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May 23, 2024 97 mins
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(00:00):
Casey O Day radio program. Letme ask you a question. I know
it's a point of personal preference andmaybe it fluctuates, and that's fine.
Everybody's got their own thing. Letme let me ask you this. If
you're into conspiracy theory stuff like watchingthose videos, which would you rather have

(00:24):
a big one? Where the videosexplaining why this is a thing tend to
be well produced. There's a lotof them, kind of consistent on the
messaging. Sometimes it's you get alittle so you know, you got like

(00:44):
a D list celebrity that's signed onto this nonsense, right, and you
still click click click right. Thoseare fun, right, because then you
got a wealth of info out there. You probably have some some different viewing
options. I'm thinking the biggies likeflat Earth got a couple high profile NBA

(01:07):
guys apparently on board with that,all right, But I kind of feel
like my favorite and Ross you correctme, because you consume conspiracy theories what
I call one man's rabbit hole,so like they offer a premise you never
thought of, and as far asyou can tell, it's just this one

(01:30):
dude in a basement in West Virginiaor something, and you read the premise
of what they're alleging, and youprobably say to yourself aloud, you're like,
let me see what this absolute lunatichas to say, because I never
thought of that, And you're notconvinced when you're done, But now you
got questions. I kind of feellike those are the special ones because it's

(01:53):
so far whatever the premise is,you just you hadn't even thought of it
never, and we think of stupidstuff for a living. But you're like,
I know, and you know what'salso impressive is if you've got an
army of idiots putting their flat Earthvideos up or they're adrenochrome stuff for whatever

(02:16):
it is, right, any ofthe gray stuff, it's not that impressive
that some of it exists, evenafter social media goes through and nuke's a
lot of that stuff. But ifyou got one guy really doing his own
thing to stumble across, that reallyshows commitment on his part. All right,

(02:40):
ross premise for you, you ready, buddy. Modern nursery rhymes are
simply tools of groomers to put childrenat ease or to help them come to
terms with what's happening to them.And you know, by by sending these
down and teaching your kid that you'reyou're literally arming a potential dude from coming

(03:07):
over and exploiting your kid. Iclicked that yesterday? Why the hell not?
Wait, So they're saying that likeclassic nursery rhymes, yes tools their
weapons of yes. This so they'remade to seduce children. All right,
let me ask you a question.Okay, Let's say your kid came home
from school and you're like, whathappened to school today? And you're like,

(03:29):
oh, I ran into an oldman. Okay, Uh, what
happened with the old man? Uh? He played? Uh? He played?
What he played? Knick knack onmy thumb? Do you have questions
for your kid after that? Ithink you do. But now your kids

(03:52):
normalize that because it's code or something. Anyway, I don't know. I
think I think I would stumble acrossthis and not give it a second thought.
I'd be like, I'm moving on. I But the the the dedication,
the dedication of this dude, that'sall. That's all I mean.
On our team, Yeah, yeah, but most of them are you know,

(04:12):
their tale morality tales. Most ofwhere they teach you like a lesson
like checking the beanstalk right, sellingthe magic beans. M h yeah,
who was this uh? Who wasthis child doing business with so grown ass
adult? I just don't care.Yeah, no, no, no,
no, you don't. Again.I'm not trying to push you on the

(04:33):
thing. I just admire the dedicationthat sucked up sixteen minutes of my life
this morning, because he really thinkshe's onto something. And you know what,
a lot of nursery rhymes don't makesense, and that's probably what he's
exploiting. But uh okay, seeI prefer the the the like super out

(04:56):
there conspiracy theory, so like theones like you know, volcan those don't
exist. You know, when itcomes to when it comes to stuff with
language and stuff, you know,language evolves and it changes, and it's
you. You can't take a nurseryrhyme from like, you know, the
sixteen or fifteen hundreds and like,oh, this is what this word means

(05:17):
today, So that's what they meantback then, and it's it's dumb.
But again it's yeah. To touchgrass, I feel like they're probably on
a compound somewhere completely see it.You know, right, you can't,
right, you can't touch grass whenyou're four hundred feet below the surface.
I'm sure you have like a littlehydroponic thing going on in there, right

(05:40):
if you're I mean, if you'redoing the the world ending bunker thing for
real. But yeah, to toyour point, it is, it is
difficult, especially if you're air lockedaway from society. I just I appreciate
the craft, that's all. That'sit not to be wildly entertained aim or
even convinced to go, hey,you know what, thank you crazy person

(06:03):
for not murdering me with a knifeon the subway, but instead of entertaining
me on the YouTube. Yeah,just keep it on line. Yeah,
pretty good with that stuff, allright. Uh so there you go.
No, I'm not gonna go overand detail all the stuff there. And
frankly, it's not even that one. It's just the the example of this

(06:26):
thing that dawned on one dude onetime. He probably told his friends,
and they just like, are nothis friends anymore. They're like, man,
Bob's getting weird, right, andhe's just like, nah, I've
indicated I'm gonna start making videos.That's uh. You know a lot of
people would just hide in their bonkernot tell anyone, but this guy's out
here spreading truth. Well, histruth. But as we learned, you

(06:50):
can say his or her your yourtruth, and then you're fine. It's
a brave new world. Anyway,I'm more concerned about the giant, the
giants living up in the clouds.But it's all But you have to understand,
it's all analogous, right if you'rea little kid, is it.
If you're a little kid and you'relike, ah, here's these people who

(07:15):
are much bigger than me trying totalk to me about coming and seeing their
garden, right, like yeah,and this goes back, This goes back
to eighties sitcom premises that would neverfly if given thought, like with Punky
Brewster is the one we always kindof throw out there ringing. When you're
a kid, it was completely feasible, like yeah, this could happen.

(07:39):
Yeah, you're telling kids, hey, if something happens, you need a
place to stay, fine, anold single dude, right, just stumble
into his apartment. It'll be fine, and he's gonna be like, you
know what to take you in,little good heartsting girl. Yeah see hey,
hey, you know these are theseare the life lessons that we grew
up with. So uh, Iunderstand how people get there all right,

(08:01):
I'll give you a rundown to someof the other stuff we're gonna get into.
Uh, of course we got ourwell you got our nerd correspondence thing
going that'll be happening eight o'clock hour. Steven Candell join us. He got
some stuff I'm gonna Somebody sent anemail. They they said, what makes
Steven an official NERD correspondent? Ilike sci fi? And you know what,

(08:28):
that's a fair question. It's probablyif you ever follow, if you
follow his Twitter account, you should. This guy's nerd in twenty four to
seven. Yeah, and he alsopublishes on like a million different publications.
Yeah, and he's the one whoknows stuff like random stuff like, uh,
what would be a good example,Oh all right, uh maybe Russ

(08:52):
maybe you know it the fact thatmaybe I'll ask Stephen this. Yeah,
this is the nerdiest trivia question Ican remember. What is the name of
the club in the beginning of IndianaJones Temple of Doom? No idea club
obi wan Oh it's pretty cool.Yeah, yeah, yeah, I bet

(09:16):
he knows that, right. I. I mean I didn't come. I
wasn't something I ran across from myown I just happen to remember, because
I think I did it one timeon the air as a trivia question.
But remember we asked him about theStar Wars Blue Milk and we were like,
so Mark, he started playing theLego Star Wars games. Oh yeah,
the Lego games are pretty good.So it starts off and if you're
playing, like you know, aNew Hope episode, the very first frame

(09:37):
of that game is Luke drinking bluemilk. And I didn't notice it the
first time. I didn't give anany thought. Hey, I thought the
milk was the island, but that'sthe green milk. Like I had this
whole thing wrong. So I'm rememberwe asked Stephen about that. We're like,
what's up with the blue milk?And he could go on for days
about it. Do you think hedo you think he'll know the club?
Obi Wan? Yes? Is thatjust just so nerdy enough too? Okay,

(10:03):
Yeah, there's actually quite a bitin there I didn't know. Do
you know who's one of the hookersin the club, Kathleen Kennedy? Yeah,
yeah, the one woman who endedup like she married. That's Spielberg's
wife, right, I think fromthe like, Spielberg's wife is the woman

(10:24):
in Temple of Doom campman kat Kate. I can't remember what her name is,
Chapman something like that. Anyway,Yeah, there's a lot of a
lot of little nerdy stuff about thatmovie. I seem to remember. Anyway,
six seventeen kc O Day radio program. By the way, white old

(10:45):
white dude heads to heads to Asiafor friend's nine year old boy, gives
them a little nickname and stuff.Are you starting? Are you seeing it?
People? That's that's called Thailand nowAnd that's so again, it's all

(11:07):
about the lens you use. Sixeighteen. We'll be back all right,
as we're just talking about crazy uhloaners. I'm not don't send me trivia
questions. I want answer to you. Trivia trivia questions in the world of
radio reserved for a host who wasforced to be like giveaway tickets or something

(11:28):
who doesn't want to, not theother way around, even though I think
we used to do reverse trivia onthe show, but we'd bring in other
idiots to do that. So AnyWho, I just I love me some little
conspiracy theories. And again, forthose out there, if your kid came

(11:50):
home and was like, they're likewhat what what? Why are you late?
What happened? I read a newan old man. He played Nickknack
on my thumb. You're gonna askhim what his thumb is. So some
loun uh speaking like the one ofmy favorite solo lunatic on the internet things
was roj You know the eas reportsthat we do that buzz in your ear

(12:11):
while I'm still talking many days.Yeah, the thing we have absolutely no
control over, yes, but peopleassume we do. So those alerts coded
Illuminati messaging and by the way,the Amber alerts you don't even want to
know, right, So while asevere thunderstorm is some sort of coded message,

(12:35):
and dude like broke it down becausethere's certain things that are said always
in that because a lot of timessonomated voice. But the Amber alert stuff
was wild. I think you probablyguess what that is, right, Yeah,
but something to do with like ulicsthe elites note where to get the
children or specifically children that are foroffer, right you know, yeah,
yeah, yeah, And like Ijust said about the aes, like we

(12:56):
don't control it. That they canuse that as part of their argument,
right, they can say, well, you can't control it, it's coming
from yes, four thousand feet inunder the ground, in the in the
hive or whatever. They're like,why do why is this mandatory? Here's
what Right, it's coming from thedeep state, yeah, or you know
deep state, one world government orI I can't remember who the villain in

(13:18):
that tale was, but you know, eight year old Alyssa is not in
her strange father's car possibly headed towardsFayetteville, right, I know it says
that, and he called the numberand you're like yeah, and then it's
this, you know what it is. It's like pre before they had wayfair
kind of stuff. So and toooften those absolute lunatics are blotted out because

(13:45):
used to be you'd let that stufffester so other lunatics could go see it
or just you know, curious onlookers. And now it's hard if you're trying
to start a conspiracy, because youknow they can they can pretty much control
that. So any who love tothink about Also, uh, why is
Trump literally hitler? I heard yesterday'sliterally hitler. Now there's a lot going

(14:13):
on here. The problem is,and I even think I referenced it yesterday
or maybe on Tuesday. Once yougo literally literally hitler, Yeah, that's
right, I tell Richard Hudson thisyesterday. Once you go literally Hitler or
Tuesday whatever. Once you go literallyHitler, where do you go? And

(14:35):
I, for a time I thoughtthat's it. Now, what are you
going to do now? And thenas I mentioned literally, uh, like
Atlantic or somebody published an article abouthow no, no, no, he's
not literally Hitler. He's worse thanHitler because he's Hitler now installing combined.
And then he went and then hewent to a seapack show where this or

(14:56):
a seapack and then the stage wasa room and then he had the flag
at half half mess for eight days, and then I can't remember what the
other eight was, but like seetwo eights. And that was literally a
former deputy director of the FBI offeringthat on MSNBC, I could pull out

(15:22):
of archives three hours or I guesstwo and a half hours of wild Donald
Trump, secret Nazi sending messages storiesthat we've seen going back to twenty sixteen.
I gave you some examples the seapack ruin stage using an eagle times

(15:46):
nine. I think there's been nineof that. There's been so many of
those, But you know, alot of it is that you really have
to sit down and understand the allegationto see how they got there. So

(16:07):
I'm not surprised when we see these. Sorry, I just see it with
Ross sent me a text there,I'm seeing what goofiness? I all right,
we'll address that in a moment,all right. So it's it's a
lot of it is kind of likethose conspiracy theory videos where if because if
you just show the situation to anormal person, you're like, I don't

(16:30):
know, it looks like a stage, looks like an eagle. That's how
normal people address this stuff because youhave to get into the micro details a
lot of time. However, andI'm not saying any of this is true.
I start to wonder sometimes if theTrump folks will lean into it just

(16:56):
because it makes everyone looks like lunaticsat whatever media outlet's doing it. I
don't know. So the Trump team, so I don't know if it was
Trump or literally Trump team, butwhatever, they did something that they do
literally like one hundred times a day, and they liked or retweeted a video.

(17:19):
They retweeted a video. All right, I'll let you hear it,
and then we'll get into why it'sa proof of real Nazis or something,
and why the Biden administration and CNNare all over this. All right,
So this is what it sounds like. What happens after Donald Trump wins?

(17:44):
What's next for America? The economybooms, American energy is unleashed, and
an end to crushing taxes. Theborder is closed, and the largest deportation
in history is underway. There's nomore wars as we focus on hold.
Law and order is restored, TheAmerican dream is back, and the best

(18:06):
is yet to come. Make Americagreat again. All right? That sounds
pretty standard for Trump stuff. RightAgain, they didn't create it, but
they retweeted it. However, ifyou watch it, well, if you
watch it, you still won't noticeanything. If you're normal, because you
know you're busy, got stuff todo. You're only passively paying attention because

(18:30):
you're doing scrolling. But what iswhen you hear those different things? Right?
If Trump wins? Here's the things. It is coupled in the video
with like a rapid succession of newspaperheadlines. Right, so it's a pretty
common thing in a campaign ad.They're really look for it. You'll notice

(18:53):
what it looks like. And I'malways paying attention. They'll be like Mark
Robinson hates puppies and kittens, right, And then they'll be like new's an
observer, August fourth, right,and they'll cite it on there thinking that
you want to look at it,and like ninety percent of the time when

(19:15):
it's something really over the top,it's it's an editorial, right, So
some angry neighbor got a letter publishedwhere they made a reference to that,
and then it's quoted as though thisis what they reported, right, It's
all so stupid. So with theflashing of headlines, one of them not

(19:36):
the main headline part, but asub headline, right, because you're kind
of you got a mocked up anewspaper thing. If you zoom in and
look below it, there's another thingthat references the Reich, and it is

(19:57):
it is clearly a newspaper which hada headline that they probably wanted to use.
However, dated from a time priorto the US is involved been in
World War Two, and it isindustrial strength significantly increased driven by the creation
of a unified Reich. All right, So see literal Nazi. You just

(20:22):
had to super zoom in and stopit at the exact moment and of course
they're on board. Over at CNN, they say that this was posted while
Trump was in court yes yesterday,the Biden campaign said this quote, donald
Trump is not playing games. Heis telling America exactly what he intends to
do if he regains power rule asa dictator over a unified Reich. Again,

(20:48):
this is something that they reposted.The AP says. At least one
of the headlines flashing appears to betext copied verbatim from a Wikipedia entry on
World War One. Quote German industrialstrength and production and significantly increased after are
eighteen seventy one driven by the creationof a unified Rich But this language is
quite specific. Yeah, well,look, the problem here is this comes

(21:11):
in the context of other things thatDonald Trump has said along these lines.
I mean the you know, thisis a video the campaign didn't create.
It got retweeted or whatever Donald Trump'ssocial team calls posting it. You know,
that's well, it's all well andgood, but you know, in
the context of somebody like Trump whohas you know, said that there were
very fine people on both sides ofa of course you knew they were going

(21:32):
there right rally where you know,people were carrying tiki torches and chanting the
Jews will not replace us. Thisword in that context is incredibly it's incredibly
upsetting, and it's very dangerous.You have people who you have on,
you have politicians that you have onas regular guests so they can come muddy

(21:53):
the waters who are literally issuing likesupportive statements for people who are literally chanting
from the river to the sea.This is what's so maddening about this.
Right, you had to go throughand search back on this Wikipedia thing which

(22:15):
was then presented us. It lookslike it was an actual article if you
click the source scene under this thingthat somebody else used when they clearly were
they knew what language they were lookingfor, and probably didn't do a good
enough job looking at that. Idon't know who created or maybe it's somebody
who's literally super in Nazis. Idon't know, but only made like one

(22:38):
micro reference to it. But that'sa lot of digging. There's a New
York congresswoman who literally showed up toa rally where somebody is holding a sign
with an arrow pointing to Jewish studentssaid hey, Hamas kill them next,
or something along those lines. Sois retweeting something that has a misattributed Wikipedia

(23:06):
thing sourcing versus I see a pictureof you with a group of people who
are trying to get Jews murdered.So what passes the smell test here?
And of course they've armed Joe Bidenwith this little nugget, so this will
be his thing for about a weekis official account? Wow? Are unified

(23:30):
Reich. That's Sittler's language, that'snot America's. He cares about holding on
the power. I care about you. See, he cares about you,
dude. Have you noticed by Idon't want to get super conspiratorial. Have
you noticed that it's some of theserallies people random folks and you can't figure

(23:53):
out who it's attributed to, willliterally shout questions that don't sound like regular
media asking but like campaign people.And so what you have is you have
this disconnected little clip. I sawone the other day. I can't remember
what it was, where a reporterasked a question that, even for reporter

(24:14):
standards, seems way too softball,and then when Biden starts to wander away,
they kind of reiterate the question sohe can have this one snappy little
line. What was it? Aboutit was about Trump and food or something
where Biden just had this thing readyto go, man, ready to go.
And I, because I always wonderwho, all right, what's reporter

(24:37):
asked that. I'll try to lookthis stuff up, right, So it
was a deucey was it April whatever? Bucket? Like? Who asked it?
And I was unable to find outwho asked this question? And it's
the camera angle you just see Bidenup there. It could it could clearly
be in a room where there's noreporters and you just have this lone voice
for the back super clear by theway, nobody else is screaming questions,

(25:00):
but like one reporter will be askingthis thing that I don't think is a
reporter. That's my conspiracy for theday because then he's armed with the super
one liner and nobody's buying that.But yeah, now I only mean ended
that and the media will be happyto help him for probably the rest of

(25:22):
the week. I don't know,probably ask about the debates. In fact,
that's my prediction. Hang on forthat. How do they know?
How do they know? To diginto it? Like that? Feels like
the Trump team was set up?No, no, no, no,
Look this is a conversation Ross andI were having off the air. I

(25:44):
don't think they were set up.I think they just didn't do their job.
Which is a very frustrating aspect ofthe thing that to this day will
always baffle me and just throw memad, is how details a lot of
it are. We're we're released andwithout the totality of it, we're we're

(26:11):
select selective details of conversations like Ovaloffice meetings that would immediately show up verbatim
in like CNN and stuff, andyou could they're like, we don't know
who's doing it, and it's likeyou just you just have there's like five
people in the meeting, and itkeeps happening, get the meeting list,

(26:32):
go who is it? All ofthese and uh, this this isn't hard
And for whatever reason, they justdo a crap job of this. They're
they're they're they're not good in theseinstances. And yes, is it is
Trump going to be viewed through adifferent lens one hundred percent. CNN having

(26:53):
to drag up the good people.They know this and this is the news
cycle now and it is going tobe used in the debate. And the
difference is when you're at a levelof the Trump campaign, and you understand
the magnifying glass you're going to beput under and how they're going to frame
everything, whether it's or not right, Well, it doesn't matter if it's
fair or not, because most ofthe time it is not, because it's
politics on a presidential level. Right. You cannot be making the mistake of

(27:15):
retweeting something like that, And you'relike, well, you know they to
do that, you'd have to putit under a microphone a microscope, but
look at it and really look forsomething. Yes, there are teams of
people who are constantly doing this witheverything that comes out of his mouth and
everything that he posts. You cannotbe retweeting that. Even if there is
a simple excuse an answer for it. You're like, oh, well,
it was part of a template,and you know they just put it up

(27:37):
there, and it's part of thevideo, it's part of software. Doesn't
matter. Doesn't mat matter if youhave to put everything under a microscope,
a magnifying glass, you have tolook at it and you have to judge
whether or not how that's going toreflect the campaign and your candidate. And
your candidate is Donald Trump. Whoeverretweeted that and it's such a simple mistake
and it wasn't done on the Trumpcampaign. Is part of malice that didn't

(28:00):
even produce it. Like I said, it was a template. It doesn't
matter that person needs to be gonetomorrow because you cannot be making that mistake
and a campaign like this, youcan't do it if you're the comms person.
And you know, obviously Trump likesto retweet his own stuff. But
Trump's point holds it was literally donewhile he's in court and he's not digging
around on his cell phone. Thisjudge, you're just mad at him if

(28:21):
he breathed. Right, Once again, none of that matters. You're the
comms person, like, hey,this looks good. Call over your army
of other comms assistance and go,hey, put eyes on this. Because
they're already calling you and not sayingfairly they are to use that both sides
argument that's been debunked a million times. Right, they've already painted you in
that corner, and now you're givingthem more am to do that. Like

(28:44):
I said, on this kind ofa level, you cannot be making a
mistake like that. Now. Theonly positive side, if you want to
look at it, is people arealready on their side. It doesn't matter
what you produce on a campaign ad, people are going to vote for Biden
or people are going to vote forTrump. It is the way it is.
At this point, you're winning anybodyover so so maybe there would be
a lot of damage, but butthat gives Biden. That's going to be

(29:06):
the go to line in these debates. Well and and and we mentioned this,
and we were having the conversation withRichard Hudson again the other day.
Apathy is going to be a bigdeal in this just like it was with
Hillary. Right, Trump, Let'slet's be honest, but one of the
reasons Trump beat Hillary is apathy onthe part of traditional left leaning moderate voters.

(29:30):
And also Hillary was like the worstcandidate in the history of candidates.
Don't get me wrong, but rememberhow you know, you remember what the
news cycle was, right, andif in the politics of yesteryear, a
newspaper absolutely or a high profile mediasource could could absolutely sink a candidate if
they wanted to, and you knowthey have less and less and less power.

(29:53):
Don't don't give them a t ballman. But anyway, all right,
is that really the caller's name?I mean, that's so they identified.
So I just you know, Iasked, you know, Casey the
radio program, who is this?And they give me a name and write

(30:14):
it down. And then I listenedto what they want to say in the
Butcher of high Point, Butcher highPoint, is that that dude to wigged
down in the McDonald's. Let's seeif it's him, Yes, Butcher of
high Point, what's up? Goodmorning, Casey? How you doing this?
Sounds like Donna and not the Butcherof hype Point. The Butcher of
Boston is all right, aka theButcher of high Point. You know,

(30:37):
we got Greensboro. You know,the Greensboro studios. We've got sweet new
digs you do. Yeah? Uh, right next to the ballpark in high
Point. Uh love that food hole. So there's literally now one of my
one of my studios has a tacoplace directly under it. It's it's a

(31:00):
we just moved in there. Anyway. All right, go ahead, Butcher,
whatever you don't, you don't haveto be the conspuency theorist. I'll
do it for you. Off Camrathe other day, it was on May
fourteenth, a so called reporter yellsout Trump today said, China's been eating
our lunch and by next like youdidn't hear him the first time, and

(31:22):
then he turns around the second time, the snappy retort saying he's been feeding
him for a long time. Yeah, that is that is. That is
definitely one of the examples because Iremember that that because the thing that stood
out to me is it's never justone reporter. Yeah, they may,
the others may shut up eventually.So whoever the for the reporter who's I

(31:48):
guess it's been deemed their term cango ahead. But I've never heard just
one rando in that moment. It'susually nine people screaming at him. And
so this, yeah, you don'thear others. It's so weird, and
his age is screaming you gotta go, tried to go. Well, there
was none of that during this,and spy use can be all right.

(32:10):
So we're talking about stupid stuff thatthen gets elevated to extra stupid stuff that
you're not gonna have to deal with, probably through the debates, because some
comms person doom scrolling because their bossis sitting in court all day and they
don't have material reposted a video that'ssome random made on the internet, or

(32:31):
for half a second. It's athing from a template, from a Wikipedia
thing that was literally sourced to actualreporting and isn't a judgment called by the
way on the Nazis right, youknow, you know it's not a Nazis
but it is coverage. But itdoesn't matter because it has the word rich

(32:54):
in it and you gotta you gotta, you gotta search it to find it.
You probab, I wouldn't notice itat first, but that's why you
gotta have extra eyeballs. Ross starttalking off the air. The Ducoccus thing
is different because the air was whata doof? Is he right? But
it just comes down to like asimple visual can completely tank a campaign once

(33:16):
you put that helmet on. Ifyou're one of his handlers, you gotta
be like, we gotta go,don't get in that tank. What do
you know? No, no,no, no, no, I don't
know. Maybe they did say itto him, but he's just like,
I'm going to be president, I'lldo what I want. I don't know,
and it is part of a template. Like I said, doesn't matter.
Yeah it's stupid. Yeah they hadnothing to do with it, but

(33:37):
it split second of a retweet.Now you've given them ammunition forever. It's
like, you know the same thingif that template needs right right, right,
if the template said something like,you know, a final solution to
fixing the economy or something, it'dbe just as bad because you can't have
that Nazi language, right. Thatwould be immediately you'd be like, oh,
this is the biggest Yes it is, and I think that that is

(34:00):
in your face. People should knowit. But like, I still go
back to the ruin thing, right, I don't care how many eyes you
put on that. Do you thinkthat anybody's like, you know what that
is? That that really reminds meof the rosterdized rune from you know,
the fourteen hundred. That goes backto how you started the show talking about
the Kidne's basement, coming up withthe conspiracy theories about the nursery. Rhymes

(34:21):
right, that the room stuff isstupid. Yes, it's dumb, right,
But it's like, but you know, final solution that's a little more
in your face probably right, right, So it's the word right, But
like I'll give an example, therewas and I remember what the quote was.
You know, you know all themotivational posters or posts, right,

(34:42):
you'll see it on Facebook. Peopleretweet like the colored box with a quote
in it. It's not always right, and I don't remember what the exact
quote was, but it was aquote about not you know, giving up
and seizing the moment and stuff,and it was it's a quote from was
it Anaya or Galtieri? I thinkit was from Galtieri, which is the

(35:08):
Argentine junta that, among other things, you know, sees the Falklands.
And then Margaret Thatcher's like, ah, we're setting the dreadnought. It's the
thing you should look up. Butright, But people are quoting it and
they like in their mind, they'relike like, oh wait, this is
the guy who was literally purging clergyand by purging, I mean murdering the

(35:36):
hell out of them. In fact, the current pope there's a whole backstory
with him because there were some membersof the clergy who started towing the line,
and the argument was they had tobecause it was the only way.
Too. They didn't do it insignificant stuff, and it was a way

(35:58):
of maintaining this and literally the currentpope uh following the ouster of these uh
murderous dictators there. That was infact, that was something that when the
previous pope brought him in. There'sa movie called The Two Popes that I

(36:20):
think does a pretty good job ofexplaining this. But like the you know,
the former pope, the one whoresigned, literally like flew him to
the Vatican. He was getting readyto retire, didn't know why I was
bringing him there. And he's like, hey, you know what, I
think you should be pope, Andhe's like, I don't think that's a
good idea, and like they literallyhad to fish through all of this,

(36:45):
you know what happened there, AndI did see some some people bring it
up at the at the time,but you got But if you're just some
person who's like, I'm going tomotivate people on Facebook today and then he
post it, I don't think you'repromoting ethnic cleansing in South America. Okay,

(37:06):
But to Ross's point, you're alsonot running for president. You're just
a grandma with too much time onhere. Right, there's a complete difference
there, right, right, yes, and let or or maybe you're you
know, you're pro ethnic cleansing andreligious cleansing in South America. I don't
know, I don't know. Andit's also dombin. Now I'm upset that
we have to be covering this forweeks. I'm not no, no,

(37:28):
no, We're not gonna cover itfor weeks. I'm covering it because I
want people to have an understanding ofwhat they're dealing with, and if it
gets brought up obviously in the debate, will be like, haha, we
predicted it. You think it's goingto be brought up in the debates,
right because if not? Of course? Right, yes, yeah, yeah,
there'll be some snappy line. Theyare the complete may get he may

(37:49):
get it right, he may hemay not right. But yeah, they're
gonna they're gonna juice them up onadderall. They're gonna feed them the lines
and even CNN maybe even they havethe question ready to go, so who
knows because of the Donna Brazil thingwith Hillary Clinton. But no, yeah,
I'll be ready to go with aquick comeback. Yeah. The only
thing will be will he screwed up? That's that straight empty thing, right

(38:14):
right, yep. They'll drill himthough. Man, I gotta I gotta
think it looks like basic training aheadof letting this dude on the debate stage.
But hey, uh, maybe I'mone hundred percent wrong, and he'll
have a very adult discussion about itand make some some good points and not
just keep repeating it with no context. I I I know, I'm full

(38:37):
of myself, all right, justtrying to find that quote where it's like,
oh, you can't share that becauseuh uh yeah it was Gualtieri's quote.
Oh anyway, I don't get mewrong, they did. There are
some stuff they do in South Americathat's just wild. Maybe you are a
fan of like in uh In inChile. Uh you remember the You remember

(39:00):
how drunk drunk driving laws used towork down there. Yeah, so for
for a while in Chile, andthere were some other places, but they
had this basically, let's say,let's say Ross gets blitzed out of his
gourd gets arrested for DUI. Now, I'm not saying that would happen.

(39:20):
In fact that it would be verydifficult now because he doesn't drink. But
but sure, sure I fell offthe wagon and had myself a day and
it was not a good day.And now you're in the pokey right.
Well, if you're the if youare the bread winner, it's going to
really encumber your family. If you'vegot to go to jail for that right,

(39:43):
so your wife can can go tojail instead, so that you can
still provide. Can you imagine whatand what an effective tool in your standard
domestic argument that would be? Right? You guys are I don't know,
you didn't put this seat down orwhatever and having a knockout drag out and
literally you just re emerge in theroom holding a bottle of Jack Daniels and

(40:07):
the car Keys. That's gonna geta retention. So you know, it's
fun stuff. You should you shoulddig into it. But some of it's
pretty awful too, you know.Now you mentioned that. I remember seeing
a while back there was the samesimilar thing, like somebody had posted like
an inspirational meme and it said youknow, uh they say it said all
or nothing or something right like yeah, chief your goals, all or nothing.

(40:28):
And then somebody in the comment sectionwas like, that's like that was
one of Hitler sayings. It wasit was Alas oder Niecks everything or nothing,
you're nazeen. They're like, no, I'm trying to be like inspirational
here. I'm just saying, yougo for your dreams. What if your
dreams is a unified Europe under underthe third ride there you go. So
anyway, Yeah, so if youget a fight with the wife bottle of

(40:51):
liquor car keys, you win thatargument every time. That's that one.
And the Mimes story, yeah,from I think that's my favorite ross.
Do you know the mind story fromPeru? I haven't thought of this in
a while. I've never heard ofit, but okay, I have to
hear it. Oh yeah, yeah, all right. So one thing if

(41:13):
if you've ever if you've ever traveledto many Latin American countries, is jaywalking.
That's not even a word they know, man, And like it's wild
on the roads and people will justthey'll just zip right across. Nobody waits
for stop. I mean there's stop. There are like crosswalk nobody cares and
as a result, a lot ofpeople get smoked. Right, So in

(41:36):
Peru, people are getting like runover because they just run out in the
street whenever they want whatever. It'slike Capitol Boulevard kind of. And so
some guy who was running for presidentof Peru, I can't remember his name,
and he didn't win, but hehe was he was in government prior
to it, and he hatched asolution and he loved it so much he

(42:00):
literally made it part of his campaign. So he did a thing when he
was like transportation director or whatever wherethey realized that even if they tried to
find people, it wasn't changing things. And it's really hard to find a
bunch of people, many of whichwere incredibly poor. So they went the

(42:21):
public shaming route. So the dudehired mimes to visually harass jaywalkers, to
publicly shame them nonverbally. So like, you're cutting across, you know you
didn't you didn't go to the corneracross. Now you're running into traffic.
Some mime standing there would start pantomimingat you, like look at this idiot,

(42:45):
And you know what. It workedbecause nobody wanted to be public publicly
shamed by a mime. Yes,what is the law in this part of
the world about punching a min ibby? Is it against the law because you
might be tempted to punch the mind? I yeah, it's I don't know.

(43:07):
There'd be a it would be ajob most people would want to do.
I don't know. Peru's pretty.Peru is like it kind of gets
Most people don't think of it whenthey think of like pretty dangerous places.
But Peru's got an edge. Man, I thought I thought about traveling to
Peru when I did the the EG. I just didn't have enough time.

(43:28):
But I you know, i'll researchstuff, like I didn't step foot in
Ecuador Colombia without doing a lot ofresearch. Right, But Peru's got an
edge. But the mine thing that'dbe amazing is shame in you. And
if it works, it works.What do you gotta do? All right,
seven eighteen here on the Casey ODay Radio program. But yeah,

(43:50):
if you're having a bad day andyou're already laid for work, which is
why you didn't walk up to thesafe crossing place, and you're already cheesed
and some mimes like pointing and laughingat you. Yeah, I suspect they
probably would get punched. But itsounds like after he lost then they didn't
do it anymore. The fun stories, all right, seven eighteen, CaCO
Day Radio program. All Right,I'm gonna flip to other stuff because well

(44:15):
the media will chew on this thingfor probably every day until the election.
We got other stuff. Crazy Americanairline story. I'm fully con I'm fully
convinced now that like if somebody wantedto make a video of news clips from

(44:39):
the nineteen forties with sports reporters talkingabout like integration, baseball, integration and
stuff, and they're hot takes,it's going to look incredibly similar to the
Caitlin Clark coverage. Because once again, here we go, why is so

(45:00):
well, why are so many oftoday's modern sports reporters open big fat racist?
And we'll share one of those examplesnext on the CaCO Day radio program.
Oh man, every single day,every single day, a a analyst

(45:20):
or a host or somebody, mangotta kinda come out with what sounds like
a super racist Caitlin Clark thing.Today's turn goes to Jamel Hill. Not
surprised. She said some crazy stuff, but she called Clark's uh well,

(45:40):
here we here we see. Iwant to I'm gonna read this verbatim.
Uh, we would all be verynaive if we didn't say race and sexuality
played a role in her popularity.Well, so many people are ha for

(46:00):
Caitlin's success, including the players.This has been an enormous impact on the
game. YadA, YadA. Allright, So she called out Nike folks
within the w NBA. Basically theonly reason they're hyping or is because she's
a straight white chick. I don'tknow that sounds sounds a little racist.

(46:21):
I mean it's complete nonsense. Right. People love her because she's the all
time leading scoring leader in the NCAAmen's or female right like she and people
and most people will watch her arctoo. Like she's struggled in her first
few games. And have you seensome of the videos with the with the
shots they're putting on her, Idon't know, man Like, like,
growing up, why did you likeor why did we like Michael Jordan?

(46:44):
Right? We like Michael because hewas the great. He was amazing.
He was an amazing basketball player.Yeah, yeah, it's him and Larry
Burr. And what I liked abouthim is I like guys or gals who
can talk trash and then there's nothingyou can do about it. Right,
It's amazing to be that dominant.So if you're Michael Jordan and you're like,

(47:05):
give me the ball and I'm gonnafloat from the free throw line to
win, or that you know thatfadeaway shot, or if you're Larry Bird,
you literally go to a bench andto ask a guy how you want
him how you want him to bepunked? How do you want to be
punk sir? And then you tellthem what you're gonna do and they still
can't guard you. That's amazing stuff. But also the public's fickle. So

(47:29):
if Caitlin Clark goes out and continuesto struggle in that arc, they'll definitely
go in that direction. Apparently allof you want to violently assault mimes.
Maybe you should, you know,talk to a therapist. I understand your
frustration, but I don't. Youcan't just punch or is punching mimes legal?
I don't know. I guess Inever looked it up. So we

(47:52):
got that random thing. We gotthe Trump retweet that CNN's freaking out about.
And yeah, also, uh,we got a Graceland update because I'm
sure you were hoping for that.But before I get into calls, Yeah,
to my point on the Caitlin Clarkstuff, that's the other thing,

(48:14):
Like, as much as we lovebuilding somebody up, uh, we'll watch
them app they'll watch the downfall andfollow along. That's like, that's just
how we roll for as a society. For whatever reason. Right, everybody
loves you when you're on the wayup. And then the moment they start

(48:35):
picking pieces into you, they'll getright on that bandwagon. Look at what
they did to Tiger Woods man,Look at look at Tiger woods image the
day before his wife whacked him withhis pitching wedge or whatever she used and
then that accident. Right, whatwas Tiger Woods's image prior to that?

(48:59):
I was squeaky clean, professional clean. Yeah, Like the biggest beef they'd
bring up is like, did hisdad write him too hard as a kid?
Like you'd hear that out there,and I don't know. He's the
man, he's the he's the manwho's made the most money off golf ever
ever ever. So and that's thatis the backstory for a lot of athletes.

(49:21):
The Williams sisters, I think thewill Smith there's a will Smith movie
where he placed their dad like kingwhatever it is. But yeah, he
was notorious. Like the backstory there, and it doesn't sound like they see
anything wrong with it, but outsiderslooking in because maybe they don't realize the

(49:42):
amount of time the top top tierathletes will put in like it seems obsessive
because it is. But once,once they got that in and uh,
you know that first woman did theinterview with New York posts like Game on
Man, and people feasted on itbecause that's what they do. The Roy

(50:02):
McElroy thing right now, if youdon't follow golf, he's the North Irish
golfer. He's very good and hegot a little bit of a history because
he was engaged to a tennis chickyears ago and they like he He basically
no showed at their wedding. Heapparently he called her for two minutes and

(50:23):
is like, I can't get married, Bye bye boom. That was it.
So he's got a little bit ofa rep there, but he did
end up getting married. He marriedsome stole. It's she's an American,
married her in twenty seventeen. Bytwenty seventeen, Roy McElroy, just so

(50:45):
you understand, had already won.How many majors had he won by then?
Yeah, he won the twenty elevenUS Open, the twenty twelve PGA
Championship, of the twenty fourteen andOpen an Chips, so he already has
majors, which is a pretty goodindicator that golf's your thing. And there's

(51:05):
all sorts of like why are theygetting divorced? Did he cheat on her
with the chick who does the CBSgolf coverage interviews, Amanda whatever her name
is, Like, and by theway, I'm not throwing that out because
I there's anything to it necessarily,but like, this is how crazy it's
become. But the divorce filings arecrazy, especially when you see the wife's

(51:28):
reason or one of her reasons forwanting a divorce. He plays too much
golf. You met him at agolf tournament, Uh, ma'am, ma'am.
What I've known this before in radio. I've seen this happen with friends

(51:50):
where like, you know, theyget married, they get in relationships,
and you know, they're working likea club, they're working like top forties,
so they're doing all the club stuff. And yeah, but she met
them at like a club remote broadcastand then later on she's like, why
do you keep going to these clubbroadcasts? And don't want you doing that
anymore? And he's like, that'swhat I do. Remember that. Remember
the day you walked in in yourhoe dress? Right, it wouldn't leave
me alone? Ah? Yeah,So if you that is the ultimate I

(52:16):
can fix him or her? Right, that's the ultimate delusion, right you.
He's he's not just a guy.Every weekend, right, you know,
it's like he disappears all day Sunday. He's a professional golfer. Yeah,
you live in maybe you see thosehouses you live in. See that
one castle thing you have in NorthernIreland which Roy owns. Oh how do

(52:42):
you think he got that plays towatch golf? Oh you marry a doctor
and you're like, oh, he'sgoing to the hospital. Yeah, yeah,
all the sick people around. You'rebringing cooties home. Don't do that.
That's that is wild. I andand not what I said. I
didn't see that cup. She gonnaget paid anyway, though. All right,

(53:05):
let's go the phones, Anthony,what's up? I was gonna say
that a bunch of MoMA's mom isuh, totally legit because they can't who're
gonna tail? Well, they canwrite out a statement, I suppose,
but yeah, but if you so, you can put the script on them
because if they try to, ifthey start going to the police, and

(53:28):
you can put your you know,make a fist and put your thumb out
and hold it to your neck andkind of move it across your neck a
little threatening gesture your mom. Yeah, you're you're threatening with mom. I
mean, but then are you gonnaget you can try to cut up,
act like you're gonna cut your tongueout. Well, yeah, but you
have to understand that that won't bemuch of a threat because their mom's Yeah,

(53:52):
but you're you're threatening somebody who spendsmost of their day living in a
box. Right, So like dude'salready a captive and uh, yeah that's
here, let's break out of thebox. Yeah, yep, yep,
yep. Yeah. All right,So he says it's legal, uh that
I'm not a lawyer, so don'ttake any that's for the record. I
do not condone the punching of mimesif it'll have a legal effect on my

(54:15):
life. It's something you just qualifiedthat I did. Okay, all right,
And I don't know, I don'tknow what the penalty in Peru is.
Janet, what's up? Hey?Rusts are GEI? It heys for
sheriff. By the way, Ithink we should vote on this, this

(54:37):
mom punching thing while it's hot,and who knows where it could leave.
We just pick people in society that'snobody likes their freest owners. Maybe could
be next. Yeah, this isthe thing. I think the Peru thing
was back in like the eighties,so there's like they're not doing it anymore.
So yeah, you have to goto free That's exactly what I mean

(55:00):
a lot of Yeah, maybe ifa circus is coming through. I don't
know. Like you say, it'snot as fighting a min to punch is
not as easy as it used tobe, Janet, So don't punch mimes.
But well, I've been in NewOrleans and there are a whole list
of people I would punch first beforeI got to mind, then annoy me

(55:20):
about being in New Orleans. Soa right, like everyone, everyone,
and thank you very much everyone Atthat the restaurant with the donut thing,
I can't remember the name of it. Somebody's getting mad at me. All
of those people see girls who takebeads but don't pay for them. That's

(55:42):
pretty annoying. Yeah, yeah,yeah, yeah, So mime is gonna
be pretty low on the list.But hey, what are you gonna do?
All right? Uh? Race Agicfrom the Weather Channel is hanging out.
We're talking about punching mimes, sir, you want? Yeah? I
was telling people I love like weirdstupid history facts, and I was minded

(56:04):
because of the story we're doing thismorning. The time Peru decided to use
mimes for traffic control, that's thething. You can look it up ass
a picture too, by the way, just so if the evidence is there.
So the thing was people were theyThere was tons of traffic fatalities and
injuries because people just cross wherever thehell they want. It's been pretty lawless

(56:28):
on that front. So a politicalcandidate there, he was mayor. I
thought he was cabinet who was amayor and then he decided to run for
president. His way of stopping itwas public shaming. So he had mimes
near busy roadways and then they wouldthey would mime shame people if they crossed.
It. Literally, it literally cutdown on the problem because people didn't

(56:51):
want to be shamed by a mimethere. I was always freaked out by
mind. I just yeah, yeah, So anyway, some people do things
a little differently. They do theydo. It doesn't make them bad people,
right, I don't know. Theopinion of minds among my audience is
not positive, so I bet itis, like that's on big mind.

(57:14):
They need to do better marketing anyway. Yep, all right, give us
a positive weather forecast, and don'tyou dare change anything, and yes,
let's talk about Memorial Day. Canwe can? We can we? Yeah,
we could do that. We coulddo that today probably the best of
the next four or five days.Tryad west. There may be some showers,
thutter showers for the trigle east,lower chances sunshine until the afternoon when

(57:37):
we'll get some clouds and we'll bein the mid upper eighties. I might
hit ninety in some spots. I'mnot going to completely rule out any shower
thunder shower chants, even for theTriangle and points east, but again,
the better chances before sunset or tothe west, and then after sunset,
everybody's got a thread of a fewshowers thunderstorms, and we'll have some scattered
showers and afternoon storms tomorrow, mixthe clouds at sunny between. So your

(57:58):
dry periods starting tomorrow be mainly duringthe morning hours, because not only Tomorrow,
but Saturday and probably again on Sundayand Monday, we'll have some scattered
showers and thunderstorms around. So yeah, it's gonna be pool or lake or
backyard and be like it's not sobad the community to be up and be
a little uncomfortable and you'll hear thunderand be like, oh no, it
was. It gonna rain, andyou're probably gonna get rain. I think

(58:19):
by the time we get back inhere Tuesday, and you know we're chatting,
not that we're gonna know, butI think everybody is probably going to
get at least some rain. Butit's gonna be warm, humid, casey
too, so the community will beback. Also. No, no,
man, so well, sorry,I know, I know. Minor next
hour you were dressed. Oh mygod, dude, you already hear the

(58:40):
forecast? You're ready? Yeah,no, this is great. You can
be What a unique little thing.You're the only weather mine on the How
about that on radio? Nonetheless,one makes it more intriguing. Yeah,
we'll have to put a bed underyou because you just don't say anything.
The alarm will go off. Yeah, all right, we'll figure it.

(59:00):
We'll figure it out. Okay,thank you, appreciate it. All right,
there you go, raced agic fromthe weather channel. Wait is that
really? Oh my gosh. Allright, don't go anywhere person claiming to
be a mine. Okay, allright, we'll get in on this action
next. Hang on, we gotStephen kent to uh well, get into

(59:20):
a bunch of stuff. We're gonnahit him with a trivia question. We're
going to talk about the uh thisthing we introduce memory, right, photographic
memory. Remember this audio from yesterdaythat's Microsoft CEO telling us about a cool
new feature UH with Windows where it'lljust it'll be AI connected and then randomly
all day take screenshots whenever you're onthe computer so that it can use it

(59:46):
to do AI stuff and totally notto be sent to the government. Think
of everything you've ever done in frontof a computer, and then ask yourself
would you like there to be photographicevidence of that? And this dude's all
hyped. It's like, it's amazingthis thing we're doing, and I'm just
like, nah, that sounds terrifying. And then we got into a mime

(01:00:07):
discussion too, So I don't knowthat I'll drag him into that, but
we'll see. All right, holdon, So this is a guy claiming
to be a mime to defend mimes? Is that what he said? All
right, let's go all right,Charlie, what's up? This is so

(01:00:27):
predictable. Is there actually a Charliethere? Or did Ross dial it through?
That's very interesting. Sir, allright, all right, thanks for
that. You're not excited that dudewas. It's like, I got an
amazing excuse me, h, look, I'm allergic to mimes. I mean,

(01:00:53):
I think he did a great jobdefending himself, did he. I'm
I mean a lot of expletives.I don't know that that helps your case
or you got to be able todeliver it in an adult manner. But
I mean I think the violent handmotions were kind of coming through the speakers.
You could sense it. Yeah,no, it was it was like

(01:01:14):
obviously like an Italian mine. Ohthose are those the worst or the best?
I don't know, because you wantexaggerated hand gestures. Sign up for
that, man, get on boardwith that. All right, Well,
I guess he's earned his spokesman points. Let me hit you with this.

(01:01:38):
I could click back to there.Sorry, I get distracted by the angry
mind. So do you know apparentlygracelands getting foreclosed on, but they have
paused the foreclosure. So Graceland wassaid to be auctioned amid the foreclosure,

(01:02:07):
and a judge has issued a stay. I think that they just here we
go, Graceland on the verge ofbeing sold at a foreclosure auction. That
auction was supposed to take place today. However, a legal filing by the
granddaughter, Riley Keo, who's anactress. I don't know if I'm pronouncing

(01:02:30):
that correct. She's the one froma trailer she was wasn't she on that
the show where like it's a bunchof college hookers on HBO or whatever or
showtime? Was that one of those? So? Any who? But she's

(01:02:51):
the current owner of the property.She's Elvis's granddaughter, and she's contesting the
sale fouled a lawsuit. Blah blahblah. I'm not gonna get into all
the details there, but that's crazy, man. Elvis purchased Graceland for one
hundred thousand dollars and it to thisday has a mortgage against it because apparently

(01:03:17):
all of Elvis's relative's daughter and thennow granddaughter were borrowing against it. So
I don't know what you need,man, What do you think is going
to happen there? Also? Man, you wanna, I'm not. Can
you imagine who buys things unnecessarily likespend all right, we'll go with a
rapper, okay, right? Makingflex purchases? Can you imagine like buying

(01:03:43):
Graceland but then turning it into ashrine to you. Can you imagine what
the citizens of Memphis think of that. I mean, that'd be the ultimate
screw you. So I don't knowthat it was getting to do it.
But if if you got a crapton of money and you make bad buying
decisions there, you go probably bea little annoying living there. You know

(01:04:04):
what it'd be like, It'd belike those folks who buy remember the house
from Brady Bunch, It's a houseand like they always do these stories where
somebody buys it and then they arelike, why do people just show up
all day every day taking pictures ofthe house. And it's like, don't
be a you bought that knowing whatit was. Get into a little discussion

(01:04:29):
with our NERD correspondent Steven kat I, although somebody was questioning your nerd Accola,
your nerddom the other day, Sohow could they possibly do that?
I'm like, try this, dude, don't try this, dude, Like,
let me give you an example.I just then I remembered a trivia
question from I think I did aradio contest years ago, and maybe you'll

(01:04:51):
know it. If you know it, I'll be very impressed. Okay,
Indiana Jones Temple of Doom, allright, you're familiar with with the work,
right, the prequel to Raiders ofthe Lost Arc. Yes, I'm
feeling a lot of people don't realizethat's a prequel. That's a very good
point there. But you remember theopening scene, right club? Yeah?

(01:05:14):
Yeah, yeah, what was thename of that club? Club obi Wan?
There you go leave me, leaveme alone, haters, I've been
to Club obi Wan. I've gotthree lightsabers on my desk and a samuraized
sword right next to me. Backoff, is it a whip saber or
a regular one? You know?That kind of weaponry is very much outdated,

(01:05:40):
and after seeing Indiana Jones hit himselfin the face numerous times with it,
I lost interest. But apparently StarWars has not, because all the
whips are now a thing. Yeah, you just want to hear some nerdy
stuff, like if you've ever we'veseen the iteration of lightsabers, right,
the classic, the the one thatnow has handguards that are also mini lights

(01:06:03):
Yeah, cross guards. Yeah,little Kylo redaction. H you saw with
who the lightsaber? Who is thedude with the red and white face that
and the good hit Down the Shaftby Samuel L. Jackson. Yeah,
yeah, Dark, dark Ball,you know, the dark the double bladed
lightsaber, and and and and thereare literally uh chat bogs and and Reddit

(01:06:29):
threads and all of this of peopleexplaining why those couldn't exist. It's wild.
It's like touch grass kids, andand and yet they're very passionate about
it. I don't understand the argument. I'm sure you do. But if
they want to have a whip lightsaber, they want to have a Jedi or

(01:06:49):
a villain or whoever it is,looking like the bad dude from the second
Iron Man movie. Whatever do yourthing, man, I think really good.
I would like to see Rossweeld alightsaber whip in high heels. I
think that would be a good lookfor him. Just a thought. But
you know, this kind of weapon, I find it cheesy. I think

(01:07:12):
it's Star Wars and nerd culture ingeneral. It always has to one up
things that came before it. Andyou know, George Lucas definitely did that
with the double bladed lightsaber in episodeone in nineteen ninety nine, and so
you kind of always have to searchfor the next cool new thing instead of
just going with classics. And that'show you end up with the lightsaber Whip,

(01:07:35):
which is going to be featured inThe Acolyte, this new series that's
coming out on Disney Plus here injust about two weeks. I think it's
cheesy, but at the same time, like, if you are a Star
Wars fan, an adult Star Warsfan, and you get bothered about scientific
improbabilities, I think you've lost yourway. Yeah, oh yeah, here's

(01:08:01):
the thing. I will admit Idon't understand the lightsaber argument. There's I'm
sure that there's some faux science aboutthis thing that can't exist because we can't
stop beams. Like that doesn't meanto be right right right, But every
now and then I do find myself. Let me tell you what space horses
kill yourself? What do you dospace horses? Space horses don't make no

(01:08:25):
remember that space horses no, absolutelynot. So if they want to,
if you want to take creative licenseyou want to do with the lightsaber whatever.
But you know what the craziest onewas actually this This was in the
Star Wars animated series Rebels, andthen it was featured very briefly in this
obi Wan show that was also onDisney. Plus they were lightsaber copters.

(01:08:47):
So the Fifth Hunters called Fifth Inquisitors, they hunt Jedi. They have double
bladed lightsabers on a spinning access ofa wheel and it's spins. It spin
is like a helicopter blade. Imean that was suck and that was shuck
to get here with. Huh.They fly and so there's one person who

(01:09:14):
actually gets killed by it in theobi Wan show, but in the animated
series, Sith Inquisitors use it togo airborne and it's the it's the dumbest
thing I've ever seen in my life. So even that is like beneath a
lightsaber whip. I mean, that'dbe a hell of a weapon. But
so you're saying there's not resistance thenecessary and plus that if people have ever

(01:09:38):
looked at a rotor blade on ahelicopter, it's not just a straight circle.
It literally is. It's curved becausein the same way that an air
an airplane has to achieve lift andthat's why wings are not flat things.
Yeah, so it's like you tryto science it, but then you then
you have to plug in that ridiculousfactor. I don't know, man,

(01:10:00):
I think I can let most ofit go. Ros Ross ever, tell
you what he went to watch Guardians, so they was the Guardians too,
was Guardians of Galaxy too. Yeah, it's when Drax is outside the ship.
He's suspended by some sort of mechanismand he's shooting off the the gold
people I forget their name, butthere they're going to crash land on the
planet with his dad. Yeah,he's outside the ship and he's shooting,

(01:10:20):
and then they go into the planet'satmosphere and he's still there and he's being
dragged through trees and everything, andonce again he's been in space, right,
yes, And they crash land andthere's a guy sitting next to me
and he just looks at me andgoes, this isn't real. So I
mean, not full of that,dude, Not full of that dude.
That guy goes suit on getting druggedthrough space and then an atmosphere, right,

(01:10:43):
which is kind of hot when yougo through those like he figured it
out. He figured out the Guardiansof the Galaxy with the talking raccoon.
That is a miss man. Allright. I get on a more serious
note. Let me let me wewe played this audio, yes, and
I'm like, I got to holdthis over for him. I want to

(01:11:04):
I want I don't want to actuallydo this. I want to be very
clear, like I want to grabsome of these tech guys and just shake
them, because like they'll they'll dothat, They'll like, this is an
amazing thing. And then they thendetail and I'm like, that's the most
horrible idea I've ever heard of.And then you realize that they're committing literally

(01:11:24):
billions to this stuff. So theGoogle CEO, I was very excited.
He was doing an interview the otherday. Or not Google, I'm sorry,
Microsoft ceo. He's doing an interviewand he's very excited about something that's
going to be in the updated windows. All right, let's listen to this.
If you guys didn't hear the showyesterday and just listen to this idea.
Ponder it, tell me what youthink and then we'll ask Steven about

(01:11:45):
it. So here he is tome interdewce memory right, photographing memory into
what you do on the PC.And now we have it. So it's
called recall. It's not keyword search, right, it's semantic search over all
your history. And it's not Joshabout any doc we can recreate moments in
the past. Essentially, here's howit works. Windows constantly take screenshots of

(01:12:08):
what's on your serpent, then usesa generative AI model right on the device
along with the NPU to process allthat data and make it searchable, even
photos. I got to try itout. I searched brown leather bag.
It came up in visual search.There's no place on this page that it
says brown leather bag. It's allright, spoiler, it's because she has

(01:12:30):
a brown bag and it's taking screenshots. And now that's the thing. Who
who asked? Anybody? Just askyourself this, every moment you've ever spent
in front of your computer, wouldyou want there to be photographic evidence?
Go Steven, what do you think? Yeah, typical crimoginanser. No,

(01:12:51):
there's nothing that I'm doing on mycomputer that I want it to visually remember
it. The this is a crazything where I don't know who this is
for, because the use case isyou saw something interesting online. Uh,
you know, maybe maybe Ross sawyou know, the helicopter lightsaber on an

(01:13:14):
AD a couple of weeks ago,but I can't quite remember what it is.
And he's like, oh, youknow, matt or PC showed me
the the helicopter lightsaber and it's justgoing to bring it up from his search
history. But it's watching everything elseRoss does, and that might be problematic
to say the least. All Ido in my computer I look at Bible
verses, so fine, I'm fine. Yeah, yeah, see where that's

(01:13:39):
a Ross does. My hobby ispantiless tentacle porn. So like, I'm
this is not a good This soundslike it'd be horrible for the truth the
truth comes out. Yeah, mymentor Kirk Kurt Eichenwall or whatever the reporter
is who was he was cruising,he posted a screenshot of his computer and

(01:14:00):
then like in the tab this ismy classics screw up that I love.
Like if you screenshot your computer screenand then people can see what's in your
browser tabs, Yeah and yeah,yeah, yeah, I'll steal man this
though for like one second. So, I mean, their their case is
that it's a feature you can turnon and off, and it also is

(01:14:21):
browser specific, so you have touse a particular browser on the PC Copilot
plus right, so you have toyou have to turn it on and use
a specific browser. So you're reallychoosing to use it, And they say,
but I don't really believe it thatit's all stored locally. That basically,

(01:14:42):
this is not going to the cloud, and this is not data that
the PC collects. That it livesliterally on your computer. So the only
person who could access it is theguy who breaks into your house and steals
your laptop or finds it out ofStarbucks. That's the only way that it
would be accessible. But I don'tknow. Maybe just like color me skeptical
and the post Patriot Act in nsA world, like you know, every

(01:15:05):
everyone could do the smell test,now I did. Somebody did bring up
a fair point. They're this thethe screen shotting Uh stuff is not a
new thing. In fact, Apple'siOS. This is a thing that has

(01:15:25):
existed except Apple is this closed loopright? Everything they do is about frustrating
your ability to interact with other things. And so like when they were saying,
I didn't even know if I believethem, but people have already been
presented with this technology. The differenceis the AI component, right, So
you to do that, then theAI would have to be independently housed on

(01:15:47):
every Windows computer. Does that makesense to you that doesn't make sense to
me, and I have IVY yes, yes, yes, ready, what
is the thing that everybody assumes isalready happening with tech but you'll never get
them to admit it? And right, you're in it, You're you're in
this studio, like let's say you'rephysically in the studio with Ross and you

(01:16:10):
guys are having the nerd discussion,right, and then next then you go
and you get on the internet.Every ad that served to you is things
you just talked about, right?How many people bring that up? Like
I almost feel like this is away of slowly like this would be a

(01:16:31):
good way to cover if that's alreadya thing happening that you won't admit.
That's my conspiracy theory. Yeah,and that's not like fark patch. I've
heard this from a million people.I've experienced it with the feeling that the
phone was listening and then serving mea micro targeted AD. And that's pretty
reasonable because that's exactly what it wouldthen be doing. If you were looking

(01:16:54):
at certain kinds of images on online, the AI would be able to do
what kind of products you would likeand then sell you ads so they could
sell your data to advertisers in theory, and it always goes this way.
That's what always ends up happening.In the end, there's going to be
a major consumer privacy issue. It'sit's wild and then yes, obviously the

(01:17:16):
component with if it's having a pingai to do its function and you're not
housing on a computer, you can'ttell me it's it's all local data.
That just I don't know how themath tracks on that, but that's the
thing that they want to do.And frankly, like there's been like there's
been some incredibly bad ideas from bigcompanies, right, which then become famous

(01:17:41):
like New Coke. Yeah, evenknow the tech sector. So there is
just a possibility that this guy ishe is too hyped on his own projects,
right, and people will reject this. But Microsoft is very effective at
getting people to adapt to utilize theirstuff, right. It really was why

(01:18:03):
they got served with all those antitrustlawsuits, right, they got this,
they got sued Europe, us everywhereand that was a big landmark case because
it was what was it Prestalling InternetExplorer on the Windows right was the main
beef. And it's like they don'thave a browser right now at Microsoft right,

(01:18:25):
they have the edge thing kind of, but they discontinued Internet Explorer.
So it is it far fetched thatpeople would gravitate towards something that will probably
be set as the default browser.I don't think that's unreasonable. I think
a lot of people just go withhow it's loaded, and now you are
using it even if you don't becauseyou don't know. Maybe like you just

(01:18:45):
don't know. So everything's crazy,all right, real quick, I just
have a couple of minutes. Ifif the Microsoft's coming up with bad ideas
in state of Washington, California stillgot them licked. So cal which is
the reason any product on the backhas something that mentions California loves to pass
these laws and flex their economic might. And now they want cars that start

(01:19:10):
beeping at you if you go morethan ten over the speed limit. No,
no, no, I've already I'vealready got my wife in the side
seats beeping at me when I goover the speed limit. I don't he's
the car to do it too.This is this is crazy. So this
is like the pet project of StateSenator Scott Wiener, appropriately named. He

(01:19:32):
claims that there's like a speeding andtraffic deaths epidemic in California, and that
this solution in his original bill wasto install mandate the installation of speed governor
devices. These are called active governordevices, which slow your car down,
seize control of your speed, andslow you down once you go ten over

(01:19:54):
the limit. This compromise bill iswhat passed, and it's a passive governor
which just screeches at you. Butthe dream is to have one that will
literally turn your car off, right, because that's the Yeah, I mean,
that's what they that's what he wants. Like he's been he's been clear
about this. The active speed governoris what they want, and it is

(01:20:15):
what they are doing in Europe startingin July. So Europe has already lost
this fight. Oh well, andthat's frankly a bunch of others in the
world of tech. Yeah, that'sobnoxious. I think some dude is going
to do swift business h D takingthese things off. Man, I know

(01:20:36):
all the black boxes removed, butI got a roll. Thank you for
the time this morning, appreciated,Stephen. All right, and we'll be
back hang on. It uses lightsaberpropellers a speedboat and as a propeller uses
a lightsaber. He's got four ofthem across the back like those big fast

(01:20:56):
Go Get Drugs boats down in Miami. Have Wow, it's amazing. Plus
think about this too as you're drivingthrough. At the same time you're cruising,
it's also preparing your fish for you, right, get them all sush
sheet up, ready to go.Man, that'll be amazing. I think
I think if you want to goreally crazy on all that, I think

(01:21:18):
what you need is all right,you ready, here's the if I'm on
the on in the one of theNew Star Wars things, maybe the one
that Samuel L. Jackson was talkingabout are people mad about? People are
mad about that? Yeah, somebodysaid that. Yeah, they were saying
that. You said that Darth Maulwas kicked down the shaft by Samuel Jackson.

(01:21:39):
Yeah yeah, yeah, which isactually inaccurate, but not if it
was a different timeline. Ah,I see, ye, yes, yes,
yes, yes. So Samuel L. Jackson was doing an interview last
week and he wants he really wantsa Disney Plus show, like I guess

(01:22:00):
it'll just be called Mace or whatever, you know his character, And uh,
people are like, but you can'tcause you know you're did and He's
like, well, but you know, maybe we do it in a different
setting. And I'm like, butI but if you really want me to
nerd out, I don't know howyou separate what happened to him, which
literally led to uh murder all thekids? Right? Do you remember the

(01:22:23):
whole thing? So so, SamuelJackson, I understand that he really wants
a show, but it couldn't beone where there's a different thing where he
beats Sidius or kills Darth Maul oryou know some of the other suggestions that
were there. So so go yellat him. But I'm fine. In
fact, I'm going to be aJedi in the new one, and I'm
Australian. And wait till you seewhat I made a lightsaber out of.

(01:22:45):
It's gonna be amazing. You geta boomerang lightsaber? Ah, you spoiled
it, man. Can you imagine? By the way, did you ever
throw a boomerang as a kid?I think I spent there was a summer
where I probably spent the entire summerand I don't think that thing ever came
to dude never never, like whatuh that's like? It's like jackalopes,
right, I got fooled by ajackalope because I was like eight. It's

(01:23:09):
different though, down in Australia becausethe physics are different because where the continent
is. So when they throw itback and throw yeah, it has a
better chance of coming back to youbecause of the circular of the physics.
It's at the bottom of the Earth. I've been to Australia, you know
this, right, and uh yeah, I ever tell you about the time
I got in f in physics.No you didn't, failed the hell out

(01:23:30):
of that class. Yeah yeah,yeah, yeah. Yeah. So it's
the it's kind of like the toiletwater me a thing right well that people
have. That's a misconception as well. People think that when you flush the
toilet in Australia it goes down thedrain. The opposite way of it does
here. That is, that isnot what happens. Is it comes out
of the toilet and up. Thatdidn't happen. And by the way,

(01:23:51):
you know, Argentina's in the SouthernHemisphere too, and at no point did
I get a free bidet when Iwas on vacation last month, So they
have the hotel, had real bidays. They're really into him down there.
But you know, you're asking foryou if you get on that thing.
So all right, well, I'mglad you got fun in physics class.

(01:24:12):
It's like it's serving you. WellI did not. Oh, oh that's
very sad. All right, afew things we got to get to here
before the end of the show.Yeah, so helped me out here.
Now you have the granddaughter of theowner, no, it would be the

(01:24:35):
daughter of the owner of the chiefsnow Andy Reid and Patrick Mahomes, who
are all rushing to the defense oftheir their kicker there. Especially Mahomes kind
of got drug into it because lastyear he made a comment that in now,
if you use the comment, itsounds like one thing, but it's

(01:24:57):
obvious it wasn't what he intended hewas. He mentioned that he'll sit right
next to Butker in a meeting andnever speak to him. Right, So
they're sitting you know, they're sittingthere watching the coach go over x'es and
o's and he's not talking to him. And the point that Mahomes was making
is that Butker is really really likefocused in like it came across as a

(01:25:19):
compliment. But now with the youknow, oh you went to this this
you know, I went to thegraduation ceremony and demanded all the women get
pregnant and lose their shoes and headto the kitchen. And again, it's
kind of like the good people onboth sides. The first thing he said
was some of you are going to, you know, tackle the career,

(01:25:42):
and some of you, many ofyou and even ones you choose to work,
will instead focus most of their energyon family and children. And he's
not mathematically wrong. Especially at areligious college. He said both were things.
And then he talked about what wasthe other b oh calling gay people

(01:26:05):
sinners or the sin itself calling thata sin, and biblically, we can
get in there and and look,you can think that that's stupid, you
can think that that's great. Butnow you've got Patrick Mahomes, who we
love to clown on here on theshow, and we'll check it out.
I'm no Harrison. I've known himfor seven years, and I judge him

(01:26:26):
by the character that he shows everysingle day, and that that's a good
person. That's as someone who caresabout the people around him, cares about
his family, and wants to makea good impact in society. When you're
in the locker room. There's alot of people from a lot of different
areas of life, and they havea lot of different views on everything,
and we're not always going to agree. But I'm and there's certain things that
he said that I don't necessarily agreewith, but I understand the person that

(01:26:48):
he is and he's trying to dowhatever he can to lead people in the
right direction, and that might notbe the same values as I have.
At the same time, I'm gonnajudge him by the character that he shows
every single day. That's a greatperson and will continue to move along and
try to help build each other up. To me, So Patrick Mahomes' take
is what normal people think, right, that's most people like. Even if

(01:27:12):
you think, you know, Idon't agree with the statement he made about
gay marriage, or I don't agree. I don't agree that that you know,
women are more likely to focus ona family, But it's true.
It's true even if both of youwork. One of the common things that
you know, and sometimes it's apoint to fight on and sometimes it just

(01:27:34):
is what it is. That whenit comes to a lot of the child
stuff, even if you're both working, a lot of that will fall in
mom's direction right, and you couldcall that unfair or whatever it is,
or mom's like to mom or whateverit is, right, But if it
works for you, fine, Andif it doesn't and you see somebody else

(01:27:56):
doing it, then do something else. Absolute lunacy. Andy Reid also,
and this is what these press conferencesare now going to be. But at
least they're not Taylor Swift questions.So I don't know how I feel about
that, but so many women justplunt staff here and in the building.
Give I mean, his comments kindof touched on the one that you work
for us. I mean, whatis a journalism with a concern about players

(01:28:17):
speaking ill of you know, womenand gentlemen. Yeah, that hasn't happened.
I don't think you're speaking kill ofwomen. But his opinions, and
we all respect that. I letyou guys in this room, and you
have a lot of opinions that Idon't like. You know what, that's
a very good point. Yeah,Andy Reid does have a little curmudgeon.

(01:28:41):
I think spent a time with Belichick. They're probably rubbed off on him,
but still like, okay, that'show normal people handle it. And I
expect every press conference for the restof the season. It's some some some
jackass is going to ask a questionabout that, and then maybe I don't
know, maybe they get Taylor Swiftto comment on it. I don't she

(01:29:02):
wait in I don't even know.All right, all right, before we
get to uh oh, we gotto talk about what happened to the RNC
headquarters, because that's completely normal,and uh a threat might be looming for
your kids. I'll tell you aboutthat, but first race stage, he
is here to threaten your kids withYeah the kids, yeah, yeah,

(01:29:24):
well threatened if they've got ball games, you know, you get into a
holiday weekend. We'll wait a second. I used to Yeah sometimes we had,
I know, Fourth of July wealways played. But yeah, if
there's outdoor plans, let me justmake a nice general category. They'll start
to be threatened up more likely tomorrowand through the holiday weekend with afternoon showers
and thunderstorms. Our radars cleaned uppretty nicely this morning. Sunshine, some

(01:29:45):
clouds today, close to ninety triad'sgonna have a chance of a shower storm.
I've even gonna mentioned maybe in gettinginto the triangle, but a better
chances we had on into the nighttimehours and after sunset tonight, and let's
just go with scattered showers, thunderstorma Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and
probably Monday. Our percentage wise,the actual best chance of the best coverage
is going to be Monday. Andwe have to watch out too for some

(01:30:08):
strong storms as we're gonna have potentiallyover the weekend in the central and eastern
US, potentially a severe weather outbreakstarting Saturday later not into Sunday. So
we'll see how those storms translate asthey come further east. So it's not
all gloomy, do but there willbe some with the thunderstorms around the next
few afternoons starting tomorrow and probably rightthrough Monday. Then a nice cool down

(01:30:30):
actually coming as we'll lose the communitysometime as we get into the first couple
of days of next week. Allright, thank you, sir. Okay,
we'll talk tomorrow and then we'll alltake Monday off together. So all
right, thank you, sir,and Jeff Bellinger joins us. Next,
hang on a Bloomberg update now withJeff Bellinger. What's happening, Jeff,
Good morning. Casey Stock's pulled backyesterday. Major averages had losses that range

(01:30:54):
from two tens percent to half apercent, but Nvidia has set the stage
for a thing thy rebound. Thechip maker reported after the markets closed yesterday
that its sales more than tripled inthe latest quarter, and Vidia also issued
upbeat guidance, announced a stock splitand raised its dividend, and video shares
are rallying and it looks like we'llhave a positive opening. Futures are higher

(01:31:18):
right across the board, especially theNasdaq futures. They're up two hundred and
twenty seven points. It is shapingup to be a difficult summer for airline
passengers. Bloomberg analyzed flight scheduled datafrom Syrium and says airlines have trimmed more
than six million seats from their domesticflight schedules for June through August. The
Justice Department is reportedly set to goafter another big American business. Sources say

(01:31:43):
Live Nation Entertainment is the latest firmto be caught in the crosshairs. The
agency will seek to force a breakupof Live Nation and Ticketmaster to end the
company's dominance of concert ticket sales.AMC Theaters is going to bring back the
summer Movie Camp program Family Friends filmswill be offered every Monday and Wednesday for
a three dollars admission. The programwill run for eight weeks starting June twenty

(01:32:06):
fourth. There'll be a different movieeach week. Home prices were at a
record high at the end of lastweek. Redfinn says the media nationwide price
was three hundred eighty seven thousand,six hundred dollars. That was up four
percent from a year earlier. AndCasey, the Labor Department just reported the
number of new claims for unemployment benefitsfell by eight thousand, two hundred and

(01:32:29):
fifteen thousand last week. Casey,alrighty, we will, we'll talk well,
we'll talk to you tomorrow and thenwe'll have a three day weekend,
right, yes, we will,all right, looking forward to that.
Thank you, Jeff, appreciate it. Okay, have a good day.
All right, all right, letme a little bit a rapid firing about
three things I got to share withyou. So yesterday the RNC headquarters in
Washington, d C. Went onlockdown after people mailed blood to them.

(01:32:58):
And they're not doing a blood drive, so obviously this is perfectly normal political
back and forth stuff. The funis trying to figure out who might have
sent it and what their cause is. Right, Like, it does have
some women's march vibes, right withthe with the blood because they've used blood
on the with the pink hats andstuff. But you know, blood on

(01:33:21):
your hands very hot right now withyou know, people who want to eradicate
the Jews, and you know,there's this small chance it's some weird adrenochrome,
dude, But at this point,we don't know. We just know
that the package was received and theynoticed it was filled with vials of blood

(01:33:44):
and they basically brought hasmat teams inas you do there, and you know,
hopefully we'll we'll know a little more. Don't know, that's but that
has got to be a little unerving, right you were gonnail room, right,
you know, it's fine with likeweird memes and you know, uh

(01:34:04):
and you know, rants about theKoch brothers or whatever, but start bringing
blood into this, I don't know, man. Let's see, the RNC
has sought to tie the incident tothe far left, although police have not
received any information. Well, hey, reporter, I understand that that's going
to be naturally, but I thinkit's also a pretty good theory, right,

(01:34:29):
but pretty good. Like if peoplewere mailing stuff to the DNC and
it was right after Biden did whathe did with Afghanistan, and you wanted
to have a panel on in surmisethat maybe somebody who doesn't like Biden did
it, I would go, that'sa pretty good theory. You're probably right
unless it's you know, like ajuicy smole a thing, and that I

(01:34:50):
don't know. That's why we've openedall these possibilities. But you know,
if a bunch if a bunch ofblood files should up here at the radio
station, I think somebody was upsetwith something I said. But when you
get a package one time for Ross, I thought it was blood, but
it was bone juice from the blacksarcophagus. So and he did order that.

(01:35:10):
So there you go, all right? What as a parent sits in
the back of your mind when youthink about your kids at school, You
know, what what are they learningtoday? What is what are they indoctrinating
my kids with? What if somelunatic breaks into the school right and wants
to do harm there? What ifa gender queer witch shows up starts giving

(01:35:34):
the kids surveys and they didn't knowabout it. All of these are perfectly
normal concerns, although it's the lastone that apparently played out. Yes,
here we go in Pennsylvania. Parentswho were initially when their kids told them
what happened, the school went,no, that's no, that's not true.

(01:35:59):
You're just making it up. Thisis misinformation. They called them absolute
looms for it. Right, here'sthe problem. It's exactly what happened.
And now the school's saying they're tryingto figure out how it happened. But
what happened is at Unionville Chadsford School, which is in southeastern PA, a
person identifying as a gender queer richwitch, which is hard to say some

(01:36:24):
somehow got access to students and wasgiving them sexuality surveys what And then the
kids were like, hey, thisthing happened to school and it's really weird.
And then the parents were, youknow, they were gas lit by
the district. Now the district saysthat it was a mistake and they're looking

(01:36:46):
into how a gender this is whatthey call themselves, gender queer witch was
able to gain access to high schoolfreshman class and give a presentation an issue.
I mean, obviously it's like theteacher did this and because the policy
of the school district is you've gotto have parents permission for stuff like this,

(01:37:06):
so they went from it didn't happentoo, she must have teleported in,
right, because she's a witch.That's what they do, or something
I don't know, emerge from acauldron or whatever. And you know,
just cost of these kids with theirsurveys to now, yeah, we totally
somebody meant to do that, butthey didn't do it correctly. So there

(01:37:28):
you go. There's one more thingyou got to worry about witches gaining access
to your kids, which, bythe way I've looked it up, witches,
you do not want to let themhave access to your kids. Did
you know this
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