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August 6, 2024 95 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
On this fine Tuesday morn as everybody freaks out over
what Debbie's doing. Debbie now already having some impacts on
the Piedmont region. Current Vice president and presidential candidate Kamala
Harris had a rally for Thursday, Yeah, for Thursday, and

(00:22):
added the new VP selection whomever that may be it
was supposed to attend. That has been rescheduled. I think they.
I'll tell you, I'll look and see if they picked
a date already, but that's been rescheduled. So you know,
if you're super excited about that, that's not happening anymore.

(00:45):
And I'm sure that other things will stack up as
we draw closer. And it looks like that Thursday into
Friday at the current speed, excuse me, current speed is
what we're going to be looking at now. As far
as the running mate, there's a couple. It's really like
a couple, but maybe it isn't. And here's what I

(01:05):
mean by that, Like, over the years, there's been some
some fake outs which I would do. I'm not gonna be.
I'm not gonna lie to you. I wouldn't. I would
enjoy messing with the media, but that's just me and
I'm a horrible person. And then I and then that
decision to want to do that was reinvigorated as I

(01:27):
was watching the Josh Shapiro stuff on on the Twitter
this morning, So I don't know. Okay, So here's the deal.
The rumor mills are it's the Pennsylvania governor and it's
the Minnesota governor. And boy, oh boy, Tim Walls has
always been a weird dude. Like I knew Tim Walls

(01:50):
when I was still broadcasting in Minnesota. Obviously wasn't the
governor at the time, Tim Poalenni was, and then the
the trust fund kid of the Dayton Slash Marshall Fields
family was then governor after he claimed he'd never do
politics again because he's so hated being a senator. But
that's another thing. Then we moved on to Tim Walls,

(02:11):
and how do I say this? He didn't strike me
as nutso as he obviously has ruled up there. And
I got because I got a lot of Minnesota friends
still like you would not believe what our governor's doing,
Oh my gosh. And then I tell him what Cooper's doing,
and then we chortle. So there's a couple, but there's

(02:33):
a couple of things going on that point to those two.
One is you had the you had the super the
super duper black suv contingent up around walls. Are they
moving him? Do they transport him? Josh Shapiro's the governor
of Pennsylvania. The capital is Harrisburg. He is at a

(02:55):
time when he'd normally be at the capitol, but he's
back in was it mcgumber. It's a Philly suburb, but
it's the really nice one where his home is. That's
where he's you know, his actual home is. And of
course the media is parked across the street, right, They
got all the news vans there because they want to

(03:16):
see the moment if, in fact he is that the
contingent of Secret Service protection, which immediately installs starts hauling
him around, and so oh in the mayor of Philly
basically set at Shapiro, but also could be all part

(03:36):
of the fake you don't know, don't know, Okay, So
with that in mind, the media who's all parked there,
they're not hiding, they're not in gilly suits, they're not
using a satellite imagery or even a drone, right, they are,

(03:57):
in fact, that is so nice. Sorry, somebody jacked with
my my button bar thing. All right, well, we'll have
to get to those here in the next segment until
I can figure out what the heck's going on there. Yeah,
so like they're not hiding, they know they're there. And
the video that's going around is how the Shapiro did

(04:20):
what he always does. He returned home to his home
and right in his front driveway there's a new basketball hoop.
It looks pretty new to me, and he and the
Golden lab and some sort of doodle or something that's
a rescue and his son are out there just shooting
hoops like they always do. And the media is positively

(04:42):
giddy that they've caught this organic moment of the Pennsylvania
governor direct, you know, fifty yards from all of the media,
just you know, getting his cute dogs out and shooting
hoops with his kid. And isn't that normal compared to
a guy who told his seven year old to shut up?
And then of course it's being presented as organic. It

(05:02):
called me cynecal and I don't know, maybe Shapiro does
shoot hoops with his kid. They weren't able to produce
any other video that I saw, and at that level.
And yes, this even goes for Trump. I just roll
my eyes as to whether any interaction with family is genuine,
so I tend to I tend to ignore it. You know,

(05:26):
did did Vance tell his seven year old to shut up?
I believe that to be more organic than the governor
of PA, who, during a time when the governor is
normally in Harrisburg, felt like he so needed to come
and pet his cute dogs and shoot hoops with his
son across the street from the media versus somebody telling

(05:48):
somebody asking a question, like you know in him telling
a story that just seems so normal to most people.
But again, this is my cynicism. I hate to offload
it on you, but basically I'm not buying it because
I'm a I'm a big fat jerk, I guess so.

(06:09):
Uh AnyWho, So that's uh, that's where we're starting this morning,
and I want to get this audio, but unfortunately I
have to fix this next gen, which I may do
with a hammer and a big one like I don't know,
like a mini sledge or something. So let me do this.
We'll take a break. And uh, also, we got to
I better do a correction from yesterday, which unlike a

(06:33):
lot in the media. I will do happy to do it.
I want to make sure that you're getting the most
accurate information. And it has to do with with the
uh with the the Kamala audio we played you yesterday
and if you don't remember it, it had this one
about the bus and then the word salad. Okay, so

(06:56):
we will get to that. I'm gonna handle this and
we'll regroup in a few And it's here on the
CaCO Day radio program. I complete complete my thought here
about all things Democrat nominees. So we don't know which
one of them it's going to be. It's interesting because
the logical choice, the most logical choice, is Pennsylvania. Except

(07:20):
and if you remember, we were here for the moment
when CNN was doing the thing during early speculation where
they were sitting around very normally talking about I don't
think we did rossh. We didn't rip that audio. I'm
almost sure we didn't. I think I explained it because
it was going on literally in the middle of the show,
but they were just sitting around and like, I don't know,

(07:44):
two weeks ago and they're like, yeah, Josh Shapiro, Pennsylvania governor.
And then one of the panelists is I you know
he's Jewish. He said it more subtly than that, or
he said it would create some additional complications, and then
everyone just nodded their head like they understood, and it
was clear what they were talking about is Josh Shapiro

(08:07):
may not sell well to the you know, all the
kids taking over Columbia University and all the others, which,
by the way, they say they're going to do it again.
We'll get to that story. It's the all.

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Important left wing death to America and the Jews.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
That's to America and the Jews.

Speaker 2 (08:23):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yah, yeah, they're part of the electorate.

Speaker 1 (08:25):
Yeah, they don't feel that they'll be And I like
how they're just like I've heard it say, they're like, well,
there's equally the same amount of people on the right
or don't like you. There's a lot of them. It's
I'll tell you what it's. It's pretty wild to me
how open a lot of people are. But it it's
not mainstream, do you know what I mean. It's not

(08:47):
treated as like CNN sitting there treating it going, oh yeah,
well you got you know, you gotta carve out it.
Isn't it interesting that in all of these countries, whether
it's in Germany, whether it's up in Canada, whether it's
in the u K. Right now, which is absolutely on fire,
we're gonna have to I don't I didn't want to
touch this story, but we have to get to what's
going on because they're running around arresting people for Facebook

(09:09):
crimes right now in the UK. And if you don't
know what's set all that off, it's a really really
tragic story. But also it all of these governments. Was
it France too?

Speaker 3 (09:24):
Right?

Speaker 1 (09:24):
They did a coalition in France? Didn't Macrona have to
basically because of the way that they, you know, works
from a parliamentary standpoint, the what you would see as
the Democrats, I guess, had to go out and strike
deals with the death to Hamas people, or at least
their version of it in all these countries to maintain
power and also do some really sketchy stuff about elections

(09:47):
that had literally already taken place. But they've had to
form these coalitions, and it's happened in all of these countries, France, Canada,
UK for sure, Germany I believe it did. And I
think what was it Italy, they were talking about it.
I don't know if it's came to pass yet, and
so it is inarguable that the left has moved further

(10:08):
left unless they're going to ignore that and then when
the next votes called, they won't have their little cabal anymore.
You know. Up in Canada, it's even more nefarious because
there is no set election date. So like because of
the coalition that was formed and it's large enough with
all of the far far left, Trudeau doesn't have to

(10:31):
call for an election for a long time, and he's
not going to until probably another year unless something comes up.
There's a lot of strategy because they want the maximum
amount of time for that pole there or whatever his
I should probably learn to pronounce his name. Opposition dude.
They want as long as possible so that they can

(10:52):
scandal him. It's really wild, man. So when if you're
Kamala Harris and you guys are looking at who you're
going to pick, and you recognize that there's a whole
swath of individuals that if you pick Josh Shapiro will
be problematic, and you'll talk about it like it's normal
on CNN. Don't try to compare that to you know,

(11:13):
Aryan groups or whatever. It's just not the same because
I promise you that the polling place up in Quarterlein
and Idaho isn't exactly a hotspot or an election turner,
probably not even in the state of Idaho. Plus, Kamala
Harris's husband's Jewish and a big fan of babysitters, which,

(11:35):
by the way, Ross did. If you think about this,
Kamala Harris is Doug m. Hoff his first marriage. This
is the story that came out. His first marriage dissolved
because he knocked up his babysitter. You know that Joe
Biden was the babysitter right for Joe and his first family,
she was the baby, so you know they're very pro

(11:58):
babysitter over on the side. But regardless, regardless, the biggest
stumbling block, the biggest stumbling block, I think, and I
think it's probably clear, is is Kamala Right. We played
that audio yesterday, we had some thoughts. I'm gonna play
it again for it and it's just a couple examples.

(12:19):
Here she is on the tarmac right when there's the
most recent Here she is on the tarmac when the
or no, I'm sorry, the other one's more recent. Here
she is on the tarmac early Friday morning talking about well,
now I know what she's talking about, but here here
is that audio, and people are like, what what are
you talking about?

Speaker 4 (12:37):
This is just an extraordinary testament to the importance of
having a president who understands the power of diplomacy and
understands the strength that rests in understanding the significance of
diplomacy and strengthening alliances.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
This is an incredible day, Oh dear God. And then
you know, in another and then there's another thing where
she's talking about being unburdened by what has been And
I didn't realize until yesterday she was talking about your money.
How many of you were less burdened than you were
twenty four hours ago with your retirement account. Doesn't it
feel good to be less burdened? You not have to
figure out how to spend it. You have to figure

(13:19):
out what you know early retirement, right, you should consult
a retirement expert. We have very fine retirement experts that
advertise on this show, but you know, make sure they
have that certification. There you go, there's my plug. So anyway, yeah,
and people looking at that as just one of many examples,

(13:41):
and then there's the really creepy bus comments, and she's
in it. She's not trying to change mind. She's in
a room with people that are firmly in her camp.
So she's just talking about nonsense. Man.

Speaker 4 (13:51):
You know what also excites me? What I'm among the
many things I'm excited about electric school buses.

Speaker 2 (13:58):
I love all drinks.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
School buses.

Speaker 4 (14:02):
I just love them for so many reasons. Maybe because
I went to school on.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
A school bus.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
Raise your hand if.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
You went to school on a school bus.

Speaker 1 (14:14):
What are you talking about? And then the dude at
the end who's given the choco choco chip reaction like
when Biden's doing his thing. Now ros your theory is
she's drunk, right, I.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
Don't want to know, Well, it was drunk or just stupid?

Speaker 1 (14:27):
Okay, we'll be either or or you know, wait, hold on,
hold on, I got a third one for you from
The Atlantic. Kamala Harris's viral moments are fun to watch
because they show a serious person having well fun. She
hasn't just reset the presidential election. Her oddball quirks and
charms matched the cultural moment, so did you can know?

Speaker 2 (14:49):
It feels more like the joker, but oddball, the joker, oddball, right, Charmie.
I saw a video somewhere poster where it was like,
you know, the Joker, right before he blows up the hospital,
and it was Kamala walking out to one for buses
during last campaign and she's just laughing at nothing.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
Was she in the middle of the street with a
button that didn't work, had a just saying just saying, yeah,
that is kind of a an off putting scene. Unless
you're the Atlantic, then it's uh, then it's a quirk.

Speaker 2 (15:14):
No, No, she laughs at like nothing all the time.
That's like and once you see it, you can never
unsee it, Like she just laugh on charms.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
You're gonna see a lot of the same stuff that
you saw during twenty sixteen, twenty twenty, anything that's tried
and true, whether it's the Shapiro thing where you know,
get like these uh his leftists on they're like, look
at it. It's just a regular guy gets the gets
the golden lab out plays the ball with his kid
right across the street for the media and not in
the backyard where he could totally do it. But yeah, yeah, no,

(15:46):
that's totally organic. Let's spread that around or and then
we'll go, oh, look at that, and I bet Trump
never plays ball with his kid, even though like a
week ago they did that. You know, when Trump was
in the cart following the well, there's more a week ago.
But when he's in the golf cart after and you know,
you see a lot of these videos come out where
he's playing at one of his clubs, Other golfers see him,

(16:08):
he tends to talk to him. The person in the
golf cart playing golf with him is his son, Baron.
You could clearly see him. So I don't maybe golf
doesn't count as playing playing ball with your kid and
there's no golden labs around. Do you remember the do
you remember the month long freak out over the fact
that Donald Trump didn't have dogs? I remember that. Remember

(16:30):
that in twenty sixteen, they're like, could you vote for
a minute, he doesn't have pets, and then they ramped
up to where like he murders pets every morning when
he gets up. Well, another one is you have to
you have to let everyone who's freaking out and has
TDS right now. You got to let them know that
they're not alone. You're not alone. And adds how everyone

(16:50):
else feels. So The New York Times was back at
the well with the uh the moonbat preppers, which are
my favorite, by the way, right, I don't remember. I
wish there was some video audio I could play, but
it's written here. I'm sure there will be. And if
you don't remember what this is, twenty sixteen, Trump's about
the time he secured the nomination. They were doing stories

(17:12):
where they were interviewing like, you know, mystic crystal moonbats
who live out in the woods for artistic purposes, who
all of a sudden decided they got to prepare for
the end of the world, right because day one Trump's
hitting that button and global thermal nuclear war breaks out.
And I always love these for two reasons. One the

(17:33):
abhorrence by the individuals who are doing the prepping of firearms,
which is great, and I can take inventory, by the way,
if you're one of these moonbats in and around my
neighborhood where there's a lot of them. Like local elections,
ain't nobody I ever voting for. We're gonna win. But
if you guys feel the necessity two prep and you won,

(17:59):
don't change your mind on the Second Amendment, that's fine,
you know, as principal position. Even if I disagree with it,
that's fine too. I like the chili mac mrs. The
there's a jalapeno burder thing, which is you get that
and then you just kind of break it up. That's
pretty good. Ross you have any requests for MREs from

(18:20):
moonbats who don't like guns, because that's how that's gonna work.
Have you ever eaten MRIs? You've had an opportunity to
dine on some of those meals ready to eat?

Speaker 2 (18:29):
I have had one?

Speaker 1 (18:30):
Yes, Uh, what was you remember? Cheez tortalini? That one's
pretty good. I don't know. We used to have a
lot of MREs for like hunting camps, so I've eaten
a lot of these damn things. So yeah, if you're
one of my crazy neighbors who abhors guns and but
you feel like you have to prep because Trump might
be president again, uh, that would be good. A stair

(18:51):
away from any of the seafood. There's a tuna one
that's not good. I'm just making recommendations. This is not
self serving at all. So you know there's a pro
you know there was somebody who makes their own You
can seal food really good if you know what you're doing.
It's pretty crazy watching some of the people that do
it all on their own because I know me and

(19:13):
I just I would have trust issues with that, but
ironically I would trust you know, the company making it
for the military, which I don't know. Government's government, right,
But like you can pretty much do that with like
feasibly ross if you got good at it, you could
make your own MRIs of nothing but olive garden stuff.
That would be amazing, right, just the nukes are flying,

(19:34):
you're in the doomsday shelter with the fam and chicken Alfredo. Again, absolutely,
what are we doing here? So but I don't have
the skill set for that, but some of you do,
so that's good. Let's see. Yeah, stick with the beef
and chicken. Stay away from lemon pepper tuna if you could,

(19:56):
that'd be great. Thank you very much for that. All right,
let's go in to this. Now, why would I think
that maybe there's a possibility, not because Trump's coming in,
but because of listening to Jamie Raskin. Now you know,
Jamie Raskin obviously is a feckless member of Congress. You
can usually spot him in hearings because he's he had

(20:17):
a cancer diagnosis, so he where's like a do rag.
It's very easy to spot. I'm not going to hack
on the guy for that. I am going to hack
on him for being a complete and utter lunatic and
telling people this which I'm about to play for you
at the same time that everyone's mad at Elon Musk
because he was talking about, Hey, you know what, man, Yeah,

(20:38):
civil war is going to be inevitable if you don't
stop this. And look, Oh my gosh, can you believe
you said that? Can you believe you said that? Here's
what Jamie Raskin said. Are you ready? I hope you're
sitting down. This will make you upset.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
What can be put into the Constitution can slip away
from you very quickly. And the greatest example going on
right now before our very eyes is Section three of
the fourteenth Amendment, which they're just disappearing with the maud
as if it doesn't exist, even though it could not
be clearer what it's stating, and so you know, they
want to kick it to Congress. So it's going to
be up to us on January sixth, twenty twenty five,

(21:12):
to tell the rampaging Trump mobs that he's disqualified, and
then we need bodyguards for everybody in civil war conditions,
all because the nine justices, not all of them, but
these justices who have not many cases to look at
every year, not that much work to do a huge staff,
great protection, simply do not want to do their job

(21:35):
and interpret what the great fourteenth Amendment means.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
All right, before I tell you what that is, ross,
how do you think that would go? It's inauguration day.
Trump's get ready to do the walk and Jamie Raskin
and his fellow Democrats are standing by with personal bodyguards
and they refuse to let him take the oath of office.
How do you think that pans out? On that?

Speaker 2 (21:57):
Violence?

Speaker 3 (22:00):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (22:00):
You think violence? Maybe two factions who have already coalesced,
because there's going to be a lot of Trump supporters
there in Washington, d C. Obviously if it would be
an their inauguration day for him, Yeah, I think that
ends horribly and for all the people that are hacking
on Elon Musk. And I mean this seriously. I think
if you want to kick off a maybe not a

(22:21):
civil war on par with what we've had, but an
absolute pandemonium, it would be it would help to disintegrate
in the same way, by the way, in the same way,
by the way that when they were talking about Trump

(22:41):
refusing to leave and then getting the military out there
and doing all that stuff, that too would have kicked
off pandemonium. But there were no indications he was going
to do that other than to try to utilize many
of the same tricks and tactics that Democrats have used
over the years, which when they weren't working, he took

(23:01):
his ball and went home. But if Jamie Raskin and
Democrats do want to play it again for you to
listen to their plan, if they were to do this
in Washington, d C. I would be fearful with what
would happen, because now you've got to figure out where
alliances lie, who's technically in charge of the military to
give orders to do things that violate pass Cooma tatis

(23:24):
which I can never pronounce, but you know, basically the
utilization of our military on US soil more so than
just national guards, because they, you know, essentially might be
controlled by individual governors, which turns into a whole messy thing.
I couldn't think of something that would be more profoundly
able to kick off an extensive period of violence, and

(23:47):
it would put shame to the summer of peaceful, mostly
peaceful protests, and the way he talks about the way
everyone laughs, let me army with what the fourteenth Amendment,
third section says. No person should be a senator or
representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President,
or hold any office civil or military under the US

(24:10):
or any other state, who has previously taken an oath
as member of Congress, or as an officer of the US,
or as a member of any state legislature, or any
executive or judicial office of any state, to support the
Constitution of the US, but shall have engaged in insurrection
or rebellion against the same. So this is the insurrection thing,

(24:30):
which has been roundly rejected by various courts, including the
Supreme Court. And they're back at this, well you know that,
well it was an insurrection there because look at that,
like two of the people had quasi insurrection charges. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

(24:52):
They also had a bunch of charges that were just
ruled illegal by the Supreme Court. So, you know, deciding
that if you're Jamie, ask you that this is so
cut and dry, you're literally willing to surround yourself with
armed militia, even if the militia happens to be sworn
members of our military, to stop the peaceful transfer of power.
Who's protecting democracy here? So now that you know what

(25:15):
it is, listen to this again and tell me how
you think this works out.

Speaker 3 (25:20):
What can be put into the constitution can slip away
from you very quickly. And the greatest example going on
right now before our very eyes is section three of
the fourteenth Amendment, which they're just disappearing with a magic
wand as if it doesn't exist, even though it could
not be clearer what it's.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
And I want to be clear, he's talking about doing
an insurrection much more than Trump, who again tweeted out,
you know, do things peacefully, regardless of what you think
he did say, there's a timeline there. And Trump wasn't
down there in the Capitol with anybody. He didn't try

(25:57):
to seize power there, Jamie would Ammi Raskin is talking
about literally is an insurrection.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
Stating and so you know they want to kick it
to Congress. So it's going to be up to us
on January sixth, twenty twenty five, to tell the rampaging
Trump mobs that he's disqualified, and then we need bodyguards
for everybody in civil war conditions, all because the nine justices,
not all of them, but these justices who have not

(26:24):
many cases to look at every year, not that much
work to do, a huge staff, great protection, simply do
not want to do their job and interpret what the
great fourteenth Amendment means.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
I'm not being dramatic here. That's one of the most
terrifying things I've ever heard a member of Congress say.
I'm not being dramatic here. And maybe there's some other examples,
but that's a roadmap for something that Raskin thinks is
perfectly logical. Now do I think that he could get
enough Democrat I don't, but I don't know. I would

(27:00):
like to think that Jamie Raskin, who has a history
of just saying random stuff, and they're trying to play
it off like it was a thought exercise. No, you
just painted a roadmap for what you think you can do.
And when he talks about kicking it to Congress, what
he's talking about is Supreme Court saying this is not
what the Fourteenth Amendment says. You're insane. But if you

(27:22):
want it to say that there is a process that
you Congress and then the states can go through to
change the Constitution to say basically whatever you want within reason.
There are some ways, there are some things you can
but you can't do it through just having you know,
a majority vote plus one. You have to go through
the amendment process, which, as you know, is such an

(27:43):
arduous process. I don't know that we could ever do
an amendment in this country. Again, which some people point
as is saying the system is broken, But Jamie Raskin
was talking clearly about no, no, no, no, no, we'll barricade
ourselves in. What is he going to do, which is
that's buy and mar right now, that's a Burma baby.

(28:07):
That's wild, that's dangerous, and it is far scarier than
anything that Elon Musk Is or Trump has ever said.
The only reason it's not as scary as it could
be is Jamie Raskin is but a lone member of Congress.
And if that was a Republican, I would assure you
that the media would be out asking every single other
Republican if they agree with Jamie Raskin, and I bet

(28:29):
they're not asking a single Democrat, which is weird. Our
word of the month. Weird anyway, six forty nine hang
on very same stories that we see every time a
hurricane gets nearby continue to permeate. In fact, if you
lost your one hundred million worth of cocaine, it has

(28:51):
now washed up on the beaches of Florida, so you
lost sight of you of your blow. They have found it.
I have to assume, because we do this story every
time there is a hurricane. Right, there's some beach in Florida,
and generally you can kind of predict where roughly that

(29:14):
gets just absolutely littered with piles of cocaine. In this case,
it was the Florida Keys. As the storm you know,
obviously was doing the Gulf Coast thing, so that was
closest to where it was pushing it out. Yeah, but
I guess you lost that. Go claim it at in
the Florida Keys. I'm sure they'll hand it right over
to you to show ID I have to assume there's

(29:37):
crackheads just waiting near the beach. It's Florida. Man. Is
that too cynical of me? Because I know that every
time this happens, the cocaine washes up. And I was
when I was in DC doing the broadcast. We interviewed
Tom Holman. He had some dudes from like Border Patrol
and whatnot who was still friends with. They were walking

(29:59):
around and I remember it was off the air. We're
having a conversation, and I understood that the dudes, uh,
he was down in Miami. He was head of the
Miami office where I can't remember his name, but whatever,
And I had to ask, I'm like, how come, Like
how much blow are you guys?

Speaker 3 (30:17):
Like?

Speaker 1 (30:18):
How much is hitting the beaches on the regular that
one of he goes by? And why is that? Because
I think a million dollars worth of cocaine If I'm
the you know, the cartel, I'm not happy about that.
So why does it keep happening? And he was explaining
kind of intricate detail because they partner with Coastguard for
like an interdiction unit. Like there's buoy's of cocaine just

(30:40):
floating around it. There's so much of it. I mean,
you know, I'm not going to give you the number,
but it's a lot. It's a lot lot, And I
don't remember if it's one hundred percent accurate, but I
think it is one hundred percent accurate. In the millions,
did floating around, and they like they essentially mimic like
diving markers, crab booies whatever, and then they sink the

(31:02):
cocaine with weight and then they come along with the buoy,
so they you know that one guy will get it
halfway there and then they'll you know, they'll be out
in uh in international waters wherever, right on the edge
of it, and then somebody, I guess in the Miami
Vice speedboat comes by and grabs it. But when the
hurricanes coming and you got to floating around out there,
it's you can break away from its tether and find

(31:26):
its way to the beaches. Twenty five packages seventy pounds.
That's what a million dollars will get you right now.
And what's crazy is they logo this stuff too, so
they immediately know whose cocaine it is. They just can't
really do anything unless they want to, I don't know,
fly to wherever this cartel is, uh drug the leader
and then bring him to a breakfast join in El

(31:48):
Paso kind of like got done with that dude, El Mayo.
He just wakes up in the US, got some uh,
let's some scrambled eggs in front of them. They are
you it's the cartel leader. I guess we're taking you
into custody. But that was just the little dream we
formulated on the show. Here, I'd like to celebrate if

(32:08):
I could, the worst people in the world, and that
is the bots and activists. You need to understand that
there are swath leaders or leaders of swaths of individuals
who literally go on and stir crap on social media

(32:30):
within the world of politics. And I think you understand that.
And what you hope is you have a few people
and then organically supporters start picking it up. And that's
generally how it works, right. You just need to get
a few in there to stir it and start the narrative, like, hey,
here's the talking points, and then people who are you know,

(32:50):
terminally online, we'll pick it up and run with it.
And if you remember when we were talking about and
I posted something that ended up getting quite a bit
of engagement on the on the old Twitter, and it
was about the predictive search algorithms right where you go
any type attempted assassination of and then it wouldn't it

(33:13):
wouldn't give you Trump. And the talking points were for
a bunch of a bunch of trolls to run around
and go, we'll just hit enter loser and then it's there.
Although ironically that was thrown out the window when people
were searching for Trump hitting enter and then it gave
them common results last week. And also, you don't understand
how algorithms work. And I had people that you know,

(33:36):
where I tried to engage and it's just not worth
it because you just point out, You're like, look, shouldn't
predictive analysis, which is something that was created to make
it quicker to search, shouldn't that provide you using Okham's
razor ramone whatever, I don't need to get corrected this morning.

(33:56):
Okham's raisor ramone. Using that, shouldn't it go?

Speaker 3 (33:59):
All? Right?

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Is it more likely that people are talking about the
astemp the attempted assassination of Trump two weeks from the incident,
or the attempted assassination of Andrew Jackson, who was the
first president with an attempted assassination, And like, people with
a straight face are like, no, no, you don't understand

(34:21):
how algorithms work. And I'm I think I do. I
think I do. That would be the most useful. Now,
if you want to go with the conspiracy that is
with it is it was. It is in the best
interest of Google to make your search process slower because
it can serve you more ads. I'll get on board that. Basically,
they's got their handslap for being a monopoly kind of.

(34:44):
One judge did the other one's like, no, nothing to
see here. So everyone ran around all these little trolls
on the Internet and they're just like and and and
they were just proving completely wrong and if you if
you presented them with it, they would just laugh. And
that's the level of discourse that we haven't politics now,
and it is the least useful discourse because there's no
intellectual honesty there. Straight up, if you make an argument,

(35:07):
you're not being an a hole about it. I'll listen
to it. Convince me, convince me otherwise. And I have
absolutely been convinced on stuff. I've been convinced on stuff,
And even if it's not one hundred percent. The death
penalty is a good example. A friend of mine who
was convinced by a lawyer friend of his kind of

(35:28):
explained it. And it does give me pause. Not all times.
I still want to shoot the nine to eleven mastermind
out of a cannon until he is what was the
term ross super dead? Super dead?

Speaker 3 (35:40):
Right?

Speaker 1 (35:40):
We want to go a super dead for Khalid Shaik Muhammad.
I don't know what that is, but I'm here for it.
But also when you get into the standard, you know,
death penalty trials, I think it's a strong argument to
point out that it's the totality of everything that the
government can throw at you versus you and either you're

(36:00):
appointed attorney or whatever you able to muster as a
private citizen doesn't mean he did it or didn't do it. It
just means that that's very David and Goliath. And we've
especially when you see the corruption that people are willing
to do in the furtherance of justice, whether it's all
the Trump trials, the Jay sixth stuff, which again I'm

(36:22):
not opposed to you prosecuting people who are assaulting police
officers and sticking it to him because I think you've
crossed the line with physical violence. But when you're when
you're throwing a grandmother for praying in front of an
abortion clinic in jail for a half decade or whatever
whatever it was she was facing a decade, I have

(36:43):
to ask myself, is this political so like, now I
have a much more nuanced thought on it. That's how
this is supposed to work. But that, of course is
not how it works. Now, how do I know? They're
completely full of crap? Even though I knew the moment
that they were posting all this stuff. Hell, would you
look at that? Google told House Republicans that various bugs

(37:06):
prevented information about Donald Trump from auto completing when users
tried to search for information about the assassination attempt. So
Google's own people, Google has said that exactly what people
said was happening was happening, and that it was wrong.

(37:26):
Now is it a random bug? Didn't Mark Zuckerberg just
fess up to the seventh? It was the photo, that's right.
There was a glitch that kept the photo of Trump,
you know, that iconic photo with his fist in the air,
of being able to be shared on Facebook. Just dio whoopsie,
And I'll say it so you don't have to. It's
so weird how all these errors go in this one direction.

(37:51):
And I think you get a little semblance of it
when you realized. You remember when Elon was first in
Twitter and he was looking over the code and they're like,
you have no idea what's in here. There could be
stuff buried in here so deep that until it manifests
and we're able to target it, you just can't even
you can't even purge it. And and you know, they've

(38:11):
made a lot of progress over over the time that
he's owned it, but you know, you get one mift
TDS suffering code er, you know, eight years ago, screwing
with the algorithm, and and that's kind of stuff that'll
be in there. And they'll never admit that because it
would show that they don't have control over their own product.
But they will say it was a whoopsie. Well, yeah,

(38:35):
I always had a glitch, man, I just had a glitch.
And again, the glitches all seem to go in this,
uh one direction, which tells me you got you got
rogue employees. You've always had rogue employs, and now people
are just calling you out on your garbage. So yes
to all of you trolls on the internet, even though
you don't care. Uh they're the everyone was right and

(38:57):
Google admits it. Uh Now the specifically, here's what they
say the glitches. The company said that they have built
in protections around political violence. So because somebody shot Trump.
That's political violence, and we can't have it out there.

(39:18):
Here's the thing that is such a foreseeable thing. If
you're sitting in a meeting at Google, and you know,
you get the brain trust there, and I'm not even
a coder, right, but I can project and prognosticate things.
I do it every day, you know, with Raskin's cut
and other stuff. It's part that analysis is part of
what we do. I would have sat there and raised

(39:40):
my hands, all right. So anybody who does something to
a politician violence, commits violence against a politician. We're not
going to allow that stuff to populate searches. What if
somebody assassinates president? That's the logical question. And then they

(40:04):
would tell you, well, no, that's not what we mean. Well,
apparently it is. And also, I don't believe you because
the Nancy Pelosi hammer story was everywhere. It was easily searchable,
easily searchable. J six stories about people and members of

(40:26):
Congress fearing for their lives were everywhere. You're telling me
that this glitch didn't catch any of those, but you know,
globbed on to the Trump story. I don't believe you.
I think that I'm I think that you have employees
that screw with your stuff because they think they can,
and why wouldn't they think they can? And hell yeah,

(40:47):
maybe even you know, not rogue employees as much as
people in management positions, going wink wink, not done. Now
that's I can't prove that, but you asked you tell
me what's more likely bunch of supposedly really smart people
who were unable to think that one day somebody might
actually assassinate another president, which has happened multiple times in

(41:10):
this country. Right We've had four presidents killed or they
just forgot to say it, or that somebody is doing
things that they probably think they can do right because

(41:30):
they have to. In the same way that those trolls
rolled in with absolutely disingenuous talking points going, you don't
understand how algorithms work, and you don't have to understand
a bit of coding to think that a more useful
product is one that does what you wanted to do
versus one that does all the other things. How frustrated
have you been trying to search something on Google's probably

(41:51):
once a week where I'm just insane, Like, we think
of a story and it's usually a story that's not
going to be positive for whatever the current you know,
liberal talking points are, and I'm like, didn't we have
this thing that happened? And then I'll you know, I'll
throw it out there. I'll throw it out there, and

(42:11):
you know, the ross will be like Ross, didn't we
talk about this thing? And other than ross and I
not being able to remember exactly when it happened because
I'll think something was three months ago and it's three
years ago. It's crazy. I'll start searching for because I
want to get the details, and it could be incredibly
hard to find things that were I remember there being
big stories and it's like, how does that stuff get

(42:32):
memory hold within a supposedly unlimited storage, right that is
the Internet? It is it is essentially unlimited nothing. That's
why they say, you know, once it's on the Internet,
there's nothing you can do. You did your only fans
for six months, and now every time you get a job,
people google your name and it's you know that, it's

(43:00):
almost it's almost impossible to wipe. And yet you know,
big stories will just find themselves unsearchable. So look, there's
there's bigger issues. But yeah, I did understand algorithms. I
think they're lying about what exactly happened. But I would
point out it all goes in the same direction each
and every time, all right, eight eight eight nine three

(43:21):
four seven eight seven four, And that is that extends
to AI. So you want more, you want more, absolutely
political prosecutions and or people going after various entities Elon
musk Ai Grock is now the target of state's attorney

(43:43):
generals or however you say that a bunch of Democrats.
Now I noticed Josh Stein need to sign onto this.
Not yet, I'm actually surprised. But ultimately they're saying that
Groc's out there giving misinformation for the election. I'm sorry,
have you tried the other AI that Don't get me wrong,
I've seen examples of GROC that is clearly not clearly

(44:05):
not giving accurate information. It should be abundantly clear to
anybody that AI is not a reliable source at the moment.
It might be a starting point, but it's not a
reliable single source for things. You have to go figure
out what instructed that AI. So if an AI is
instructed by what it sees permeating, like if Google's AI

(44:26):
is instructed by what permeates with predictive search results, I'm
not saying that it is, but if that's the sourcing
it's using, then it's going to be wrong. The head
of the Democrat Party up in Wisconsin was giving false
information about Wisconsin's voting laws and GROC. One of the
things that screwed up was the replacing somebody on a

(44:49):
ballot and the dates that were necessary. And it was
clear that it had sourced statements by the head of
the Wisconsin Democratic Party who had given erroneous information and
social media posts. Well, that makes sense. If you're AI,
You're like, who should I ask? And I should ask
somebody who's in political power in this particular state. They

(45:10):
probably know you. Glad you grab that information and represent it.
But you'll notice that these attorney generals for these states
are not asking for a review or apology or a
process of the other ais, which, if you remember, we're
making female black Asian Nazis right and then giving erroneous

(45:33):
information about stuff, all sorts of stuff like Donald Trump
wasn't nobody tried to kill him, nothing happened. Re collapsed
on stage, had a medical issue that still to this
day is something that you'll get that is erroneous information.
And according to the state's attorney generals. The only way
to go ahead and solve the problem. Are you ready

(45:55):
for this is to fix AI so that it will
only when it comes to information about elections. All the
AI will do, rather than trying to provide it is
direct you to a website that's controlled by Democrats. It's
absolutely wild. They say it's a nonpartisan. It's clearly not
Go look at it. Go look at it, because if

(46:22):
they can't control the information, that's a problem. If they
can shame the AI people into saying, well, no, if
you want any information about that, you have to go
to this website, then they control the single source of
information right there, and that's what they're trying to do.
All of these defenders of democracy, along with Jamie Raskin,
which yes, is searchable and does seem to me to

(46:46):
be I don't know. In support of political violence is
immediately searchable, but I don't know if Google fixed it,
so I don't I don't know. And if you don't
know what Jamie Raskin said, hell, I'm gonna play it
one more time for you.

Speaker 3 (46:58):
What can be put into the constitution.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
This is a congressman has to do with the do
rag because he had the cancer, so he's easy. I
just want this is a visual thing. I'm not hacking
on the dude for cancer, but I just you know
who this lunatic is.

Speaker 3 (47:12):
What can be put into the Constitution can slip away
from you very quickly. And the greatest example going on
right now before our very eyes is section three of
the fourteenth Amendment, which is insurrection disappearing with a magic
wand as if it doesn't exist, even though it could
not be clearer what it's stating. And so you know,
they want to kick it to Congress. So it's going
to be up to us on January sixth, twenty twenty

(47:34):
five to tell the rampaging Trump mobs that he's disqualified
and then we need bodyguards for everybody in civil war conditions,
all because the nine justices, not all of them, but
these justices who have not made right.

Speaker 1 (47:50):
That's the important part. So he just said, look, if
we can't get the Supreme Court to do what we want,
I think even though they and other justice and judges
all around him. So that's not what insurrection means. And
by the way, he didn't do that. He's like, well,
we're on inauguration day, with all Trump supporters in town,
somebody's gonna have to stand in front go Nope, we're
not swearing your dude in. I don't know what statement

(48:14):
can lead to more political violence than that, and maybe
that's what they want, so they can just put down
all of the MAGA stuff violently. Anyway, we'll be back. Shockingly,
it's coming from WRIL. Now this is this is an
opinion piece and it's not from WRL. Instead, it's from
a UNC Chapel Hills School of Information and Library Science

(48:39):
professor and author Tresi McMillan cotton um done. And then
it's an em at the end. Okay, excuse me. It's
a doozy and I feel like some of you are
not going to agree, but that's why we'll have this discussion.
And also it's a hell of an argument she's making

(49:04):
entitled why I love the DMV and you should too. Really, okay,
what is it? Is it? The do you know someone
who works there and you're like, that's a good person,
and look, the DMV is just it's another unit of government.

(49:26):
Arguably it's one of the most front facing units, right
It's it's one of the few where you go and
interact on You know, a lot of people will never
interact with, you know, in the first person, with their government.
They'll never go to a council meeting. And you know,
I want to opine on something, but when it comes
to you know, when it comes to I guess car stuff,

(49:49):
whether it's a DMV, the plate outlets or yeah, that
kind of stuff. It's inevitable. Even you know, your your
property taxes, with your how short of a city inspector
coming out because you did some work, you know, that stuff,
it's all at arm's length. But the DMV, man, that's
something you're up in. So I'm gonna read this, but

(50:09):
I'm gonna I'm gonna tell you what is is obvious
to me is the argument here, and that's what makes
this so insane. All right, So here we go. This
is from the from the article. It says you may
disagree with me on a visceral level, you would not
be alone. It is chic to roll your eyes at
the DMV to express exaggerated condolences when people say they

(50:31):
have to renew their driver's license. Didn't I just did
this with Ross because you were like, what were we
talking about? If you have a DMV thing. You had
to do something like that, right, And I think when
you told me, I was immediately like, I'm sorry, bro, sorry,
you have to deal with that. That's our normal reaction
to stuff. Why because it sucks. It's the experience sucks.

(50:53):
The having to get there and show up at the
DMV like you're waiting to buy Taylor Swift tickets and
you know, bring your bring your little lounge chair. Have
you have you been to a d m V office
or have you driven by one prior to it opening?
People are lined up, especially in the uh you know,
in the in the in the bigger cities, they're lined

(51:14):
up there because that's their day and they have to
do something that should take them five friggin seconds. Now,
some of it you can do online, but eventually you
get to hit a number where you got to go in.
I think this is I think I'm the I can renew.
I have one more renewal and then I have to
do it in person, and I hate every moment of that.
And I already have a real idea. I have a passport,

(51:35):
so like I could give two craps about you get
the get the real idea with North Carolina don't care.
I have a passport, I'll just use that and then
next time it rolls around, I guess I'll get it.
But I'm not. I'm not. I'm not champion at the
bit to get in there man. Anyway, I digress. Even

(51:56):
with more, even more than other government services, the d
m V is character arise as a bureaucratic black hole
with long lines, surly clerks, inefficiencies. Yes, because again it's
one of the few ones where most people are going
to have to interact on a first person basis with
the government, so it can be very frustrated. And the
North Carolina DMV is a healthscape all its own. Remember

(52:19):
under this administration, under the Cooper administration, the previous director
of the DMV damn near or with the dot excuse me,
bankrupted for all practical purposes. The branch of government look
it up, never really and there was never really an
account there other than yeah, we swapped out some management,

(52:40):
we did some other things. They squandered all of your
DOT dollars, that half the projects that had to grind
into a halt. The whole thing was an absolute crap
show man. So it makes sense that the DMV was
never able to expand to accommodate the fact that we
have how many people still moving to the state of
North Carolina every day? Red dumpster fire. I shared this

(53:03):
story yesterday online, and I had people in towns like
Lillington right, not hacking on Lillington for being Lillington, but
there's not that many people there are compared to you know,
Wake County. One of our listeners showed up right with
his with his tailgate chair, and his whole day ruined.
Only to have ten minutes after the supposed opening time,

(53:28):
when everyone's outfront's going what the hell's going on? To
have a sign hung up that said, sorry, we'll be
closed today. This was ape. This was let me check
the date. This is recent, by the ways. He posted
a picture of the signs, so unless it's photoshopped, which
I don't believe it is, this is fairly recent. And

(53:51):
others opining that this happened to them too. Sorry, I
don't know why, I just closed the damn thing. Here
we go, dude to staff shortages at the DMV office
in Lillington, will be closed today. This was yesterday, and
they took a picture here obviously the sign which they
had to put up ten minutes after it was supposed

(54:13):
to open. What the hell's going on? What the hell's
going on? And then others have said that office in
Cernersville did the same thing. So tryad triangle or points between.
It doesn't matter. This picture looks like the one from
Cernersville where I spent three hours waiting for my son
only to find out that they ran out of time.

(54:34):
How many of you have gone in We had another listener.
She said that she went in there and sat it
out and then realized that we were getting to the
end of the day and she's like twenty second from
still getting in there. So what the hell is this
college professor talking about? What could she possibly think is
so awesome about the DMV that she wrote this communism? Sorry? That'sok.

(55:00):
An abrupt turn, isn't it? Communism? I hate? I'm going
to go back to reading this.

Speaker 2 (55:07):
I hate.

Speaker 1 (55:07):
Although she did say that they had heard DMV in
Chapel Hill, I guess that they have the Zootopia picture
of the sloth as a DMV worker, which strangely I
think we talked about on the air here just very recently.
But all right, so she says, we are living in
one of the most unequal periods of modern history. The
gulf between the wealthy and everyone else is so wide

(55:29):
that you'd need a private jet to cross it. Wealthy
interests have an outsized influence on our politics. Whenever you
see a radically unfit candidate running for office, you can
usually find a wealthy donor what a rich argument to
be making right now with Captain Chuckles there in the middle.

(55:49):
Instead of fighting for equity, there's that word that's not equality.
People who are not quite wealthy but not really poor
compete with one another on razor thin margins, and then
of course it's all about not being associated with, you know,
the pores. The stratification is everywhere. Fast passes on toll roads,
exclusive access at amusement parks, upgrades on Uber and Uber eats.

(56:15):
The DMV is so hated because it doesn't make status distinctions.
You can't pay to separate yourself from the masses. Everyone
has to search the same cumbersome website. You have to
compete for an appointment or show up early, whether you
have a high net worth or a negative bank balance.
This is communism what she's talking about here, and I'm

(56:36):
not being overly dramatic. This is. This is in the
minds of many leftists, this is communism perfected. Sure it sucks,
but it sucks for all of this, which of course
isn't the case. I promise you there are people who
are able to fast track certain things within the DMV,
and you couldn't tell me otherwise. Do I think the

(56:58):
governor who has it when they have to renew their
life since goes insists of the DMV. I don't believe
that for a moment unless they do it for a
photo op and they roll them in and roll them
out because they're sure as hellm not sitting there for
four hours waiting. It's wild man that anyone would write this.

(57:19):
And then the reasoning being that, well that's because it
doesn't matter how much money you have, it sucks for everybody. Well, crap,
isn't that a problem? You're making this argument because you
think it proves some point about it. If we had
total equity, you know, America could be a better place.
But the example you're using is the thing people hate

(57:42):
the most about government interactions. Is the worst piece of
supportive evidence I've ever heard in an argument.

Speaker 2 (57:50):
You could privatize it and make it a lot better
experience for sure. Yes, I don't care what you are.
You take the general manager of Walmart there in Wig
four or Target or whatever, and you have them like
you know, you now have to be in charge of
the DMV and figure this out. Guarantee you they can
do better job than what we have right now.

Speaker 1 (58:10):
The process is broken and for this woman goes, but
it's broken for everybody equally. What a stupid argument. You're
a professor? How am I so much smarter than all
the not all of them, but some of the professors
over there, Because I would have told you this is
the worst example to make your point, because all you're
saying is because this is what is promised with when

(58:33):
people start talking about getting communism right, this is what's
promised right. No distinction of social classes from each according
to their ability to each according to their needs. That
kind of garbage, and which by the way, is a
quote of you know, arguably the biggest proponents of communism
that also killed you know, tens of millions of their countrymen.

(58:58):
This isn't good. What you need to do is you
need to take something that people like and then show that,
regardless of your socioeconomic status, you can achieve this, But
you went with the DMV to go, Hey, communism achieved
and that's a good thing. Absolute lunacy a speaking.

Speaker 2 (59:14):
Not only is it understaffed that it does all work,
it also does a horrible job of what it's supposed
to do, which is produced drivers that can drive on
the roads. Have you driven on the roads here? Well,
there's a lot of people coming. Remember the last time
I went there, I was sitting at the DMV and
I was I was listening to people do their test
and that person there and the little office and like Louisburg,
whatever was was sitting there going uh, you know, yeah,
give them the giving them the answer.

Speaker 1 (59:35):
Yeah, that's the other thing. Go to Lewisbourg.

Speaker 2 (59:37):
You go to Lewisbourg and there were two people there.
They're completely understaffed and overworked.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
What was it? I think it was? Yeah, I'm sorry.

Speaker 2 (59:45):
Because they were completely overstaffed and underwork. They were just
people in and out. You do a horrible job in
the test, we're gonna stamp, you're gonna improve it. You
can leave and I don't care if you drive like
a jackass on the roads. Get out of my office.

Speaker 1 (59:55):
Yeah, don't hit me. Who was it? Ap Dylan was
telling me, I take is ap Dylan our writer friend
from North State journal. I think she was trying to
get her daughter her first driver's license. She was trying
to make appointments and like Murphy and stuff. I know
if it was quite Murphy, but what what's going on?
So this absolutely to see eight eight eight nine three

(01:00:16):
four seven eight seven four. So do you feel better
about the DMV now because it sucks for everybody? Let
us know, raced agic. Do you like the DMV? You
fan of the DOV is the dumbest op ed ever,
But it sucks for everybody equally. So that's a good thing. No,
it's not. No, definitely not a good thing. Yay, I
found that. I see that somebody found my million dollars

(01:00:37):
worth of cocaine and the Florida keys.

Speaker 5 (01:00:39):
Oh okay, every.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Hurd w every hurricane. I don't understand why the beaches
are not lined by crackheads when they hear hurricanes coming.
Man possible, Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:00:52):
For us, it's not a hurricane. But yeah, you go
back to last week at this time, I think we'd
be impacted as much. We're going to be flood watches
up now, we'll start to see the rain showers come
in today. The triangle points east and south may end
up with some decent showers thunder showers today, but it's
really through tomorrow, Tomorrow night, Thursday, potentially even into Friday.

(01:01:14):
Rain will pick up an intensity and coverage and we
could end up with double digit rain totals. That does
include Raleigh, Durham, and areas to the south end to
the east, especially east of eighty five. But as you
go our east of ninety five, excuse me, but as
you go further west, there'll be lower amounts, but still
some flooding possible, even around Greensboro Winston Salem where there

(01:01:36):
could be a few inches of rainfall there also. So
things are gonna unwind pretty quickly here and it's a
multi day rain event. We're not gonna get rid of
Debbie until maybe late in the week, So once the
rain starts coming in, it's gonna be on and off
for multiple days. So hunger down now as a forecast,
as we kind of sharpen the pencil a little bit,

(01:01:57):
is going to be maybe eight to ten inches of Raleigh, Durham,
points south and east of that even more. And then
as you get back into the triad four or five
six inches of rain. Now that's cumulatively it'll take multiple days.
That's through Friday, but pretty good like there will be
flooding and there will be issues with water getting into

(01:02:17):
places where it's not supposed to be. So you know,
it is gonna go downhill and go downhill pretty quickly.
The winds will start gusting tomorrow twenty to twenty five,
maybe twenty five to thirty on Thursday and Friday. I
don't know if we get the tropical storm force, but
still gusty winds and rainy and just just an awful
period of time coming up. There's no other way to

(01:02:37):
sugarcoat it. For some, especially east and south, there could
be some historic rain. In parts of South Carolina, they
could get thirty inches of rain. Some spots have already
seen over a foot.

Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
Well, at least the majority of the state isn't low
lying and swampish. So yah, good, good that, yeah, it
could be that all right. Well, yeah, we hope everyone's okay,
and yeah, but you know, if something happens the DMV,
I mean you're good, yeah, yeah, yeah, I don't want
the people there, so but you get it all right,
thank you, Sir, appreciated by the way. Now people are

(01:03:09):
emailing me Ross. Apparently there's a d m V Kiosk
and Raleigh to serve state workers. So that's not equity,
is it? Is it only state workers are allowed to
go to I need more info on this because this
completely blows all this garbage out of the water, all
of it out of the water. Is it near the
bus stop? So at least they have to risk getting stabbed,

(01:03:31):
That's what That's why we didn't get to that yesterday.
But that's that's one of the aspects we're going to
talk about. Anyway. We'll try to get to all of
it coming up KCO Day Radio program, just because I
know it's gossipy, but also you know, there's the potential
for some really really big names if they if they're
ever actually willing to dig into all the diddy stuff. Yeah,

(01:03:56):
I mean, I can't imagine some of the stuff that
would come out about people are big, big right now.
But much like the Epstein client list, I would say
good luck with that and take it for what it's worth.
There's a report out this morning, and this was prompted
by a social media post by sug Knight, but Apparently

(01:04:16):
there are others who back with Knight saying or excuse
me a social media post of a podcast, So Suge
Knight's on a podcast, and then the video posted. All right,
I'm not going to play it for you because I
didn't Ross is busy, doesn't need to dub that in.
But they were talking about Ben Affleck and j Loo,
you know, the divorce, the pending divorce, and according to Knight,

(01:04:39):
by the way, Suge Knight's in prison, you need to
understand that he hosts this podcast, participates on the prison phone,
which is probably pretty expensive. So Knight is suggesting that
Ben Affleck wants to divorce from j Lo because of
some very explicit videos that were part of what was
obtained during the raid of Combs's Diddy. I guess p Diddy,

(01:05:05):
Sean Combs, any of the other names he went by,
in in which Lopez maybe doing some really really bad stuff.
I don't what that is. I don't know, you know,
some of the Diddy stuff is has to do with
underage people. I don't know if that's the allegation or
it's just really really like salacious video that was taken over.

(01:05:28):
I don't know the answer to that, but they go
to Puffy here's the quote. They go to Puffy's house
to get all these videos of Jaylo doing this, Jlo
doing that, and the FEDS apparently talked to Affleck and
showed him screenshots of some of the footage. I don't
know if that's the process, but that's I mean, that's crazy, man.

(01:05:52):
But he wants to go ahead and get that divorce
done because when it hits the fans, so to speak,
he doesn't want to be there. It's that story, never one.
Here's the one that bothered me incessantly. It looks like
they're gonna get ready to ruin another eighties movie action
flick nineteen eighty seven with a updated version for modern audiences,

(01:06:18):
and that would be Running Man. Ross. You a fan
of The Running Man? You like The Running Man? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:06:24):
No, it's a good movie.

Speaker 1 (01:06:25):
It's good movie. It's pure eighties. It's for the timeframe
it is. It is what it is, and obviously Arnold
Schwarzenegger if you don't remember it, and there's a game
show or they stick him into like the abandoned part
of the city and they basically have to fight like
Mortal Kombat characters.

Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
I'm sort of like at the age now, because if
it's in the eighties, I'm like, yeah, I'll take it
over anything we have today. Goofy, silly, don't care, I'll
take it. You mean a remake or there the original?

Speaker 1 (01:06:51):
Okay, all right, yes, yeah, I watched Running Man not
that long ago. I think it was on HBO Max
or something. I watched it not that long ago. And
it's the perfect movie for when on Sundays when I'm
putting prep together. That's the exact kind of movie I
tend to put on in the background because I already
know what's happening. Right, But according to new reports out

(01:07:13):
they are they want to do an update starring Sidney Sweeney.
Do we all know who Sidney Sweeney is? Sidney Sweeney
is a very blessed woman, as evidenced by her plunging
necklines in her uh uh.

Speaker 2 (01:07:27):
She got like huge brains.

Speaker 1 (01:07:29):
They're giant brains. Tran you know, good for her, doesn't
hide them, you know sometimes women will, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:07:35):
Know they're saying that she brought her she brought them back.
They're saying like she killed bulk in that respect. Remember
she was an SNL at the end of it, and
They're like.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Yeah, yeah, and uh. And by the way, she's already
do you know she's redoing Barbarella, that Jane Fonda movie
from the sixties, which you know what, I'm okay with that.
That's fine. Anything to purge Jane Fonda is. So as
long as Sidney Sweeney avoids throwing in with the Vietcong,
we're probably okay. That being said, what what is is

(01:08:04):
that a high bar? Is that should I You're gonna.

Speaker 2 (01:08:06):
Break the simulation. Man, She's gonna come out against Ho
Chi Minh and it's gonna be over zero fox.

Speaker 1 (01:08:10):
All right, Hey, at least then will know at least
at least we'll know at least we'll do all right.
So anyway, so yes, Sidney Sweeney and actor Glenn Powell.
If you don't know Glenn Powell is I'm trying to
He was in hip Man, but he was in uh,
he was in the Top Gun Maverick. But did you
ever see that Ross Riversy Top Gun Maverick?

Speaker 2 (01:08:30):
I saw it up until the middle of it, and
then I just stopped washing and then I saw like
the the clip of of of Maverick showing the kids
how it can be done.

Speaker 1 (01:08:39):
Yes, Okay, you remember the one? Yeah? Do you remember
the iceman character of the young pilots, the really cocky one?
And yes, that's Glenn Powell. Okay, all right, except except
he's no Schwartzenegger. But I don't mind him and stuff.
I've seen him, and that being said, he's not Schwartzenegger. However,

(01:08:59):
there is some speculation that there could be some role reversal,
so Sweeney would not be the executive from the TV
station right who ends up getting tossed in their spoiler
with Arnold. She might be the Arnold.

Speaker 2 (01:09:17):
Now I fine with that, because Arnold in the original movie,
did he do a lot of running?

Speaker 1 (01:09:25):
No, it was the murdering. There was some running. I
see what you're I see what's Yes, yes.

Speaker 2 (01:09:29):
So she'll be running in the movie.

Speaker 1 (01:09:32):
No, she'll be She'll be just murdering everybody within seconds
at all. You know, yes, probably initially slow motion running.
I mean you can slow down video on today's modern TV.

Speaker 2 (01:09:45):
You know, I'll have to see a trailer.

Speaker 1 (01:09:47):
Let me. Could you do me a favorite? Could you
call down to Paradise and uh? And you know what,
I need an independent take on this? Can you call
down to Paradise and Uh, check in with Whitman, Price,
Hadad and see what they think of this. Could you call?
And they're on the beach right now, still in their outfits.
It's really weird. Yeah. I don't care Whitman, Price or Hadad.

(01:10:09):
You can check with any one of them. I'm just
curious what they think as folks who were in the
original original one, you know, are the previous winners from
the show. So all right, we'll check in with them
because they're in paradise. Uh oh oh, Ross making it
look are they not? Oh they've been murdered. Okay, all right.

(01:10:30):
Why do I randomly remember the names of the previous
winners on The Running Man and yet I couldn't remember
the other day lethal weapon? And then Ross hijacked it
with Joe Dirt. It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:10:43):
I'm pretty much sure last ninety nine percent Joe Dirt,
but you're allowed to think it's lethal weapon. We agree
to disagree.

Speaker 1 (01:10:49):
Here, we're Danny Glover sitting on a toilet with a
bomb strap to it. You think that's Joe Dirt versus.

Speaker 2 (01:10:55):
There was a scene in Joe Dirt we had a
bomb strap to him.

Speaker 1 (01:10:58):
Danny Glover did actor Danny Lover from you know, you
know him from Predator to was that also Joe Dirt?
Was Joe Dirt being chased by an alien hunter in
the streets?

Speaker 2 (01:11:14):
So is she going to be running? It's called running man,
And just where's the record? You're you are against miss
Sweeney running watching them?

Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
I'm against for bastardization of Schwarzenegger flicks. That's what I'm against.
Look what happened when they Look what happened, what they
did with the last Terminator. Come on, that's unforgivable. Now,
if they don't show her with like magical ninja skills
at one time, you know, going all be a trix

(01:11:51):
from kill Bill with no formal training, then yeah, if
they just want to chase her around and tell the
prey you know, it's like Gazelle's right if it was,
because you're not gonna win a fight with a lion,
so you got to have the cardio, so you've got
to be doing a lot of running. I'm just saying
that there's other projects that they can do. So do

(01:12:12):
you think she has black eyes by the end of
the movie from the contestant she has to fight? Is
what I mean? Will they show that she's a little
vulnerable or will they go full And I don't know
this is this is all Hollywood speculation, but I'm very nervous,
all right? Eight eight eight nine three four seven eight
seven four. It's eight point fifteen here on the Cacode

(01:12:32):
radio program, speaking of women in movies. Apparently it's not
good enough for activists. We'll share that with you. And
this Secret Service story.

Speaker 6 (01:12:43):
Is insane and is like, is as corrupt a scene
that you might see in some Hollywood thriller starring Sydney
Sweeney running as as as you can possibly remember, And yet.

Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
And yet people are just like a whole hum about this.
So if you don't know what the story is originally reported,
but was it real clear politics? I believe, And now's yes,
real clear politics. Who had three sources within Secret Service?
Who are now talking about what happened with the cocaine
in the White House. If you don't know the story,
I'm going to tell you about it coming up next

(01:13:25):
here on the KCO Day radio program. Ever seen ross
so pumped about a Hollywood eighties movie remake? But that's fine,
we'll see in the rat So. The rap on Sidney
Sweeney is she's actually conservative, right, is that because I
saw people that were trying to run that thing. I
had no yeah, yeah, yeah, because apparently her family is

(01:13:47):
and like some family members like nah, she's you know,
but she also it's it still shows you what's going
on in Hollywood where it's like I am so here
by the way for any of you Onion, so listening,
not not that any well, there are a couple actually
in the Raleigh area. The worst thing going on right
now is all of these piece of garbage influencers like

(01:14:08):
Jack Posovic and Charlie Kirk who have access to these
political mailing lists, who are spamming my inbox. So now
I'm have to go block him on Twitter. I'm getting
who's the who's the local dude? The young guy? Oh,
what is his damn name? We interviewed him one time
and then he was too good for us, talking about
Stephen Hord No no, no, no, no, Ry Ryan something

(01:14:30):
or other. I got spammed with some of his stoles. Yeah, okay, yeah,
that dude, and it's like the first thing I do
is now I just purg you from my life because
they're out of the sheer audacis who start spamming my email.
I've got more Charlie Kirk Jack Pisobic emails this morning.
Look at that Kirk's In the last twenty minutes, Charlie
Kirk has sent me three different they're not the same email,

(01:14:52):
And it's just like, how do you think people want
anything to do with you? Hell, half the time you're
wrong with the crap that you post.

Speaker 2 (01:14:57):
I think I blocked Charlie Kirk a while ago and
the Juneteenth stuff when him and Kansas Owens were freaking
out over it. Oh, like, hey, bring on another holiday.

Speaker 1 (01:15:07):
Yeah. Yeah, in the same way that Ross is like
you're running, man, Try that sounds good? Yeah? Is there running?
Because you know what that's Ross takes lemons, make lemonade.
That's his thing, so super positive, influences the whole full
team around here. So let's see, all right, that's our

(01:15:27):
Hollywood section. Dude, you want some you want some delicious irony?
Do you guys remember Harrison Butker, the kicker for the
Kansas City Chiefs, right, and uh what was it? It
was a graduation speech, right, he was. He was speaking
at a college graduation. And it's clear if you listen
to the totality of it, he's making two arguments that
if women want to be homemakers, great, If they want

(01:15:51):
to go to the career, great, But if you are,
if you choose to do that, and you think it's
fine to make fun of women who make the decision
because you feel they're being subjugated in it, in reality,
you're not for women making their decisions, which seems like
a pretty logical argument. Now, don't get me wrong. He
then got into his preference of stuff, but it was
clearly his preference, and they're like, we got to cancel him.

(01:16:14):
His agency dropped him. If you remember, his agent dropped
him over the you know, the sheer stupidity, because that's
what we do well, Harrison Butker is now the highest
paid NFL kicker ever. Yes, that's right. The three time
Super Bowl winner sparked outrage after telling him graduating class

(01:16:36):
that his success was all because quote, a girl I
met in band class back in middle school would convert
to the faith, become my wife, and embrace one of
the most important titles of all time, homemaker. So he's
literally talking about his family just while I think Bucker's

(01:16:58):
weighed in on Biden's abortion stuff too. I think was
something else he said, But all this was for him
to cancel. Can you imagine being the agent who knee
jerk reacted to this, and because you know what he did,
Bucker went and negotiated it himself. He just said, fine,
I'll do it myself. And so you're an agent who

(01:17:18):
if you'd have waited what three months? Three months, you'd
have had what ten twelve percent of what is six
point four million per year? So the total is twenty
six million with eighteen guaranteed, so you'd have had ten
percent of that. You absolute adults. It's very fickle.

Speaker 2 (01:17:41):
It's a Bob Sugar move.

Speaker 1 (01:17:43):
What do you mean? Oh no, no, it's no is
it is that a Bob Sugar? You want to Jerry maguire.

Speaker 2 (01:17:48):
You don't want a Bob Sugar.

Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
Jerry had some growing up to do. It was clear,
and frankly, that's so you go here. Yeah, he didn't
go with Jerry McGuire either, He went with himself and
now he makes the most money doing what he does. Look,
I know you got no love for the Kansas City Chiefs,
but you gotta you gotta, you gotta think this is

(01:18:13):
pretty funny, right.

Speaker 2 (01:18:14):
No, especially considering all the drama surrounding other players. And
the chiefs like, this is not the guy you have
to worry about.

Speaker 1 (01:18:19):
Yeah, it's a very good point. Yeah, and now that
agent doesn't get his new beach house, I'm so sad.
Good news, bad news. I guess there's a lot of
ways to handicap this, so we'll go ahead and do that.
But we got we got to tell you about what's
coming to a college campus near you. But first the
Secret Service story. All right, ready, I didn't have enough

(01:18:42):
time in the last segment, so I want to get
to this. So on Monday, the Secret Service did confirm
that it disposed of the cocaine found last year at
the White House, which is kind of a big deal.
And this was this was part and parcel about a
furies of stories that were coming out earlier this week

(01:19:03):
by Real Clear Politics, who cited several sources within the
Secret Service. And I find it interesting now that the
hold on let me my sprite. Drinking a sprite this morning.
I don't generally drink fool sugar sodas, but it's happening,
so anyway, just pretend it's a beer. Anyway, So anyway,

(01:19:27):
the Secret Service sources told Real Clear Politics it wasn't
just because you have to understand the Secret Service policy
for any evidence, with some exceptions like you know, explosive
devices things like that, the policy is to hold on
to anything that's part of an official, official investigation for

(01:19:47):
seven years. It's a retention policy. It's pretty simple. All
law enforcement agencies, anyone who collects evidence has some sort
of stated retention policy. So for them to eleven days
later after they closed the investigation to simply destroy it,
that's not good, and that's putting it mildly. However, it's

(01:20:12):
far more insidious if the real clear politics story is true.
According to their reporting, the director, obviously the now departed
Kimberly Cheatle, became quote really pee word off. I don't
know if I should say that. But when her request
was rebuffed, what was the request? According to the reporting,

(01:20:36):
Cheetle ordered subordinates to destroy the cocaine. However, met internal
opposition by some people who probably figured out that one
that's not legal. Two they would be the scapegoat if
they followed those orders. But apparently somebody did, or Cheatle
flushed at herself like a drug raid on cops where

(01:20:57):
you hear the toilet going in the other room and
you know they know what's up. So the subordinates who
quote cited protocols requiring evidence to be retained for seven years,
initially told her they wouldn't do it. Two sources told
the outlet the cheetle or someone speaking at her direction

(01:21:17):
then called the agency's forensic division, the supervisor Matt White.
So he's the guy, and every one of these you know,
he's the old guy works in the basement right where
all of the uh, all the lot law enforcement guys
go down there, sign in, sign out evidence. That's the dude,

(01:21:38):
and asked him to dispose of the evidence because quote
leadership wanted to close the case. Now, whether it was
White who destroyed it or if he was one of
the subordinates that pushed back and somebody else had to,
we don't know, Boston Paul. I pretend if it's a beer,
just have a beer. I don't know. I'm not quite

(01:21:58):
too the uh drinking on the show phase of the
storied radio career, but I'll get there one day, Boston Paul.
Don't worry like you know, like that bitter cop who's
a PI now has got a bottle of gut rot
whiskey in his drawer. I strive to one day achieve that.
But you have a beer if you want. Anyway, So
the Secret Service closed its investigation just eleven days after

(01:22:20):
the cocaine was found, without interviewing any potential suspects. So
that's number one. Number two, and this is what makes
it more egregious and more scummy and more cover uppie,
if that's a word. Additional sources. So now they have
five people on the record. Now they're not identified, and

(01:22:41):
you know how I feel about anonymous sources, so take
it for what it's worth. Said that during the eleven
days they had had they hit a DNA match, which
there had been some reporting, but one that was a
partial hit within and a national database, meaning they weren't
just able to get DNA or partial DNA from it,

(01:23:04):
which was the reporting. They entered it into the system
and it popped. I'm gonna say that again. They found
DNA on it. It then popped within a system in
the national database. So NCIC, I guess or whatever, I guess,
there's actually a DNA portion of this. And after it popped,

(01:23:27):
they didn't interview anybody, and then they disposed of it
outside of the boundaries of their own retention policy. This
is the stuff you see in movies, right. This is
the other half of the revisionist history that the media provides.

(01:23:47):
Ross and I were talking off the air. Can you
imagine all the stuff we don't know if they're willing
to operate in a time when it should be a
lot harder to get away with this because there's so
much digital res of what happened. You think these cats
didn't see what happened and Nixon back in the day
and started girding their loins on stuff like this. So

(01:24:10):
you had a hit, even if when you say, it's
a partial hit and it may not hold up in court,
which I understand that there's a certain threshold that you
have to hit. But you then don't go interview anybody.
And the director of the Secret Service is making phone
calls to the evidence locker saying, hey, I need you
to destroy evidence. What it does show is, even though

(01:24:32):
they may have people on record, if this is all true,
it shows you that simply replacing a couple of people
at the top might have no fundamental change if those
all along the way are willing to go along with
excuse me, along with this stuff to destroy evidence, to
do any of that. It's the corruptness of law enforcement

(01:24:55):
practices that is that when I talk about it being
part of a mood, it's always a hallmark of whoever
the villain's going to turn out to be right, it's
the corrupt leader of this thing, or the cabinet member
who actually killed the president's mistress. It also was on match.
I can't remember what that movie was, but I mean,
this is the stuff, dude, and this is the reporting

(01:25:17):
that's out there. And Chetle she retired or she you know,
she walked away. But through the failure of what happened
with Trump coupled with this, the woman might or at
least very should be facing some sort of prosecution that
flimsy your evidence on J six people. But she won't

(01:25:37):
because of the position of power that she held. Did
anyone who helped destroy evidence, and frankly anyone who didn't
within this who did push back. Again, I think some
of the pushback was not because they disagreed, but rather
they realized that if it ever came out, they'd be
the scapegoat. They'd be the patsy here. Oh no, oh,

(01:26:00):
the director didn't know anything about it. It was this
mid level manager who did it. He's a rogue employee,
like they've seen this movie before. Those people shouldn't be
in a position of power, and that position of power
could be as minimal as somebody who's an investigator, you know,
standard investigator. Everyone involved in this investigation, who got a
DNA hit and then watched as the director allegedly tried

(01:26:25):
to destroy the evidence. Who didn't come forward and say something?
And you don't have to come forward to the media.
You have to be dropping tips to the Washington Post.
But you know there is oversight to the extent that
there is, and there are members of Congress that provide oversight,
who are you know, would love to take this like
a dog with a stick and run with it. Man

(01:26:49):
and the corruption man, just the absolute corruption. There's no
valid excuse if either of these things came to pass.
And will it go anywhere, I don't know, But I
do know that if Donald Trumps serious about purshing, he's
going to have a heavy lift on his hands. And
likely there might be agencies who are not able to
perform certain duties, and that'll have to be an argument

(01:27:10):
that they make. But you can't have this level of corruption,
I promise you if you got busted at the White
House with one hundred dollars worth of blow, something bad's
gonna happen to you, all right, eight forty four raced agic.
Once again we're talking about cocaine. That's what we do here. Well,
thanks again, I can mix it up. Do you slease

(01:27:33):
do this? Did you see the meth lettuce? No? Oh? Man? Yeah? Uh,
FED sees record forty eight million worth of meth hidden
in lettuce shipments from Mexico. Shock can oh yeah? What
else would come from? I think, honestly, I think this
is a brilliant marketing employee for big Lettuce. Yeah, that
I could look. Yeah, cocaine bunny, Yeah, like people, I

(01:27:57):
don't like lattice. Man vers that it gives you wings?
You like it?

Speaker 5 (01:28:02):
Now?

Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
Yeah, you can be addicted to the lettuce. Man, They're
gonna sell so much lettuce. But I can't prove it,
so we'll see, all right, man, Yeah?

Speaker 5 (01:28:11):
No, yeah, Well I wish I had better news, but
it really starts going downhill this afternoon. For the rest
of the week, we're in rain and thunderstorms, rounds of it.
Will there be breaks at times, yes, especially today as
below pulls back out over the tropical Storm Debbi the
open waters of the Atlantic, So it does pull a

(01:28:31):
little bit further east and away from us briefly, but
then as we go on through Tomorrow and Thursday just
kind of meanders around off South Carolina coast and eventually
they come back on shore and it's gonna push back
closer to us. So the worst days of the week
are probably going to be as we get into Wednesday
night and Thursday and maybe even on into a part
of Friday, when heavy rain coming in.

Speaker 1 (01:28:51):
Yeah, I'm people hate it when I interrupt you on
this stuff. But no, so when you say it goes offshore,
do we so it? Then we'll have to make landfall
back in North Carolina.

Speaker 5 (01:29:00):
Right, it's right now, They got to project and make
landfall in South Carolina.

Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
Okay, all right, just North Charleston, Okay, all right, puts
pretty close to the border though, oh no, South damage,
don't damage myrtle dirty myrtle man.

Speaker 5 (01:29:14):
Yeah, well, they're gonna get a pretty good bath on
shore flow. They'll be on the east side, luckily Charleston
for them, they won't be on the east side at
least to the current trajectory, current path. And then it
comes back on shore meandas around for a couple of days.
Eventually it'll get caught up and go north and could
have impact the northeast and New England as a depression
or a weak tropical storm.

Speaker 1 (01:29:33):
But we've got a lot of.

Speaker 5 (01:29:35):
Rain to deal with them, flooding rain and flood watches
which started, which start I think tomorrow as the rain
picks up eight to ten inches, some could get more.
It could be fifteen inch totals to the east and
south of us triad four to six inches. That's a
lot of rain. Oh yeah, it'll come over a few days. Yeah,
it'll come over a few days. But still it's gonna

(01:29:56):
be problems with flooding. If you're in a flood prone area,
prepare now. There'll be some gusty winds at times. I
would prepare anyway, not only for the water, but maybe
for some body power outages too. You know, if that
water gets in places it's not supposed to get into.
Uh and we get a wind gust and we get
some bands of stronger thunderstorms and that could be enough
with the saturated ground to pull some trees down. So

(01:30:18):
uh yeah, will be here tomorrow to talk a lot
more about it, and uh, you know, we'll be able
to see if there's been any changes and see if
the forecast is on track. You don't want it to be.
You don't want it to stall out like this. This
is worst case scenario for a races.

Speaker 1 (01:30:31):
What happened. This is what happened with one of the
hurricanes a few years ago in North Carolin. Remember it
just came Was it opped there? Right?

Speaker 6 (01:30:37):
Up?

Speaker 5 (01:30:37):
It war mad? I can't was one of the one
or the other, the.

Speaker 1 (01:30:42):
One that flooded Newborn. It's stopped right literally like this.
We're talking about this on the air. The speed had
dropped to essentially zero, and you were saying, this is
not good. This is really bad.

Speaker 5 (01:30:53):
So yeah, we're still at seven. But when you see
stationary or it starts moving like one or two miles
an hour, that's when you're kind of like age. Yeah,
and hopefully it'll move quicker. I want this to be wrong,
but oh god, it is suggesting that it's not to.

Speaker 1 (01:31:07):
No, he telling off the air, Ray was saying he
wants it to go hit Fiji. I don't know if
it would be a pattern not Fiji's what's the Bermuda. Yeah, Bermuda,
wishing death on Bermuda. So anyway, all right, we got
a roll stirt, Thank you very much, appreciate it, bye,
and we'll be back, can you No, No, apparently not.

Speaker 7 (01:31:26):
The dust is settling after the big sell off on
Wall Street, and you may find some stocks you'd like
to own on sale today. Goldman Sachs says four decades
worth of data suggesting that buying stocks after sell offs
on the scale we've seen over the last month is
usually profitable, and it looks like we'll see some bargain
hunting today.

Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
Futures are a little bit higher.

Speaker 7 (01:31:47):
Right across the board now, futures are up one hundred
and forty five points. Delta Airlines extended the pause on
its New York to Tel Aviv service through the end
of this month, the carrier sighting the ongoing conflict in
the Middle East. The mining slump has hit the parent
of Taco Bell, KFC and Pizza Hut. Young Brands posted
weaker than expected second quarter sales as consumers worldwide cut

(01:32:09):
back on fast foods, and Casey, the Florida based restaurant
chain World of Beer, Bar and Kitchen, has filed for bankruptcy.
The company does have some outlets in North Carolina. It
hopes to restructure its operations and remain in business.

Speaker 1 (01:32:24):
Case, that's too bad. They got one over at North Hills,
and I might have been in there a few times,
so all right, they have so they're going to keep
operating though, right because at this point that's their hope. Yes, okay, good, good, good,
all right, thank you, sir. I do appreciate it. Have
a good day. Yeah, there you go. Jeff Pillinger from
Bloomberg News. Oh well, hopefully Biden can save that as well,

(01:32:46):
because he's got quite a track record here of saving stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:32:49):
Sure.

Speaker 1 (01:32:50):
Good. Congress heard the economy, environment, any environment, good good good.
So apparently that's how everything got fixed yesterday, the economy
and end of the environment. So also you get a
little breaking news here. Associated press quote. Vice President Kamala
Harris has decided on a running mate. In an announcement

(01:33:13):
he is coming in quote hour.

Speaker 2 (01:33:16):
Just Clothes TV just put out like thirty seconds ago
that she has chosen Tim Walls to.

Speaker 1 (01:33:22):
D Ui Walls. You know, my favorite Tim Walls story
is when he was younger, he got a Dui to
a ninety six and a fifty five and then pretended
to be deaf.

Speaker 2 (01:33:33):
Yeah, I was reading about that.

Speaker 1 (01:33:34):
Yeah, yeah, it's a true story. Yeah, he's like, oh
I can't hear. It's like that he's responding to commands
and they're like you sure, you sure you can't hear?
But whatever, young and dumb, right, And speaking of young
and dumb, the the college takeover for the pro homascats
that will resume when school resumes. I have a question
because most of these big universities are open during the summer.

(01:33:56):
I've taken summer university courses. Why'd you all leave if
this is the if there's literally a genocide going on.
Because if I thought there was a genocide going on,
and I've decided that I'm gonna, you know, make it
my point to stop a genocide, I'm not leaving for
three months to go to South Podway with my friends
or whatever they were doing. I hope they weren't. Man,

(01:34:18):
they're just ruined the the look there. But could I
recommend some for universities before they get back landscaping right ross?
What is what is greener? A quad that it looks
like Central Park with grass and all that or cacti.
We use very little water, require very little maintenance, right,

(01:34:40):
so you swap the quads for cactus and you save
all that. It's very green, very environmentally friendly. And I
want to watch them pitch tents, but no, they say
they're coming back and they're going to go right back
into protest mode, which again they didn't feel necessary during
during the summer when they wanted to go a you know,
van life blogging or vlogging or backpacking in Europe. They

(01:35:06):
apparently that was all on hold. So far, groups at Columbia, Rutgers,
George Washington, and Harvard have announced they will be doing
it again. I look to see if UNC is going
to be back at it. I think after you guys
got shamed by the frat bros
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