Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Uh sorry, I'm just fixing something that decided about thirty
seconds before the show to be uncooperative. There we go,
all right, very good. Uh let's see here. You guys
want to learn this morning, as you know, just to
start the show. I know everyone's brain isn't turned on
(00:21):
right at you know, six oh six or whatever it is,
but we can learn right ross. You watched the White
Guys for common event last night as part of your duties,
did you? Uh you watched all that?
Speaker 2 (00:35):
No?
Speaker 1 (00:35):
I checked that out, yeah no, oh oh well what what? Well?
How were we going to learn? Man u us? We're not,
but there were we were. They were going to teach
men how to be men and uh also come to
terms with their manhood, which I don't know what that
(00:56):
means sounds you know, well all right, so so unfortunately,
I'm assuming you were busy wrapping your new couch and
plastic like my grandmother did. All that.
Speaker 3 (01:09):
I was lifting, making beef jerkey, and I went a
riverboat gambling.
Speaker 1 (01:14):
Oh wow, okay, did you know when to hold him
and when to fold him? Okay, that's good, that's good.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
I sat down and uh watched some John Wayne movies
for about eight hours straight.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Oh good, so tired. I watched Hondo the other day, right,
that's yeah, that's a good one. Okay. I I have
a new bear rug so uh unfortunately what I had
I had to alpha him into holding still. But he's uh,
he's good now, Like, didn't hear a peep. I think
he's terrifying. That's the way we like it. But that's
(01:48):
what keeps it fresh.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
I'm very uncomfortable this morning. I'm trying not to move
too much because you'll hear the jangling of my mammoth tusks.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
I mean, yeah, that's that the term you use for
though Yeah, yeah, okay, all right, never heard them called that,
but that Ross had to build a time machine to
get those. So what are you doing? I'm you know what?
All right, Well this isn't fair. Let's listen to organizer
Ross Morales explain what it is to be a man. Well,
(02:19):
I go literally fixed stuff with a paper clip and
some bubblegum.
Speaker 4 (02:24):
And that happens at the same time as the myths
around America that we grew up with, that we as
men are expected to be protectors and providers.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
You know what, I'm sorry, I forgot to I forgot
to say this. Hold on, I'm taking a sip of
my mead that I just made. It's very good. Ladies, Ladies,
if any of you were listening this morning, you're gonna
want to be sitting down. You're probably going to swoon
(02:57):
when I play this guy's audio. And I don't want
anything bad happening to you. I want you to fall down,
get hurt, nothing like that. Okay, So hey, and you
know what, I want you to resist the urge to
leave your your your husband's, your boyfriends, and immediately try
to track this dude down. He has a man bun
(03:20):
or a top nutt thing going on. He doesn't really
turn his head so that I throw that out there
just to get the h the desires flowing. So resist
those urges. Okay, resist those urges. Here we go with
mister Morales.
Speaker 4 (03:40):
And that happens at the same time as the myths
around America that we grew up with that we as
men are expected to be protectors and providers are going
out into economy that doesn't really allow for that, especially
for working class folks, and sort of like compounding on that,
you know, masculin as a trope has been co opted
(04:02):
by the maga write is something that feeds into and
exacerbates the loneliness epidemic as well as the mental health
crisis that many face that end up leading to really
destructive behaviors.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
We aren't the.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Only ones that are hurt by these things. Black and
brown people, lgbt QIA plus people, especially trans women and
Indigenous people, and you know, all sorts of other folks
in our society open historically and often still today are
marginalized in being hurt, demonized, and you like marginalize even furthers.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
I don't know. By the way, I just built an
a frame. While he was talking, Russel backed me up
on this. What yep, Yeah, I'm working on my PhH
Now he's trying to build a bigger one.
Speaker 5 (04:51):
I'm working on my forge back here making some swords.
Speaker 1 (04:56):
That is awesome. That's a that looks like the Klingon weapon.
Speaker 5 (05:00):
Yeah yeah, it's it's a bat left oh man swinging
that hammer.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
Needs some fire sound effects. What is the what are
you talking about? Sir? Now? Look at look he's now.
When he wants to talk about the ability within the
economy for there to be a single worker to support
an entire family, it is more difficult. The math bears
that out. But the manhood trope, what is the manhood trope?
(05:31):
I need to know, I know what is the manhood trope? That,
by the way, has been hijacked from you. So what
he's saying is he is the epitome of manhood. But
now when people think of manhood they think of you know,
Ross with his forge, me with my a frame. The
idea that a man can be a protector, it's it's
(06:00):
it's sheer absurdity. And this isn't the is what is
the stupid trend? On tick train? Remember the New York
Times did they did a big piece over the weekend
because some woman used to be a ballerina and then
she married a dude and they had like eight kids,
and they got a ranch out in the middle of nowhere,
and they're all smiling and happy and doing their thing,
and she's beautiful and he's tall and handsome, and they're
(06:22):
too airyan looking for the New York Times and that
they did a feature on these people, and absolutely it
was a weekend of just trashing on him. She was
a Juilliard He made her give up her dreams, like
like it was some sort of Handmade's tale come to
(06:42):
light right and instead you just yeah, I read a
little bit of it because it's paywalled, but I saw
some of the excerpts. Everyone sounds happy. Everyone sounds happy.
You know why, because sometimes you take a different direction
in life and it requires you to not continue on
(07:03):
a direction you were going, and you have to make
that decision. As an adult, you make that decision, do
you all? Do you regret it? Sometimes? Yes? I didn't
get the impression they did. But this guy claiming that
they had a lot, you know, a lockdown on manhood
and then it was the trope. But by the way,
(07:25):
it's not a trope, it's a thing. It's not a
trope that they had a lockdown on manhood and then
the right came along and stole it and bastardized it
and made it something that wasn't. And this is not
to say, by the way, that people who who are
Trump supporters can also be people that you would consider
(07:49):
how do I say this? More traditionally manly or have
you know, would would exude manhood or manliness which, by
the way, manliness is almost something different than manhood. It's
more of a manifesting of it. Whereas when I think
of manhood, I think of people who it's not about
(08:11):
understanding a role, but they understanding the importance of filling
that part of it right, and whether it is in
a relationship, whether it is in society, whether it is
in you know, interacting with friends around them. And there's
a lot of things that can be manly that watching
(08:31):
people do them, it doesn't look very manly. And there's
things that aren't traditionally manly that can be I guess
or at the very least not detract from it. Like
I made fun of this due with a top knot. Okay,
he looks like he looks like a loser with a
top knot. But there's some guys who can pull it off. Whatever. Fine.
(08:58):
I know, forget Jason Momoa a politics, but that dude
walks into a room wearing a top knot. You're not like,
look at the little girl, right, And that's just the
physical outwardness. But I'm talking about what it means to,
you know, be a provider if you need to be
the provider or one of the providers, but also the protector,
(09:20):
to be chivalrous when necessary, a trait that is being
beat out of men many times by the women who
this guy would attempt to surround himself with, who put
him in the friend zone. Over at the Purple Hair rally,
somebody wrote online that this guy could get friend zoned
in a brothel. I laughed, that's funny because it's true.
(09:44):
But I don't need a lecture from you know, Captain
manbun here about what it is, because it's not the
same thing for everybody. It's like that judge said about pornography.
You just know it when you see it. But they're
wanting to create this, this divide because it wasn't just
this lunacy yesterday. No no, no, no no. It was
(10:06):
also people who are now having a problem with the
rights kind of manliness, and they decided that the person
they want to attack for all the wrong reasons, as
though he is the lone arbiter of manliness is Hulk
Hogan because he was at the Trump rally, which, by
(10:28):
the way, the owner of the Detroit Lions had Hogan
at some event, some charity event, and a bunch of
moonbats came out mad as hell because they want to
cancel Hulk Hogan. The irony, of course being you guys
could have canceled him for things over the years. You didn't.
It wasn't until he and Peter Teel destroyed Goker that
(10:49):
he was really back on your radar.
Speaker 3 (10:51):
They've been trying to destroy Hogan forever.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
The problem is you get him down the mat and
you're like it's over, and then he starts to hulk
out and he starts to shake you ever seems shake
like this, Yeah, I have stand at somebody stares at
you and he's shaking. He's moving his head back and
forth and yeah, yeah, boom dropped the big leg. Good luck.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
How how triggered are you by Hulk Hogan? I will
share a story with you. The answer is apparently very
triggered because he was he was at the Trump thing.
He was.
Speaker 3 (11:26):
It's so dumb, like like, listen, Hulk Hogan.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
It's like he's he's a character.
Speaker 3 (11:33):
He's I was about to say, it's like saying you're
getting triggered by like some other big hero from the
eighties like Optimist Prime. I'm sure I'm triggered by he
Man or Lionel.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Mmmm mm hmm. Well, I mean he Man is right
there in the th Man, right he Man, I mean
the sheer audacity of having two male descriptors as your name.
That has to be triggering to the women. You know,
(12:04):
the purple haired protests women, They just can't deal. This
is so stupid. And if this is who is your
arbiter of manliness?
Speaker 4 (12:15):
And that happens at the same time as the myths
around America that we grew up with that we as
men are expected to be protectors and providers.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
You know what, Let's put this dude in a field
and I don't know, pick one of the women from
the women's event, and we'll put some wolves in there,
and we'll see who she expects to handle the wolves.
He won't because he won't have any idea. But I think,
all of a sudden, I think when there's wolves about,
(12:49):
people's preconceived notions tend to fall by the wayside. Seammy
looking at him, like, what do you gotta do something?
We got wolves. Shit, they're so dumb they'd probably try
to take a selfie with them. But there you go.
All right, ladies, I'm gonna ask you this, those of
you who haven't, you know, left your families to go
(13:10):
find this guy to be with him, would you rather
pretend you're single and ready to mingle. Okay, there's a
thought exercise, and you can either go to the the
White Men for Kamala fundraiser last night, albeit virtual, but
(13:32):
let's say it was in person. You can either go there,
you know, to find yourself a bow. Or you can
go to the RNC after party where Hogan and Kid
Rock and all of them are hanging out. Plus you
know the whatever dudes were attending there. Let me know.
(13:55):
I'm I have a prediction, but only time will tell.
All Right, gonna get Ross to build me a sword.
We'll be right back, apparently. The hijacking by the Right
of It Okay, and hul Cogan, David French, who's an
absolute lunatic. He's he was kind of leading the charge
(14:15):
on Twitter the other day, but he's not the only
one they've been. They've been very upset over Hogan, like
he went to like a kid's Yeah kids cancer fundraiser
in Detroit. He's he's showing up to raise money for
kids with cancer, and they protested him. And then they
(14:38):
want to protest the Detroit Lions, which I would understand.
Screw the Lions. Sorry Vikings fan here, but you can't
you protested a kid's cancer thing. I guess people don't care.
I don't know if you heard during the uh the
Israeli football sizes me soccer match, the crowd screaming Hyle
(15:04):
Hitler during it at the Olympics yesterday. So this is
where we are absolute lunatics. But yes, David French very
upset and Hull Cogan because he showed up at the
RNC because he tore his shirt off. Whatever he is now,
he now has to be canceled. And as Ross pointed out,
(15:28):
good luck, good luck with that. What are you gonna
hit Hogan with? And one of the things, if you
don't know the story, it's delicious. It's one of my favorite.
It's up there with the why is his name escaping me?
This war? Who had the stupid flag? That four chair
Reddit tracked Shi La Buff? Yeah, look excuse me Lebouf
(15:49):
Shilah Buff story with what happened with his we will
not we will not submit stuff. That's that's one of
my favorite stories. And then that and then the well
I was gonna say the the dude with the dolphin story,
but that's just my favorite recurring audio. And if you
don't know what that is, weight it will eventually be
(16:10):
presented to you. But for those of you who don't
know what happened to Gawker, which was an absolute rag,
was Hulk Hogan and Peter Teal. You know how much
say hate Peter Teal because he is a tech bro,
he is a Trump guy. He was given a cabinet position,
except he was not recognized because we have to do
(16:32):
these things as the first gay cabinet member, right the
Biden administration decided the Buddhajic was and so did the media.
Even though Peter Teel is incredibly gay and he's out,
but he wasn't always out, and because there was, there
were inklings for years the till was both gay and
(16:53):
also conservative. Gawker just couldn't deal with that. And so
what did they do? They him, which I thought was
a major offense. They outed Peter Teel years ago and
he's a billionaire, and you know what he did. He
waited and he sat there and every day he had
(17:16):
a team of lawyers combed through the crap that Gawker
was printing until they could find a case that they
knew could be used to destroy them. This is evil,
genius crap, but all earned Okay, says, and then they
just hammered on till and they did a Teal and
(17:37):
they did this, and then one day Goker got a
hold of the Bubba the Love Sponge whole Cogan video.
And if you don't know what that is, basically, Bubba
the Love Sponge's a radio host down the Tampa area.
He was friends with Hogan who lives in the Tampa area.
(17:57):
And Bubba's ex wife was there and Hulk got with
her and there's video and all that. So it's like,
it is what it is, okay, and they they put
the video out, they did all this stuff, and that's
when till just A Teal decided, you know what this is? It?
So Teal and his lawyers reached out to Hulk Hogan
(18:20):
and said, hey, you should sue him into oblivion. And
Hulk's like, I don't have the kind of money to
fight these guys, and and then Teal's like, I'd like
to introduce myself. I'm a billionaire. And Teal funded Hulks
lawsuits and destroyed Gawker. Ah, such a refreshing story. Sorry,
(18:43):
I love it. I love it. And you be like, oh,
you hate the media, Yes, a lot of them. I do.
But in this case, I don't even consider goker media.
That's a gossip rag and it's a dead gossip rag.
And every one of those writers over there, if you like.
I used to comb through it day during my prep
cycle and it was like it was like you drop
(19:03):
something in the trash and I got to dig through it.
That's what it felt like. So they earned everything that
they got. So if that didn't destroy hul Cogan, good
luck with that. Trump is masculinity is rooted in grievance
and anger. David French rights, a democratic alternative should be
(19:24):
honor and courage. Do you think honor and courage don't permeate?
Are you familiar with the quote unquote rights relationship with
the military, And when I mean the military, I mean
the real military, not having to sit there and piecemeal stuff.
(19:45):
And it has to be a very selective slice of it.
And let's throw a bunch of people out who we
now are trying to recall. I don't know if you
know this. They're basically willing to re implement Navy seals
who were booted or other special operators, and it basically
bunge the whole. He wouldn't take the vaccine thing from
the record, which makes a lot of people very nervously
Why you're getting all these guys back all of a sudden,
(20:07):
like you changed your mind on this stuff. But the left,
when you get into the honor and courage thing, that
is not a hallmark of the of the left traditionally.
It doesn't mean that there are not honorable people getting
harder to make that argument sometimes, but if you wanted to,
(20:30):
when you want to discuss it as a hallmark of
a large group of people, who's going to be showing
up for the veterans fundraiser, probably a bunch of people
who are Trump voters. That's the reality. I've been to
one hundred of these things. Even when they're built, they're
not even build politically, not even through my show or
something like that. They're just build very generically. It's almost
(20:53):
exclusively people on the right showing up solutely. This is
the revisionist history that you saw with the audio we
played to open the show from the Captain manbun There.
Whether we're going to reinvent masculinity is about two things. One,
it's it's about revenge. I think in some cases, I
(21:17):
think Captain manbun So wanted to be masculine and it
just never worked out. So now he's got to destroy
what he he never was able to achieve. But that's
a personal thing, and I'm throwing accusations there. I don't
know if that's what motivates his week behind. But the
other thing is, if they control what is masculine, anyone
(21:41):
who is appearing to be more masculine must be an
absolute terrorist and a problem. And the guy kind of
says it in there, right, And then they turn into
loaners who were running around and white supremacists and they
all moved to Courtelaine, Idaho, and it's all crazy and
that's going to be a heavy ironically enough, and I
don't see him getting there. But if this is where
(22:04):
they want to start, I'm here for it. From the
New York Times, if you ever wondered whether the Republican
Party sees itself as the party of men, I invite
you to rewatch the r NC Prime Time featured a
rousing speech by Hulk Hogan, a song by Kid Rock,
and a speech by Dana White. Then they give descriptors
(22:27):
of them chief executive of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. Those
were the warm up acts. Before Trump delivered his acceptance speech.
It also included a speech by Peter Teel and a
speech by Franklin Graham. And who was the woman who spoke?
There was a woman who spoke in there, and I
(22:49):
forgive me on I had the list in front of me.
But but those are the three you seeeson? Okay, but
what kind of men were featured? They're all rich and
powerful in a long time I'm fan of professional wrestling,
or as a longtime fan of professional wrestling, do you
believe for a moment that David french is along was
(23:11):
down with Hulkamania in the eighties?
Speaker 3 (23:15):
Right?
Speaker 1 (23:15):
Do you think he was cheering on Andre the Giant?
I don't believe you. I don't believe you for a moment,
But whatever. I loved watching Hogan as a kid, But
none of them are the kind of men I want
my son to be. White was caught on video slapping
his wife. Kid Rock has his own checkered past, including
(23:35):
a sex tape and an assault charge. Yeah, he got
into a fight at a strip club with another dude,
and I think the dude hit him, was his claim,
But there was I can't remember the whole story, but whatever,
Hogan faced his own sex scandal. Yes, because your allies
(23:56):
in the media got a hold of his tape and
published it, which led to them being sold for parts
you absolute goon. So yeah, this is They're coming at
it from a bunch of different directions, and I guess
a Whole Cogan and Kid Rock and Dana White are
(24:16):
everything that's wrong with it. And here's the irony. You
don't have to like any of them. You can have
a problem with that Dana White video a lot of
people do. You can. You can have a problem with
Whole Cogan based on steroid use, which you know, I
would understand that you can have a problem with Kid
(24:38):
Rock based on that haircut previously, whatever it is, but
that wasn't the totality of it. And this idea that
all of a sudden you're going to redefine it and
people like this idiot are going to be the arbiters
of manliness, and.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
That happens at the same time as the myths around
America that we grew up with that we as men
are expected to be protectors and providers are going out
into economy that doesn't really allow for that, especially for
working class folks and sort of like compounding on that.
You know, masculinity as a trope has been co opted
(25:17):
by the magarite is something that feeds into and exacerbates
the loneliness epidemic as well as the mental health crisis
that many face that end up leading to really destructive behaviors.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
So why is it, by the way, that when you
look at it, on average, you and your crew have
a much higher probability of being on a long term antidepressants. So,
I mean, where is the mental health crisis? He is
telling you that the current version of what it is
(25:48):
to be a man, or what people I guess would
describe it if you just asked him on the street,
leads to a bunch of loaners again with mental health
issues that are absolute scourges to society and probably need
to be rounded up and dealt with. I'm not exaggerating.
Listen to what he said. It leads to this epidemic
(26:09):
of loneliness and mental health crisis, or it leads to
woodworking or Ross's forge, right, which, by the way, that
explains why there's six extra acs around here. I didn't
know you were running a freaking kiln in there, so
but whatever, right, it leads to go into the gym
(26:30):
and get your gains in, or it leads to having
eight kids with your wife and moving to a few
hundred acres in the middle of Tennessee because you're a
tech guy who's got a bunch of money and you
can do that, And good for you and living that
country life that you always dreamed of, and you both
look immeasurably happy. And when The New York Times writes
a piece about how happy you are, a bunch of
(26:53):
bitter cat ladies, yes I will invoke that term, absolutely
lose their crap and claim that she is is literally
dealing with Stockholm syndrome and was ripped away from her
dreams at Juilliard like a slave. And I'm sorry, I'm
gonna reject that line of thinking, because you all are
(27:13):
the mental health crisis we're dealing with. And I think
that dude right there is probably the one suffering from
the loneliness epidemic. Maybe just maybe, I don't know, contemplate
and if you don't agree, what arm wrestle when we
get back hang on, let's see, well you know what
there we go? All right? All right, so this is
(27:34):
a week and a half ago, all right. So in
Arizona there was a wildfire that this one's called the Watchfire,
and I was trying to figure out the date because
they didn't put it in there. But they have just
made an arrest of the man that they say was
because here was the deal. So the fire destroyed let's see,
(27:55):
twenty one homes, four hundred people had to evacuate. It burned,
and three and a half square miles. So I don't
know about twenty three hundred acres twenty two twenty three
hundred acres. Why would you put oh, there's the acres. Yeah,
twenty two hundred acres. Yes, that's right. I can convert
square miles to acreage. It's a wyoming thing anyway. So yeah,
(28:21):
and there was a witness report that some protester was
burning an American flag and that's what caused it. But
you know, they were investigating, so they have arrested the
dude for it. They arrested the dude. His name Keanu Dude.
(28:47):
That is his legal name, Kanu Dude, because of course
it is. And why not how high do you think
he was with his buddies when he they convince him
because he had to have changed his name to that right, nobody.
You're not born Keanu dude, are you? Oh he's Apache.
(29:08):
Oh okay, I'm sorry, I'm just digest. I had to
click over the New York Post story, which had more
details than this. I'm sorry, I'm not making fun. I'm
not making fun of the Apache here. But everyone who's
part of the Apache tribe has a very interesting name.
So this guy's and not like you know, then, not
(29:30):
the in the Dances with Wolves scheme of things, but
rather the tribe's police chief. His name is Elliott Sneezy
and the chairman of the tribe. His name is Ronnie Rambler,
a Taro Ronnie Rambler. Okay, I don't know, maybe he
is Keanu dude, but anyway, Yeah, so they're all trying.
(29:54):
So he burned down part of his own Oh this
is yeah, this is on the reservation. So he literally
burned out a bunch of his own tribe members so
he could burn an American flag. I don't know if
it was over Trump or just America in general, or
like what the beef was. But yeah, up on the show,
we're going to talk about let's see yeah, yeah, yeah, okay,
(30:17):
hang on, hang on, and Johnson dude. What Mike Johnson
is an absolute loser, dude, the Speaker of the House.
I do not understand the ability of Republicans to seize
defeat from the jaws of victory on such a regular basis.
(30:38):
What is wrong with you? Why would people send you money?
I'll say it again, and I don't care if you
guys could do it. Some of you get irritated listening
down there on Hillsboro. Why why, why why should people
send you money? If this is what you're going to
do with it, you're going to use it to promote
an overall narrative or my Johnson is an effective Speaker
(31:01):
of the House. So I don't know if you know this.
They put together they are sumbold the Trump Assassination Task Force,
which I don't know if I like that name. I
don't know if I like that name, Trump Assassination Task
Force sounds like some of the Democrats have put together.
But whatever, right, So this is their January sixth committee
(31:25):
and they just announced who's going to be on this thing,
and what an absolute dropped ball. Democrat members include Jason
Crowe of Colorado. There is military background there, I guess.
And by the way, the decision making was not done
(31:52):
in the same way that the January sixth task Force was.
Right where Johnson said, all right, who do you want
on there? And in this case it would have been Pelosi,
And then when the names were provided, she went, no,
I don't think so, We're just gonna put these These
two people hate Trump more than anything on there.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
No.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
Hakeem Jeffries literally wanted Benny Thompson on the damn task force.
That was the only one, apparently that Mike Johnson rejected.
And that's probably because Benny Thompson, who was also on
the January sixth committee, proposed the denying infinite security and
government resources allocated toward bluahblah. It's it's a stupid acronym
(32:31):
that spells out disgraced. And it was a bill written
to strip Trump of his Secret Service protection. He did that,
I don't know about a year it now, not even
a year ago, like six months ago. So he was
not allowed. Other than that, they took all of them.
And you want to hear the sheer insanity. Oh, by
the way, here's the Democrats crow Korea lu Korea from California.
(32:57):
Madelin Dean, Pennsylvania, hula Han Pennsylvania, Chrissy Hulahan is a
nut job, Glenn Ivy of Maryland, and Jared Moskowitz of Florida.
And I did appreciate Moskowitz being one of the more
aggressive folks with the Secret Service director, but everyone was
(33:18):
and I still think it was by design on the left.
But I have a question, how is Corey Mills and
Eli Crane not on this If you don't know who
they are, you kind of do if you've been watching
anything on Twitter. So former Navy seals. One is a sniper.
(33:39):
The other dude is the guy who went to to
the actual site. That's Eli Crane and filmed the video
from the roof showed where the shots were, showed that
little room in the other building. That's actually you could
have stayed inside in air conditioning and still had line
of sight on this building. You know people who are
(34:03):
aware and are able to use their expertise to talk
about security failures. How do you not put people on
there who have the military background to understand how to
secure a perimeter. This is wild to me, and Mike
Johnson is an idiot. This was the opportunity to get
(34:29):
people who can go in there who are familiar with it,
Crane's film and stuff, and put people on this committee
who are actually qualified to be on a committee about
the failure of a security perimeter in this event, I
don't understand it. Even if you don't, you know, even
(34:50):
if you don't like the fact that, like Crowe I said,
does have military background. I don't know fully what it is.
I can't remember, but I want this is like watching
these one hundred year old senators ask Facebook how they
make money? Why do we always do this? And you
have the power? Now, Okay? Should he have rejected all
(35:11):
of the Democrats and just stuck the five who voted
with Republicans against what the Democrats wanted, you know, basically
pulled a Pelosi. You could make that argument he should
have done that, but I don't Getting away from that,
you might as well if you might as well put
Adam Schiff on this thing, and then to not include
(35:34):
members of Republican members of Congress who have real world
experience A former Navy seal sniper. I want to be
very specific because a lot of people think seals are
just you're all seals, and you're all seals, and you are,
but you have a special te Okay, you have a
thing that is that you do that perhaps maybe the
(35:57):
other guys in your team don't do right. So and
that's that's how you make an effective team. You got
a guy who's doing the breaching. You got a guy
who is a sniper. You have all of that. I
don't know all of the different ones, but I know
enough that that's a thing. So you have somebody who
is a former world class sniper and you don't put
them on this committee? What is wrong with you? You
(36:24):
have the guy who spent the most time thereafter, what
is wrong with you? You put some gypsy circus act looking
psycho from Pennsylvania on there who hates Trump. They're gonna
turn this thing into Wow, why would why didn't Trump
block the bullet for it hit the fireman? Right? Kind
(36:48):
of garbage? And this is this is, this is what
the Speaker of the House decides to do. Don't send
these idiots a cent? Right, And by what I mean
by that is whether you know it or not, leadership
in Congress basically they have their packs, right, they have
(37:12):
one in the House. House leadership fund is one. There's
a few, and you don't give a cent that Mike
Johnson Country because he doesn't know what to do with power.
He's an idiot. He is an absolute, blithering idiot if
he's going to think that this committee not having those individuals,
at least one of them, not having individuals on there
(37:33):
who understand the logistics. I remember yesterday when I asked
Boston Paul to sober up and call in because I
wanted to know what the standard because I think I know,
but I don't know, and I want to know how
it works when you are a local law enforcement officer
hav any interact with FBI or Secret Service for the
purpose of a presidential visit, because I couldn't believe it
(37:57):
when I heard the SWAT sniper team from Butler, PA
said that they had no contact with Secret Service that
day until after. And you don't stick the people, Yeah,
absolute puppy. Yeah, I'm sure somebody put them in another
room with, you know, lit a blow torch and said
(38:21):
you will do this. Who the hell knows? That may
be so angry when I just read that during the break.
So you're not investigating crap, You're not going to get
to the bottom of this, You're not going to figure
out what we need to do you're gonna make some
cursory recommendations that are obvious to me and dudes in
a coma probably you know, maybe in the future we
(38:43):
should not have the protect e shot and then task
people to figure out how to implement your mandate and
for and here's the other thing you're going to not accomplish.
Are you ready? There are a there are a swath
of individuals who don't think this was shearing competence. I know,
(39:06):
people like, how dare you would accuse people of that?
I'm not accusing. I'm explaining the reality to you. And
the reality is that there are a lot of people
who think this goes beyond just in competence, laziness, or
any of it. And it can. It can be more
than that, and it can be more than that intentionally
(39:27):
or unintentionally. And here's what I mean by that. Right,
there's incompetence like whoops, we forgot to secure that building
because we thought they were doing it, and then they
thought we were doing it and we forgot to talk
and whoopsie. Right, But there's also if a decision was
made that obviously transferred personnel to Pittsburgh for the Joe
Biden event, was that done with any sort of malice.
(39:52):
And then of course there's the Illuminati called and they
said shoot Trump right, all right, So everything in between.
So if it looks like you are not doing a
thorough job, and you have people when we watch the
committee hearings that we can watch asking dumb questions that
burn their five minutes that either you know, either of
(40:15):
the two reps that I told you about, Eli Crane
or Corey Mills would have known instantly so they can
get to the real meat of it, you know, to
get to the meat of things. That's why Mark Zuckerberg
didn't care when he was sitting in that Senate hearing.
They get ten minutes, but by the time they're done,
by the time they actually get to pass all the
(40:36):
easy questions, they're ten minutes is up. Whereas somebody who
has a real working knowledge like Mills does of setting
a security perimeter and what a sniper would look for
and what a sniper would exploit, and how he is
amazingly able to hold on like Spider Man, the sloped
(40:59):
rules that are so slowed they would be legal for
an eighty eight compliant wheelchair ramp. He's amazing right there.
He must have spider powers. You're not gonna get You're
not going to get to the real questions. And the
real questions are questions that Corey Mills and he Corey
Mills especially can ask and Eli Crane both seals, but again,
(41:25):
Mills being the sniper that he can ask when another
sniper is sitting in that chair testifying. Right, they're gonna
ask questions. They're probably gonna use a bunch of weird
military acronyms that I'm gonna have to go look up right, which,
by the way, there are some hilarious ones if you
ever really deep dive into it. I was getting into
it with an emailer yesterday, thought he was gonna acronymy
(41:48):
to death. But I remember some and you got Some
of them are hilarious. I love the FAPs of thing
and pms. Ah, those are military acronyms. Look abup. But
he's gonna know, he's gonna know what to ask. And
this is what you choose to do. Just absolute dufe
(42:09):
is how how after what you saw Democrats do to
that January sixth committee, even if you didn't want to
do the thing or you shut down all of their suggestions,
I understand rejecting you. You had to reject Benny Thompson,
the guy tried to have Secret Service removed. He has
a personal vendetta. You weren't gonna be able to overlook that.
But even if you don't do that, why you would
(42:30):
not put people on there that can really get to
the bottom of this unless you really don't want him
to get to the bottom of it. That's right, you
know what, that's absolutely roster. We had the X Files theme.
I know we do in there somewhere. I'm gonna have
to put that back on the button bar because I
know I sound like a conspiracy loom, but I'm left
(42:52):
with no other options. I'm left with no other options
than to not understand how you would not put the
people you have four hundred and thirty four other people
to choose from you absolute lunatic and you can't And
that's on both sides, okay, And you can't find people
(43:16):
with military experience, let alone the exact experience. What am
I left to conclude? All of you up there don't
want answers. Deep State people are right, and all of
those weird emails I get are now they're making sense.
(43:37):
Or you can do a thorough job, and the American
public might take seriously the work that you're gonna do.
You know what, I don't know what you do about
Mike Johnson, but you better do something quick. And this
is this is inex sxplicable. I'd love to hear him
(44:01):
explain himself, but he's going to busy himself with killing Joe.
Biden wants to remake term limits on this, on this,
on Scotis and then he's like, duh, oh my dead body.
Look I'm fighting for you. No you're not. You're an
absolute tool. And this might be the most resentful thing
that I've ever seen you do. Biden can't do that.
(44:22):
You guys can't do that that way. There's a constitutional thing,
there's a process for that. It's Kabooki theater. So you
will ignore this right here. This is shameful, and this
is the Republicans doing it, and the Democrats are laughing
at you. Benny Thompson was a sacrificial lamb. They got
(44:44):
what they wanted, and you know what, perhaps you got
what you wanted. I don't want to believe, but I'm
starting to We'll be back. You're going to uh, We're
gonna go ahead and get to get to those right now,
because one of these is absolutely delicious. Where is this all? Right?
(45:06):
Hold on? Sorry, I had to open up yesterday's prep packet,
which I was going to do during the break, but
then Ross and I talked about getting shanghaied. So it's
a thing, and you'll understand why here in just a moment,
so the I have that in the stack. Yeah, here
we go. Okay. So I don't know if you've been following.
Of course the Justice Department has or the excuse me,
(45:28):
the Biden folks and excuse me, Harris people. No, a
little button didn't work there or whatever. So the Harris
people and Biden all them, We're like, look, we're doing
more to crack down on the you know, the drug
trade in uh in Mexico than anybody else. And and
(45:49):
the reason is they arrested a couple dudes in the US.
El Mayo, not to be confused with El Miracle Whip. Sorry,
that was lame Ismael Zambada, who's kind of a big
deal for decades. They've been looking for this guy, right,
(46:11):
and he he has never been in prison, unlike you know,
l Chapo would get caught. They throw him in prison,
and then all of a sudden, he's got a secret
motorcycle tunnel under it, which is why he lives in Florence,
Colorado now in super max and probably will forever. So
that's good. And the attorney for Zimbada is he's telling
(46:38):
a crazy story. So how was his client just hanging
out near El Paso, Texas, specifically Santa Teresa, New Mexico,
and then authority is just able to descend upon him. Well,
according to the lawyer, his client got sharp kind of
(47:01):
he claims, are you ready for this? He claims he
had no intent to be in New Mexico, wouldn't go
to the US. He said. My client neither surrendered nor
negotiated any terms with the US government. Joaquin Guzman Lopez,
you know him as El Chapo's son. According to the attorney,
(47:23):
kid drugged, kidnapped, his client, threw him into a plane
in handcuffs, blew him to the US US, offloaded him
off the plane, at which point people are like, what's
going on, and then they went up and arrested this dude.
He was throwing the back of a pick up, forced
into the plane, tied to the seat by Guzman Lopez
(47:45):
and uh just ended up there and that's crazy. That's
like Ciicario. If you ever seen Cicario, or do you remember,
because remember Trump was saying one of the things that
you know, maybe we need to do, and it's and
it would probably never happened publicly, is send like sealed
teams into Mexico to grab these dudes and do exactly
(48:09):
what they did in the movie Cacario. If you've never
seen the movie Cacario one, don't watch the second one.
It's done, but watch the first one. It's a great movie. Basically,
it's a you know, some sort of joint task force.
This woman from the FBI, she gets pulled over to
it and and there, you know, there's got a bunch
of people working in the task force and it's not
always clear where they're from. And one of them is
(48:31):
a guy is a character, Venicio del Toro, And I'm
not gonna ruin who he is for you because it's
not necessary here. It's a really good movie. But what
they're doing at the beginning of the movie, and she's
trying to come to terms with after they had just
they had busted a house in on in the States
that was filled with dead bodies of migrants and drugs
(48:52):
and all sorts of stuff. It's pretty horrendous. And they
decide that they're gonna they're gonna go get the dude
they think is responsible for this, or one of the dudes.
And then there's another dude that they go to get.
That's more of the movie, but again watch the movie.
And so they go in standard suv. They're not wearing
patches on anything, and you know, they pay off some
(49:16):
local federalis there and they go in and they snatch
this dude. It's the opening part of the movie. And
then just drive them back across the border. They're like,
look what we found in Texas or wherever they came out.
I think they're out of Texas or Arizona or whatever.
But yeah, so like maybe it's that which is kind
(49:37):
of amazing. Can you imagine if the world's worst drug
lords or you know, murderous dictators, just all of us,
you know, who have like international arrest warrants, you just
like and just wake up and they're in a cafe
in Houston eating and panadas and they don't know how
they got there, and here come the police.
Speaker 3 (49:55):
It happens. You know, I'm stare in your compound. You
wake up in the bay Smith of the Alamo.
Speaker 1 (50:00):
What what happened? What's that bicycle? Whose bike is there?
Speaker 3 (50:06):
It's like Batman in the dark night. Yes, yes, he
goes to Shanghai and he gets yeah, and he drops
him down and got them. He's like, there's your guy.
Speaker 1 (50:14):
Wait looking at that. He's right there. Go ahead to
rest him. That'd be crazy, man. Just like who showed
up this week? Oh it's the you know, it's the
butcher ab of Bengali. He was We found him at Disneyland.
Why is he a Disneyland? I don't know. He claims
he didn't mean to go to Disney.
Speaker 3 (50:33):
He wakes up strap to the people movies.
Speaker 1 (50:38):
Gotta be amazing. That's amazing. Oh yo, what is that
flying around? No? Go away? Okay, yeah, I think the
Disney thing would be far funnier than the Alamo. I mean,
the Alamo is kind of sending a message for a
Mexican drug lord. But like, if you want to get
the dude who keeps feeding kids to to al gators
(51:00):
in the Philippines or whatever, and then all of a
sudden he shows up on the log flume. I'm here
for that, because you know, you get the picture. Can
you imagine how popular that picture would be for purchase
of him recognizing right on the downslope while everyone's arms
are in the air.
Speaker 3 (51:16):
Really splash mountain or whatever they're calling it now?
Speaker 1 (51:19):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that could be any log fluw do
the what the ball of America? I don't care. You
the one of Caroins, Yeah, let's get let's get the
Carolinas up in this thing. I'd be fantastic. Oh oh,
you're talking about kidnapping people. Yeah, but those people the
(51:41):
people flooding your streets with violence and profiting off of
the absolute invasion of your country, promoting it, running radio
ads in Mexico and Central America, running radio ads telling
people about relocation services, putting fly up at thetia's farmers
(52:02):
markets and stuff. These are things that exist that your
government is aware of that don't make it into the news.
And these are the people profiting off of that. So
if they show up on uh, you know, a roller
coaster over at Cedar Point, then whatever, Yeah, and you
(52:22):
got them all strapped down, it's perfect. What are they
gonna do? Jump? Absolutely nuts? All right? Eight eight eight
three four seven eight seven four. I don't know why
I find that story so amusing, but it's the I
just I would love to be a fly on the wall.
When he woke up, like what he's looking around? He's like,
(52:45):
look at a license places, say, oh, it looks like
New Mexico license. Oh my gosh, and then boom, you're
You're in custody. So all right, seven forty three. Uh,
let's get rased agic if he's ready to rock and roll,
and we'll get into the other story in a moment.
So this this this big drug lord that they caught
down in New Mexico. He claims, it's you ever see
the movie Sacario? I have not? How am I the
(53:08):
only one who's seen this?
Speaker 3 (53:09):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (53:10):
Are the Dark Knight? Right? Remember the Dark Knight? He
has to go get that dude from Hong Kong or whatever,
and he goes and like literally snatches him out of
the office building and drops him on the streets of
Gotham that they're wanting to get. Have you never seen
The Dark Knight?
Speaker 6 (53:25):
The parts of it really not helping you out here today?
Speaker 3 (53:29):
Am I.
Speaker 1 (53:32):
Sorry? I think so? I just you know what you
need to be strapped to? Something like in what's the
Roddy McDowell movie. I'm thinking of that really weird one
from the sixties where they strap him and make him
watch this stuff with the eye things.
Speaker 6 (53:50):
On clockwork orange.
Speaker 1 (53:52):
Yes have you seen that? I have? Okay, that's what
you need, but not with porn or whatever was on there,
but with like, you know, good movies and stuff. Yeah,
I do, all right, and you know what, you'd probably
like it because like your wife couldn't objectbably you got
stuff to do this weekend. I can. I'm strapped to
this seat. I have to watch these. I have no choice,
(54:12):
So all right, well, then carry on with your business, sir.
Speaker 6 (54:16):
Oh sorry, sorry I couldn't contribute, but maybe next time.
What goes up temperatures, what goes down rain chances and coverage.
Watching the complex right now of severe storms coming out
of northeastern Tennessee going through Johnson City, about to enter
western parts of the state in the mountains here over
the next couple hours and may try to get into
(54:37):
the triad late morning and come across the triangle. I
think they're going to weaken as they approach, so there
is a chance of seeing some of these shower thunderstorms
later this morning and into at least the mid afternoon
hours from west to east, So just the heads up
and if they hold together, especially for the Triad, could
be some stronger storms around lunchtime or there after. Upper
eighties for many of us who may stay in the
middle eighties and the Triad in points west Tomorrow will
(54:59):
start to see the heat built. So here we go
back to the low and mid nineties with eating it
seas close to one hundred. Going to see that again.
For Thursday and Friday, a real good chance will be
anywhere between ninety four and ninety seven degrees for daytime,
high small rain chances, and even into the weekend. I
don't see too much changing, low to mid nineties and
chances of rain in each afternoon, so no widespread rain.
(55:21):
Parts of the state have seen an abundance of rain
over the last couple of weeks. In Asheville they've had
over nine inches of rain this month and a surplus
for the year. We've seen quite a bit in the
Try and the Triangle a little bit more coming in again.
Some of these storms has come in later this morning,
especially to the west, could pack a punch, so maybe
some strong winds and heavy rain and then we'll start
talking about the heat more than we will with a
(55:42):
thunderstorm probably starting tomorrow and for the rest of the
week and into the weekend.
Speaker 1 (55:47):
Okay, all right, thank you very much. Movie guy. All right,
we'll talk in an hour. Thank you. You go, Race
Agic from the Weather Channel. Oh wait, all right, so
finally somebody else has seen Sakario. So it was Texas.
The base was oh, because they're out of Laughlin. And
then del Rio's the border town. Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
(56:08):
It's a good movie. Y'all should watch it. There you go,
all right, we'll be back. Hang on, is there anyone
who listens to this show and you think one hundred
percent of what Ross and I say is serious?
Speaker 2 (56:20):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (56:20):
We just got what did we get corrected on?
Speaker 3 (56:22):
Somebody send me an email let me know that the
basement doesn't the Element doesn't have a basement. Okay, Well,
as I mentioned in passing, which I mean, how they
get a bike down there though exactly right. Yeah, listen,
Madame Ruby doesn't lie. He is impeccable.
Speaker 1 (56:41):
Absolutely if in fact, if Mike Johnson wasn't a complete
blithering idiot. I just got an email from somebody saying
maybe he's got the case all buttoned up. Again, it's
not just the case because I've seen we've seen this
show before you put this. You put the seal sniper
on this thing because he can and talk to the
experts in ways that everyone else can't. Okay, he'll know
(57:05):
when they're full of crap. There's a reason that when
you see those stolen valor videos, who usually notices that
the dude in the mall with his flag patch incorrect
and you know, a slight deviation and where you know
on his lapel there who's busting them other military dudes
who had to wear that every day correctly, and if
(57:28):
they didn't, they get smoked. For the same reason that
you're going to investigate this, you need people in there
who have the requisite experience. So when they start in
on a government witness or somebody who was there that day,
or somebody who's in the chain of command, or somebody
was supposed to be running the com center where these
guys actually coordinated, I can't get my head around that
(57:52):
they know that when you start throwing acronyms out, whether
you're full of crap or not, this is easy. So yes,
and free, not base, but if you think everything we
spoiler Ross doesn't have a forge in his studio. He's
not making a sword right now.
Speaker 5 (58:08):
Yes I am.
Speaker 1 (58:11):
He's banging one of his toys on the counter, spoiler,
or he's making a sword, you know what. Believe whatever
you want, surf you.
Speaker 5 (58:23):
It shall not be in friends, shall not be Yeah, I.
Speaker 1 (58:27):
Guess if you're making weapons, technically it would fall under that.
So all right, yeah, so you know, breathe and you know,
question everything. We're fine with that.
Speaker 3 (58:38):
Very disappointed. That's the only hammering sound effect we have
in the in the system. Isn't that depressing?
Speaker 1 (58:46):
We only have the one?
Speaker 3 (58:47):
Yeah, I mean I searched, you just searched hammer right,
hammer hammering, myning, my yell against.
Speaker 1 (58:52):
Oh that's too bad. Do we have a sound of
an actual forge, you know, with the with you know,
like the blacksmith hitting.
Speaker 3 (59:00):
I look, that's my fallback career, so I'm doing it here.
Speaker 1 (59:03):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (59:03):
I have tenure. I've been here with eighteen years now,
so I can if I want to put a kiln
or a forge here in the studio, I'm allowed to
do so they can't do anything about I have tenure.
Speaker 1 (59:12):
Yeah, until you burn all of high woods down.
Speaker 3 (59:14):
It's my backup career, Blacksmith. Yeah, he burned the He
burned the whole business park. That happened on Forged and Fire.
He talked to him about it before the show. There
is a guy in upstate, New York who watched Forge
and Fire the show in the history chick fan swords.
I was like, I'm gonna make swords now looks fun.
So he builds a kiln in his uh yeah.
Speaker 1 (59:35):
And you know his wife, you know his wife every
day it was like don't.
Speaker 3 (59:38):
And like and burn burst from his forge, you know,
drifted away and they just happened to say something on
fire and that thing was the downtown of the town.
Speaker 1 (59:48):
Yeah. Yeah, that burned down, just one little thing. And
then his wife gave him and I told you so
and probably left. Ah. So yeah, if Ross wants to
and all of the business park down, he says, it's
his constitutional right. So who am I? Who am I
to argue? I'll tell you what's not. You're right to
(01:00:09):
derail a train for YouTube YouTube clicks, which a young
man in Nebraska's facing charges over. And he is not
the master criminal. He is not, by the way, grabbing something.
And then I just looked up at the clock and
literally had to sprint back. But that's how we We're
(01:00:31):
always working, even when you're not listening to us. Now,
how much we're working. Some of you would claim it's
fifteen hours a week. It's quite a bit more than that,
but I can tell you it's more than the Netherlands.
We'll break down this crazy graph. We already tweeted this
thing out about how much how many hours full time
(01:00:53):
workers work on average by country, And I always love
people's response. They're like, oh, wow, well, you know in
the US you work too much. So when you're looking
at other countries where they barely work at all, it's
just like, why wouldn't you want it to be the
other way? Well, it also speaks to innovation production and
(01:01:15):
what you're watching happening in Greece right now, where they're
going to go to a six day work week because
their productivity is so low. There is a balance there.
But I'll just put the numbers out. We could talk
about that here in a moment, but first I want
to talk about the the the YouTuber out in Nebraska
and master criminal. He is not He's seventeen year old
(01:01:41):
who makes train video he's really into trains. Okay, I
don't know if he's as crazy as that one dude,
that famous train guy audio, which maybe I should have
pulled that, but whatever, you know, if you know it,
you know. But he's pretty young in his career, and
by the way, his voiceovers really shaky, right, he needs
(01:02:02):
a lot of practice there, although I suspect maybe he's
probably not gonna be making train videos again. So he
lives in a town called Bennett, Nebraska, and Bennett is
like a lot of small towns. There's not a so
weird by Buddy from Nebraska. Literally just texted Vegas. He's
(01:02:23):
listening all right, time stop, I'm telling the thing. I'm
telling the thing. Man, hold on. Oh it's a different story, okay,
all right. So, like Bennett, Nebraska is like so many
of these little postage stamp towns out in the West,
in the Midwest, it's you know, there's not a lot
going on. And you know, Buffalo, Wyoming is uh is
(01:02:45):
where I grew up. It's not it's not a huge town.
It's like thirty five hundred people. Bennett looks to be
smaller than that. And so you gotta you gotta get
your own entertainment. By the way, Bennett is about a
half hour forty five minutes south of Lincoln. Oh, actually
more than that, probably an hour south. I'm just looking
(01:03:06):
it up on a map here, so you know that's
the trip over to the big city. I guess if
you want to do something, so you know the idea
that he gets fascinated because in Bennett, Nebraska, they have
a lot of coal trains that come through. I think
they have a plant, so it's feeding power station out there,
and so Burlington, Northern Santa Fez, I'm assuming the rail
(01:03:27):
line that comes through there, and so he gets really
knowledgeable with trains. But he just wasn't getting the juice
when he put his videos up because again they weren't
really well made. They weren't even really that interesting unless
you're really into trains, and then specifically into coal trains.
(01:03:48):
So I guess he sat around at the strategy meeting,
which is going on in his own head, and said,
all right, well, what can we do to go ahead
and pump those numbers up? Right? And he thought, you
know what if I get video of one of these
trains slamming into I don't know if he thought it
would derail. He kind of had to know as much
as he knows about trains because well, I'll explain the
(01:04:10):
scenario here in a moment, but I want you to
listen to the video of this train derailing. It's not
super high speed and thankfully nobody was injured. But basically,
the train slammed into an empty Loan coal car, right,
one of those black coal cars you'd see trains pulling.
(01:04:33):
You know, weighs I don't even know what it weighs
crap ton, but obviously, if you're a train that's moving,
hitting one of those is gonna is gonna be problematic.
But it also derailed because it moved the track the
train was on on the primary track that it tried
to force the train onto the secondary track the spur
(01:04:56):
line or they have a word for it. I think
it's which it's a repair it's to rip a rip
line or rip track, and it mean it's a repair track.
So you know, and you know how you know you
have the mechanical you know arm that you've seen a
hundred times where the villain switches the tracks and those
(01:05:17):
things are generally locked down. They're not real easy to manipulate.
But the one in Bennett was one of the older
ones where it was simply a padlocked box. And then
once he was able to get it open. This is
all alleged by the way, once he was able to
get it open, he was able to manipulate it back
so that the train also, in addition to hitting this thing,
(01:05:39):
had to it made a quick jaunt over to the track.
So hitting it at the speed the train was traveling,
coupled with hitting the coal car, it caused the train
to leave the tracks. Obviously, because it's trying to make
you know, like that the thing up and where was
it Philadelphia where you had that that Amtrak wreck that
(01:06:00):
that was from hitting a corner way too fast. Well,
this creates just a little s, little half s corner thing,
and that's what the train actually probably derailed from. But
it was predicated on the fact that the track was
selected over to the rip track where this thing was sitting.
And I'm telling you all this because I want it
(01:06:21):
to be abundantly clear that whoever did that absolutely had
to know that it was gonna be bad. Well, lo
and behold, here is this young man standing by and
just happened to be filming filming in that direction, filming
at that exact moment so he could capture the quote
(01:06:45):
unquote insane, insane footage, the insane footage of the derailment.
Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Oh my god, Oh my god, Oh my fricking god,
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (01:07:04):
Aren't they okay? All right, so lunatic in my opinion,
here's how he got busted. And and this how people
don't know this is beyond me in the same way
that the guy who ditched his own plane. Immediately folks
are like, wait a, say you're wearing a parachute you
(01:07:27):
happen to have He also took he disengaged something within
that serrus. I'm not sure what it was. But also
he had set up cameras, but specifically cameras on the
underwing and on on you know, some of the support beams,
so that he had like all of these cameras filming
him emerging from the plane with his parachute and jumping
(01:07:49):
out while allowing it to crash into He couldn't have
known where it was going to crash. It could have
hit some hikers, it could have hit a highway. Was
the fact that nobody was killed or injured is amazing.
But immediately they were like this is so weird. Nobody
flies like this, even if you're a YouTuber, and so
(01:08:11):
he was immediately caught. So what happened is the train derails.
All this happens. You see him run over where Now
the guy's in the train are out of the train
and they're walking around, probably a little daze, but thankfully
nobody suffered any significant injuries. And he's standing there the
whole time and he's just because it's cutting through his
(01:08:32):
little town. It's got nothing to do. And investigators show up,
and investigators he's questioning them. He's like, what happened? Do
you know what had They're like, we don't know what happened,
yet we're looking into it. And he's like, I think
what happened. Does somebody remove the padlock from the line
switcher and then switched it over to the rip track
where it collided with the blah blah blah And the
investigators looking at him like how would you know that?
(01:08:56):
And he's like, well, you know, I know a lot
about trains. And then I'm sure the instigator looks down
the track and he sees this kid's tripod and it's
a tripod that is pointed directly and if you see
the video, okay, Russell, send a link. Ount If you
(01:09:16):
see just the angle of the video, you realize there's
zero reason to point a camera here. If even if
you were trying to film a train going by, you
wouldn't stand right next to the track, which is dumb
because you're doing this. You would stand back and you'd
put like the big panorama shot on so you could
get this train movie moving by. You Sure, the last
(01:09:38):
thing you would do is to shoot it down this
little alley where the two tracks emerge and and uh
and separate from each other, because if you wanted to
film that part of it, you would walk down there.
But you wouldn't if you knew that something bad was
gonna happen. So within five minutes they're like, this kid
totally derailed the train. Man, so he's charged. They say
(01:10:02):
the damage was three hundred and fifty thousand, which actually
I as almost downright affordable. I guess, I don't know.
I thought it would be more, not just the damage
to the coal car. And what it happened is the
coal car had been damaged, but in normal course of stuff, right,
and so they had made a decision on a previous
(01:10:24):
train to remove it, put it on the repair track,
and then let the crews get to it. When the
crews got to it, and then they would have put
the track back over. Now I am curious why or
how the system wouldn't read that if there's a digital
way that it would know that there's because like a
lot of tracks, if there's something going on, it indicates
(01:10:48):
within the cab. I had a buddy who was who
worked for in Minnesota, who worked for Burlington Northern, and
it was fascinating, Like the rules stand the rules, like
these guys they're not allowed to have their phone out
in there, they're not allowed to be doing and they
just they have to just be watching the track doing stuff.
(01:11:08):
But the technology and stuff that they have, especially that
they were outfitting with the the the UH the engines
that he was operating, was was pretty cool to learn about.
But so I don't know how it works with the
coal trains or all of that, or maybe there was
some indicator and they were slowing down. I don't know.
But then they went back and they they realized that
(01:11:33):
there was video of this kid's like car coming in earlier.
Because there's close caption footage, they can't see where the
actual switcher stuff is happening, but they can see him
driving onto the side road right around the time that
you would have had to do it in between trains.
So like the evidence is overwhelming, but the fact is
he did it for YouTube content. As social media is
(01:11:56):
a cancer, man, Ross, let's stop doing social media.
Speaker 3 (01:11:59):
You can always tell when these things are like fake too,
like he's trying to because why is the camera there?
Like you see these big elaborate videos like I saw
one on X right where it's like a woman is
painting her wall and it's being filmed from a distance,
so you see the entire room and it's it's in
the landscape positioned perfectly, and her kid comes in and
knocks her up the ladder and she falls on the
(01:12:20):
couch that the paint on it, and then she.
Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
Saw that video. She's like, oh, I'm on covered in paint.
Speaker 3 (01:12:26):
Now I'm gonna get your kid.
Speaker 1 (01:12:27):
And it's like, come on, what are you saying? That's
not real? Are you that little that little that little
turd came in there and ruined the couch.
Speaker 3 (01:12:39):
Man just set it set up like a game of
mouse trap.
Speaker 1 (01:12:41):
Just it was straight up because I remember the all
the paint happened to flip back almost like she was
holding it.
Speaker 3 (01:12:47):
Yeah, and you see constant videos like this where something
crazy elaborate will happen or something very heroic, and you're like, well,
why was the camera there? Like you said, why is
it in four K's perfectly filmed? And the first thing
I do is I immediately go to the comments trying
to find somebody to say this is bullcrap man, and
like it's so depressing because you have to scroll and
scroll and scroll until you find somebody who understands that
(01:13:08):
this is not real.
Speaker 1 (01:13:09):
Yeah, some of the most blatant ones. It's more depressing
to scroll forever and go. Is everybody stupid? Right? Am
I surrounded by stupid? Which we are because sometimes we're
surrounded by stupid. But yeah, yeah there's some I'll tell
you the uh oh one of the ones just that well,
you know what, all of them are just the worst.
(01:13:30):
Like I could try to land on one, but it's
just they're so fake and it's just the amount of
and the acting is so bad on some of these,
like even if you're not paying attention to what's going on,
the acting, Holy hell, how do you not know? This
is fake. Now. I've seen some good ones admittedly where
I'm like, I think that's real and I have to
(01:13:51):
really kind of dig down into it, and I'm like, well,
you know what, if it's not real, that's you guys
did a very good job. But you know, generally, I
want it to be on things that are not consequential,
like do I care that she ruined her couch?
Speaker 6 (01:14:03):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:14:03):
Do I care that she tried to insult my intelligence? Yes?
And that's where people get upset about this stuff. You
know what we should task the Europeans with going through
trying to get to the bottom of it. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:14:16):
I don't think they have the time.
Speaker 1 (01:14:17):
No, like just their free time, man, I don't. They
don't free time. It's so busy, man, they are, they
are so busy. This map is an endlist is insane. So,
by the way, the average full time worker in the
United States, and remember this number got adjusted because of
what we consider full time actually adjusted has been adjusted
(01:14:42):
over the last ten years. That being said, in the
United States had to look this up because for whatever
reason it's not in this story is forty three hours,
all right, So that is good. That is a kind
And again this can include somebody who holds what is
a full time job, and then they can also add
secondary but you're also having to account for people or
(01:15:03):
considered full time but are working thirty hours. So this,
you know, it averages out. But we average on the
high side there. The only European nation who has a
higher average workload per week is Turkey, and that is
primarily because Turkey is agriculture driven. And you'll notice a
lot of the countries that do have high numbers. It's
(01:15:25):
agriculture which tends to have a higher average, and Turkey
is it. Serbia at forty two, Bosnia forty one. Now
Greece is at forty. However that is due in large
part to their fishing industry and military or not military.
(01:15:49):
What is the breakdown here? Hold on, they say armed forces,
but it doesn't have to be armed forces. It can
also be like un kind of thing where Greece has
a very outsized number there. But Greece, when it comes
to things like service and sales, clerical support, technical and
(01:16:10):
professional jobs, the number is very very low, which is
why they're talking about going with this six day work week,
because when it comes to things that are the big
productive moneymakers, drive GDP for a country Greece has a
real problem. Will you get over in the European Union
on the western side of Europe and ain't nobody doing nothing? Okay,
(01:16:36):
In fact, let me see what's the Romania is the
last country in the five spot to average forty hours.
After that, everything in Europe is less than forty hours
for your average full time worker. Poland is at thirty nine,
and the list goes down from there. But let's get
to the ones that we're making fun of the other
day where I just I pointed out that these idiots
(01:16:57):
over there, Oh crap, I'm sorry, looked at my clock.
Let's take a break. We'll come back get into it.
This is a Fox News report. Nearly half a million
working age Massachusetts residents lack English proficiency. I saw the departed.
It has to be more than that. How many people
at ross Would you see what the population of Boston
(01:17:18):
is and then give me half that number? All right,
hang on, we're gonna have a more accurate thing. And
I'm being generous just limiting this to the city of Boston,
by the way, but you know, we'll go with what
we know. So, yeah, four hundred and fifty thousand Massachusetts
residents have limited English proficiency, working age, blah blah blah,
(01:17:39):
all right, population, Oh Boston.
Speaker 3 (01:17:43):
An again, population six hundred fifty seven hundred and six.
Speaker 1 (01:17:47):
Oh, well that's the problem. Boston Metro type Boston Metro
or actually I can just look it up with the
on our radio metro dm A or however you want
a word it. DMA is just a fancy word we
use for the market. Like you know, Raleigh is not
(01:18:08):
just the DMA, Greensboro's not just the DMA. Obviously got
triangle triads. So justin metro. Well, actually, just what's the
population of Massachusetts because it's pretty bad everywhere, but I
don't think most of them were speaking English, especially not
in and around there. And then have you guys heard
(01:18:29):
Boston Paul call in what this is on my never
any question to crap on Massachusetts for no discernible reason.
Speaker 3 (01:18:39):
Well, this is four point nine million, all.
Speaker 1 (01:18:42):
Right, so we'll cut that in half. So yes, it's
far more than that. Oh this is working age. So
then you got a go half and then maybe take
another third off it's still way more. So you know,
get some some like classes or something up there. Have
you guys thought about that, learned to speak English. I
(01:19:03):
don't know it would be helpful. It's very helpful in
this country. I know you're not supposed to say that, hey,
it would be very helpful learn to speak English, but
it is. If any country you move to, you should
probably probably get a minimal proficiency with whatever. The standard
language is.
Speaker 3 (01:19:20):
Always confusing to me, Like, I don't know why you
would move somewhere and not want to learn the language.
Like to me, it would seem like a very essential
thing to learn, right, Like if I Italy, it should
probably learn Italian.
Speaker 1 (01:19:31):
Let me let me let me tell you how much
better my travels have been in Latin American countries since
I started to learn Spanish. And even though I don't
speak it very well, I understand and read it great.
And it's like this weird thing. And I got buddies
who have done this and it that is so useful
just going to a Mexican restaurant. Do you know what
(01:19:53):
I'm saying That you don't necessarily need to have that,
but it's so helpful in so many different ways, especially
what they do. When I was in Colombia, almost nobody
speaks English and Colombia unless you're in a tourist area.
So whereas some countries you go, you go to Mexico,
there's a lot of English, a lot of Central America,
(01:20:14):
there's a lot of people learn English because they have
a lot of call centers and stuff that serve the US.
But but yeah, why would you not want to? And
why wouldn't the residents of Boston want to? I don't know.
It's very strange to me. So sorry, just one of
these things I saw scanning the New York Post. Oh,
by the way, somebody sent me this, So I got
a new cure for baldness. They're screwing, They're just messing
(01:20:37):
with people at this point, come on, a new solution
to the bitter luck of baldness. Scientists say that male
pattern baldness may be able to be cured by are
you ready, drum roll, please rubbing sugar paste on your head.
They're screwing, they're messing with you. They're if you believe that,
(01:21:02):
I'm here to tell you that I we just done
our own research. We just double blind and uh yeah,
very good pure reviews. I had Ross ree you know,
run it so and he's my pure It works best
in the woods generally the more mountainous and remote, the better.
You want to rub the sugar paste all over your
(01:21:24):
head and then not hang your food up and maybe
like cook some food and then but have the sugar paste,
and you'll be cured of worrying about your baldness very quickly,
because they will literally scalp you the bears or near
the beehive. So and then you can have a head
(01:21:44):
full of bees and just be like, no, yeah, that's
my new look. This wild people buying this stuff. Oh yeah, no,
absolutely no, I just got no. It's the path the
male pattern baldness. The cure is to rub sugar paste.
This brought to you by the sugar industry. I'm here
(01:22:06):
to tell you it only works in the middle of
the woods. Yeah what is this?
Speaker 2 (01:22:16):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:22:17):
No, no, no, I know somebody to send me a list
of all the things that's been So are you bald?
Speaker 5 (01:22:22):
Sir?
Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
Guy? Who just send me the email? And do you
just whenever you hear one of these, I guess there's
nothing wrong. I guess you're not losing anything rubbing sugar
paste on your head. You're out some sugar and some
I don't even know how you thicken it.
Speaker 2 (01:22:33):
Here.
Speaker 1 (01:22:33):
I guess you use cornstarch or something. But I heard the.
Speaker 3 (01:22:36):
Best thing was he wanted to buy a Hayes for
share of a T shirt. Really you put it right
there like a do ragged, just moving and like your
hair will grow like get yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:22:45):
Yeah, there are Brett Michaels. There's a reason they wear those, right.
It does because it looks bad ass, right or or
people don't think you're bald anymore is another theory that's
out there. I've heard about both.
Speaker 3 (01:23:03):
Because you lift so much, you got your sweat profusely
and it helps, you know, pick up the sweat.
Speaker 1 (01:23:08):
Yeah, and you should use steroids too, because that does
not at all cause hair loss massively and is a thing.
So all right, well, who am I to argue? Did
you do a study?
Speaker 3 (01:23:21):
Yeah, it's peer reviewed.
Speaker 1 (01:23:24):
I can't argue with that. It's now that I know.
Speaker 3 (01:23:26):
Yeah, my, my, my peer Harbinger fifty also from Twitch
reviewed the study.
Speaker 1 (01:23:31):
Wait he's bald.
Speaker 3 (01:23:32):
He's bald, right, I mean that's your opinion.
Speaker 1 (01:23:35):
It's he has his picture and then he photoed. He
photoshopped himself on your fake beer or something? Was that him?
That's beer?
Speaker 3 (01:23:42):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
He he photoshopped himself. He would be high. It would
be taller than two cars stacked together. He didn't even
do a good job. You're telling me that's the dude
who peer reviewed it.
Speaker 3 (01:23:54):
It's a triple reviewed.
Speaker 1 (01:23:59):
Who's the other one?
Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
Hugs TV?
Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
They're huggs okay whatever? And then Kylon News, is that
where he's off today?
Speaker 3 (01:24:06):
Peer reviewed?
Speaker 1 (01:24:07):
Yeah, he's not just on vacation. I heard he's not
here this this week, So I don't know. I think
this is pretty sketch. Now, sometimes sometimes on the on
New York Post, they do have properly researched in peer
reviewed stuff. This from the Journal of Psychosexual Health. I'm
(01:24:30):
sure you all subscribe. A new study says that women
can live longer if they are willing to commit to
a minimum of one but on average one and a half.
So I guess through the month six Whoopee sessions to
(01:24:51):
go seventies game show on you. It's it's right here.
It says women aged twenty to fifty nine who do
not get at least one and a half sessions in
per week, so averaging six per month, have a seventy
percent increase of what is known as all cause mortality
(01:25:14):
an earlier death. So, ladies, if you want to live longer,
researchers at the University of Walden, which is in Minnesota,
analyze national Health and Nutrition examination data, put it next
to surveys and found this very important thing. So look,
it's not us, Okay, it's not for us. It's for
(01:25:36):
you because we care about you so and we hate
to see that. You know, that headache that you have,
the thing where you dot that's probably because of and
you're just perpetuating it. So I would encourage you to
check the research here. And this isn't some weird Bangladesh university.
(01:25:59):
This is this is you're in the.
Speaker 3 (01:26:00):
United It's also peer reviewed.
Speaker 1 (01:26:01):
Yeah, peer reviewed right there.
Speaker 3 (01:26:03):
One and a half though, is like it's a weird number.
Speaker 1 (01:26:06):
Well yeah, they're just saying you have to have that.
Speaker 3 (01:26:09):
Would that would suck?
Speaker 1 (01:26:11):
Yeah yeah? Yeah, oh yeah yeah yeah right yeah, don't
take that. Well, it depends who's done. I'm sorry that's
going in the direction I didn't want it to, but
I what is a half really? I mean again, it's
for ladies, it's for your health, and we just want
to pass because I want you. I want my listeners
to live as long as possible, so that you keep
(01:26:33):
listening and help. And the man in your life he
does too. It's part of his basic chauvinistic nature, is
what you know. The people at the Kamala Harrison would
probably tell you, but it's not it's it's it's caring
because we care, because that's what good men do. Eight
forty four raced Agic is here. You have thoughts on
(01:26:56):
that study, sirh I bet you don't.
Speaker 6 (01:26:58):
Know what's the side and well now called yeah side
behind everything right?
Speaker 2 (01:27:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:27:03):
And also some idiot says if you rub sugar paste
on your head, it'll cure baldness. So I was showing
the difference between real science and not real science. I
encourage anyone who believes that to do it in the woods.
So nobody here, yeah, well, no bears like to rip
your scalp off from the Oh yeah that too. Yeah.
(01:27:24):
Now you're not bald technically anymore because you can't grow here.
All right, what's what's going on, sir uh?
Speaker 6 (01:27:30):
Well, speaking of coming out of the woods, coming out
of the mountains, a big area of rain and thunderstorms
now getting into Johnson County, Carter County, and just west
of Ashville, and heading east now weakening a bit, but
still some stronger storms with wind and thunder and lightning
and heavy rainfall.
Speaker 1 (01:27:47):
You're gonna hit Boone, isna. Yeah? Actually, oh man, I
hope it doesn't destroy something there that suck anyway, I'm sorry.
Speaker 6 (01:27:54):
Go ahead, Yeah, Well, it may be in Boone right now. Yeah,
it's pretty close to it, yes, And it is coming
east and it's gonna hold together here for a bit
and get into the triad here Wilkes County into Cadwell
Alexander County first and then roll east.
Speaker 1 (01:28:09):
It'll probably week.
Speaker 6 (01:28:10):
In a bit, but still over the next couple hours
in through early afternoon and then spreading east across the
triangle as they'll rain and thunderstorms and probably weak in
a bit as these systems usually do that come from
the overnight hours. And then we'll still continue to see
a threat for some showers thunderstorms later today. So this
kind of cluster will come through last hour or two
(01:28:31):
and then end, and then later this afternoon there may
not be much rain left at all, and it'll end
from obviously west to east, since it's coming in for
the west still in the mid upper eighties today. Then
we'll start hitting ninety tomorrow, low to mid nineties for
the rest of the week, maybe the upper nineties of
the triangle later in the week with the heat and
Desea's going above one hundred. So we're gonna lose on
what's been a very wet July, and as we get
(01:28:51):
into August. I think we'll get hotter, the humidity is
gonna stay and probably see less rain, but it heads up.
This rain coming in here in the next couple hours.
Try it first, and eventually the Triangle will have some
impacts with the heavy rain and maybe some gusty wins.
Some of these storms were warned on they were severe
storms earlier. Let's see if there's any warnings left now,
no warnings, but certainly could have some heavier downpours and
(01:29:15):
some strong wins holding their intensity at least briefly here
as we had toward lunchtime.
Speaker 1 (01:29:19):
All right, sounds better. And what's going on in Rhode
Island with the locusts, So we're good there. All right,
I did see that you thank you, sir, appreciate it.
We'll come back with Jeff Pellinger hanging well. Good morning.
Speaker 7 (01:29:29):
Casey wall Street started the week with a volatile session.
When the closing bell rang yesterday, the major averages were
all within about a tenth of a percent where they started.
Right now, the futures are mixed. S and P and
NASDAC futures are modestly higher. We have the Dow futures
down twenty nine points. Two class actions have been filed
against David's Bridle by employees and customers of the chain,
(01:29:51):
which was hit by two ransomware attacks earlier this year.
The plaintiffs accused David's failing to protect personally identifiable information
store systems. A lawsuit that accuses Wells Fargo of misleading
investors by claiming to have a diversity hiring policy will
go forward.
Speaker 1 (01:30:09):
The legal action says.
Speaker 8 (01:30:10):
The bank interviewed many minority job applicants that it had
no intention of hiring. A federal judge declined to dismiss
that securities class action, originally filed in twenty twenty. New
feature being introduced on Instagram meta platform says users will
be able to create their own chatbots powered by artificial intelligence.
(01:30:30):
Companies unlucky enough to be targeted by hackers feeling the
full effects of inflation. IBM's annual cost of a Data
Breach report says the global average cost of a breach
is nearly five million dollars, ten percent more than last year.
In casey, if you're a tech worker with the flexibility
to work from anywhere in the world, a new digital
(01:30:51):
nomad report from Digital Citizen Solutions says the best destination
for remote workers is Spain.
Speaker 1 (01:30:59):
Casey. Okay, well, I know what it's not the Rhode
Island beach front with the locust infestation.
Speaker 8 (01:31:05):
Good Lord, that's right, that's all those pictures.
Speaker 1 (01:31:07):
Oh jeez, all right, I have a go on, Jeff,
appreciate it. Okay, I have a good day. Although rost
does it surprise you that God is rendering the plagues
upon New England? Or has this just been a long
time coming?
Speaker 3 (01:31:19):
I know, no, it's to be expected. I mean, were
you surprised?
Speaker 1 (01:31:23):
No?
Speaker 2 (01:31:23):
Not.
Speaker 1 (01:31:23):
I'm like, oh, New England's getting the biblical plagues. I
could see that. I see that. Also, when you're leaving
New England, at least you go to visit, don't look back,
or you turn to salt. So a lot of people
don't know that. So just news you can use. Yeah,
the locust plague and Rhode Islands.
Speaker 6 (01:31:43):
Anything like this, in my life.
Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
The beach goers is running like Jaws. Is there guy
wondering where his girlfriend Chrissy is. That is so random
that I know the first girl eating in Jaws is
named Chrissy. Anyway, so we were you saying, now, hold
on that dude had hair.
Speaker 3 (01:32:06):
Russia sent me a picture the photos I saw. It's
quadruple peer reviewed.
Speaker 1 (01:32:12):
He okay, but the first photo is one of your
T shirts over this dude's head.
Speaker 3 (01:32:16):
I'm gonna post the photos and the evidence.
Speaker 1 (01:32:19):
And then on he Then it's a picture of him
with but there's no way to prove that he didn't
have that hair.
Speaker 3 (01:32:25):
First, that is my twitch colleague hugs TV okay, give
him a follow. And in the first photo you see
him covering his head with one of the Hayes for
Sheriff T shirts.
Speaker 1 (01:32:35):
There's not a before that's not.
Speaker 3 (01:32:37):
The second one is the reveal in his hair is full, beautiful, shiny,
look at that. And the next one thumbs up, big
old grin. It says ten to ten would recommend to
a friend. That's that's the science. So I know this
is sugar. You want to know, you want to know
the sugar in your head. That's a bunch of bunk
that you want to know how I know this is bs.
Speaker 1 (01:33:00):
Yeah, go ahead, because I've wiped a part of my
body with your shirts on the regular. You don't do
it enough, and there's no hair emerging there like this
guy's sporting.
Speaker 3 (01:33:11):
It's just the normal. You're not doing it enough. If
you really commit, you'll be like sasquatch down there everywhere.
Speaker 1 (01:33:18):
Well, it's that's where I choose to rub the shirt
the whiskey. Shit.
Speaker 3 (01:33:22):
Hey, I appreciate the support.
Speaker 1 (01:33:24):
I steal it, thank you. I steal it from people. Yes,
all right,