Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The Mandy Connell Show is sponsored by Belle and Pollock
Accident and injury Lawyers.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
No, it's Mandy Connell and Don koam ninety one m
song god.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
Way say can the nicety store, Mandy Toronal keeping sad bab.
Speaker 4 (00:26):
Welcome, well to Welcome to a Friday edition of the show.
Speaker 5 (00:30):
All together now woo, that's right. I'm your host for
the next three hours. Mandy Connell.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
Over there in for Anthony Rodriguez is Michael Cooper and
in the studio with me now for a rossover event.
Speaker 6 (00:45):
Today.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
It's a very special edition of The Mandy Connell Show
with her friend Roskominsky staying.
Speaker 5 (00:51):
For an hour.
Speaker 7 (00:52):
Stay for an hour because we're dumb, disproving the line
in your song that you keep ignorance away.
Speaker 4 (00:58):
Acception that the Yeah, Ross and I've been talking about, like,
you know, doing a little crossover because we enjoy it.
Speaker 5 (01:03):
It's fun for us. Like somebody said, why are you
doing this?
Speaker 6 (01:05):
I'm like, we like it.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
I mean, it is just fun for us to do.
But instead of so Ross and I are the geniuses
that we are. I'm like, hey, I'll come in and
do an hour of your show, which I already did
and then Ross, you come in and do an hour
of my show.
Speaker 5 (01:19):
So we're telling Grant that we're doing a Ross over,
and great goes. That's awesome.
Speaker 4 (01:23):
So you're coming in to do a half hour of
Rosses and he's staying into a half hour years and
Ross and I were like, what, maybe I don't know right,
that's genius.
Speaker 5 (01:37):
So stupid, So the next time will be doing it
that way, so neither of us has to like come
in or stay later or earlier than.
Speaker 8 (01:47):
We have to.
Speaker 5 (01:48):
We're too stupid to figure that out. Oh my god.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
Well, the best part is that we both realized at
the exact same moment how stupid we both were.
Speaker 6 (02:00):
Almost christ from laughing so hard.
Speaker 5 (02:02):
It was follow us worse more. Yeah, get our opinion
on stuff.
Speaker 4 (02:09):
We're practically Janius is over here, and we're not even drinking.
Ladies and gentlemen, we're not even drinking anyway.
Speaker 5 (02:20):
Let me do this to pull we'll just pull the
reins back together.
Speaker 4 (02:22):
I gotta do the blog real quick, and then I'll
come back and we'll do our little fun hour together
because I got some stuff we got to talk about.
Speaker 5 (02:29):
My vision for future debates. I think you're gonna love this.
Speaker 4 (02:32):
Find the blog by going to mandy'sblog dot com. Look
for the headline that says nine thirteen twenty four blog
Ross ruins my show, the Abortion Initiative and a gop rally.
Speaker 5 (02:43):
Click on that and here are the headlines you will
find within.
Speaker 8 (02:46):
I didn't listen office happening Almost hips say that's going
to press.
Speaker 4 (02:50):
Flatch today on the blog, Ross is sidekicking for an hour.
Today The Rocky Mountin Voice is hosting a rumble Sunday
about that abortion of your chance to see the Hero
twenty twenty. In action is this weekend when the crazies
ruin everything. Uber and Lyft have driver owned competition. Now
Colorado gives up on teaching math. Another one bites the
(03:13):
dust boulder says no more McMansions. If you're gonna screw up,
may as well go big breay Gun is number one.
Speaker 5 (03:20):
The political schism of the Colorado.
Speaker 4 (03:22):
Media tgif everybody, I can't wait to see the movie
that embarrassed the race hustler in chief, y'all Trump needs
to scrape off Laura Loomer. The best diet for happiness
The Kiffness plus Donald Trump is magic. Lessons to live
a more fulfilling life.
Speaker 5 (03:38):
And I only left a sweatshirt.
Speaker 4 (03:41):
Those are the headlines on the blog at mandy'sblog dot com.
Speaker 6 (03:46):
And yes, schism is an excellent word.
Speaker 5 (03:48):
Yes, I do try to use excellent words on the blog.
And what was that last one?
Speaker 6 (03:52):
The sweatshirt?
Speaker 5 (03:54):
Yeah, I only and I only left a sweatshirt.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
That particular story is about weird stuff.
Speaker 5 (03:59):
Found in hotel rooms.
Speaker 4 (04:01):
Okay, And the only thing I've ever lost that I
I mean, you leave things, you leave like a like
a like a razor or something.
Speaker 9 (04:07):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 4 (04:08):
You leave something like that, it's inconsequential. I've never left
anything consequential that I have not been able to get back,
except one. I got a Florida State official team sweatshirt
before I left college, and when I was a flight attendant,
I left it in a hotel room in San Francisco
and never got it back. And that one, that one
hurt because it was a team sweatshirt. It was like,
(04:30):
you can't buy it kind of team sweatshirt. And somebody
jerk in San Francisco. Has it super frustrating you ever
leave anything in a hotel room? My kids have, I
thought were gonna say, my kids, and I'm like, Ross,
they'll find you.
Speaker 5 (04:41):
They have your idea.
Speaker 7 (04:42):
No, that would actually be fine if you heard the
rest of the story. But because the rest of the
story is every single time that I've left whatever, just
something small, or my kids leave something in a hotel room,
would call the hotel room the hotel and I say, oh,
we didn't find it.
Speaker 6 (04:55):
So it's just like the people who clean the rooms
are taking it.
Speaker 5 (04:58):
Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 6 (04:58):
And so that's why I'm saying, if it had been
my kids that I had left.
Speaker 5 (05:02):
Yeah, yeah, there you go. You don't know. We don't know.
Speaker 4 (05:08):
Okay, We've got to talk about Tuesday Night's debate because
we were in here for the Kaway cast. We saw
it in all of it's in glory, and since then,
I've been thinking about this, and I've been thinking really hard.
Now Donald Trump has come out and said he does
not want another debate, which for him, I think is
a mistake or he's realized he can't stay disciplined enough
to actually perform at the level he must perform at
(05:29):
in a second debate.
Speaker 5 (05:30):
That being said, I have some ideas that I want
to just bounce off.
Speaker 4 (05:34):
Okay, Idea number one, Each candidate gets to bring a
team of three instant fact checkers.
Speaker 5 (05:43):
Okay, and it works like this.
Speaker 4 (05:45):
As any candidate is speaking, if they say something that
is demonstrably false that we know is wrong, the other
fact checkers get to ring end ding. They have a
big red X that goes across him, and now they
can either stop and ask for clarification at that point,
or they can continue on with the giant red X
on them, so everybody knows they've told a lie. And
(06:06):
then we'll stop, and then we'll go to the fact
checkers and they'll say, fact check, here's what's going on.
Speaker 5 (06:12):
Kind of like a game show almost, you know what
I mean.
Speaker 4 (06:14):
If you're the candidate, your goal is to make it
all the way through a sentence without being fact checked.
Speaker 6 (06:20):
Is that what they do with like America's Got Talent
or something?
Speaker 5 (06:23):
Oh no, yeah that?
Speaker 6 (06:24):
Oh yes, I'd like to hit the thing and yes, right, yes,
I'd be into it.
Speaker 7 (06:29):
If one of them was Heidi Klumb, Well, is she
a fact.
Speaker 4 (06:33):
Checker or one of the Are we now having hosts
of the debate? Are we having women in slinky dresses?
Speaker 6 (06:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (06:38):
Okay, okay, okay.
Speaker 4 (06:40):
I think more people would watch if we had women
in slinky dresses.
Speaker 7 (06:42):
Okay, but going with your idea in a serious way,
I think I would like to see it implemented where
they have to respond to the fact checker at the
end of whatever they're saying, rather than cut them off
multiple times in the middle of an answer. All right, there,
you know someone someone XU, yep, and at the end
of your two or whatever, then the fact checker can say,
why did you say that?
Speaker 8 (07:03):
I like it.
Speaker 6 (07:03):
I don't think this is the thing. They both lie
a lot.
Speaker 5 (07:06):
Oh yeah, Oh, and here's the.
Speaker 4 (07:08):
Thing, because you know I just mentioned I've I've been
having conversations with people and I'm going to be super
vague about this, who are really focused like a laser
right now on looking for solutions to the negativity in
our political dialogue, whether it is among citizens, whether it
is among the political class. This is what ranked choice voting.
This is the big appeal for me for rank choice
(07:30):
voting because it does not reward that kind of behavior.
It disincentivizes division, hatred, telling lies about someone else, It
disincentivizes all of that. Right, So if you're trying to
elevate the conversation, you have to disincentivize telling blatant lies
that you know are blatant lies, you know, and you
(07:52):
have to disincentivize that. And so we've got to figure
out a way without the moderators checking these people bold
because obviously we saw what happened to ABC. It was
so the more I read the questions, go back and
just read the questions Ross, it will make your head explode.
It is this, in my mind, is one of the
greatest examples of journalistic malpractice in like the last few years.
Speaker 5 (08:17):
And oh my god, we've had some massive examples of that.
Speaker 7 (08:20):
So I don't know if these things matter, but I
will mention them, and they certainly making their way around
conservative Twitter. But the female moderator of the debate is
a sorority sister of Kamala Harris's. I don't actually know
that they were in the same college at the same time.
Speaker 5 (08:35):
They were not, They were in two different chapters a
decade apart.
Speaker 7 (08:38):
But there was a conversation where George Stephanopfulis interviewed that
lady Lindsay Davis, I believe is her name right, and
said to her on ABC well as a sorority sister
of Kamala Harris, YadA, YadA, YadA. So she certainly Lindsay
Davis knows that she's Kamala Harris's. Well, wait a minute,
I don't know that that's important.
Speaker 4 (08:59):
Was that question in the context of when Kamala Harris
blew off Israel to go to speak to her sorority group?
I mean, the context of that kind of matters. Was
George Stephanoppolis just trying to get that in.
Speaker 5 (09:10):
There, so it was on the record.
Speaker 6 (09:13):
No, I don't know, this was some years ago.
Speaker 5 (09:16):
Okay.
Speaker 7 (09:17):
The question actually ended up being about like the significance
of pearls in their sorority.
Speaker 6 (09:24):
Why is Kamala wearing pearls anyway?
Speaker 7 (09:27):
So there's that, But I think the more interesting one
is that that the woman who owns ABC, or who
runs ABC, who runs Disney and Disney owns ABC is
one of Kamala.
Speaker 6 (09:36):
Harris's closest friend.
Speaker 7 (09:37):
I know, I know, And I'm not saying these people
necessarily leaned on the moderators or anything, but.
Speaker 4 (09:44):
How it has got to be there subtly, Okay, how
they choose the moderators. I think there's influence there. I
think that they are going to say, Okay, you know,
we would prefer David Muir and Lindsay whatever.
Speaker 5 (10:00):
Her name is, We prefer them to be the moderators.
Speaker 4 (10:03):
Maybe the pressure is that because you know, people always
accuse us, and I'm sure.
Speaker 5 (10:06):
They've accused you.
Speaker 4 (10:07):
Well, I media tells you what to say, and I
tell people all the time. I have never had any
editorial interference from iHeartMedia in any way, shape or form,
not implied, not, you know, nothing right. And so I'm
loathed as saying where does that pressure come from? But
when you're talking about someone running for president who just
got that kind of softball treatment, yeah, you start to
(10:30):
ask those questions.
Speaker 7 (10:31):
You know, we know that kind of stuff happened at
CNN before Zucker left. We know he was pressuring their
hosts to treat Trump badly and so on. Anyway, I
need to beat all that up. But you and I
both almost couldn't believe how bad the moderators were, especially
because the moderators knew they were being watched.
Speaker 8 (10:51):
Yep.
Speaker 5 (10:51):
And that's the part that's the most shocking.
Speaker 4 (10:53):
I mean, do you really think that they were unbiased
and fair in their question asking? I'd love to be
able to ask either of them upon further review. Do
you believe that you were fair to both candidates? And
if so, how did you not fact check anything? The
Kamal layers said, not one thing, nothing. Yeah, how is
that even possible?
Speaker 7 (11:15):
There are some folks asking about, you know, getting some
third party independent lawyer to look at the internal communications
of ABC News to see if they planned to only
fact check one side.
Speaker 6 (11:26):
Now ABC won agree, they don't want agree to that,
but I do wonder.
Speaker 7 (11:30):
And again, I think comes down to something you were
just talking about it was an intentional thing, or this
isn't this is entirely possible. Journalism schools these days are
entirely full of leftists, and and people who go to
journalism schools are taught as much that they're on a mission,
have an agenda.
Speaker 6 (11:47):
They're not really taught to be journalists journalists the way you.
Speaker 5 (11:50):
Think to change the world.
Speaker 7 (11:51):
Culter Cronkite, Yeah, right, and and and people say, oh,
it's not a giant cable. They're not all uh, they're
not all conspired to work together.
Speaker 6 (12:01):
And that's true. They don't have to they share a brain, right, And.
Speaker 5 (12:05):
That's the thing.
Speaker 4 (12:05):
It's like when you talk about newsroom bias, and I
can't speak to anything at the national level. So I
would not pretend to know what goes on in CNN's
you know, news meetings. But I've been around enough local
television stations, local newspaper people that it's not that they're
out there, they're not getting talking point memos at the
beginning of the day. It's that they all already share
the same ideology and assume that everyone else does too.
(12:28):
And so that is why there are so many people
in media today when you say, look, you know, I've
pointed out bias to colleagues and said, here's why people
would think that you have a bias based on this,
and I'll explain it to them and they will argue
with me.
Speaker 5 (12:44):
So you know, what do you do with that?
Speaker 4 (12:47):
When people are not willing to say, I know where
I'm coming from, I get paid to tell you where
I'm coming from. This is a different job. So I
love it when people are like, YEO can a journalist?
I'm not a journalist. I don't play one on TV.
I don't pretend to be one. You know who I am,
you know what viewpoint I have. It's a different animal altogether.
That's why I do what I do because I don't
want to do. I don't want to do one bias stuff.
(13:09):
I want to be able to tell.
Speaker 5 (13:10):
You what I think.
Speaker 7 (13:11):
I'm not going to add anything because I'm with you
on every single thing.
Speaker 6 (13:14):
You just say all of it, all of it. Okay,
I'll amplify one thing.
Speaker 7 (13:19):
But when people accuse me of being a bad journalist,
I say I'm not one.
Speaker 6 (13:25):
It's similar when people call me rhino.
Speaker 9 (13:27):
Right.
Speaker 7 (13:27):
Oh, yeah, I'm not a Republican. Yeah, and I be
a Republican and name older and I don't claim to
be one.
Speaker 4 (13:33):
I still have been robbed of a position on the
on the Rhino Hall of Fame. Yeah, I'm still robbed nothing,
nothing ross ignoring me after all my rhinoing.
Speaker 7 (13:45):
You know what you should get is was it amazing Sarcastros,
Scored Coppola or one of these guys who get the
Lifetime Achievement Award.
Speaker 6 (13:55):
That's what you should get from the Rhino Watch people.
Is your your lifetime achievement award?
Speaker 4 (14:00):
That would be so good?
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Ho good?
Speaker 4 (14:01):
That would look on the T shirt? Yeah, you know,
that would be really really good on the T shirt.
Speaker 5 (14:06):
Okay.
Speaker 4 (14:06):
I got a couple other things on the blog that
I want to ask you about there's a really good
column today. I don't know if you saw Corey Gaines's column.
I saw it on page two at Complete Colorado.
Speaker 5 (14:15):
About the political schism.
Speaker 4 (14:18):
You and I kind of talked about it that this
Aurora gang story just kind of blew wide open in
local media since we're already talking about that, I mean,
unsurprisingly to me or most people, nine News went all
in on the look, how this crazy lady's making things
bad for immigrants, right, I mean that was the whole
whole line, like, oh, she's horrible and making.
Speaker 5 (14:40):
Things bad for immigrants.
Speaker 4 (14:42):
And it was really frustrating when we're talking about things
like police reports and this report from Perkins Koy and
things that came with actual documentary evidence, and some news
media outlets just they may have reported on it once
but never mentioned it again, like it didn't happen. It
was just really strange to see that blatant. How surprising
(15:06):
is that for you?
Speaker 6 (15:08):
The media part isn't surprising too.
Speaker 7 (15:12):
If you lower your expectations for how well most media.
Speaker 6 (15:18):
Outlets will do, and I think nine News is the
worst in Denver, you can never estimate low enough, right,
they're just the well it goes back to what.
Speaker 7 (15:29):
We were talking about before. They have an agenda and
they can claim all they want that they don't. But
I find at Channel seven and Channel two and Channel
thirty one, our news partners.
Speaker 5 (15:37):
At KATV are are much more, much much fair, much
much fairer.
Speaker 7 (15:42):
I think the thing that kind of surprised me and
troubled me a little bit was kind of the public
fight that sort of broke open on my show I
guess about between Kaufman and Jurinsky, and I was, I
was very pleased to see you. Like two days ago,
they put out a statement to.
Speaker 4 (15:55):
Joint statement, and it was exactly what it was, exactly
what they were both saying. Y El Drensky said on
my show after Mike Kaufman said on your show, look,
therese were isolated incidents and we don't think that gangs
are in the buildings. Now they both said the exact
same thing, So I think that probably got them talking,
which is a good thing. Yeah, but the whole story,
I mean, ultimately, you guys, this story is a perfect
(16:18):
example of how not to handle a crisis.
Speaker 5 (16:21):
The city of Aurora.
Speaker 4 (16:22):
All they had to do was tell Daniel Drensky, Yeah,
we know what's going on because they've obviously been working
on it. They've started arresting people left and right now right,
so there's obviously been All they had to do was say, look,
this is what we're doing. And then once you make
the arrest, you come out and say, look, we had
an issue, we took care of it, and.
Speaker 5 (16:38):
Look at us.
Speaker 4 (16:39):
We'll look at all these people we just arrested instead
of denying it. So the whole thing just gets thrown
into the media. It was just a really dumb way
to handle things.
Speaker 7 (16:48):
I think what we may come to find and this
is something Kaufman mentioned in that interview on Monday, I
think was Monday on my show that there seems to
be evidence now and Christopher Ruffo just wrote about this
that Denver used COVID money to pay nonprofits to cover
the rent for illegal aliens in Aurora. So it appears
(17:10):
that Denver pushed illegal aliens into Aurora.
Speaker 4 (17:13):
With only two months rent assistance and then secretly paid
their rent with COVID federal COVID money.
Speaker 7 (17:21):
And I guess what we need to see now, and
what Kaufman said he's going to look into is whether
the state new and whether the fed's new. But if
Johnston is really dumping Venezuelan.
Speaker 6 (17:32):
Illegals and Aurora and not telling.
Speaker 7 (17:34):
Aurora yep, and then you yeah, then you get the
whole only two months thing. Then they're there with no jobs,
no income, no way to pay rent, and you've dumped
them there.
Speaker 6 (17:42):
This looks to me like maybe a serious scandal.
Speaker 4 (17:45):
We'll see if the media shows any interest in that.
By the way, too of texts in a row for you,
ros Kamenski, Ross, you are a rhino, and then you're
not a liberation. I'm assuming they meant libertarian, but they
wrote liberation, so you are not a liberation.
Speaker 6 (18:00):
Remember that.
Speaker 4 (18:01):
Stew on that while we take a break, stew away,
it's a Ross over with ros Kaminskin me more coming
up next, and then at one o'clock we're going to
talk to Heidi Canal. Got a lot of guests today
because there's some stuff happening that's super timely that I
wanted to get in today and I wanted to have
Ross for the whole hour. Can we talk about Laura
Lumer for just a second. We have to, Okay, So
if you don't know who Laura Lumer is, this is
(18:21):
another reason that I am not super happy about Donald Trump,
and one of them is is because lately he's been
flying this woman, Laura Lumer around with him. And I
saw an article today Ross and I didn't put it
on the blog because I don't care that much that
she's essentially his Oh no, I did put it on
(18:42):
the blog. She's his security blanket and when advisors around
him are telling him to tone it down, she is
telling him to take it up a notch, which is
exactly what he wants to hear. And so she now
is flying around with him on nine to eleven.
Speaker 5 (18:57):
And she is a horror.
Speaker 4 (19:01):
She is an absolute political grifter. She sends out racial,
you know, racist tweets.
Speaker 5 (19:07):
All the time.
Speaker 4 (19:08):
She has been part of the uh, We're gonna unleash
the crack and we have all the evidence January or
election conspiracy people that never produces anything right, never produces
the actual evidence.
Speaker 5 (19:20):
She's just awful And I was so en ross at
the R and C.
Speaker 4 (19:24):
She came to the media area and literally walked around
waiting to be asked to come on someone's show, and
no one took her except the hardcore small tiny town
outlets that nobody else would talk.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
To she's she's really bad news.
Speaker 7 (19:38):
She's she's exactly the problem with the Republican Party right
now overall, and.
Speaker 6 (19:45):
Then specifically with Trump. As you said, I mean, if
you have that kind of poison in your ear, it's
like it's like the old cartoon where like.
Speaker 7 (19:53):
A character is an angel one launch show and a
devil on the other, and she's the devil. And it
actually that explains why Trump was so bad at the debate.
Maybe he was listening to her rather. I mean literally,
I will.
Speaker 4 (20:08):
Tell you, I don't think he listened to a single
thing that anyone said to him. And then immediately Kamala
Harris got under his skin with that the rally thing.
Speaker 5 (20:18):
Yeah, and from that point on it was all that's
are off. It was all about his ego.
Speaker 7 (20:22):
So, Laura Lumer is really an internet troll, and she's
got lots of followers because it's easy to get lots
of followers being a moron and a racist and all
this stuff. And I wonder if the fact that that's
her home is part of the reason Trump seems to
believe everything he sees on the internet.
Speaker 6 (20:39):
Like we was talking about eating cats and dogs and
eating pets and stuff that's all over the Internet.
Speaker 7 (20:44):
And I wonder if she's, in addition to just you know,
having bad ideas, if she's kind of guiding him into
like watching Twitter more and believing more of what he
sees there.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
I think it probably is a little from Colin a,
a little from colinbe. We do know that Trump is
online all the time. He I mean, we've known this
since before his first presidency, but we know he's online
all the time. He is obsessive on social media. And
you know those stories broke as a matter of fact
today on the blog. Have you ever heard of the Kiffness,
(21:14):
the guy who takes Yeah, he's got a new song.
Hang on, I'm gonna get this. Hang on one second,
couverer in three to two. We're gonna do that. Now
you can turn it back up.
Speaker 5 (21:25):
You ready? This is his new song.
Speaker 10 (21:26):
In Springfield, they're eating the dogs, They're eating the cats,
They're eating the pets of the people that live there.
Speaker 5 (21:38):
They're eating the dogs. Yeah wait, it gets so I
don't know way live there. Yeah, here you go. The
Kiffness kicks out. People love Springfield.
Speaker 6 (21:52):
Please don't eat backet?
Speaker 8 (21:54):
Well would you do that?
Speaker 5 (21:56):
Eat something else?
Speaker 6 (21:58):
So spring past.
Speaker 5 (22:05):
It is a couple of the things to eat. Yeah,
they're eating there. It's it's pretty uh, it's pretty funny.
Speaker 4 (22:15):
By the way, all of the proceeds from that song
will go to the Clark County SPCA.
Speaker 5 (22:20):
So there you go.
Speaker 7 (22:22):
Let me let me share two things with you real quickly.
So Babylon B the top two headlines, and the Babylon B.
First is rf T Junior really really hoping nobody asks
him point blank if he's ever eaten a cat. And
then and then the second one, Taylor Swift's cats endorsed Trump,
(22:42):
and it's got a bunch of cats wearing little cute
little cats wearing mega hats.
Speaker 6 (22:49):
It is the biggest fastest meme of all time.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
The cats, the oh yeah, oh yeah, I mean it's
it's been wildly entertaining, wildly entertaining. But but here's the thing.
We're not talking about serious here. We're not talking about
the deficit, we're not talking about spending. We're not talking
about the fact that now they've downgraded Social Security even
more and without significant changes, we're going to have to
(23:12):
cut benefits by twenty percent in a very short period
of time, like twelve thirteen, years, none of this stuff
is even being talked about because we're talking about cat
memes and ABC News is asking why Donald Trump is
so awful, and it's distressing to me.
Speaker 8 (23:28):
Ross.
Speaker 5 (23:28):
I'm starting to worry.
Speaker 7 (23:29):
Did you I'm just picking up on your thing about
debt and deficit because that's my biggest issue. Did you
happen to hear the conversation I had with Mick mulvaney
the other day?
Speaker 5 (23:38):
I did not.
Speaker 7 (23:39):
So he was Trump's chief of staff and then he
was Director of Office and Management and budget right, so
he said when he was in omb he wrote a
budget for Trump, and he said it was incredibly conservative,
reducing spendings, just everything that the conservatives want, yeah, would
want in a budget. And he went to the Oval
Office to meet with Trump and a senior Republican senator
who he wouldn't.
Speaker 6 (24:00):
Okay, And it's just the three of them in the
meeting and the.
Speaker 5 (24:03):
Scene it's got to be miss McConnell or Lindsey Graham.
Speaker 6 (24:06):
And the senator whoever.
Speaker 7 (24:07):
It was said to Donald Trump basically, if you cut spending,
you'll lose votes. Nobody ever lost an election because they
increased spending.
Speaker 6 (24:19):
And Mike said ms McConnell and Mick mulvaney said that
was the end of my budget. That was the end.
And then later on Trump said to Mick again in
some other circumstance, basically, I have no interest in cutting spending,
and and and here we are.
Speaker 8 (24:35):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (24:35):
The only upside here would be that he's not He's
not going to be going for votes anymore if he
wins this selection.
Speaker 5 (24:42):
Here's the way I look at this, and this is
you know, trying to split the baby on this.
Speaker 4 (24:47):
At least I know there is a slim, tiny chance
that someone could get Trump to do something about spending.
Speaker 5 (24:56):
There's a remote chance that that could happen.
Speaker 4 (24:58):
I don't feel that way with Kamala right, there's literally
less than zero chance that she is going to do
anything about the debt and deficit and ross.
Speaker 5 (25:07):
You're you're an economic sky.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
I mean, I am becoming increasingly increasingly concerned. They were
like fifteen years away from a major debt crisis that
create like completely realigns.
Speaker 5 (25:18):
The entire world.
Speaker 4 (25:20):
Because if we collapse in a debt crisis, we take
everybody down with us. You know, there's going to be
nobody left after we go, maybe except China and Russia.
Speaker 7 (25:30):
We're gonna I don't think we'll ever default on our
debt because we can print as much of our own
currency as we need to to pay it.
Speaker 6 (25:37):
But it means we'll all be poor.
Speaker 7 (25:39):
It means, you know, the thousand dollars that you have
saved will only be worth five hundred dollars. And it
means that Social Security benefits will be cut and Medicare
will be cut, and all this stuff will be cut.
And they're going to come and raise our income taxes to.
Speaker 6 (25:53):
Forty percent fifty percent.
Speaker 7 (25:55):
And but as Mick mulvaney said, the politicians all their
thinking about is their next election.
Speaker 6 (26:01):
And as long as they think that, it's.
Speaker 7 (26:02):
A game of musical chairs, and the music isn't going
to stop until they're out of office, they're going to
keep stealing our future.
Speaker 5 (26:09):
And then you're gonna have to eat your own cat.
Speaker 4 (26:10):
We'll do this every so often, only the next time
just an FYI, it'll be a half hour of me
on Ross's show and a half hour of Ross on
my show. Something we were too stupid to figure out ourselves.
Speaker 5 (26:22):
That's fine. That's actually two full half hours too, isn't it.
Speaker 6 (26:27):
Yeah, yeah, true, Yeah, So we got the upside there. Okay, say,
by the way, I'm a libertine librarian, You're not a libertine,
nor a librarian, nor a liberation.
Speaker 5 (26:37):
Okay, don't forget or a libation. I'll add one more
in there.
Speaker 11 (26:42):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (26:43):
This textter said, is it all over for Trump? True
odds of who's winning? I'm I'm first of all, a
terrible prognosticator, awful, never good at guessing this stuff.
Speaker 5 (26:53):
So I've just stopped.
Speaker 4 (26:54):
But I do feel like this race is still winnable
by either candidate.
Speaker 7 (27:00):
The metaphor I'm gonna stick with is that if this
were an NFL game, Trump was up by two going
into the debate, she outscored him by a field goal.
Speaker 6 (27:10):
So he comes out of the debate down by one.
But that is not like being down by two touchdowns
in the fourth quarter. Correct.
Speaker 7 (27:16):
And if you look at the biggest betting website it's
called Polymarket. Right now, Kamala Harris is ahead of Donald
Trump by half a point forty nine point eight to
forty nine point three. That's basically a tie. And at
another website before the debate, you know betting odds worked
with like minus one twenty you got to like, bet
a dollar twenty to win a dollar.
Speaker 5 (27:35):
So if it's got a minus in front of it,
you're the favorite.
Speaker 9 (27:38):
Right right.
Speaker 6 (27:38):
So before the debate, Donald Trump was minus one twenty
and now Kamala Harris is minus one twenty. So it's
gone and the betting odds from a small favorite for
Trump to a small favorite for Harris. So to answer
the listener's question, and either one could still win this thing, yep.
Speaker 5 (27:53):
And so that is the answer to that question.
Speaker 4 (27:57):
Mandy and Ross, you need to change your show for
HiMAT tandem you two six hours every day. No, thank you,
but we're glad. This is my favorite text of the day. Hey,
Mandy and Ross, I liken the two.
Speaker 5 (28:08):
Of you together.
Speaker 4 (28:09):
Like me, try to leave work, but there are two
cool coworkers in the break room chatting about stuff I
want to know.
Speaker 5 (28:14):
Good stuff. There you go.
Speaker 12 (28:16):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (28:17):
One more thing that I wanted to ask you about today? Oh,
so are you gonna go see am I racist this weekend?
Speaker 6 (28:24):
I'll be away.
Speaker 5 (28:25):
Oh that's right, you're oh speaking of a way? What
were we talking about?
Speaker 6 (28:28):
We were talking about packing?
Speaker 5 (28:30):
Oh yeah, Ross, we were talking about.
Speaker 4 (28:31):
Packing because Ross is flying out somewhere mysterious today. And
he says, I haven't even started packing yet, And I
was like, Yeah, you throw in a pair of khakis,
two pairs of shorts, a lot of underwear, a couple
T shirts, and a collar shirt.
Speaker 5 (28:43):
What else does a dude need?
Speaker 7 (28:45):
Yeah, And then I said, I bet you packed like
a dude in the sense that you traveled a lot.
Speaker 6 (28:49):
You traveled for a living.
Speaker 7 (28:51):
So but when I say packing like a dude, what
I mean is not like my wife who puts everything
in the suitcase three days earlier and then spends three
days pulling half the stuff out.
Speaker 5 (28:59):
But you kind of.
Speaker 4 (28:59):
Says that's the way to do it when you're packing
for a long trip, especially, you throw everything you think
you're going to take, and then you go back and
realistically say, I haven't worn those pants in about.
Speaker 5 (29:09):
Two years, Why am I going to wear them on
this trip?
Speaker 7 (29:11):
Did you actually say that when you're packing for a trip,
you will like coordinate things.
Speaker 5 (29:14):
So yeah, No, I choose like a color palette, so
everything you match.
Speaker 4 (29:18):
It means that, like, if I have a blue color palette,
I'll have like a light blue, then gray and black
and scarves and whatever to go with that. And so
everything is kind of in the same color palette, so
I can mix and match and wear different things with
different things, and wear things more than once.
Speaker 7 (29:32):
Okay, are you I aspire to be good enough at
packing that I can get home and have worn everything once.
Speaker 5 (29:39):
Yeah, more or less or in a perfect world.
Speaker 4 (29:43):
Yeah, laundry halfway is really what I what I really
want is laundry halfway and then.
Speaker 5 (29:48):
Have exactly the right amount of clips. That's on a
trip that's ten days or longer.
Speaker 6 (29:52):
Right, well, and this trip is just under that, but
around there.
Speaker 7 (29:55):
And I still find despite the fact that Mandy, I've
been to over six countries that I never come home
and don't say I overpacked.
Speaker 6 (30:07):
I still overpacked every time. It's so frustrating if.
Speaker 4 (30:11):
You're going to a place you've never been, and maybe
you're not you're not, like you don't know what they
wear in restaurants and stuff like that. I mean, you
got to have a little bit of wiggle room with
your packing. You just don't want to have too much
wiggle room. You don't want to have a stack of
clothes that are still clean when you're coming home. That's
a bad strategy. It's really hard when you're planning for
a place like going to.
Speaker 5 (30:30):
Norway in June.
Speaker 4 (30:31):
How do you even pack for that because the weather
could have been anything? Yeah, even I wait before it
kind of packed a little bit of everything.
Speaker 5 (30:37):
And some days it was downright cold. I didn't pack
enough warm clothes.
Speaker 4 (30:41):
I packed for cool but not cold. And there were
some days with the wind where you were like, dang,
it's a.
Speaker 5 (30:45):
Little chilly right now.
Speaker 7 (30:46):
Would you rather come home with a bunch of stuff
you didn't wear, or like one pair of underwear that
you had to wear twice?
Speaker 5 (30:54):
First of all, I never run on underwear.
Speaker 6 (30:56):
Okay, ever, it does.
Speaker 5 (30:58):
Not happen a second of all.
Speaker 4 (31:00):
Well if I do, if I had that situation, which
does not occur in my life, i'd be washing underwhere
in the sink? Yeah, I mean, sometimes you gotta you
gotta do what you gotta do.
Speaker 5 (31:07):
I'm very crafty.
Speaker 4 (31:08):
I always have a couple of pieces of clothing that
can be washed in the sink, just.
Speaker 6 (31:12):
In case, just a case can't be washed.
Speaker 4 (31:15):
Some clothes don't dry well after you wash them as sink.
They look terrible after you wash them in the sink.
But some are like you wash them, you hang them up.
There's no wrinkles or anything. There's just bam, they're just
ready to go. You're you're a wee good guy, though
sometimes you're not. You're not like you don't spend a
lot of time worried about wrinkles.
Speaker 6 (31:31):
Oh, we've talked about this on my on my show before.
When I get a T shirt out of the laundry basket,
just throw it in the drawer. Half the time, maybe
I folded. Otherwise I just throw it in and hope
the wrinkles come out once put it on.
Speaker 5 (31:43):
I'm not, I'm not.
Speaker 4 (31:45):
I'm not super persnickety about a lot of stuff, right,
I'm just not. I'm not a I'm not a fancy
persnikity person. But that if I were married to you
and that was that kind of willy nilly attitude.
Speaker 5 (31:57):
Towards the clothing and the drawers would not stand. We
would we would have to go to counseling and then.
Speaker 4 (32:02):
You would have to learn how to fold your clothes
because there was no way that that That is not
happening on my watch.
Speaker 5 (32:07):
Nope, not going to do it. Your wife is a
better stronger person than I am.
Speaker 6 (32:11):
I think she also doesn't know what because her clothes
and my clothes are not kept near each other, They're
not intermingled. No, not even closed.
Speaker 7 (32:17):
I have a whole chest of drawers to myself in
the bedroom and all of her clothes are in the
closet in the bathroom.
Speaker 6 (32:24):
She didn't even see myr So this was.
Speaker 4 (32:25):
A don't ask, don't tell dresser right like, just leave
the drawers closed, Yes, don't ask any questions. Ron Kaminsky
a joy as always. And uh, next time when we overlap,
we'll just have it, you know, half hour, half hour now,
nobody asks later half hour in your show, half hour
on my show half half.
Speaker 6 (32:43):
That's too smart. I know, how did we not?
Speaker 13 (32:46):
Because we're not.
Speaker 4 (32:46):
As smart as Grant. Anyway, when we get back, Hidigan
all joins me. There is a rumble and it's happening
this weekend and Scendari you're going to tell you about.
Speaker 5 (32:55):
It next worldwide on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (33:03):
The Mandy Connell Show is sponsored by Belle and Pollock
Accident and injury Lawyers.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
No, it's Mandy connellyn on KLA ninety fm, god Way.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
Can the Nicys Grey Andyconnell key you sad babe.
Speaker 6 (33:29):
Welcome, Welcome, Welcome.
Speaker 4 (33:30):
To the second hour of the show, and I am
so happy to have our next guest joining me. Hidi
Ganal is the founder of the Rocky Mountain Voice. If
you're not reading the Rockymountain Voice dot com every day,
you are missing a great opportunity.
Speaker 5 (33:44):
Need to get a lot of good news in one place. No,
it's not all good news.
Speaker 4 (33:47):
I should have said, Okay, you can get your news
in an awesome place at Rockymountain Voice dot com.
Speaker 5 (33:53):
Hid be welcome back to the show.
Speaker 14 (33:55):
Oh hi, Mandy, it's great to be on.
Speaker 4 (33:58):
So let's talk about first, Well, how are things going
at the Rocky Mountain Voice.
Speaker 14 (34:03):
It's going great.
Speaker 5 (34:04):
It's growing very fast.
Speaker 14 (34:05):
We've got over one hundred and fifty thousand subscribers that
read our newsletter every day and get news from.
Speaker 11 (34:10):
Our unabashably right of center.
Speaker 14 (34:12):
News source in the Mountain Minute Newsletters. So we're having
a lot of fun and we're hosting a lot of
events around the state, getting people together to have a
lot of fun and make it fun and exciting to
be a conservative in Colorado again.
Speaker 5 (34:24):
So what's happened on Sunday?
Speaker 14 (34:27):
So Sunday we're having the Rocky Mountain Rumble. This is
actually hosted by Wide Open, and I'm honored to be
a speaker at the event, as well as Congresswoman Lauren
Bobert and John Fabricatory Valdemar Archiletta Surgery from CD seven.
Speaker 11 (34:41):
We've got great candidates. We have Danielle Darinsky who's going
to get up and speak. It's going to be a
lot of fun.
Speaker 14 (34:47):
We've got hundreds of people RSVP'd. It's one of the
best places to have an event in Colorado. Super fun
right off by twenty five in Council Rock Parkway.
Speaker 4 (34:55):
It's easy to find and there's tons of parking. It
is a really good space to have an and it
kind of allows people from south of the metro in
the Springs to make an easy trip up to do
it as well. What inspired this rumble? And I'm well, okay,
I was going to ask you a question, but I'm
going to change it. I'm going to tell you my
statement and then I'm gonna ask you a question.
Speaker 5 (35:14):
This is the kind of stuff that would.
Speaker 4 (35:15):
Normally be put together by the party apparatus. Did you
guys just decide since that wasn't happening, that you would
fill that hole?
Speaker 14 (35:26):
Well, we're not actually the sponsors of the event. I'm
just speaking at the end.
Speaker 6 (35:30):
I got you.
Speaker 5 (35:31):
I'm sorry, Yep, that's okay.
Speaker 14 (35:33):
Some great people got together with Wide Open and decided
to put it on, and we're just helping get the
word out about it because we think this is exactly
what we need to do in Colorado. And you know, us.
Speaker 11 (35:44):
Republicans have gotten you know, it's a little depressed lately,
so you know, in order to get everyone spired up
for the next fifty two days for the election, we
want to get everyone together have a good time.
Speaker 14 (35:54):
We've got a great band, that Randy Burkhart Band. He's
a wonderful country singer, and it's just going to be
about having fun and getting people.
Speaker 11 (36:01):
Excited, connected and collaborating.
Speaker 14 (36:03):
It's at five o'clock on Sunday, but parking's kind of
a bear, so everybody should get there early or uber
down there and we'll have a great night filled with
lots of fun.
Speaker 4 (36:12):
Well, I've got it linked on the blog, although I
did not understand that it was being hosted by the
Wide Open Saloon, so I've now given them their credit,
and it should be the people that come to your events.
Speaker 5 (36:23):
Heidi, and I'm just talking about not the people that
are speaking.
Speaker 4 (36:26):
I'm talking about the people that just come to your events.
Speaker 5 (36:28):
Are some of the nicest people out there.
Speaker 4 (36:30):
And if there was ever an opportunity for people to
come out and hang out with completely normal, uncrazy people
who love this country and love this state, I'm guessing
Sunday is going to be another opportunity to do just that.
Speaker 14 (36:46):
Oh thanks, Mandy. I just I love my friends, my
conservative friends across the state. We have a great time
together and we all got to know each other as
I traveled around.
Speaker 11 (36:55):
The state in the governor's race.
Speaker 14 (36:56):
But I think, you know, it's kind of it's the
hidden them to get these people together for fun and
exciting rallies. It's just something that's missing right now in
our party in the state, as you know, for obvious reasons.
So we all thought, let's just do it and not
think too much about it, get it together and hopefully
people will show up and people are RSVP like crazy.
Speaker 5 (37:16):
Well, a great event.
Speaker 4 (37:18):
I also put the RSVP link on the blog today,
and I know that it's a free event. You don't
have to pay anything. But I do know that there's
its wide open. Saloon is big, but it's not that big.
So I'm guessing that if you've already gotten a bunch
of free tickets out already, if people want an RSVP,
they probably need to do that sooner rather than later.
Speaker 14 (37:36):
Yeah, Nandy, And we did put a link on the
top of the Rocky Mountain Voice website. Now just go
to Rockymountain Voice dot.
Speaker 5 (37:42):
Com and sit or your blog.
Speaker 11 (37:44):
But people should URRVP mostly for security reasons. We're going
to have a pretty heavy security presence. There's been lots
of threats by the Democrats about protests and crazy stuff,
so we just want to make sure everybody's safe and
so to register that, make sure you have a spot.
It also makes sure that I know who's going to
be there and make sure that everyone's stays.
Speaker 4 (38:03):
All right, Hidigan all, I appreciate you and everything at
Rocky Mountain Voice dot com And Sunday afternoon, it's going
to be a fun party starting at five at the
Wide Open Saloon and I will see you soon.
Speaker 14 (38:14):
Thanks. May have a great day, all.
Speaker 5 (38:16):
Right, Thanks Heidi.
Speaker 4 (38:18):
It is and I took a shot at the Colorado GOP.
This is the kind of stuff that the Republican Party
should be putting together. But I don't even think their
name is attached to this at all. You know, I've
had conversations, and I'm going to be vague because I'm
I've had conversations with people who are working on some
really cool stuff, but it's not ready for primetime yet,
and I don't want to undercut anything.
Speaker 5 (38:39):
That is coming. But I wanted to ask you guys
this question because I and.
Speaker 4 (38:44):
I was talking to a friend of mine who is
a Democrat in a different state, and I specifically sought
her out to ask her one question, and that is,
are you fatigued from politics?
Speaker 6 (38:57):
Like?
Speaker 5 (38:57):
Are you do you feel fatigue?
Speaker 4 (38:59):
Because she is a high consumer of politics because of
her job. She works in a different industry but is
also a high consumer of news and she sent back
that is the perfect word for me and everyone I
work with. But I wanted to ask if we reach
the point yet? And I realized that there are people
who are so very angry about the way things are going,
and they feel like, you know, things are so bad
(39:22):
that they have to remain angry in order to get
anything done. And I don't think I'm talking to those
people on either side of the aisle, but I'm talking
to people who are paying attention. If you're listening to
talk radio, you're paying attention. That's just a full stop.
I mean that's you're paying attention. But I mean, is
it exhaust Is it as is exhausting for you as
(39:45):
it is for me? Because I'm at the point now
where it's like I'm tired of people arguing. I'm tired
of watching a debate that was a masterclass in playing
to the worst instincts of one candidate and watching that
candidate take de bait.
Speaker 5 (40:02):
No real substance is going on.
Speaker 4 (40:04):
We have some significant issues in this country that we
have to address, and they're not going to be addressed
by hyperpartisan antics. They're not going to be addressed by
threats from the electorate that if we don't get one
hundred percent of our way, we're going to balance you
out of office for someone.
Speaker 5 (40:20):
Who will be less yielding.
Speaker 4 (40:23):
And I'm talking about things like immigration policy. We have
to fix the border. We have to fix the border,
and then we have to fix our immigration policy because
we need people who want to come to the United
States of America and live the American dream and be
part of the system and pay taxes and work hard.
We need all of those people, and right now the
(40:43):
immigration system is an absolute nightmare. Once my friends in
the process right now, her husband, by the way, is
stuck in Ireland right now because he's not sure he
can get back in even though he has a green card.
I mean, it's crazy what our immigration says is doing.
But right now we're electing people who take pride in
(41:04):
not compromising on anything.
Speaker 5 (41:06):
And don't get me wrong, for me, my line in
the sand is the line at the border. Border security's
got to come first.
Speaker 4 (41:13):
But there's absolutely no reason that once we pass a
border security bill we can't create We're using every smart person,
every egghead. We could find a better immigration system that
is more modern, updated, that works for people. While we're
securing the southern border. They act like somehow we have
to do it all at the exact same time, in
(41:35):
which case border security always somehow falls by the wayside somehow.
But right now we're electing candidates who are not interested
in working things out, and we punish them if they
do compromise with the other side. And this is why
we're so one of the reasons we're so polarized. I
think at this point there's a whole bunch of reasons
(41:56):
why we're so polarized.
Speaker 5 (41:57):
There's not just one.
Speaker 4 (41:58):
Answer here, but I'm talking to people who are trying
to figure out ways how do we disincentivize bad behavior,
How do we inspire people to want to participate in
a primary system at a higher rate than we have
right now, because right now it is a very small
(42:20):
percentage of the overall electorate that is making decisions in
safe districts and sending people to various offices, either at
the state level or the federal level, and we're.
Speaker 5 (42:31):
Just getting you know, nutbars.
Speaker 4 (42:33):
One good thing, one really good thing I want to
be positive about this that happened in this last primary
season is that none of the wack of noodles on
either side one, you know, like the truly crazy people
got defeated. And so yeah, it's I feel like there's
(42:56):
people out there that want to find a better way,
people who are tired of everybody taking sides and nothing
productive happening.
Speaker 5 (43:06):
You know, when I talk about the border, and I realize.
Speaker 4 (43:08):
There's a whole bunch of other issues that we can
do the same thing with, but I'm kind of on
the border right now for a reason.
Speaker 5 (43:14):
We're incentivizing people.
Speaker 4 (43:16):
To pay extortion to people who then sexually assault women,
leave people in the desert to die. They make very
dangerous crossings where people die all the time. We're incentivizing
those people to do this by not fixing what we have.
And now we know we have gang activity. We absolutely
(43:39):
know that's happening. We're having gang members Venezuela and gang
members being arrested here over the last week. We have
more than are wanted for serious crimes. I mean, we've
got to fix things. And I'm tired of like team
sports in politics, and oh, I realize that I've done
my part to fan the team sport flames.
Speaker 5 (43:59):
I get it one hundred percent.
Speaker 4 (44:02):
When I blame things on Democrats in this state, I
try to just let you know Democrats voted for this.
I don't call them the devil. I don't say that
they're soulless bloodsuckers. I don't say any of that stuff.
But I'm gonna let you know whose fault it is.
Assigning blame is much different than calling someone a dehumanizing name.
So now I'm talking about in Colorado, Texter. Texter just
(44:24):
said Mandy Rashida to lead one. I'm talking about in Colorado. Specifically,
that comment was in Colorado. This person said, need a
viable third party. I don't disagree. I've talked about the
fact that in two thousand I voted for Ralph Nader,
not because I had I wanted Ralph Nator to be president,
but I was voting for the viability of a third
(44:44):
party candidate. But in Colorado, you guys, starting a political
party is not easy. It's extremely difficult, as evidenced by
the lack of traction for many of the small niche
parties that we already have, right, even the Libertarians, although
the Libertarians would rather sit around and argue about our
(45:05):
gane points of liberty, no one else count you know,
cares about than actually mount a winning campaign at the
local level. So the Libertarian Party can't get out of
their own way. So I just feel like there's a
market for that. I feel like there are people who
would like to be more engaged and do a better
(45:25):
job at their own civic responsibility, but they don't know
where to start. Where do you get unbiased information? Where
can you just find out the details about a ballot
initiative so you can really make up your own mind?
And I think that there are more people who would
probably be more engaged if it didn't seem so you know, difficult, Mandy.
(45:47):
I've never heard what is actually wrong with our immigration policy,
our immigration system, and I am talking about the system
when you are coming from a foreign country trying to
immigrate to the United States of America. That system, league,
that system is so cumbersome, so complex, and so needlessly expensive,
(46:09):
and it is so slow. It costs thousands and thousands
and thousands of dollars, It costs years of your time.
My friend's husband had to fly back to Ireland for
an appointment in London. By the way, they've been married
for twenty three years. This isn't a green card marriage.
(46:30):
The system itself is just woefully broken, and we've got
to fix that because people want to immigrate here, and
we should encourage people who want to come here and
be a part of the American dream. But instead we've
allowed a ton of people from third world nations to
walk across the southern border. They don't have many marketable skills,
(46:51):
they don't speak the language, and what are they doing
right now? They're living off the largest of taxpayers. That's
the exact opposite of what we want but now they
want to come here through a legal system that allows
them to sign up as a worker.
Speaker 5 (47:03):
I want to come over and I want to work.
Maybe I want to.
Speaker 4 (47:06):
Work in the fields while the fields are you know,
where there's where there's.
Speaker 5 (47:08):
Food to be picked. But I want to be able
to go back and forth.
Speaker 4 (47:12):
Those people should be able to get some kind of
status because we're not taking away American jobs. When we're
talking about people picking produce, do you see Americans lining
up to do those jobs? Ask any farmer about American
workers in agriculture.
Speaker 5 (47:27):
They will laugh in your face.
Speaker 4 (47:32):
So you know, we've got to fix a system that
is more effective.
Speaker 5 (47:35):
More efficient, and easier to manage.
Speaker 4 (47:38):
But at the same time, all of these people who
just walked over the Southern border, I am not in
a mood to give them any kind of status other
than the ability to work, because that is what the
Democrats have done. They have sold what they believe to
be a solid Democrat majority and they've shoved them down
the throats of the American people. And to add insult
to injury, Hey, tax dollars, your tax dollars are.
Speaker 5 (48:03):
Going to support people that have come here illegally.
Speaker 4 (48:08):
I mean that's you gotta have stones the size of
cantalopes to be a political party and do that.
Speaker 5 (48:13):
And yet that's that's here, that's where we are, Mandy.
Speaker 4 (48:17):
What is truly concerning about the upcoming national election is
the threat of election denying poll workers and others who
can refuse to count the votes and cause delays. You
can thank Trump for all that nonsense that will live
on long after he is elected, or someday.
Speaker 5 (48:32):
Will just go away.
Speaker 4 (48:36):
I think in a better way to put that, Texter,
and I mean this is that Georgia inspired distrust, Wisconsin
inspired distrust, all of these places that could not seem
to get ballots counted and then stopped in the middle
of the night. I mean, all of this weirdness that
went on around counting ballots when a vast majority of
(48:58):
American cities, including extremely large urban areas, managed to get
their stuff counted in one day, right, Trump just amplified that. Now,
I was amplifying that helpful if you want secure elections.
It was even though we haven't done. We can't do
anything at the federal level to secure elections because states
(49:20):
are responsible for securing elections. But a lot of states
have gone to great links to do a better job
securing their own elections. Unfortunately, it's just Republican states that
have done that. So yeah, read what you want into that.
Speaker 13 (49:34):
Yep.
Speaker 4 (49:36):
I understand why you like traveling to countries with brown people.
I understand why you like westerns. I understand what does
that even mean. I travel all over the place. I
travel to places with people of every ethnicity. As a
matter of fact, next year I'm going to Japan. There
will be Asians there, I know.
Speaker 7 (49:58):
Right.
Speaker 4 (49:58):
Oh my gosh, stop the presses. By the way, if
you want to go to Japan and South Korea with me,
check it out. Mandyconnelltrip dot Com, Bush v. Gore created
uncertainty too, it did, and those stupid butterfly ballots were
a huge part of the problem.
Speaker 5 (50:14):
You're absolutely right about that, Mandy.
Speaker 4 (50:19):
So let's figure out funding processing facilities at the border
to process the immigrants instead of leaving them in a
scenario where they have to cross illegally.
Speaker 5 (50:27):
Here's what you have to do, you guys.
Speaker 4 (50:29):
You have to shut down the border period full stop,
and you send to the world we are sending troops
to our southern border. Anyone who comes to our southern
border will be repelled, you will not be allowed to enter,
you will not be given temporary status, you will not
be allowed to come to the United States of America.
Speaker 5 (50:49):
Then you secure the southern border, and.
Speaker 4 (50:51):
Then you create a program to let people who can
prove that they're going to come in and be a
productive part of society into the country. If you're going
to be a drain, you can go somewhere else. Try
to get into another country without money, Try to get
into another nation without being able to tell them how
you're going to support yourself. Good luck with that. We're
the only suckers, Mandy may plan. If you want to
(51:16):
stay over six months, you must show income over thirty
thousand dollars per adult in an ad digital five thousand
per child. After ten years, you can apply for legal residency.
If you fail to make the money for two years,
you must leave. Is that Japan, okay, Mandy, Japan? If
you yup, That's how it is. In most countries.
Speaker 5 (51:35):
We're the only ones who are like, oh, you.
Speaker 4 (51:36):
Got nothing, you don't speak our language, you got no
means of support.
Speaker 5 (51:40):
Come on in, come on in.
Speaker 4 (51:43):
The taxpayers will pay for everything. And don't get me wrong,
I bet you There are amazing people who have walked
across South and Central America to get here because their
families were starving, and they really want to come to
the United States of America to get a taste of
the America dream and work hard and support their families,
knowing that their children are going to have a chance
(52:05):
at a better.
Speaker 5 (52:05):
Life than they did. And I love those people. But
if we had a better.
Speaker 4 (52:09):
Immigration system, those people would be able to come in
without breaking the law, you know, I mean, oh, so frustrated.
Speaker 5 (52:18):
Do you mean to make this whole segment about immigration?
I really did not. My apologies. I've got other stuff
I want to talk about.
Speaker 4 (52:24):
But at one thirty there's a gun show in town,
and it's your chance to go check out.
Speaker 5 (52:29):
The weapon I've been talking about. We'll talk to David
Clemens after this about that.
Speaker 4 (52:33):
There's a gun show in town and my friend David
Clemens from Hero is here for it.
Speaker 5 (52:38):
David, where are you right now?
Speaker 8 (52:41):
Hey, Mandy, good afternoon, and hello to all your listeners.
I'm at the Rappa Hole County Fairground for the biggest
gun show I have ever seen. Mandy, this is fabulous.
You want to see how many gun suppliers, manufacturers, and
innovators are here at the faird now all inside air conditioned,
(53:03):
three great big warehouse, the looking buildings that have nothing
but guns in them. It's amazing.
Speaker 5 (53:11):
You can buy, sell prade, come.
Speaker 8 (53:14):
In and look at all the new innovations. This is
gonna be a good weekend. And Hero is really excited
to be here. We're a little unique because we're not lethal,
and pretty much everybody else in here are guns.
Speaker 6 (53:28):
But we are really.
Speaker 8 (53:29):
Excited about being here at this show. It's gonna be
a good It's gonna be a good show.
Speaker 4 (53:33):
I wanted to ask you, David, is the the other
reps that are selling firearms and more fatal methods of
self protection? What do they think about what you guys
have put together a Hero? I mean, what do a
gun guys think?
Speaker 8 (53:47):
Is it amazing? They come up today? All day long,
they've been coming up and going like, we've heard of
you guys, but we wanted to see it firsthand. You know,
they come from the classic long term thinking about unition guns,
you know, and going out and shooting ranges. This is
really about close range personal protection. They know it, and
(54:09):
they know that this new technology is coming into spacebook.
It's still very, very unique. What we find is that
men buy it for their women, Men by it, you know,
Dad buy it for their students. Realtors buy it for
their offices, you know. And it's really about short range
personal protection. Here has just got a really good idea
(54:33):
and innovative products. We came out with these products five
years ago, patented our products. When Best of Shot show
two years in a row, that's the biggest show on earth.
And guess what in the non legal space we won
the best product available and the best news about the
entire thing, Mandy is. Guess where we came from? Loveland, Colorado,
(54:59):
hometown boy is, hometown patents, hometown innovations, some of the
best engineering brains we have ever found. And we are
so excited to be back in Colorado Denver market and
to see our friends and our customers again.
Speaker 4 (55:14):
Well, where are you guys in the gun show? When
people come in the show, because it's big, So where
do they go to find you if they want.
Speaker 5 (55:19):
To come check out?
Speaker 4 (55:20):
Cause this is a perfect opportunity to actually go and
see it, see how it works, you can handle one,
and get a feel for what we've been talking about.
Speaker 5 (55:27):
Instead of just seeing it online. So where are you
in the gun show, David?
Speaker 8 (55:31):
Well, first of all, nobody can miss this where the
biggest booster is right. Walk in the door and turn right.
Just look for a great, big lit Hero sign that
looks like guns elevated over ten feet in the air.
So it's going to miss us, I promise you. But
it's really easy. Once you get into the main gate,
turn right, you can't miss this. We're going to be
(55:53):
you know, twenty steps to the right and you're going
to be able to see this thing up against the
back wall.
Speaker 9 (55:57):
What is that.
Speaker 8 (55:59):
The closer you get more excited, you're going to.
Speaker 5 (56:01):
Become David Clemens from Hero.
Speaker 4 (56:04):
I want you to have a great weekend, and you're
going to be in the safest place in Colorado this weekend,
that's for sure.
Speaker 8 (56:11):
Yeah, with all the bad news that's going on in
you know, Colorado, you know it's going on all over.
Speaker 13 (56:18):
The United States.
Speaker 8 (56:18):
But yeah, we're definitely in a safe place. These people
are so kind and they're kind of us, They're kind
of each other. It's going to be a fun show.
And Manby, you should come out and see us too.
Speaker 11 (56:29):
You need to come out come.
Speaker 4 (56:31):
It's all happening at the Aurora of the fair Grounds
this weekend. David Clemens from here, I appreciate your time today,
my friend.
Speaker 5 (56:39):
Thank you all right, have a good one.
Speaker 4 (56:41):
That's if you've ever wanted to see it and hold it.
This is the perfect weekend, so I wanted to let
you know that was going on. Now back to the
blog because I have so much stuff it's not even funny.
I also have a couple of folks coming on. There
is a constitutional amendment on the ballot this year that
will codify abortion rights into the Colorado Constitution, and based
(57:04):
on the way that Colorado has voted in the past,
I'd say, since I've been here the past.
Speaker 5 (57:12):
Thirteen, no eleven years, it's going to pass.
Speaker 14 (57:16):
Well.
Speaker 4 (57:16):
There are people who are not ready to concede that
fight just yet. They'll come on at two thirty. Also
on the blog today, my friend Kelly Maher and my
friend John Caldera are in the newest episode of The
Devil's Advocate about Kelly's weren't getting the crazy people out
of politics? It is such a good wait, you know,
it's just a great expenditure of your time. That's on
(57:39):
the blog today and coover how much. Do you use
Uber and Lyft? Do you use it when you travel?
I've got the hiccups. Dang it, oh Koove's doing something.
I use Uber and Lyft a lot, although I have
learned that in many markets they have now created a
taxi app where you can find out that.
Speaker 5 (58:02):
You can find out.
Speaker 4 (58:04):
If it's going to cost more or less to take
a taxi. And in New York City a taxi is
almost always cheaper than Uber or Lyft. There are a
few times if you're in a tourist area, you know,
a busy part of New York City, most of the
time a taxi is going to be cheaper. But that
being said, there's been a lot of kind of talk
around what Uber and Lyft drivers make as a percentage
(58:28):
of the trip.
Speaker 9 (58:29):
Right.
Speaker 4 (58:29):
There's been a lot of talk of they're doing all
the heavy lifting and Uber and Lyft are taking too
much off the top. Well, now there is a co
op that has come to Denver, although it sounds like
it's not totally ready for prime time in that if
you need an instant ride, they don't have enough active drivers.
But this driver owned app is called the Rocky Mountain
(58:51):
Employee Ownership Center.
Speaker 2 (58:54):
They are.
Speaker 5 (58:55):
Oh no, I guess that's who did the app.
Speaker 4 (58:57):
Co Op Colorado, the employee owned app designed to compete
with the Uber and Lyft, is now active in Denver.
I'm reading in Westward, and I'm all for anything that
provides more competition, right, But I'm also for anything that provides,
you know, a good living for someone who's already doing
this job. And I've always wondered, and I don't know
(59:20):
anything about technology. Okay, I don't know anything about making
the Uber app or the Lift app. And this may
make me seem really stupid the way I'm about to
say this, but this is genuinely how dumb I am
about the back end of technology. I am an end
to user one hundred percent. But from where I sit,
Uber and Lyft are not complicated apps. They have a
(59:42):
maps program, they have some kind of I guess electronic
bulletin board for their drivers to take the rides, and
stuff like that. It just doesn't seem that complicated. So
why are Uber and Lyft getting so much of the cut?
Speaker 8 (59:57):
Now?
Speaker 4 (59:57):
I'm also a capitalist, right, So if Uber and can
take the cut and still have enough drivers and still
serve their customers in more power to them. But we'll
see if this co op can come in and actually
be very, very competitive.
Speaker 5 (01:00:09):
But I just thought it was interesting. I love the
free market, and we're not in that space.
Speaker 4 (01:00:14):
In the ride share space, we have not over regulated.
Speaker 5 (01:00:17):
It to the point of death.
Speaker 4 (01:00:18):
But I will say this, I have a fifteen year
old daughter, and there are times when Chuck has to
be one place, I have to be one place, and
the queue has to be somewhere else, and I am
so reluctant to put my fifteen year old daughter in
an Uber or a Lyft because of the stories of
drivers that have attacked young women.
Speaker 5 (01:00:40):
I'm sure there have been men who have.
Speaker 4 (01:00:41):
Been attacked as well, but the stories that I think
of are women who have been assaulted. And I want
to know in this co op, do you do a
background check on your drivers because Uber and Lyft do,
and yet they've still had incidences where people have been attacked.
Speaker 5 (01:00:57):
So I'm going to be watching this app. I love competition.
Speaker 4 (01:00:59):
If you could bring down those prices, that would be
great because many times Uber and Lyft, as I said,
are actually more expensive than a taxiicab is the last
time we were in New York, so we're at our hotel,
we've checked out, we're getting a ride to the airport.
I checked the Uber and Lyft and they are I mean,
like twenty dollars more expensive than a cab. Because New
York has a taxi app as well, so.
Speaker 5 (01:01:21):
I check it.
Speaker 4 (01:01:22):
The taxi is twenty dollars cheaper to go to LaGuardia.
There's other women standing in the lobby and they have
their Uber and Lift apps and they're about to call
an Uber and I said, hey, I just checked the
taxi app, and a taxi is twenty dollars cheaper than
an Uber or Lyft, and.
Speaker 5 (01:01:36):
They were like, that's okay.
Speaker 4 (01:01:38):
It's like, okay, I don't understand, like the panache of
writing in an Uber and Lyft rather than a taxi.
Speaker 5 (01:01:44):
I don't get that. It was like there was seriously
like judgmental attitude about that.
Speaker 4 (01:01:48):
Is there is that a flex now showing up at
a ride share versus showing up in a taxicab.
Speaker 5 (01:01:54):
They both do the exact same job, And I don't care.
Speaker 4 (01:02:01):
I just want to go with a cheaper option, except
I'm not sharing an uber. You ever done that uber sharecouver?
Speaker 6 (01:02:06):
I have not done an uber share.
Speaker 5 (01:02:08):
I did it once, by accident taxing in.
Speaker 6 (01:02:11):
Uh when we went overseas to Europe. Oh yeah, and
by far the Uber was by far a better price.
Speaker 5 (01:02:17):
Well, in Europe you have unionized and all that.
Speaker 4 (01:02:20):
It's taxicabs here are competing really hard with Uber and
left really hard. So yeah, but no, I accidentally did
the Uber share thing never again.
Speaker 5 (01:02:31):
I was like, where are you going? He's like, oh,
I have to go pick up the other fair. I'm like,
other fair? What not cool?
Speaker 4 (01:02:38):
And then you have to sit in an awkward silence
with the person in the backseat of the car just
did not like, do not like, do not recommend, saying
Aurora Fairgrounds are Rapahoe County Fairgrounds. My bad, sorry about that.
For the gun show this weekend, to see the Hero and.
Speaker 5 (01:02:51):
All that good stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:02:52):
So a couple of Uber and Lyft drivers have weighed
in and I didn't know you could request a female
driver only on.
Speaker 5 (01:03:00):
The lift app. That's good to know. Good to know,
Thank you for that.
Speaker 4 (01:03:04):
Appreciate that another wolf has been found dead. That's right,
Colorado not proving to be a very friendly space for
the wolves that were yanked out of their own lands
and relocated here by do gooders.
Speaker 5 (01:03:17):
On the front range.
Speaker 4 (01:03:18):
You don't care how many baby cows are slaughtered in
painful fashion. The spokesperson for Colorado Parks and Wildlife said
wolf's survival is highly variable between regions, but three of
the twelve wolves in Colorado dying in nine months is
not caused for alarm and is in line with typical
(01:03:40):
wolf survival.
Speaker 5 (01:03:42):
Well, that's not very good. Have you guys seen that meme?
That is two photographs of a lion.
Speaker 4 (01:03:52):
The lion on the top is at the zoo, right
behind bars, in a cage, and it says, this lion
has everything, every need met, everything provided for, all the food, rest, protection, medical,
everything is taken care of. They don't have to worry
about anything. But they're in a cage. And then, oh, lifespan,
(01:04:12):
lifespan behind bars is like twenty one years.
Speaker 5 (01:04:16):
Lifespan in the wild is twelve. You got to fend
for yourself.
Speaker 4 (01:04:19):
You gotta find everything what looks better, And they show
a lion standing on the tundra right free. It's a
really good sort of point maker. And it's interesting because
the people who claim to love wolves have to know
that wolves probably live longer in captivity. I mean, my dog,
I can say, with complete authority, if my dog had
(01:04:41):
to fend for herself, she'd be dead in like two weeks.
She's too goofy, too slow, too adorable to be out
there doing things that dogs would have to do to
get bi right. But she her life expectancy in the
wild is a fraction. Would she be happier, Absolutely not.
Because she likes scarpig, she likes her multiple dog beds,
(01:05:04):
She likes snacks on demand because she has thoroughly trained
me to be her snack treat, you know, deliverer. And
I know that humans and lions. Would that lion rather
be free on the tundra?
Speaker 2 (01:05:15):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (01:05:16):
It's interesting because it seems like the same people.
Speaker 4 (01:05:20):
Who support things like the Wildlife Experience out in I
think it's in Keensburg, which is amazing. If you've never
been there before, it is incredible. Take your binoculars because
it's not a zoo. You don't see the animals right
up close. You got to take your monoclars. Really incredible.
It's a sanctuary for animals that have been in captivity.
They're still in captivity, but they are going to live longer,
(01:05:43):
healthier lives in captivity, and these giant things. But then
you have the we need to put more wolves in
the wild. Oh, losing three in twelve months not a
big deal, not unusual in the Wulf lifespan. It's interesting,
isn't it. I just thought that was going to be fascinating.
The cows are going to die anyway. But you know what,
I just want you to ask yourself this text or
(01:06:05):
who just texted in that, would you rather be ripped
apart by a pack of wolves or have a counterprod
go directly into your.
Speaker 5 (01:06:12):
Forehead and kill you instantly?
Speaker 4 (01:06:15):
I mean, if you're gonna be food, wouldn't you rather
be food that doesn't suffer at the end?
Speaker 5 (01:06:23):
Call me crazy, but I know what I would do.
Speaker 6 (01:06:26):
We'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (01:06:28):
The Mandy Connell Show is sponsored by Belle and Pollock
Accident and injury Lawyers.
Speaker 2 (01:06:33):
No, it's Mandy Connelly Ton.
Speaker 1 (01:06:42):
FM.
Speaker 3 (01:06:43):
Got study the ny Frey Many Connell keeping the sad bab.
Speaker 5 (01:06:53):
Welcome on, Welcome to a Friday edition of the show.
Speaker 4 (01:06:56):
It's a third hour because it's Friday and it's been.
Speaker 5 (01:06:59):
A long week. Whatever.
Speaker 4 (01:07:00):
I'm making two more corrections in this segment after making
my prior correction in the last segment. Thanks to my
textures for keeping me honest. I said the wrong name.
It is the Wild Animal Sanctuary in Keensburg, which is outstanding, and.
Speaker 5 (01:07:17):
The other one I said Cattle Prod.
Speaker 4 (01:07:20):
And this texture points out rightfully Mandy Pros used to
make an animal move. Captive bolts are what kills? Did
you see No Country for Old Men? Did you see
that movie.
Speaker 6 (01:07:32):
Way back in the day.
Speaker 13 (01:07:33):
It's been a while.
Speaker 4 (01:07:34):
Okay, So first of all, if you haven't seen the movie,
there's no spoiler alerts here.
Speaker 5 (01:07:38):
What I'm about to say.
Speaker 4 (01:07:39):
It is alternately one of the best movies I've seen
and then probably the worst ending that I've ever seen
to a movie ever.
Speaker 5 (01:07:49):
It was so bad.
Speaker 4 (01:07:50):
Chuck and I were in Fort Myers and we're at
a Tuesday matinee in Fort Myers. So we are the
only people in the theater under like one hundred and
fifty years old, right, because it's during season, all the retirees,
and it's a it's a relatively full theater, so you know,
it's like, you know, it's season, meaning all the retirees
are there. The movie ends, and I'm not gonna tell
you how it ends or anything like that, but it ends.
(01:08:12):
It ends abruptly, I'll tell you that much. And this
guy behind us goes, you.
Speaker 5 (01:08:16):
Gotta be effing kidding me and everybody.
Speaker 4 (01:08:20):
You've ruped it because the ending was so unsatisfying. But
the bad guy in that movie used a cattle bolt
to kill people. That's what that weapon was. And I
think of that now when I think of the cattle bolts.
But that's yeah, it's it's a very quick death. So
two more corrections on my part. It's just been a
banner day for me. A couple of things on the
(01:08:41):
blog today. One of them is is this this makes
I cannot wait to go see I am a racist?
Speaker 5 (01:08:48):
This weekend? Am I arrest?
Speaker 3 (01:08:50):
Or?
Speaker 5 (01:08:50):
Am I erasist? By Matt Walsh.
Speaker 4 (01:08:52):
So Matt Walsh, if you don't know who he is,
he is a guy writes and and does video for
the Daily Wireies. Very funny, and Matt is now done
two documentaries. His first documentary What is a Woman, where
he went around to all of these uh, sort of
transactivist types and just ask them what is a woman?
Speaker 5 (01:09:13):
And you know, chaos and mayhem ensued.
Speaker 4 (01:09:15):
But what makes Matt so good at this is he
is amazing at playing the straight man. He's just he's
very calm, he's very reserved. And his new movie called
Am I A Racist? Is out this weekend in theaters,
and in it, this is the part I cannot wait
to see. In it, he sits down with the like
(01:09:38):
one of the og raceler hustlers of this latest incarnation
of race hustlers.
Speaker 5 (01:09:43):
Her name is Robin DiAngelo.
Speaker 4 (01:09:44):
And she wrote a book that I read because after
the George Floyd riots, I was like, look, I'm gonna
do some introspection. I'm gonna see what people are talking about.
I'm gonna I'm you read some books that people recommend
to me.
Speaker 5 (01:09:58):
And I read half to three quarters of.
Speaker 4 (01:10:01):
Her book, White Fragility, before I could no longer stop
vomiting in my own mouth while I was trying to
read the clap trap that she put in that book.
Let me just encapsulate the whole book for you. Hey,
if you're white, Cooper, are you white?
Speaker 6 (01:10:14):
I am, yes?
Speaker 5 (01:10:15):
Racist. What are you gonna do about it? Nothing?
Speaker 4 (01:10:18):
Because you cannot ever get rid of your racism because
you're white.
Speaker 5 (01:10:21):
That's honest to God. The whole freaking book such.
Speaker 4 (01:10:24):
A I and the fact, this is the thing, this
is the grift on this whole thing, Because if I
met Robindie Angelo right now and I'd said, your book
is full of clap traps, she would say, and you're
proving my point. White fragility is that white people don't
want to be told they're racist because they're so racist.
Speaker 5 (01:10:42):
They don't want to be.
Speaker 4 (01:10:43):
Told they're racist, and they can never get rid of
the racism in their soul because there's so racist. It's
like a circular argument that whatever happens proves her point,
even though if I had the opportunity to talk to her,
it would go like this. You play the part of
Robin d Angelo for a second. Hi, miss di Angelo,
welcome to the show.
Speaker 12 (01:11:00):
Thank you for having me on.
Speaker 5 (01:11:01):
What am I thinking right now?
Speaker 6 (01:11:03):
No idea?
Speaker 4 (01:11:04):
Well then, how do you know what I'm thinking? If
I'm a racist or not? Come on, I can't stand
this woman. Actually I don't know this woman, and I'm
trying to be less personal in I hate this woman's work.
Speaker 5 (01:11:15):
Let me put it that way.
Speaker 4 (01:11:16):
So Matt Walsh wearing a really bad wig with a
kind of a gnarly looking man bun in the back,
not even a good man bun, like a sad I'm
just trying to grow my hair out and it's not
quite long enough, but I'm going to put in a
little ponytail.
Speaker 5 (01:11:29):
Not anyway, Man bun So, who's got this wig on?
He's terrible. He's gone to a diversity equity.
Speaker 4 (01:11:34):
Inclusion school, so he is a certified DEI instructor or
whatever that is.
Speaker 5 (01:11:41):
And he sets up an interview with Robin de Angelo.
Speaker 4 (01:11:43):
Found out later that they paid her fifteen grand to
participate in a what she thought was a documentary about racism,
which it is it is, but during this interview, apparently,
and I'm going to give a spoiler alert right here,
he got Robin DiAngelo to pay reparations to his black
(01:12:05):
producer during the segment, in a complete mockery of everything
that he's done. I can't wait to see this movie,
and I'm going to try and go this weekend. I
told Chuck this morning, I go watch this trailer and
he's like, uh, Chuck is not my better half. Is
not a political guy.
Speaker 5 (01:12:21):
He doesn't like it. It irritates the crap out of him.
Speaker 4 (01:12:24):
He gets super mad about stuff, so he chooses not
to engage. So whenever you see Chuck at a political thing,
with me know that he has been dragged there and
he doesn't want to talk about politics with anybody. But
that being said, I said, you have to watch the trailer.
He's like, ugh, I can't do it tonight, so I
might might go to a matinee. I want it to
be successful at the theaters this week for a couple
(01:12:45):
of reasons. Number One, more than anything else, Hollywood is
a money operation, right. They want to make money and
they want to make as much money as they can make.
So if things like this Matt Waller documentary do really
well in the first weekend, it's going to be easier
for the next documentary to get made and get distributed.
(01:13:08):
Because distribution is key. You've got to be in the theaters.
You've got to have that kind of access. And slowly
but surely, conservative leaning movies and things like the movie
about trafficking children.
Speaker 5 (01:13:23):
I mean, these are starting to.
Speaker 4 (01:13:24):
Get made on a regular basis, and if you go
see them in the theaters, then more will get made.
And secondarily, I want to see this particular interview on
the big screen.
Speaker 5 (01:13:33):
With some popcorn.
Speaker 4 (01:13:35):
It's not as good as my popcorn, but it's movie
theater popcorn, so it's second best, and I want to
watch this woman embarrassed by the way she has now
come out and said, after reviewing the sequence of events
and discussing it with colleagues, I realized that they had
lied about their agenda and I had been played.
Speaker 5 (01:13:55):
The author claimed.
Speaker 4 (01:13:56):
Everything seemed normal until things got weird when Walsh told
that if she supported reparations for black Americans, then she
should give his black producer cash.
Speaker 5 (01:14:05):
On the spot.
Speaker 4 (01:14:07):
During the scene, DeAngelo obliged without irony, saying, on behalf
of myself and my fellow white.
Speaker 5 (01:14:13):
People, I apologize you guys, you guys so good, so.
Speaker 4 (01:14:23):
Good, and yes for the texter who just hit the
text line to say, is this how to message Mandy Conwell.
Speaker 5 (01:14:31):
Connall. Mcconwell works too, McConnell. When I moved to Kentucky, and.
Speaker 4 (01:14:35):
I've said this on the air before, I would meet
people in Kentucky, bless all their little hearts, and they
would say, oh, Mandy connall, are you any kin to Mitch,
And I'm like, well, his last name is McConnell and
my last name is Conall. So no, oh, y'all aren't
kN No, we are not ken, no kinship, There no
(01:14:55):
kN going on there at all. I'll chuck that voting
as an illusion. Trust me, he already feels that way.
I'm so sorry that you read White fragility, says this texter.
Can I get you to pay for a struggle session?
I don't know, depends on how guilty I'm feeling when
you hit me up for that next time. One of
them is a video. I've invented this guy's videos on
(01:15:19):
the blog before because I think they're so interesting. He's
a younger guy, maybe thirty, and he just stops older
people in parks and ask them questions about their lives,
like you know. One of the main questions he asks
is what is something you worried about when you were
younger that now you wish you hadn't spent as much time?
And he says eighty five percent of the respondents have
(01:15:39):
the same answer to that question, and it is I
wish I cared less about what other people thought of
me when I was younger. And this is a function
of getting older where you just stop caring what other
people think about you. You know what, it matters what
your loved ones think of you, right, and your loved ones,
I mean the person you are in a relationship with
(01:16:01):
it matters to a certain extent what your family thinks
of you. And I mean that in your extended family.
And I say it that way because as you get older,
it is not out of the question for you to
make different choices than your mom and dad and brothers
and sisters would make, right, And there can be tension
in the family, and I hope that you can work
(01:16:22):
through those issues. But in my mind, it matters more
of what your significant other and your own children think
about what you do. But these are fascinating videos, and
this is a longer version of that that is on there.
And I want to play this one more time. I
played it earlier. It's just so funny, and I just
want to remind you guys looking for a little credit
(01:16:45):
here on this one.
Speaker 5 (01:16:46):
I was an early adopter of the Kiffness, right, you
know that. You know that about me. I was an
early adopter.
Speaker 4 (01:16:52):
I love the Kiffness, and the Kiffness decided to well
dip into the Trump debate to eat his next song.
Speaker 5 (01:17:01):
Can I have my audio please, Michael Cooper? Yes, thank you?
Speaker 4 (01:17:04):
All right, this is the Kiffnesses new song starring Donald J.
Speaker 5 (01:17:08):
Trump in Springfield they're eating the dogs.
Speaker 10 (01:17:13):
They're eating the cats. They're eating the pets of the
people that live there. They're eating the dogs.
Speaker 15 (01:17:23):
They're eating the cats. They're eating the pets of the
people that live there. People love Springfield.
Speaker 6 (01:17:34):
Please don't eat bocat.
Speaker 8 (01:17:37):
Why would you do that?
Speaker 5 (01:17:39):
Eat something else? People love Springfield. Please don't eat my dog.
Here's a cat, a lock couple o the.
Speaker 12 (01:17:50):
Things to eat.
Speaker 15 (01:17:52):
They're eating the dogs, they're eating the cats, Sammon, They're
eating the pets the people. They're eating the dog, they're
eating the cats. They're eating the pets of the people
that live there. And then it goes down from there.
Speaker 4 (01:18:13):
You can see that whole video on the blog today.
I thought it was hilarious. I thought it was absolutely hilarious.
That is on the blog as well. Now, got a
few things on the blog, but none more important than
this next story. You may remember Reagun Rachel Gunn, the
Ausy woman who was chosen to represent to Australia in
(01:18:36):
the first breakdancing competition in the Olympics. She may have
single handedly been responsible for it not being part of
the Los Angeles Olympics when she did a breakdancing performance
that was hailed by all as almost like she was
having some fun with us, right, like, this can't be real.
It was so absurd, which makes this next story that
(01:18:59):
much we're concerning. Reagun has officially been named the number
one female breakdancer in the world by the World Dance
Sport Federation.
Speaker 5 (01:19:13):
Now, lest you think to yourself what.
Speaker 4 (01:19:17):
The WDSF said in a statement, do the unique circumstances
regarding ranking events this year. It is not unusual in
the period immediately following the Olympic Games for some athletes
to be ranked according to a single event. Rachel Gunn
Regun had placed first at the Oceania Continental Championships in
(01:19:40):
October of twenty twenty three. Now even the World Danceport
Federation realizes how absurd this is, they say, look when
the ranking events recommenced this year. Therefore, the world rankings
as they currently stand could be interpreted in conjunction with
results from recent global breakdancing competitions for a more accurate
(01:20:01):
reflection of the global competitive landscape.
Speaker 5 (01:20:06):
She's number one. She's number one.
Speaker 4 (01:20:08):
When we get back, there is an abortion amendment on
the ballot this year, and I've got folks who are
not ready to say it's gonna pass like I think
it is.
Speaker 5 (01:20:15):
We'll do that next.
Speaker 4 (01:20:16):
And Amendments seventy nine would would codify abortion rights into
the Colorado Constitution. It was referred to the ballot. Was
that referred to the ballot by the I think it
was referred Was it signatures? How did this get We'll
find out with our next guests, because joining me now,
the vice president of the American Association of Pro Life
Obstetrician Gynecologists in Colorado and president of Democrats for Life
(01:20:42):
of Colorado, Tom Peril, is with us doctor Tom Peril.
Speaker 5 (01:20:46):
And Wendy Smooth.
Speaker 4 (01:20:47):
Wendy Smooth, See what did I have, Wendy Smith? I
literally said, Wendy, your name's easy. I won't mess that up.
Wendy Smith, who was a retired acute care nurse practitioner,
there on to talk about why and seventy nine is
a bad idea, And I want to start with you, Tom.
Speaker 5 (01:21:05):
What would this amendment do compared to what we have
in law right now?
Speaker 9 (01:21:13):
The amendment would make unrestricted abortion to constitutional right, and
it would also facilitate taxpayer funding, which are two new things.
Speaker 3 (01:21:25):
It has.
Speaker 13 (01:21:26):
Several other unattended consequences.
Speaker 9 (01:21:29):
Which includes eliminating primal notification, which is one of the
only laws on the books in Colorado pertaining to abortion,
and so parents would not be notified in advance of
their team daughter's abortion, and it would preclude the legislators
or Colorado's coming back and modifying the restrictions on abortion
(01:21:54):
to address the waid abortion issue which is occurring at
ever increasing.
Speaker 13 (01:22:01):
Numbers here in Colorado. On healthy women with healthy babies.
Speaker 5 (01:22:05):
When you say late term abortion, what do you mean
and what does that mean?
Speaker 4 (01:22:09):
I want to be clear because I think most people
that is such a bland euphemism for what actually happens there.
Speaker 5 (01:22:17):
So what is considered a late term abortion?
Speaker 9 (01:22:23):
We use the term late abortions because late term is
sort of controversial, But late abortions typically are after the
first semester. In particularly, I'm talking about post viability abortions
after point one weeks, which is the absolute limit of
fetal viability in the United States. Today, there are babies
actually born at some centers, like the University of Iowa
at twenty one weeks. Currently quite two weeks is the
(01:22:46):
standard for offering resussitive measures for a PREMI, but as
early as twenty one weeks, babies can survive. So when
I'm talking about late abortions, I'm talking about after the
point of fetal viability, and the methodology used for those
abortions is different than first trimester abortions and it represents
(01:23:06):
substantially more risk to the to the mother. You may
know that dn E abortions are the standard in the
second trimester up until about twenty four weeks, and DNA abortions.
You know, this is difficult to discuss, but it involves
taking the fetus apart is membering it to extract it
(01:23:29):
from the uterus. In the process, the fetus is killed,
and usually that's done without the benefit of any anesthesia
or by a petis side prior to the dismemberment, which
means that the fetus won't feel that. Jane fairly acutely
and I later later in pregnancy, go ahead, I was
(01:23:53):
gonna say in the third trimester, more commonly, what happens
is the the phoenis is injected with poison, in this
case to Jockson, which is a chemical drug that's used
for heart failure patients and people with cardi rhythmius, but
in a massive overdose it causes nausea, vomiting, wretching, abdominal pain, delirium,
and we know that that happens in infants as well,
(01:24:16):
So there's every reason to believe when we inject to
jockson to the fetus, it takes at least minutes up
to twenty four hours to kill the fetus. And so
it's a very tortuous death and people are unaware of
that as well.
Speaker 5 (01:24:29):
And then do they deliver the dead baby? What is
the process there?
Speaker 4 (01:24:33):
I mean, I'm trying to be too graphic, but I
got to tell you, guys, I think one of the
reasons that people are willing to accept late abortion is
because they've sanitized what it actually is. Right, we don't
talk about what it actually is that we're talking about.
We've allowed it to become ending a pregnancy instead of
ending life, which is what it's doing. So I'm gonna
(01:24:55):
if you're squeamish, you may want to turn away from
the station for a moment.
Speaker 5 (01:24:58):
But I'd like to know do they deliver the baby
hole at that point?
Speaker 4 (01:25:02):
How do they get a twenty six twenty eight week
baby out of the mother after they after they kill it.
Speaker 9 (01:25:13):
It's a several day procedure, and they use serial dilations
of the cervix to just accommodate the size of the
of the baby. And then typically in the third or
fourth day, when it's in the you know, late later
in the third semester, they give a drug to make
the uterus contract and then they use instruments as well
to extract the dead fetus. They kill the fetus on
(01:25:37):
the first day, they extract it on the third or
fourth day, and when they extract it, sometimes the fetus
comes out intact and sometimes it's also this member, depending
on the difficulty they have in extracting the fetus.
Speaker 4 (01:25:53):
So it seems to me and doctor Terrill and then
I'll get to you in just a second, Wenday, I promise.
I spoke to my own obg yn about what health
situations would be existing where the termination of a pregnancy
in late later months is necessary to save the life
(01:26:15):
of the mother. When I was like, can't you just
either deliver the baby alive? And she didn't have a
good answer for me, and we had a long conversation,
but she said, it's just a really tough thing to
parse this out, So why not just deliver the baby
at that point and allow someone else to take responsibility
for it.
Speaker 13 (01:26:39):
You know, that's just the point.
Speaker 9 (01:26:40):
After viability, there's absolutely no indication for an abortion as
opposed to a delivery, because abortion is a just mentioned,
takes several days. If you have a medical emergency, nobody
has the time to wait several days to perform a
late abortion. Delivery can be performed in a matter of minutes.
And so if it really is medical emergency or emergency,
(01:27:02):
it's actually malpractice to form an abortion in that setting.
So after viability, it's never necessary to do an abortion
to save a life of mother. In fact, I even
called doctor Warren Herne and Boulder and asked him that
same question. He said, is there any situation that you
could think of where an abortion was necessary to save
the life of mother after viability instead of a delivery?
Speaker 5 (01:27:22):
He said, I don't know.
Speaker 9 (01:27:23):
Called the University of Colorado, So it tells you here's
the premier abortion provider, a coaching abortion provader.
Speaker 13 (01:27:30):
And any can't think of a situation when that would
be relevant.
Speaker 9 (01:27:33):
So the propaganda out there that this is necessary to
save the health or life of mother's just not true.
Speaker 4 (01:27:41):
So you and I were talking off the air about
the fact that a lot of people here in the
state don't know that in Colorado you can get a
completely optional you decide you don't want to have a baby,
you can do that up until.
Speaker 5 (01:27:54):
The day of birth. That is the law here in Colorado. Correct.
Speaker 13 (01:28:00):
It is correct.
Speaker 4 (01:28:02):
I find that goulish every time I bring it up.
I have a texture of some sort who says that's
not accurate. That never happens, And it does. It absolutely
does happen. You said you had data on that.
Speaker 9 (01:28:17):
Oh, we know that in Colorado. Based on the Colado
Palm Department of Public Health and Environment, there are between
four to sixty eight and fourtun and eighty six abortions
after twenty weeks in Colorado over the last two years,
and that represents between three point two and three point
four percent of all abortions. It sounds like not a lot,
(01:28:38):
but you know that's basically five hundred abortions after viability.
And the striking thing is Doctorhearn from Boulder has published
his own late abortion practice experience, and he says that
seventy percent of the babies that he awards laid in
pregnancy are are healthy. In other words, these are healthy
babies in healthy women that are being aboarded for elect divisions.
(01:29:01):
I mean not that they're trivial reasons. Sometimes you know,
women don't even recognize that they're pregnant until.
Speaker 13 (01:29:06):
The fifth or sixth month.
Speaker 9 (01:29:08):
Sometimes you know, a partner leaves them, or they lose
their job, and all these things, you know, demand our
compassion and our care. But I think we need to
offer them more than a late abortion. We should be
working diligently to provide them pregnancy services and support, you know,
treat domestic violence and the other issues that arise that
that make a woman feel that that's the best option
(01:29:30):
for her.
Speaker 4 (01:29:31):
Wendy, how did you get involved in this movement? You're
a retired nurse practitioner. What did How did you jump
in here?
Speaker 5 (01:29:40):
So several reasons.
Speaker 16 (01:29:42):
My specialty was hematology oncology, so understanding the science of
the growth and development, and from the very first stem cell,
I've always really been pro life.
Speaker 13 (01:29:57):
In addition, I.
Speaker 16 (01:30:00):
Have been involved in prison volunteering in prisons for over
eighteen years and currently volunteer with three different anti trafficking organizations,
and my focuses in minor sex trafficking, and so I've
dealt with the issue from several different perspectives, and I
(01:30:20):
just am compelled to defend life and.
Speaker 13 (01:30:25):
The health and safety of women and girls.
Speaker 5 (01:30:27):
Well, someone reached out to me after I said, I hate.
Speaker 4 (01:30:31):
To say it, but I feel like based on the
recent voting on anything, we can't even get a later
term abortion ban passed in Colorado that failed at the
ballot box. What confidence do you have that this amendment
is going to fail? And if so, where's that coming from?
Because I love to have confidence, but Colorado voters have
(01:30:53):
shown me that they don't want any kind of limits
on abortion at all.
Speaker 16 (01:31:00):
So I have confidence because I think that one of
the reasons that people have vote like with Proposition one
point fifteen, people that we talked to didn't know what
they were voting for.
Speaker 2 (01:31:11):
They didn't realize that by.
Speaker 16 (01:31:15):
Refusing to limit it to twenty abortion to twenty two weeks,
that it allowed for abortion. It opened the door for
vote abortion all the way up to birth. I don't
think most women know that it is not women's health care.
In fact, there's no any efforts to promote health and
(01:31:37):
safety guidelines, for example, the Women's Health Protection Act HB sixteen.
Speaker 13 (01:31:43):
Twelve thirty one.
Speaker 16 (01:31:44):
Any of that was turned down, that never got out
of committee because it was perceived as a barrier. So
there's no guidelines, there's no oversight, no safety regulations, no inspections.
Speaker 5 (01:32:00):
That's the thing. That's the thing that I thought that
that's the case.
Speaker 8 (01:32:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:32:06):
No, I was going to say, so what you're saying.
Speaker 4 (01:32:07):
Just to be clear here, because we talked about this
a little bit before, I didn't realize that they're not
abortion clinics are not under the same medical inspection standards
as a standard medical facility that has to adhere to
certain levels of Clintley's. Now I'm not saying that they're
all pits of despair, but they don't even get inspected,
so you have to go on faith that they're following
(01:32:28):
proper medical practices.
Speaker 5 (01:32:29):
Is that what you're saying.
Speaker 16 (01:32:32):
That's absolutely what I'm saying. The public is dark, and
how do we collect data because they're not reporting all
the data, and if this amendment goes through, it'll be silent.
Speaker 2 (01:32:42):
I mean, we'll have no way of collecting data.
Speaker 16 (01:32:47):
Currently, a lot of it's voluntary in Colorado, but they
don't enforce it.
Speaker 13 (01:32:53):
So the irony is that.
Speaker 9 (01:32:58):
I was going to say, the irony is that you
know a second and third trimester abortion clinic which has
takes care of very high risk situations. We know that
second trimester abortions have a ten percent of complication rate
and one point seven percent life threatening complication rate, and
yet which is much higher than most ambulatory surgical centers
which are highly regulated, and first centers for that matter,
(01:33:21):
which are highly regulated.
Speaker 13 (01:33:23):
But second third trimester abortion clinics have no regulation despite
the high risk.
Speaker 9 (01:33:28):
And it's just a matter of time before some tragedy
occurs in multiple tragedies, and we may or may not
hear about it because the nature of reporting on this
kind of thing is really suboptimal. We know from the
experience in Philadelphia with Gosnell that even prominent hospitals like
University of Color of Pennsylvania didn't report some of the
(01:33:51):
women who were damaged and even one woman that died
as a result of complications of abortion.
Speaker 4 (01:33:57):
The Kermit Gosnell story should have been a wake up
call for so many people that there's too many people
that want to continue to support the sanitized version of
abortion that they've been fed just ending a pregnancy, no
big deals, just a choice, and that I think is
what has to be changed before we can see real
change at the ballot box. It's one of the reasons
(01:34:19):
I wanted to talk to you today on the air.
It's why I want to have a graphic conversation about
what this procedure actually is, because I think that when
you start to realize the barbarism of it, it gets
really hard to say no, you should have that choice
at any moment during your pregnancy.
Speaker 5 (01:34:35):
And yet that's what we have in Colorado.
Speaker 4 (01:34:37):
And I guarantee if I look at the text line
right now, there'll be a person who says, but how
many abortions are happening at thirty eight weeks? Great, if
we can all agree it's not happening, let's make it
so it can't happen.
Speaker 5 (01:34:49):
If we all agree it's so.
Speaker 4 (01:34:50):
Distasteful that it never happens, let's take it off the
table permanently.
Speaker 5 (01:34:53):
And they will not concede that point. It's very, very frustrating.
Speaker 9 (01:35:02):
Yeah, I you know, we know that it occurs well
into the third trimester, well beyond thirty two weeks, And
in doctor Hurn's published information he has even has one
listen to thirty nine weeks. I'm not sure if that
was a live baby or still birth, because sometimes he
conflates the two, but in any case, there's no question
(01:35:22):
that happens well into the third trimester.
Speaker 13 (01:35:25):
And again on healthy babies and healthy.
Speaker 4 (01:35:27):
Women, Doctor Tom Peril and Wendy Smith, thank you so
much for your time today. We'll continue having this conversation.
Speaker 8 (01:35:35):
You know.
Speaker 4 (01:35:35):
I hope you guys are right, but I don't think
you are. And I'm hoping that conversations like this at
least give someone pause before they support it, you know,
and and maybe some baby steps we'll be having a
different conversation in the future.
Speaker 13 (01:35:52):
Thank you very much all having us.
Speaker 5 (01:35:54):
Thank you guys.
Speaker 4 (01:35:55):
I appreciate it very much. We're all gonna have a
chance to vote on this in the fall and see
what that is.
Speaker 5 (01:36:01):
So there you go, Mandy.
Speaker 4 (01:36:04):
Even though we disagree on this topic, I appreciate you bringing.
Speaker 5 (01:36:06):
These people on the air.
Speaker 4 (01:36:09):
And you know what, I like I said, the sanitization
of these things has to stop. Because I have never
been faced with an unwanted pregnancy. I just want to
throw that out there. I have never had to make
this choice, and I would love to tell you that
I wouldn't have chosen that in my twenties, but I can't.
I can't go back and see what you know Mandy
(01:36:31):
would do at that point. But we can't can't change
the laws until we change the narrative, right, We can't
change the laws until we change people's hearts and minds.
We can't change the laws until women are confident that
it's the right choice to keep their baby.
Speaker 5 (01:36:48):
So there's a long way to go with that, Kathy Walker.
Speaker 4 (01:36:51):
You know, Dave Logan, I heard you were making fun
of Ryan Edwards for losing on of the Day.
Speaker 5 (01:36:56):
You're right over there. You can come on in and
do of the Day if you want. Oh, that'd be fun.
Dave picks up his coffee.
Speaker 4 (01:37:04):
He's like, really, well, I beat Ryan Edwards in a
sports category the other day, and apparently Dave was giving
Ryan some of the guff about it, Kathy, some of
the guff?
Speaker 5 (01:37:16):
Well, understandable, right, right? Oh, Jesse, okay?
Speaker 6 (01:37:23):
And I said, will she no?
Speaker 5 (01:37:27):
I will not come on, come on, Dave.
Speaker 9 (01:37:30):
No.
Speaker 4 (01:37:30):
But now it's time for the most exciting segment on
the radio of its kind, hit Kathy.
Speaker 2 (01:37:35):
In the world of the Day.
Speaker 5 (01:37:38):
All right, what about dad Joke of the Day, please,
Michael Cooper.
Speaker 12 (01:37:44):
Dad Joke of the day is why couldn't the little
boy go see the Pirate movie?
Speaker 5 (01:37:48):
Why couldn't the little boy go see the Pirate movie?
Speaker 6 (01:37:50):
I don't know because it was rated.
Speaker 5 (01:37:53):
R ah hah.
Speaker 4 (01:37:54):
That's very funny, very very funny. All right, what's today's
word of the day.
Speaker 6 (01:37:58):
I think you'll get this one, fallow.
Speaker 5 (01:38:00):
Callo.
Speaker 4 (01:38:02):
Callo is one of those words that I could probably
use in a sentence, but I isn't it like aren't
you cowardly?
Speaker 5 (01:38:08):
Isn't callum like chicken? Kathy? You got a guess on callum?
I'm a clue less on that one. What is it?
Speaker 12 (01:38:14):
Callo is a synonym for immature, used to describe someone,
especially a young person who does not have much experience
and does not know how to behave like an adult,
like Ryan Edwards.
Speaker 5 (01:38:25):
Met those cases games, just kidding.
Speaker 4 (01:38:29):
Today's trivia question in what year did the first official
international soccer game take place? I have no idea international?
I mean countries in Europe.
Speaker 5 (01:38:41):
Play against each other. Yeah, wow, it's earlier than you think.
Speaker 4 (01:38:46):
Let me just say that eighteen seventy two. The game
was played between the national soccer teams of Scotland.
Speaker 5 (01:38:51):
And England and ended as soccer does in a zero
zero draw, which means soccer sale. Mandy. That's why soccer sucks.
Speaker 4 (01:39:00):
I'm just just not with that, not going to do it, okay, Kathy,
what is our Jeopardy category?
Speaker 5 (01:39:07):
Michael coover all right?
Speaker 12 (01:39:09):
Our Jeopardy category is remember nineteen ninety nine.
Speaker 4 (01:39:12):
Oh gosh, that was during my last decade. I may
not remember nineteen ninety nine. We'll find out, all right.
Speaker 12 (01:39:18):
Question number one, one hundred million stamps incorrectly placing the
big landmark in Colorado instead of Arizona won't be released.
Speaker 5 (01:39:29):
Mandy, what is the Grand Canyon?
Speaker 3 (01:39:31):
Yes?
Speaker 2 (01:39:33):
All right?
Speaker 12 (01:39:34):
Question number two, Bank of America was taken to task
for its employee adopt one of these machines and keep
them clean.
Speaker 5 (01:39:43):
Program Mandy, what's an ATM correct?
Speaker 3 (01:39:46):
Yes?
Speaker 6 (01:39:47):
Good seaw.
Speaker 4 (01:39:47):
I had a friend who worked at Bank of America
who actually made more money doing that than she was
making it her.
Speaker 5 (01:39:52):
She adopted a whole bunch of them. We just walked
around cleaning all day.
Speaker 8 (01:39:55):
All right.
Speaker 12 (01:39:56):
Question number three, Mandy, up to nothing. He got a
new car, the Lancia Jubilee, seen here with some of
his guards.
Speaker 5 (01:40:05):
I have no idea Lancia Jubilee.
Speaker 9 (01:40:08):
Your car.
Speaker 5 (01:40:11):
I have no idea, Pope, John Paul? This mobile? Okay?
Speaker 6 (01:40:17):
All right? Question number four.
Speaker 12 (01:40:19):
Emails flew there, emails flew as moves were made to
name Saint Isidor of Seville, the patroot saint of this
global system?
Speaker 5 (01:40:32):
Mandy, what's the internet?
Speaker 8 (01:40:34):
Yes?
Speaker 4 (01:40:36):
Right?
Speaker 5 (01:40:36):
What saint is a door?
Speaker 8 (01:40:38):
Sat?
Speaker 6 (01:40:39):
What saint is a door?
Speaker 5 (01:40:40):
Okay? A lot of saints, Kathy, A lot of syce
should be better.
Speaker 8 (01:40:44):
Hold.
Speaker 5 (01:40:44):
I don't know why he was chosen, but whatever is he?
Speaker 14 (01:40:47):
The in door?
Speaker 5 (01:40:48):
Never mind? Go ahead, all right?
Speaker 6 (01:40:49):
Last question.
Speaker 12 (01:40:50):
This craft that had it's fifteen minutes of fame in
nineteen sixty one was recovered from the ocean floor in
nineteen ninety nine.
Speaker 5 (01:40:59):
Craft craft? When did it say that?
Speaker 2 (01:41:02):
Again?
Speaker 12 (01:41:03):
This craft that had its fifteen minutes of fame in
nineteen sixty one was recovered from the ocean floor in
nineteen ninety nine.
Speaker 5 (01:41:11):
Craft nineteen sixty one?
Speaker 13 (01:41:13):
What is that?
Speaker 5 (01:41:14):
I have no idea.
Speaker 4 (01:41:15):
All I can think of is a NASA Yeah, no cat,
so yeah, that's a good guest.
Speaker 5 (01:41:23):
I don't know if that's a gals? Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:41:24):
What is it? The Liberty bill?
Speaker 8 (01:41:26):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (01:41:28):
Colllee? Anyway?
Speaker 4 (01:41:30):
Fun playing Manda? When I walk out big stripe. That's okay,
that was kind of a hard category. Anyway, we will
be back on Monday. KO Sports coming up next. You're
gonna want to keep it right here for all of
the upcoming info about the Broncos game on Sunday, Go Broncos.
Speaker 5 (01:41:44):
We'll be back on Monday.