudi Arabia, and you're killed if
you say this shit that you're trying to say out
out in public in this country. But they want to

(01:21:23):
say that in America's shit and Trump is shit, and
it's not a free country anymore. Is going to take
away all your rights, and you wouldn't be able to
say any of this in another country. And you get
to say it, and you get to say it because
someone fucked your mom and God are pregnant, and now
you want to encourage your kids to be something where

(01:21:44):
they can never have that experience ever, not the experience
of heterosexual sex, at least in the way it was intended,
and not a normal pregnancy. I'm not saying they can't
impregnate a male, because they can clearly, but it's not natural.
If the power went out tomorrow, ain't no males getting pregnant. Ever, again,

(01:22:07):
that's all gone. So it's it's only because of our
modern technology and and what we have available to science
that you can even make that happen. It's not natural,
So stop trying to convince us all that it is.

Speaker 2 (01:22:21):
Well, stop trying to convince us that kids know what
the fuck they're talking about.

Speaker 3 (01:22:25):
Exactly exactly, you know what.

Speaker 2 (01:22:29):
It shouldn't be. Period. If you're an adult, you want
to go ahead and hack your genitals off, knock yourself out,
be safe, ye, live however you want to live. Don't
you leave everybody else alone, don't don't hurt other people,
do what you want to do. Cool, fine, no problem,
But this this over bearing. My kids just came out

(01:22:51):
of the womb and oh they and he's playing with makeup.
He doesn't know what he's trans Oh he's a fucking kid.
Can we just let him be a kid? No, we can't,
because we have we have these these over bearing, overly sensitive,

(01:23:12):
overly important parents that lack so much control in their
lives that they want to go ahead and say you
know what you don't know what you are yet? Yeah,
we're gonna go you. Are you a boy today? No,
you're a girl. Okay, You're going to chop off your dick.
We're gonna chop off your dick. It's gonna be fine.
It's it's really it's it's fucking delusional. And again, no

(01:23:35):
problem if you're an adult in your trans and you
you cool, awesome, you be you, no problem at all.
Total respect for you as long as you're being cool
to everybody else. But this stuff, as soon as you
introduce kids. That is the most twisted clip that we
have of the week, and that's disturbing as fuck. Yep.

Speaker 3 (01:23:56):
Well, and you kind of touched on where I want
to go with with my little I guess my soapbox.
But I kind of came to the realization this week
that liberals libs uh in this whole woke movement. And
again I'm gonna I'm gonna paint with a very broad

(01:24:18):
brushstroke here. I'm not including everybody but right, right, but
but in general, I came to the realization that liberals
are losers. They're absolute fucking losers, and they will never
be winners. And I'll tell you why. So so being
in a in a mindset and growing up in sports,

(01:24:43):
which you did, haf Ay did. I I did, and
and I don't even mean that we were like we made,
you know, high school varsity football and we were state champions.
I'm not I'm not saying that. I'm saying we went
and played like our pastime was going out to the
local you know, boys and girls club and playing basketball
with each other, just fucking around and constantly competing with

(01:25:06):
one another. Oh shit, you just you just bested me.
All right, let me see if I can do my
best move on you. We had a little like a
seven foot basketball hoop outside of our local boys and
girls club was right across the street from from Cornado.
I know you remember it. But we would have like
dunk dunk contests with each other on that because we

(01:25:26):
could actually dunk on that rim. And so we were
constantly competing against one another, and if you lost, you
came back the next time with your best. Shit. You
made yourself be better somehow because you didn't want to
keep being a loser, and liberals have found a way
that they kept losing and or they just stopped trying

(01:25:49):
to win. I mean, I'm not even saying that they
lost their whole lives. They just lost once and they
were like, ah, I don't know how to be better.
I'm gonna go be a fucking.

Speaker 2 (01:25:58):
Weakling.

Speaker 3 (01:26:00):
Yeah, a victim. Thank you that better word. And so
now they are claiming their identity as as this is
the hat they're hanging there. This is this transactivism, This
this victimization of I don't know, the black community or

(01:26:22):
of the immigrant community or whatever. Basically, what you're saying is, yeah,
I'm a loser and I need help. And if you
have that mentality, you're never gonna be a fucking winner.
You're always going to be a loser. That's that's breaking
your ankle. The doctor gives you a crutch, and eight
weeks later, the doctor says, Nope, you'll never walk again.
Keep the crutch, You'll never try that.

Speaker 2 (01:26:46):
You're done.

Speaker 3 (01:26:47):
Yep, exactly. But you like the sympathy from your coworkers.
You like that your wife puts you into bed every night,
she helps you, help you bathe. One percent, that's all
this is it's it's it's Munchhauser Munchhausen disease on steroids,
and and that's all it is. It's this dog whistle
of like I have a trans kid, and every fucking

(01:27:09):
kid I know is trans. That's what this fucking idiot
was saying.

Speaker 2 (01:27:13):
Oh, it's cool, right, it's cool right because now now
now she's got that kid, she's part of the she's
part of the club. She's part of the one.

Speaker 3 (01:27:21):
Part of the That's That's what I'm saying, is that.

Speaker 2 (01:27:24):
All in all, society has to bow down to the
one percent.

Speaker 3 (01:27:28):
Didn't we learn that It's it's a way to be
a winner. It's the way to be a winner. And listen,
you know, there's there's a lot of ways to win
in life. I'm not saying you have to be the
fucking high school quarterback champion.

Speaker 2 (01:27:42):
You know.

Speaker 3 (01:27:42):
Uh, George Clooney was never a fucking athlete. He's he
said that, talked about that many times. He's never an athlete.
But the guy found a way to win in life.
Like you, there's lots of ways to win. But when
you just settle for for being a loser and saying, well,
every one needs to rally around me because I'm such
a fucking loser.

Speaker 2 (01:28:03):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (01:28:03):
That's that's that's where we're at right now. And and
again we go back to that whole you know, strong
men make make you know, easy times, easy times make
weak men. Weak men make hard times and hard times
make strong men. We're we're at that point right now.
We have a bunch of weak people. It's not even men,
it's just weak people who were They don't even know

(01:28:28):
how to find their own identity. They don't know how
to find their niche in society. They don't know how
to succeed, they don't know how to keep trying. They
just put out a hand and say please help, and
and I'm and here's the deal. We're all fucking tired
of helping you. You're gonna set Tesselas on fire. You're
gonna call people Nazis who aren't Nazis. You're gonna go
counter to whatever the popular populist candidate wants to do.

(01:28:54):
Fuck you, we're done. We're not giving you the hand anymore.
You're not getting the handouts anymore. If you get pregnant,
you're gonna have to fucking deal with it. I'm not
saying take away women's rights. That's not what I'm saying.
I'm saying, if you make a bad choice, you need
to make decisions for your own life and for the
life of that kid from there on out. And I'm
pro choice. I'm not saying I'm pro life. I'm saying

(01:29:16):
I'm pro choice, but I'm also saying that abortions should
not be.

Speaker 2 (01:29:21):
Cont Yeah, exactly, why make it pro accountability versus pro choice?

Speaker 3 (01:29:28):
So stop being losers, come join the winning team. I'm
I'm I'm not the winningest winner of all time, but
I have had enough loss in my life and picked
myself back up enough times that I'm not gonna stand
for you being a fucking loser anymore. I don't care.
Either do it yourself or fuck off. That's That's that's

(01:29:50):
my speech.

Speaker 2 (01:29:52):
War on Tesla continues. We had some fire bombing this
week which was and uh, pretty intense. When you light
one of these cars on fire, it does some I mean,
obviously it's really bad damage, but these don't You can't
just put these out. It's really really bad. But the
Democrats really took to really trying to make sure that man,

(01:30:16):
you guys are well. Here here's Tim Waltz. Let's let's
let's listen to Timmy timp on, tim.

Speaker 14 (01:30:23):
Saying on my phone, I don't some of you know
this on the iPhone. They've got that little stock app.
I added Tesla tude to give me a little boost during.

Speaker 9 (01:30:29):
The day.

Speaker 2 (01:30:32):
Two twenty five and dropping. So, and.

Speaker 14 (01:30:40):
If you own one, if you own one, we're not
blaming you. You can you can take dental floss and
pull the Tesla thing off, you know, and take out
of just telling you.

Speaker 2 (01:30:49):
He goes on to pretty much champion more destruction of
of of uh Tesla vehicles.

Speaker 3 (01:30:57):
Yeah, he really does, which I just gonna say, which,
by the way, that's a fully American company, an American, American,
American made car, employing Americans only, and these people and
by the way, eighteen months ago, and even let's go

(01:31:19):
back like maybe two three years ago, like Tesla was
who was who was saving the electric car market and
championing the environmental climate cult It was like, hey, buy
a Tesla because that means that you're doing the right
thing for the environment, which we found out now they're
actually worse for the environment. But whatever, who's counting. But

(01:31:42):
he single handedly saved that whole movement, and now they're
firebombing them an American made, American company employing Americans only,
and they're somehow justifying that that. That just shows you
how fucking crazy they are, how how desperate they are
for a win because they're such.

Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
Losers, and how they're willing now to go and destroy
the environment by blowing up the cars Bury. That part
of the leader bill, Bill Maligan, it's a Fox reporter.
Governor Waltz gloats about Tesla stock dropping. Records from Minnesota's

(01:32:25):
State Board of Investments show that as of six point
thirty twenty four, the state of Minnesota had one point
six million shares of Tesla in its retirement fund and
two hundred and eleven thousand shares of Tesla in its
non retirement fund. So this this this.

Speaker 3 (01:32:51):
Jackass governor of Minnesota.

Speaker 2 (01:32:55):
Yes, leader of the Minnesota people. Little Somalia is there, Yeah,
is out trashing his state's pension funds.

Speaker 3 (01:33:09):
In the name of identity, in the name of running
for president.

Speaker 2 (01:33:14):
Yeah, that's exactly why he's doing this. On this this
this stump speech. Now listen to this. This is this
is the next day after that news drops.

Speaker 9 (01:33:24):
What can we possibly do about.

Speaker 10 (01:33:27):
Elon Musk because it's not right.

Speaker 14 (01:33:30):
It is not right, and this guy bugs me in
a way that is probably unhealthy.

Speaker 3 (01:33:36):
And but but.

Speaker 14 (01:33:43):
I I have to be careful about being a smart ass.
I was making a joke. These people have no sense
of humor. They are the most literal people, most literal people.
But but my point was, they're all mad and I,
you know, said something I didn't you know, probably shouldn't
have about a company.

Speaker 2 (01:33:59):
He is agree, agreed, So I make the case. I
make the case.

Speaker 14 (01:34:08):
They're all butt hurt about the Tesla thing, but they
don't care the disrespect they have shown to employees at
the Minneapolis VA who care for our veterans.

Speaker 2 (01:34:17):
Then they fire them. They don't care.

Speaker 14 (01:34:21):
So we will have the conversation about efficiency and government
and about doing that, but none of us believe for
a second they're thinking about this. Oh, we fired everybody
that's dealing with ebola. And then he went into the
Oval office wearing a hat. I don't ever want to
hear anybody talk about decorum and respect or that wearing
a hat coming in their richest man in the world.

Speaker 2 (01:34:41):
Again, this maybe's just me.

Speaker 14 (01:34:43):
If I'm the richest man in the world, I'm like
out on the streets handing out to money.

Speaker 2 (01:34:47):
It'd be fun as hell just to help people out.
Go up, Yeah, because that's how that works, Tim, I
was just kidding.

Speaker 3 (01:34:57):
Then why aren't you doing that? Tim? You fucking f fuck.
Why aren't you handing out money to the poor. Why
is Joe Biden? Why isn't Hunter Biden all the millions
he made in Ukraine? Why aren't you fucks out there
at AOC You were a fucking bartender and now you're
worth what is she worth? Like two point seven million?

Speaker 2 (01:35:18):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:35:19):
Why aren't you handing out money to the poor. That's
the thing. It's all lip service, it's all bullshit. We
all know you're doing it so that you can remain popular,
not so that you can do the right thing, one
hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (01:35:35):
Just to remind everybody who actually supports the Democrats as
far as billionaires go. George Soros, Michael Bloomberg, Bill Gates,
Reid Hoffman, Tom Stayer, Dustin Moskovitz, James Simmons, Laurel Lauren Powell,
Mark Cuban, JB. Pritzker, Reed Hastings, Melinda French, Gates, fred
ickeneier Heim, Saban, Mark Benahoff, Steven Spielberg, Warren Buffett, jose

(01:36:02):
E Feliciano Hemdi. Look at a Tyler, Perry, Lewis van On.
I don't see them out on the corner handing out
money now.

Speaker 3 (01:36:14):
And let's not forget seventy five percent. I'm not making
this go up. Go out and look it up yourself.
Seventy five percent of the richest counties in this country,
seventy five percent of them voted Democrat and have have
voted Democrats since the mid seventies. Seventy five percent. So

(01:36:41):
it's funny to me that the Democratic Party now they're
they're big. The big bullet in their gun is that
down with the millionaires and the billionaires, because they're trying to,
you know, defund you as a blue collar worker. The
fact is most billion are Democrat and vote Democrat and

(01:37:03):
contribute massive amounts to the Democratic Party, to the DNC.
That is all I fucking dare you to fact check me,
because that's all certifiable. That's how it is. So, so
when you want to say that we're the party of
the people and down with the billionaires, then fine, fucking
down with all your people, all the Hollywood actors, all

(01:37:27):
the CEOs, all the lobbyists, all the fucking heads of
every university, all the deans of every fucking university like that.
That that number astounds me. I looked up that number,
like ninety eight percent of college deans voted Democrat, ninety
eight percent. Where do you think our young people are

(01:37:49):
learning this bullshit? Because they have an agenda going through
these colleges. And so these young people show up and
they're in, they're very influenceable, they're they're malleable, and they
hear this ship that's like a mandate from the top. Uh,
it's very easy to understand how we got here. It's very,

(01:38:12):
very much more difficult to figure out how we get
out of it.

Speaker 2 (01:38:20):
And to his comment about we're all pissed off over
whatever over you know, his comments on Tesla, That's not
what we're pissed off about. That's not what people are
pissed off about. But people are pissed off domestic terrorism.
That's what we're pissed off about. These aren't protests. This
is your b LM movement. You're not built. You're not
burning down cities, you're not burning down groceries and walmarts

(01:38:44):
and best Buys and Walgreens. You're not burning out those things. No, Instead,
you're gonna go ahead and take and perform domestic terrorism
on a car maker and their showrooms. Protest all you want,
that's fine. I went to three tests. I went to
three different test Tesla dealerships, and only one of them

(01:39:05):
had a protest today. And the one that I was
at was peaceful. No problem. You guys are doing your thing. Absolutely,
you don't like it, great, get out there and do it.
Make sure you don't buy a Tesla. Awesome, No problem
with any of that. Nobody's pissed off about that stuff.
The people. The stuff that people have pissed off about
is that you take it to fucking extremes. And this
is not a trend. Now, this is not a trend.

(01:39:27):
It's it's like it's it's like the trans violence. This
is not a trend. These are people who have a
screw loose. They they they're if you look at the
last a lot of the shootings that have taken place, Yeah,
if you look at the the violence that's taken place

(01:39:49):
lately at that the UH I think it was what
was it three of the uh uh people that UH
trashed uh Tesla's Tesla dealerships in the last week. Well
they were all trans Yeah, well it's not.

Speaker 15 (01:40:09):
Here's what's it's a trend that I mean, you can't
this is data. You what you lacktly you know what's
wild to me and I don't. I mean, maybe someone
can explain it to me, like I'm.

Speaker 3 (01:40:22):
Five, but what's wild to me is uh So let's
take the guy like. This is like maybe the most
ridiculous and innocuous example of this. There are many like
way worse ship like people are keying Tesla's and painting
them and setting them on fire. But this guy stuck

(01:40:44):
his hand out them throwing This guy stuck his hand
down his pants and wipe ship on on a Tesla,
his his own human feces on a Tesla. So so okay,
let me get this straight, sir, I mean, out of
all due respect, because I don't think you're a servant.
Let's just benefit the doubt. Okay. So you disagree with

(01:41:10):
not even the politics of who's driving that car. You
don't even know that person. You don't even know how
they think about things. They might have been they might have.

Speaker 16 (01:41:18):
Voted Bernie Bernie Bernie, Hillary Bernie and Biden, the whole
fucking way, and yet you have no idea who they are,
the fact that they own a Tesla.

Speaker 3 (01:41:31):
You're gonna wipe your own shit on their car because
you disagree with the politics of the CEO of the
company that made that car. That's fucking wild. How do
you make that jump. That's like being mad at my
great great grandfather because he shot your neighbor's dog. That

(01:41:54):
has nothing to do with me. It has nothing to
do with anything I am or what I believe. It's
a fucking car that I drive to and from work.
I was trying to do the right thing for the
environment or whatever, or I just like the fact that
they go from zero to sixty in less than two seconds.
That's cool, And you're gonna wipe your shit on my car.

(01:42:14):
I would have I I can't even tell you what
I would have done to just completely annihilate somebody keying
my car because they didn't agree with the politics of
the guy that made my car. Not me. They don't
even know me. They're just making an assumption about the
guy who made my car. This is this is wild shit.

(01:42:36):
This is this is what I mean. This is such
a charged time in our history though, and it is.
But I'm saying that's how that's how crazy people are
getting is there's so much energy in the air and
in the environment that they're they they've lost it, They've
lost their grip on reality.

Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
By their logic. That's what I mean by their logic.
Anybody who drives a BMD is a Nazi, not anybody
who drives a Toyota V dub funded Pearl Harbor. I mean,
that's how we're Daniel's Lada.

Speaker 17 (01:43:18):
So so this is like a kind of shitty situation
where like, yes, I understand that he's antagonizing people. He's
like rubbing people the wrong way. You don't like the guy,
you don't like the beliefs, you don't like what he's doing.
And there are things to criticize. I'm not saying there
aren't things to criticize, Like everybody is, nobody's about criticism.
But to punish that car company that is one hundred
percent made in America may buy people living in America.

(01:43:42):
Americans rely on those jobs. Like maybe we criticize another thing, right,
what is your goal that we shut down those factories
and those Americans lose those jobs? That makes you feel
better about your gripe with Dylon, not to think some
people they they just want to win an argument. It
feels like, you know, there's people that rely on those jobs.

Speaker 2 (01:44:00):
Oh this goes back to your comment about winners and losers, right,
They just want to win an argument. They feel so
shitty about themselves, about their predicament. They're victims. They're they're
gonna go ahead and destroy everybody in their path. This narcissism,
this apocalyptic feeling of I'm gonna go to go and

(01:44:21):
drag everybody fucking down because I don't because Orange Man bad. Yeah,
it doesn't make any fucking sense.

Speaker 12 (01:44:27):
But I wonder, I wonder where all that comes from.

Speaker 2 (01:44:29):
Fits. I wonder. I wonder if.

Speaker 3 (01:44:32):
You say, George Soros, I'm gonna lose my ship right now.

Speaker 2 (01:44:36):
I was gonna witch humor. I was gonna save George
Soros for later, so you can lose your ship there. Okay,
all right, do that?

Speaker 3 (01:44:42):
Which hold on real quick. I want to go back
that entire interview, that entire show, uh with Theo vonn
on his show this Yeah, this past weekend, that whole thing.
I listened to the whole thing. It is, it is hilarious.
I mean, you will laugh because both of those I
love both of those guys. They're amazing comedians and have

(01:45:03):
like actually very thoughtful minds that that understand today's climate
and really have some good thoughtful things to say about it,
even though a lot of it's joking. But it's a
from start to finish, that's a fantastic podcast. And if
you're not listening to this past weekend with THEO and
and the people that he has on, what a fabulous podcast.

(01:45:24):
And I'm not I'm not fucking I'm not you know,
hanging off his balls or anything. I'm just saying it's
a it's a it's a really it's a solid podcast
and and just enough humor with just enough politics and
current events that you learn something but also you feel
good afterwards. So and with Andrew Schultz on I I

(01:45:48):
like him. I think he's a brilliant comedian, very smart.

Speaker 2 (01:45:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:45:51):
Yeah, really really great show. So check out.

Speaker 2 (01:45:53):
That's what comedians are supposed to do for you. Yeah,
supposed to do that. Comedy's not gonna get We're not
gonna get into Bill Burr this week because fuck that guy,
point fuck him.

Speaker 3 (01:46:06):
Yeah, but.

Speaker 2 (01:46:09):
This is this this. This is what I appreciate. I
do the THEO Von's, the Andrew Schulz. I might not always.

Speaker 12 (01:46:18):
Agree with him, right, but that's okay.

Speaker 2 (01:46:21):
That's the way things are supposed to be. It's it's
it doesn't have to be that hard. Oh fuck, But
you know who makes it hard, Chuck Schumer. We are.

Speaker 18 (01:46:33):
We are mobilizing UH in New York. We have people
going to the Republican districts and UH going after, going
after these Republicans who are voting for this and forcing
them to either face change their vote or face the consequences.
This is a long, relentless fight that we fight every day,

(01:46:53):
and I am confident that we will bring Trump's popularity
numbers and strength down if we keep at it, and
keep at it, and keep at it.

Speaker 2 (01:47:02):
Their whole tactic is sending people to districts that are
already Republican, people that don't live in those districts, and
they're trying to bring his popularity down. Their legislators. Shouldn't
they be doing something to legislate. Shouldn't they be doing
something that bringing up bills that are actually challenging. That's

(01:47:25):
the way this is supposed to work. The Democrats are
in full p R overload. They do they are doing.
They're not governing at all. Granted they probably can't because
they don't have an edge in either the House or
the Senate. And obviously, but this is what you're gonna do.

(01:47:45):
That this, this, here's, here's, here's he's the worst. Yeah,
well he's he's well, he's he's he's not He's not
the worst. The worse is Corey Booker. And those guys
are standing quietly behind him, letting Schumer reckon himself.

Speaker 3 (01:48:08):
Okay, okay, but I'm gonna tell you why Schumer's worse.
Because Schumer, well, yeah, I believe he actually has a
brain in there. I believe he actually can think, and
he's choosing this Corey Booker. That guy's a smooth brain
fucking sheep. He's not had an original thought since third grade.

(01:48:31):
Uh and AOC same thing like I have. I have
no idea how she got to where she is other
than the fact that she's a pretty face.

Speaker 2 (01:48:43):
Oh, I've got I've got We've got that covered in
a little bit. I got this.

Speaker 3 (01:48:46):
But Schumer, Schumer, Schumer's not pretty. He's he's so he
had to rely on his smarts and I think he
he knows exactly what he's doing, So he's the fucking worst.
He the fact that he chose to go on this
yentifest the view and say these words that you're about
to play, He's the fucking worst by far. I'd punch

(01:49:08):
him right in the deck if I saw him today.

Speaker 19 (01:49:10):
And you know what their attitude is. I made my
money all by myself. How dare your government take my
money from me? I don't want to pay taxes, or
I built my company with my bare hands. How dare
your government tell me how I should treat my customers,
the land and water that I owned, or my employees.
They hate government. Government's a barrier to people, a barrier

(01:49:33):
to stop them from doing things. They want to destroy it.
We are not letting them do it. And we're united.

Speaker 4 (01:49:39):
Okay, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:49:42):
Government is a barrier to all people, not just billionaires. Chuck. Yes,
I don't want anybody to touch my money. That's not weird,
that's not inappropriate. No, alr any problem with building infrastructure.
We've got sixty eight bridges team different states that are
being looked at because they're very possible. There are candidates

(01:50:06):
to actually fall apart. They're worried about they're gonna collapse.
I don't know any problem with my money going towards that.
But other than that, everybody should keep their fucking hands
off my money, period, end of story. Whether it's me,
you guy down the street, or elon, to keep your
fucking hands off my money, you're not doing the right
thing with it anyway.

Speaker 3 (01:50:27):
Dude. Imagine imagine if he hid. First of all, amen
to what you just said. Yes, imagine if he if
you replace the word money with my daughter in that statement,
I don't want anyone touch my daughter. I've i've I've
drafted this with my bare hands, and I don't want

(01:50:47):
anyone touch on my daughter. Dude. It's it's all the same.
My family, my money, those are the same, because if
I don't have money, I can't provide for my family.
How fucking out of touch are you? How removed are
you from the general public that you don't get it
that we're working our fucking buttholes off and some of

(01:51:11):
us are just barely scraping by. We're trying to provide
for our kids, We're trying to provide for our parents
because social Security ain't gonna fucking do it. And you
say something like that, Oh, don't touch my money because
I built this. Fuck you and your fucking bitch, ass
ugly face.

Speaker 2 (01:51:29):
You did think that, who are you protecting? Chuck? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:51:33):
Right, exactly what are you?

Speaker 2 (01:51:36):
What are you protecting Chuck?

Speaker 3 (01:51:37):
What's your motivation? Yeah, yeah, it's it's Uh, it's it's
a level of insanity. And the fact that you've got
a coalition and I'm gonna say it's it's the minority.
It's it's a small coalition. But they're loud, their their vocal,
they have it smarts so they can make their voice

(01:51:59):
be amplified. But the fact that you have these people
that are so die hard that they're willing to literally
go down with the Titanic, because listen, guys, that ship
already hit the iceberg an hour and a half ago.
The bands playing either get on a fucking rescue boat
or or you're going into some freezing water.

Speaker 2 (01:52:18):
Here.

Speaker 3 (01:52:19):
The Democratic Party is a wreck, and and you can
you can jump onto Chuck Schumer's coattails, you can jump
onto AOC's titties, which are fabulous. Uh, But at the
end of the day, none of those are going to
keep you afloat. You're all going down and we can
all see it, and it's it's actually like a glorious

(01:52:39):
thing to watch it. You're you're so far off base.
You're so far away from what reality is, from my reality,
for mcshane's reality, for people we know, for for everyone
that is a working, fucking stiff doing the best we
can do day to day. You are so out of touch.

(01:53:01):
You're done, You're done. We're not buying it anymore.

Speaker 2 (01:53:05):
All right, let's uh, let's let's take Are.

Speaker 3 (01:53:08):
You really gonna play this fat cow?

Speaker 2 (01:53:10):
Yes? Yes, this is Boston Joan, this is uh. This
woman is a college professor at Boston University. This is
part of it.

Speaker 3 (01:53:18):
For those of you playing along, For those of you
playing along at home, picture a twinkie, but that's a humanat.

Speaker 2 (01:53:28):
Potato wearing a I don't know, some hair but yeah,
twinkie works too.

Speaker 3 (01:53:33):
She doesn't she actually doesn't have a neck. It like
just goes shoulders and then head.

Speaker 2 (01:53:38):
I've never seen anybody wear a jacket over camo.

Speaker 3 (01:53:45):
I didn't even realize that was camo. Oh, she's trying
to hide her the fact that she's a woman. Yeah,
Like I don't have breasts, don't wish.

Speaker 2 (01:53:52):
I couldn't see her anyway or him. This is a
Boston joan.

Speaker 3 (01:53:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:53:58):
The thing I want to say is that I study memes,
and the most obvious meme nobody's talking about is Elon's
black hat. And he thinks of himself as this black
hat hacker that's broken into the government and socially engineered
his way into the treasury, and he's gonnabscond with all
the data. It's an obvious data heist, but he believes

(01:54:20):
he's living a meme. And so we need to be
very clear about what our demands are, about what our
bright lines are, and that we're not gonna stop until
Tesla is done with musk.

Speaker 3 (01:54:33):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:54:38):
Just go look at look at look at thank you.
Experience it. So she studies memes, Okay, this, this, this,
that is what she does. Her job is studying memes.

Speaker 3 (01:54:52):
That's her job.

Speaker 2 (01:54:53):
Yeah, that's her job. That's her fucking job.

Speaker 3 (01:54:55):
I mean same, I just don't get paid for that.
So but yeah, that's my job too. I get it.

Speaker 2 (01:54:59):
Well, I want to go. I'm I want to go
to work for ASU now and just study memes and
social media.

Speaker 3 (01:55:07):
Yeah you should.

Speaker 2 (01:55:09):
I think I would be really, really good at it
because if this potato gets to do stuff like that
and that's her take, there's there's been nothing. No never mind,
let's let's let's let's go to just because.

Speaker 3 (01:55:30):
I miss this potato head and her bucket of ship
for everyone.

Speaker 2 (01:55:37):
Sorry, if you guys want to give Jasmine Crockett a
birthday president, go to Tesla Takedown next week. Her birthday
is a twenty nine, so.

Speaker 8 (01:55:46):
I'll make sure that I keep it short.

Speaker 11 (01:55:48):
But I am truly here for very selfish reasons, starting
with on March twenty ninth.

Speaker 20 (01:55:53):
It's my birthday, and all I want to see.

Speaker 2 (01:55:55):
Happened on my birthday is for Eli to be taken down.

Speaker 21 (01:55:58):
Yes, so I think everybody to really enjoy taking this uh,
this guy down in the stock down and because of
the example it will.

Speaker 2 (01:56:05):
Set John Cusack everybody.

Speaker 21 (01:56:09):
You know, nothing's gonna We are in an.

Speaker 3 (01:56:12):
All garchic country.

Speaker 21 (01:56:13):
That's that's that's fascist and becoming more fascist every day,
and that means people are gonna die and it's going
to get as ugly as we can think. And the
only way to stop that is if the people who
have the money are afraid of us. And you know
it's the people who own the society, the owners those people.

(01:56:33):
We have to make them really afraid. And what's happening
now with Musk is making them very afraid. And that's
a good thing.

Speaker 20 (01:56:41):
If we kill the Tuffla brand, if we drive down
the thock right loan off, we can force them to
sell his stock to pay back the billions of dollars
of debt that he took on to buy Twitter.

Speaker 2 (01:56:49):
This is Michael Lee. This is a what investing quote
unquote investigative journalist.

Speaker 20 (01:56:56):
Death will drive tuflo stock into a death spiral. Tanking
Tuflo stock is a e thoughid strategy, and it's one
of the only thought strategy that's really been articulated to
deal with this moment. And if we're successful, we will
oft e want must wealth and with it, his power.

Speaker 11 (01:57:09):
So we need to be very clear.

Speaker 2 (01:57:12):
Oh sorry, Then we go back to Joan Donovan, the
meme lord of Boston University. They're delusional, They're all fucking delusional.
And John Cusack, can we talk about the headband? This
guy did not grow up. He still hasn't grown up.

Speaker 3 (01:57:28):
You know, he used to be a hero mine. I
mean really, I loved everything he stood for. I loved
I loved the movies he was in. I I yeah,
I mean, my god, uh I serendipity a gross point blank,

(01:57:49):
which is still a cinematic fuck yeah, I mean so.
And and yet, if you actually believe what you're saying, John,
which I think he does, I'm sorry, dude, you're certifiably insane.
We're going to have to open Here's here's where the
economic growth it's going to come in the next ten

(01:58:09):
to fifteen years is all the mental institutions that we're
going to have to have for these people. They all
need to be housed because they're they're so far off
the fucking reservation. You're not even you're not speaking a
common language a B. You're not speaking logic. You're speaking

(01:58:30):
pure emotion, which is, by the way, a very immature
thing to do. I mean, the mark you want to
know why teenagers get to be such dicks is because
they they lose their ability to differentiate between logic and emotion.
That's that's what the brain development's doing during the ages

(01:58:51):
of thirteen and eighteen is really thirteen and twenty five
is what is logical and what is emotional? And they
don't know at first. They're trying to figure that out.
That's why parents are so important to be like, hey,
you're being an emotional fuckstick. This is what's logical. You
need to be home by twelve o'clock every night because
that's what's logical, because you have school the next day.

(01:59:15):
And then all of a sudden you hit your thirties.
You're like, holy shit, I was such a dick when
I was a teenager. What was I thinking? You weren't
You weren't thinking? And John Cusack and the rest of
the idiot that you played this like every kid I
know was trans you're a fucking teenager. You're actually probably
a preteen. You're not even in the teenager mode yet.

(01:59:37):
You don't don't even know what logic looks like. You're
just in the emotion of this feels good to support
these people, so I'm gonna do it. Yeah, well, okay,
then you need to be put in a mental institution
because you're forty five and you're acting like you're thirteen.
So goodbye.

Speaker 2 (02:00:04):
So AOC and Bernie and Tim Walls and government Governor
Newsom have been at it this week trying to get
they're they're they're basically they're trying to get they're trying.
They're going town hall town hall one. I would love

(02:00:25):
to know how much they're making from each town hall.
And I'm sure they've got donors in there.

Speaker 3 (02:00:31):
Yeah, which is which we we did try and look
up before the show, and it's not it's not publicly
I'm disclosed. So you don't know how much they're making. Yeah,
not yet. I'm sure at some point we will know.
But rest assured they're being funded for this. They're not
doing this ship for free.

Speaker 2 (02:00:49):
And and well and and Bernie Sanders does nothing for free,
right right. But the interesting thing is is that this
week they this this is their their test. These are
all test balloons to see who's gonna run for president.
I don't think that I think there were I think
it's way too early. I don't think they have any idea.

(02:01:10):
But we've heard from Dean Phillips this week, Hillary came
back up, you had uh, you've had Bernie and AOC
and this clip. Let me let me play this clip
because this is important too. Here we go.

Speaker 3 (02:01:25):
I'm waiting for them to try and resurrect the cripkeeper.

Speaker 2 (02:01:30):
They really should.

Speaker 3 (02:01:31):
He's just as viable as Hillary or fucking Bernie are
you kidding me. You're talking about politics twenty years ago,
and you're still trying to resurrect these people like he
still he's still trying to use her.

Speaker 2 (02:01:45):
Like I said, losers, but he's he's the leader of
the Communist Party in America, so they might as well
go and send them out there. I mean none, I
guess all his policies are anyway. This is uh, this
is a little background in THEOC.

Speaker 22 (02:02:01):
Alexandria Okazio Cortets is not really the congresswoman of New
York's fourteenth congressional district.

Speaker 9 (02:02:08):
She is essentially an actress.

Speaker 22 (02:02:11):
She's merely playing the part of a New York congresswoman.
I know this sounds crazy, but bear with me. In
twenty seventeen, a group called the Justice Democrats held auditions
for potential congressional candidates that they would run on their
platform for various congressional seats throughout the country. Alexandria Okazio

(02:02:31):
Cortes's brother, Gabriel, submitted her for the role. Now, I've
auditioned for many acting roles in my day. I've also
cast many of my own projects. I know how this works.
If you find somebody with star power, even if they
don't one hundred percent fit the part, you go with it. Obviously,
AOC has star power. Just look at her. She's a superstar,

(02:02:52):
the most famous person in Congress maybe ever.

Speaker 9 (02:02:55):
Their casting was perfect.

Speaker 22 (02:02:57):
Now, I didn't have to go digging for evidence for
this because they freely admitted.

Speaker 9 (02:03:02):
They brag about it.

Speaker 23 (02:03:03):
Back in twenty sixteen, we put out a call for nominations.
We got over ten thousand nominations. Out of those ten
thousand nominations, we found Alexandria.

Speaker 5 (02:03:13):
My brother told me that he had set my nomination
in the summer, but I was like literally working out
of a restaurant with them.

Speaker 21 (02:03:20):
It's like, there's no.

Speaker 9 (02:03:21):
Way a casting call. They had a casting call.

Speaker 22 (02:03:24):
They cast Alexandria Caser Cortes in the role of congresswoman.

Speaker 2 (02:03:29):
This is your Democratic Party, everybody.

Speaker 3 (02:03:32):
Hey, we covered this, We covered this months ago. Yeah,
I remember talking about this. I mean, this isn't new information.
Of course, she's an actress. This wouldn't work. Listen, say
what you want about you know, body image, beauty, masculinity, femininity, whatever.

(02:03:54):
This wouldn't have worked if she was an ugly person,
male or female. It wouldn't work. The fact that she
has that face, that body, she's she's easy on the eyes.
She could basically say whatever the fuck she wants, and
people are like, yeah, who we love her, don't don't
kids yourselves. The Democratic Party is maybe deeper into sexuality

(02:04:20):
than than the republic Republicans are they just they just
they they put it over the the like beneath the
fog of war of like, we're all supporting of trans,
yay and gay and LGBTQ, but really, at the bottom
of it, they know they need pretty people to represent
their policies because otherwise it won't work. And that's God,

(02:04:41):
that's so entirely fucked up. It's it's unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (02:04:46):
Well, this is kind of fucked up too. Let's uh,
this is CNN taking after Gavin Newsome, which I thought
was fascinating because it's CNN. It is apparently, Yeah, Gavin's
on the outs and and Bernie and AOC are definitely
on the ends, and Owen Tim and tampon Tim.

Speaker 3 (02:05:10):
So let's talk about the word LATINX.

Speaker 17 (02:05:12):
Just two weeks ago, here's what he said about it.

Speaker 24 (02:05:16):
By the way, no one person ever in my office
has ever used the word LATINX.

Speaker 9 (02:05:19):
So can we finally put that to bed.

Speaker 2 (02:05:21):
Yeah, but where did that even know? More LATINX everybody.

Speaker 24 (02:05:23):
Well, I just didn't even know where it came from,
and like, what are people talking about?

Speaker 10 (02:05:26):
But there was a person who used LATINX. It was
actually a really important person with him, right.

Speaker 9 (02:05:32):
Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 25 (02:05:32):
And look, these aren't minor shifts. These are progressive issues
that Gavin Newsom used to champion until fairly recently. And
now he's not just walking away from them, he's sort
of acting like they were never legitimate with that clip
talking about LATINX in the first place. But let's just
let's take latin X. We did find somebody who used
it repeatedly in his office.

Speaker 3 (02:05:53):
Let's take a listen to this.

Speaker 24 (02:05:56):
I hope we can really paint a picture in terms
of our consciousness of how impactful this has been on
the LATINX community. LATINX community, the LATINX and black communities
got politicians that are banning not assault rifles, but the
word latin X. They're not even serious.

Speaker 2 (02:06:13):
A little hit piece from CNN. I just like the
like knowing that Gavin's on the outs.

Speaker 3 (02:06:19):
Yeah you're fucked, You're done, which honestly makes me happy
because that means we won't have to suffer him as
a presidential candidate.

Speaker 2 (02:06:29):
Well, we'll see where we are in three years. But
he's definitely right now.

Speaker 3 (02:06:35):
Yeah, this this kind of thing where he's like, I
don't even know where that came from, and then CNN
is playing clips of him fucking saying it. That tells
me he's he's he's hasn't dranked enough baby blood or
whatever they do in their rituals, and and he's he's,
he's out, he's done, he's a he's a nobody. I

(02:06:59):
think the only think Gavin. Sorry, hey, there he is.
After No, I was gonna say, I was gonna say
the only thing that Gavin could do to save his
career is to like like become one hundred, like just
go full on Republican, just be like I was coerced

(02:07:20):
to say that ship I'm full of Republican. That's the
only thing you can do to save himself. So anyway,
half A, how's the night going?

Speaker 4 (02:07:27):
Oh my god? Roulette stresses me out, man, I hate it.

Speaker 2 (02:07:36):
Is it the math or the action?

Speaker 4 (02:07:38):
Just it's just all the action. I mean, we got
it's the fucking tables covered with chips, and I mean
I've learned to not really stress about it, but I'd
still stress about it, you know what I mean. So
just mucking for twenty t and then dealing for twenty

(02:07:59):
and I may sixteen dollars Jesus, and real quick about
buttercups and her fabulous birthday. I'm sure I've said this
to you guys before, but when she and I met,
the story about how we met at the grocery store
that I worked at, m HM, when I saw her,

(02:08:22):
it was like, you know, like the heavens opened up
and the light shone down on her. I mean, she
was breath She still is still gorgeous, she's beautiful, but
she was I mean, I'd never seen anything like that
before in person. Just stunny, dude.

Speaker 3 (02:08:41):
I actually remember, either the first time or maybe the
second time that she came through your line, you came
home and you you came to my room because we
were all living in the in the bachelor pad of
the Hubble. Oh yeah, at the time. You came my
room and you just like sat down. You're like, holy shit, dude,
I'm not I'm not really even sure this is real.

(02:09:03):
I feel like it's like a like I'm it's a
dream and I'm kind of waking up and it's not
really real. And I just remember, I clearly remember the
day he met her and what an impact she made
on you, And so it's it's no surprise that you know,
twenty nine years later or whatever it is, she's still

(02:09:24):
a part of your life. And I'm and I'm I'm
here for it, dude. I fully support it. I think
it's great.

Speaker 4 (02:09:32):
Yeah, yep, yep. Can we do this? So after last
week's farm report, Wow, boyd did we get mail?

Speaker 2 (02:09:54):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (02:09:55):
We did a lot.

Speaker 4 (02:09:57):
I got a couple of stamples here. We got Race
from Schenectady, New York. She said, My kids and I
listened to the show and the way to school every morning.
They were so upset by the like of story they
couldn't go to school that day. We got Veronica from
San Diego. She wrote, my husband is so upset by
your farm report that he can no longer get aroused sexually.

(02:10:18):
My god, I mean, that's that's a lot to take in,
you know. The staff and yeah, well okay, yeah, so
the staph and I we had we had a good
talk about this, all right, and we thought, hey, maybe
a feel good stories in order.

Speaker 2 (02:10:35):
Oh nice, to.

Speaker 4 (02:10:36):
Make up for it. So we voted and it was
fifty and it was decided, Nah, fuck it, let's do
another sad one. So here's the story of Peter the Dolphin.

Speaker 2 (02:10:48):
Oh no, god.

Speaker 4 (02:10:51):
So a woman named Margaret. She worked and studied dolphins.
She was working on learning a story.

Speaker 3 (02:10:57):
I know the story, it's so good.

Speaker 4 (02:11:00):
The story a long time ago too. Yeah, So she
was working on learning how they communicate with each other.
She's working with three dolphins, two girls, and a boy.
Pamela and Sissy were the girls and the boy was
named Peter. So over time, Peter would start showing jealousy
if Margaret was spending too much time with the with
the girl dolphins. So over time they actually formed a

(02:11:22):
strong bond with She forms wrongbomd with Peter. She's spending
more time with Peter. He is you God, damn, these
people are so fucking loud. Yeah, I'm doing with this
whiskey hell, this is the farmer pot I'm doing. I
need to bring this sign that sign in whiskey hell sign.

Speaker 3 (02:11:44):
I think we need to make you a capsule that
you can just step into.

Speaker 4 (02:11:48):
And upproof booth. Yes, all right, so anyway, it's no
more time with Peter. He flourished, He learned different sounds
and their meanings, he learned her name and how to
say it. I'm guessing it was in dolphin He's. But
he would show signs of sadness and distress whenever she
wasn't around, whenever Martin had a day off or whatever. Right, So,

(02:12:12):
and she actually admitted to missing him as well when
she wasn't around. So over time he would start staring
at her knees and her legs and like just observing
them how they worked. So he really started, you know,
getting a little close. And then Peter started getting aroused.

(02:12:34):
So Margaret h she you know, she described it as
like an itch. It was a distraction for him, and
it made training difficult when he was sexually aroused, and
made focusing and repeating different things that they were working
on very hard for him. So she decided she would

(02:12:55):
leave him to get him back on track. And it
was non sexual from her point, but it was very
sexual from his. Hello.

Speaker 2 (02:13:09):
So she was a groomer or was he a groomer? Well, god, sorry,
go ahead.

Speaker 4 (02:13:14):
So at some point later a scientist from NASA who
and they were funding this whole thing. He came by, Yeah,
and he for some reason, not not related to this,
I don't think, but for some reason, he decided to
abandon the whole project. So Peter got shipped off to
another facility and Margaret wasn't employed by them, so they

(02:13:36):
didn't get to see each other anymore. So not long
after that, Peter showed signs of distress and he drowned himself.
The caretakers there unanimously, unanimously agreed it was suicide because
dolphins are conscious breathers, and suicide among dolphins is actually

(02:13:56):
quite common.

Speaker 3 (02:13:58):
And that.

Speaker 4 (02:14:00):
Is your farmer board. Can we work on the booth
with idea? Can we do we have funding for that?

Speaker 3 (02:14:18):
Yes? We do. I Hey, I've got some guys working
on it right now. They've got three sheets of plastic glass.
We just need funding for the fourth figure. We'll figure
this out. That that actually is a it's one hundred
true story and it's also really sad story. Uh, you know,

(02:14:41):
poor Peter. Yeah, and and I and you know what,
you know why I say poor Peter. I can totally
fucking relate to that goddamn dolphin. I you know, like
I go to work with the best intentions, and then someone.

Speaker 2 (02:14:54):
Will watch.

Speaker 3 (02:14:57):
Oh no, no, someone walks in just looking, you know,
their best that day. And and I and I'm I'm
I'm doing everything I can to be the best you
know supervisor I can be. But fucking eight, Like why
do you wear those pants to to show off that butt?

(02:15:17):
You know what I mean? Like? Yeah, and so we've
all been there, you know, we've all been there. We've
all found somebody attractive that we probably shouldn't. Here's the
problem is is I I? Yes, I I think uh
what's her name? She crossed the line. She was like, hey,
you know, great, you're staring at my my ass, my legs, whatever.

Speaker 2 (02:15:39):
Let me jerk you.

Speaker 3 (02:15:40):
Off, because right right then and there, there's there is
no coming back from that, you know, literally, that's it.
That's yeah, you're you've now gone down a road there
is no return from because once it happens once, that
guy is going to constantly and I don't care if

(02:16:02):
it's a dolphin, a fucking giraffe, a mouse. Once it
happens once, we're coming back for more. And I so
so god damn it, like shame on her.

Speaker 2 (02:16:18):
Fuck, I really really wanted like a sleeveless of Seattle
ending and like free Willie Peter's She's out in the
ocean and Peter gets a break and he jumps over
this wall of rocks, yes, and then frolicking, and then
she's writing them off into the sunset. That would have

(02:16:39):
been way, way more happy. I didn't realize that dolphins
had a thing for knees that bend mony. That's that's
pretty intense.

Speaker 3 (02:16:51):
I mean, you know, we all want something we can't have.
Like I love vaginas because I don't have one. Women
love peanut is because they don't have one. Imagine you're
a dolphin and you don't have knees. It's totally true. McShane.
Imagine or imagine like a giraffe looking at someone with

(02:17:12):
a really short neck, like I want that. I'm gonna
I want to chew on that short neck. I mean,
that's that's how it goes in the world of nature.
Mike Shane, And trust me, I'm an expert.

Speaker 2 (02:17:24):
You are you? You guys are both yeah, sure, experts.
I absolutely no zoologists.

Speaker 3 (02:17:30):
No, No, hefe is the nature expert. I'm the science guy,
and I'm telling you this is science.

Speaker 2 (02:17:36):
It's in behavioral science. That's what it is. It's like
it's like nature and vieral science come together and make
a natural science.

Speaker 3 (02:17:51):
Had a psych psychemological Yeah.

Speaker 4 (02:17:56):
I had a really weird thought last night, as a
dead spread here we go. Yeah. Yeah, at the time
it's it's story time. Was that I was a dead
spread and this couple walk by, younger couple and she
had like this I don't know, tain top thing on
and she had like boobs, like you know, Cleveland showing

(02:18:17):
quite quite prominently and you and so they walk by,
and you know, I'm there by myself, just thinking, and
I thought, you know, it would be cool. And I
don't want anyone to die or get hurt or anything
like that, but it would be cool if something happened,
like I don't know, an explosion or an active shooter

(02:18:39):
that doesn't kill anybody, because we don't want nobody to die,
but something to scare people to make them run. And
then I could just stand there and watch these girls
run by with their boobs, you know, bounce all around.

Speaker 3 (02:18:51):
Yes here, I know what you mean. And yes, I
pray for disaster daily just for that very reason. And
then and then part B of that is then I
want to rescue these hot women like, well, they got
trapped under a steel beam and I'm strong enough to

(02:19:13):
like live. Yeah, ah, yeah, No, I'm there with you, dude.
Here's here's a part of this is a part of
the male psyche that women you don't understand, you don't
even know about. This is our dark sea want. We
want to be a hero to all of you. Yes,

(02:19:34):
first to my wife, but then everybody else who also
has breasts. I want you all to think I'm a
hero all of you. We don't do the ship we
do if we don't want you to think we're heroes.
We get good at stuff so that you were like, wow,
that's really amazing that you can do those things. That's
what we do. That's how our brains work. That's what

(02:19:57):
propels us to greatness.

Speaker 4 (02:20:01):
What if there was a bunch of girls that we're
going to fight each other for you, but at the
end of the at the end of the fight, you know,
whoever does win, they're probably gonna they're gonna be bad shape.
Would you still want that to happen? No, you can
nurse her back to health with their people.

Speaker 2 (02:20:25):
Or what if you're completely unattracted to what you know
won you.

Speaker 3 (02:20:29):
Yeah, imagine well, no, imagine fucking bruiser from you know
ho dunk Iowa went to Boston.

Speaker 4 (02:20:38):
Shaped hold on, now, come on, I am I gonna
just let anybody into this competition. No, I will be
the selector of who gets to compete for me?

Speaker 3 (02:20:48):
Okay, good, all right, So let's so it's all right,
it's it's it's Mi La Jovivic against Kate moss and
and they're fighting it out still.

Speaker 4 (02:20:59):
So I my thought was more like a battle royale,
like twenty five thirty girls just go into town, not
well you know what I mean? No, I don't want
to do one on what.

Speaker 2 (02:21:13):
Lean into it and tell us what do you mean?

Speaker 4 (02:21:15):
Well, like go to town each other, I mean beat
the ship out of each other. I don't go Okay,
although that would be cool too. You have an orgasm contest.

Speaker 3 (02:21:24):
Yeah, like whoever comes last or most need.

Speaker 2 (02:21:29):
To look harder.

Speaker 4 (02:21:30):
We're losing like half our listenership, I think.

Speaker 3 (02:21:33):
Yeah, I think so too.

Speaker 2 (02:21:34):
I think people they want to show you fucking do
have whiskey on the show. Jesus Christ. Right, yea, we
haven't been It's like we haven't put a show out
in like three weeks. Or something.

Speaker 3 (02:21:44):
I mean, here's the thing, here's here's what I'll say
to just wrap all that up and make it actually
feel okay for our listeners. We respect one hundred percent,
respect all women for all But Hafe is speaking kind
of in the theoretical and listen, I'm gonna go out
on a limb here, Ladies. Don't don't pretend like you
haven't fantasized about two guys fighting over you, over your honor,

(02:22:08):
because that's a fucking thing. So we get to have
that fantasy too, that's all Hafe saying. And in that
scenario with thirty five women trying to fight over my honor,
I still wouldn't want that. I you know what, I
would just I I want to defend all of their honors.

Speaker 2 (02:22:27):
I'm not going to say no at this point. Guys,
knock yourself out and if I'm interested, by the time
you get done, cool.

Speaker 3 (02:22:35):
Our fucking by the way, our chat is going nuts
off of our chats.

Speaker 2 (02:22:38):
Our chat's borderline pits.

Speaker 3 (02:22:40):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, we're awful.

Speaker 2 (02:22:43):
Mike and Tabby, you're gonna beat the shit out of
each other. Aaron, I don't know what, Daron, what what
is Aaron doing? Yeah? I don't know.

Speaker 3 (02:22:51):
Yeah, it's all right, Hey, I just want to put
this into context. We have had people say that this
show rivals a lot of other shows that are out
there as far as entertainment and news. So this is
all for entertainment purposes. This isn't This isn't you know,
to be inflammatory or to be sexist assholes. This is

(02:23:13):
for entertainment purely, right, Hafe.

Speaker 4 (02:23:16):
Hey, oh yeah, definitely see even.

Speaker 3 (02:23:22):
It's wholly made up, I would I don't. I don't
believe anything I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (02:23:30):
All right, I gotta go.

Speaker 2 (02:23:34):
Have a good night, Hafe.

Speaker 3 (02:23:35):
All right, all right, man, well done, thank you for
that very depressing but in lightning story. And yes, happy birthday, Buttercup.

Speaker 2 (02:23:44):
I think I think we need to get I need
to find some walk up music for hefe when he
comes in and then an outro or something when he
goes out, something like that.

Speaker 3 (02:23:54):
I need to work on that little Yeah, I mean
the walk up music. I think he should probably pick
and listen. I'm going out on a limb here. I've
known half a longer than any any person on this
planet except for my mom. So that's just saying something
I'm gonna I'm gonna say that Halfe would pick something

(02:24:14):
either bye, and this is gonna make Cafe laugh, but
he would either pick something by Van Halen or Billy Joel.
Those literally that's his that's his two options. He would
pick walk up music by one of those two artists.
And if I'm wrong, half A, please please help me.

(02:24:35):
I'm wrong, but I think I'm probably right. And if
you really search deep down in your soul, you know
I'm right.

Speaker 2 (02:24:41):
I could see eruption by Van Halen. He'd be good
to come in. Er be a good song for him.

Speaker 3 (02:24:48):
Yeah, or photographs Yeah, yeah, oh that's a good one
anyway by Billy Joel. Sorry that I'm trying to remember

(02:25:08):
the name of a couple of songs that he really likes.
I mean, obviously piano man. I mean, how could you
not like that song?

Speaker 2 (02:25:15):
Oh, piano man? Though, because suing me a song on
the piano and then he was talking about I can't
think of anything.

Speaker 3 (02:25:23):
Better, exactly exactly right. But yeah, I actually, I mean, dude,
great idea. I think walk up, walk up and exit
songs are I mean, they're part of what makes baseball
cool these days. So I think it could up his
you know, his his coolness O meter. I mean yeah, okay, yes,

(02:25:51):
we could go Britney Spears. We could we could have
him walk into us Stronger.

Speaker 2 (02:25:56):
Mike, Mike wants stronger by Britney. No, Mike, thank you. No.

Speaker 3 (02:26:04):
You know what? What about firework by Katy Perry?

Speaker 2 (02:26:08):
Right? Oh Katy Perry would be good for him.

Speaker 3 (02:26:11):
Because oh let's go wop.

Speaker 2 (02:26:15):
Yeah, let's yeah, really really good.

Speaker 3 (02:26:18):
I was just thinking firework just because you know, he
always brings the fire, the fire and the work work.
Oh yeah, let's wrap up this absolute debacle.

Speaker 2 (02:26:33):
What what beer are you taking a bed?

Speaker 3 (02:26:35):
Oh? I mean it's not even close. My first beer
was a taste of prison asshole.

Speaker 2 (02:26:43):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (02:26:43):
And and this this second beer, though Guilty, was a
phenomenal Baltic porter. I felt like I was on a
on a ship back in the fifteen hundreds sailing across
the Atlantic with this beer. Very very very they stayed
very true to the old world brewing on this beer.

(02:27:07):
You just you could taste it, you could feel it.
Very well done. Definitely not a sex beer. This is
just like a beer that you probably actually after a long,
long work week and you come home Friday night and
the wife's like what do you want for dinner? And
you're like, I don't give a fuck. Then you pop
this beer open and and you pour it in a

(02:27:28):
glass and you and you drink it down while she
figured figures out. Yeah, she figures out what she wants
to eat, because this is what you're gonna eat.

Speaker 2 (02:27:37):
For the evening those nights.

Speaker 3 (02:27:39):
Very very good beer. Yeah exactly, easy, done, yep, yeah,
done and done exactly. I'm getting wheat and malt and
all that. So yeah, that's what. How about you? What
do you? What do you do?

Speaker 2 (02:27:53):
I'm gonna go with the Baltic will Full Blindness Baltic
porter from Resident Culture. I did really I love the
bar Wine, but I I want to find more beers
that are like my go to, and this one would
have been. There wasn't enough about the Barley Wine that
was like, oh my gosh, this is I need. Oh wow,
this was just like take my pants off for it.

(02:28:15):
That wasn't gonna happen with that one. But the Loful Blindness,
I I really I enjoyed it. I wanted I want
a four pack of it. I want to keep that
in the fridge and I want to hit one of
those when I when I need it. It's like my uh,
I don't know. Emergency beer makes everything all right. All right,

(02:28:38):
that's gonna wind things up. Thank you for sticking with
us at Whiskey Underscore, hell Is the X Feed, Whiskey
hell Pod on pretty much everything else, TikTok, Instagram, whiskeyhelpod
dot com is going to be the website also, so
if you guys want to check us out, go there,
especially for show notes. Thank you for listening. Thank you

(02:29:01):
to everybody in chat. We had Aaron was alright, we
had Tabby, we had Mike, uh, Lisa, Aaron, Elle, Justin
die who also I miss Happy birthday Buttercup. Who am
I missing? Anybody? Beard? We miss you, Joe Bionic. We'll

(02:29:23):
see you later. Jay, I know you're working tonight. Anything else, no.

Speaker 3 (02:29:31):
Half a half Aye for bringing the fucking heat fucking
with Raypee Dolphins. Yeah, much appreciated.

Speaker 2 (02:29:41):
I'm Steve Mashane.

Speaker 3 (02:29:44):
I'm fits.

Speaker 2 (02:29:46):
I think critically, act accordingly. We'll talk to you soon.
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