Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Scrolled the bowels of Twitter x whatever, and look for
those little gray the little gray things next to not
the blue check, the gray check. See if you get
the gray check, you're dealing with the government official. And
so I scanned through there and on the for me,
(00:23):
they have fed me probably fifty panic tweets from Democrat
members of Congress, certain officials, former elected officials like the Clintons.
They have every single one of these algorithms absolutely panicking
over this audit. I guess, if you want to call it,
(00:51):
that of the us AID program, and I am here
for every bit of it, and in exactly zer hero
of those. Have I seen a specific financial, budgeted rebuttal
for why that program doesn't deserve it on it right,
(01:14):
And whereas with with the with with Trump's people, whether
it's Levitt, Trump himself, Marco Rubio, who is as Secretary
of State now tasked with oversight of the program, I
have seen nothing but specific indictments of the program. I mean,
(01:36):
there's the larger broader stuff. I gotta say, there's not
a president alive who I would have thought would have
gone full bore on a program called us AID just
because of the name of it, not because of what
we're finding out, what we kind of already knew, but
who just would have what? You know what, it's not
(01:57):
worth the squeeze, so to speak, because they're gonna be
losing their minds. And Trump was like, I don't care, man,
We're gonna go ahead and do this, and then when
we do it, we're gonna start pointing things out to
Congress to do away with USAID.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
Or if you leave you I don't know, I don't
think so. No, if not when it comes to fraud,
if there's fraud, these people are lunatics. And if it
comes to fraud, you wouldn't have an Act of Congress.
And I'm not sure that you would anyway. But we
just want to do the right thing. But it's something
that should have been done a long time ago.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
All right. And the reason he's saying that is because
the us AID program was established via executive order.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
John F.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
Kennedy did it, you know, before Dallas, and not his
people after Dallas, as was the Biden way. And what
it grew into is sheer insanity. Man. You know, programs,
there's a reason that programs from it used to show
up in that Book of Waste every year and then
kind of didn't here recently and they're not going to
(03:07):
tell you this. And that was the very same list,
which is seemingly the focus point, you know, the master
list of where all the money's going, how it got there.
Kind of right, because a lot of this stuff is
members of Congress when they're putting budget stuff together that
maybe have friends or people they know. It's not to
say that they don't mean well with some of this stuff,
(03:30):
but when you see where the actual money goes, when
you see how it's actually utilized, and you have concrete
examples of all of this stuff, people start to have
a lot of questions. They look at things like, all right,
let's see because when you hear US eight and they
(03:50):
always throw Africa in there, and it's far more than then.
You think of that Sally Struthers commercial, right, you think
of a bunch of some of them looking absolutely emaciated,
there's flies around, you know, the visuals they show you
on TV. So you pledge the price of a cup
of coffee per day, and purportedly that's what this program
(04:14):
was attempting to address starving people all over the world,
but in reality, food wasn't necessarily the priority for a
lot of this stuff. Here is a White House spokesperson, Levin.
Speaker 4 (04:28):
Usaid, over the past several years, these are some of
the insane priorities that that organization has been spending money on.
One point five million dollars to advance DEI in Serbia's workplaces,
seventy thousand for a production of a DEI musical in Ireland,
forty seven thousand for a transgender opera in Colombia, thirty
(04:49):
two thousand for a transgender comic book in Peru.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
What are we doing? And if you want to go, well, look,
their budget is much more than that. And if you
even add which mentioned there, it's just a drug. I
don't care. I don't care, Okay, I mean obviously they're
going to give you the craziest examples first. And what
I'm not seeing is I'm not seeing well, yes, but
(05:15):
that was zero point eight percent of the budget, and
in reality, ninety percent of the money is going towards
food programs, and here's the documentation it's not and in fact,
dollars have gone towards research at the Wuhan LAP. And
the reason that you don't see the crazy list is
(05:36):
because under the last administration, they changed it. So when
you have this group of I mean, it's almost like
a movie when you have a group of like kids,
young adults, kids that show up with some laptops and
some extreme mountain dew and they're basically camped out over
(06:00):
in the White House Administrative Building, the Eisenhower Building, just
burning through all this stuff with their algorithms and just
spinning out, spitting out details. The panic begins. Have you
ever seen this much panic over what?
Speaker 5 (06:16):
He is?
Speaker 1 (06:17):
Not that big of a program. They docks these guys
and understand who you're doxing. If I could for just
a moment, one of these dudes, he's like, you know
he did at eighteen? What did you do at eighteen?
Do you remember when you were eight What did you
accomplish in your eighteenth year on this planet? Did you
(06:40):
have a big scientific breakthrough? Or do you go to
parties listlessly try to figure out, Oh man, I should
probably do something or my parents are gonna throw me
out of it. What did you do at eighteen? One
of these guys is like, oh, yeah, you know those
two thousand year old scrolls we can't open to see
(07:00):
what they look like inside. Yeah, I was just sitting
around the other day because I don't know, I had
nothing to do. They didn't invite me to the party again. Whatever,
I'm just sitting around and I thought, what if I
used this AI algorithm I wrote so that scientists all
over the world can start reading these scrolls without ever
unwrapping them, and I'll be the first person ever to
(07:22):
code one of these two thousand year old scrolls. After
school and you know, because mom says I can only
work so late. What did you do? And you bring
those dudes in like their DJ qualls from the Core?
Do you remember inside all of the absurdity that was
(07:42):
that movie where they're just like, yeah, we got this
special polymer. We're gonna go to the center of the Earth.
It'll be fine. And our giant phallacmobile looks like a
train because we love trains anyway. Yeah, we're gonna go
ahead and do that. We'll kill Stanley Tucci at some point,
but we're gonna also we're gonna get some kid who's
(08:03):
eating Doritos and we're gonna be like, could you hack
the world? He's like, you guys are crazy, Like what
if we gave you more Toritos and a bigger computer.
He's like, get sold, let's do this. Okay. Elon just
brought five of those dudes in and now people are like, oh,
they have access to this informa. They have information that
they don't show you the public anymore because the Biden
(08:25):
people within the Biden administration are like, yeah, it doesn't
look good when people see a list of transgender plays
in Colombia and wonder, wait a second, is that feeding people?
I don't think it is. Or you know, women's women's
driving programs in countries that women don't drive in there's that,
(08:48):
or women's voting initiatives, but that don't change the fundamental
rules where really it just means a dude if he's
got four wives, has five votes. But you're not attacking
the under I could go on for days, but they're
not coming back with this. Hey, here's how ninety percent
of this went to bread and milk, and here's how
(09:10):
we gave it away. You know why, because it didn't
like everything else. They named it this thing. They told
you it was this thing, and if you didn't ask
too many questions, you could live comfortably going, well, look
do I like that? You know we're given fifty three
million to Burma. I mean Burma. They got to eat
(09:30):
over in Burma. And you're like, well, what if I
told you it has nothing to do with food. And actually,
when it comes to the food programs, one of their
calendar years that we can still see only saw a
ten percent delivery rate directly to the people. See a
lot of times there are programs that do give food
or medical supplies, but they give it to the guy
(09:51):
who's going to sell it for you know, guns and
golden toilets and stuff. It's an absolute disaster. And it was,
as I pointed out, with so many of these other things,
it was, uh like universal basic can come for activists,
(10:12):
because those are the people who are running these programs
who then in turn, as money is doled out, have
maybe a charitable side of their particular charity where they
do money. And what do they do They donate back
to the same politicians that are giving them the money.
It's essentially money laundering. And so while they're kicking and
screaming and threatening impeachment and and I can't believe these
(10:35):
kids have At first of all, these kids are you
have a room full of geniuses who probably aren't very
ideological at my point out they're in it for the lulls,
so to speak. They're in it for the for the
for the ability to take their their their nerdery and
(10:57):
funnel it into something. Again, what did you do at eighteen?
Did you unlock a mystery? Too millennium old? That no
other scientist on this planet because at the end of
the day, they fully they didn't fully understand the power
of AI because they you know, and it's not that
they're bad scientists. It's like it's like showing your kid
(11:19):
a rotary phone right now. Even if they're smart, they'll
probably figure it out eventually, but at first they're looking
at that, they're going, what do I do with that
piece of crap? They start talking to it, Hey, piece
of crab, dial whatever, and it doesn't do anything. Now
they're onto the next. It's it's why we have these
Our attention span is so short. It's why we have
(11:42):
articles where they're just like and the twenty sums just
figured out that you don't have to be uh. You
don't have to be uh relatives or married to live
together to lower housing costs. Yeah, if you've got three bedrooms,
you can get two of your buddies, it's crazy, we
just figured this out. That's how you end up with that.
They're all get out on the internet over the Baron
Trump books. Do you remember this from the first time around?
(12:04):
Apparently nobody does. There's somebody on Twitter fans, Oh, oh,
you're not gonna believe it. I just found there's books
from this obscure author in the early nineteen hundreds and
the character's name is Baron kind of it's spelled differently
and slightly pronounced it, but it's close. It's time traveler stuff.
At least that's fun. No, you know what, as somebody
(12:27):
who can be critical from time to time, where I
think that Trump gets I think trump people around Trump
allow him to get over his skis because they have
pet projects. But I just watched a presidency that was
dictated by people's pet projects. The difference was they're not
really running it by the guy. Biden was just signing it,
which is why he didn't know he paused natural gas exports.
(12:50):
Trump is doing this, and if he's got better people
around him, I'm going to give him the benefit of
the doubt on this stuff because he hasn't been wrong yet,
and there will come a time where he gets over
or they are successful in a media narrative of going, hey,
look at this starving kid who's starving more, but not now,
(13:11):
because they don't have examples to throw out, because they
realize how corrupt this whole thing was, so all they
can do is scream. You know, he's not an elected official.
So much of your policy and programming has been effectuated
by people who are not elected officials but rather bureaucrats
who are just ideologically ready to go, willing to do
(13:33):
this stuff because they know that even if they get caught,
and even if they have to do a little show
punishing and that person has to leave, they're going to
be the next year. They have a job for him
over at the program that's handing out transgender Colombian opera donations. Okay,
and they're going to make five hundred thousand a year.
They'll be in charge of this thing, and they won't
(13:54):
do a lot of awarding, but they'll have a lot
of dinners and fundraisers and stuff, and those same officials
wanting money. He'll show up and everything will just go
on and the d the money machine will continue to
go burr. And that's where we'll be and every single
rebuttal is not on the specifics. It's wild man, So
(14:17):
how could you get sick of watching this ross? You
don't even pay attention to the news during the day.
Every time you saw a little nugget accidentally, how how
much more excited did you get?
Speaker 3 (14:24):
Yes, Oh, no, dude, it's incredible.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
Oh oh it's Twitter. For a second, you're like, oh
my gosh, look at that.
Speaker 3 (14:32):
Yeah, it's just so efficient.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
Right, yes, yeah, you have five DJ qualls in a
room somewhere and it's you know what it's it. It was
the social media strategy. We'll get some young guys that
are pretty smart. We'll give them Zen and Mountain Deom.
We'll see what they come up with.
Speaker 3 (14:48):
Now, you've got like five high functioning autistic kids who
are just looking at like numbers. Yeah, they're looking at
the green coat and there following where the money's going,
realizing you know, this isn't how it's supposed to.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
It's amazing, And none of them striking his political ideologue
now because they went and they basically put bios so
they could docks. These guys get they sound like a
bunch of guys that have that are really excited to
be working with Elon obviously, and they just it's just
a project they got to handled. They got handed right,
it's just this other mit professor would do. They're like,
here solf ColdFusion. They're like, oh, ok, we have a
(15:24):
whole weekend. Sure, all right. They put them in a
room with like super laptops. Probably they throw food in there.
They're probably not even eating it. They're just so excited. No,
you have such a big data set to pour through.
Speaker 3 (15:36):
You know, you just find five high functioning autistic individuals
who they're what you call in the in the autism community,
a special interest, right with something the obsess over. And
their special interest happens to be say like budgets. Yes,
and they're gonna do. That's what they're gonna do, and
they're gonna enjoy doing that.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
You gave them what was that chick who went viral
the other day? You gave them a quest? Right, remember
her video? So give them a quest. They love it.
This is their quest. You gave him a quest. Their
questing stand back, We'll be back. But I would I
would have to assume that dude wud be rolling. Well,
it's a little hard since they put him into all
those pieces, but due to be rolling over in his grave.
(16:16):
What Scotland's looking to do? Man, We'll let you figure
out how type this.
Speaker 5 (16:26):
Are you?
Speaker 3 (16:27):
All right?
Speaker 1 (16:27):
Okay, all right, sorry, log me out of something, and
then I have to log back in for some reason
the call screener. Okay, all right, Well ere likes at
that time. So did you know that in the in Scotland,
which I have a lot of questions, how they're going
to enforce this bad boy? Uh, they're getting ready to
(16:47):
ban an absolute plague to the country, a plague that
is wiping out let's see mammals and birds, and that
is cats. Yes, that's right. Households in Scotland soon could
(17:08):
be prohibited from owning cats. Oh what's And I'd say,
what's you know, hey, if you know for those you
went to flee America because Trump's there, like here you go,
no cats, that'd be amazing, right, Well, it's not the
only thing. And actually I was reading a list of
actual things that members of the Scottish you know, they
(17:29):
have their own independent, well semi independent parliament there are
getting ready to ban this year and it's just like
just just you know, you might as well just purge
yourself of all the heritage and stuff and just be done.
All right. So these are things. Now it doesn't mean
necessarily they're going to ban all these but these are
(17:52):
things that very well under current proposed legislation could soon
be illegal in Scotland. So cats, right, Okay, maybe some
of you're comfortable with that. By the way, Scotland has
a much bigger bird kill issue. They have a crap
ton of windmills and they know that they probably kill
(18:16):
about one hundred thousand birds a year, but most people
realize that that number is likely higher. Right. The birds
they're counting killed are birds whose remains are within a
certain distance under one of these things. So if you
hit a bird, if it's able to fly off and
then dies later, you don't necessary it's not in the tally.
(18:39):
With that being said, it's not the only thing, all right.
So birds fireworks all the one o'clock gun at Edinburgh.
So if you going to Edinburgh Castle, they have like
a lot of these places they have, especially in Scotland,
they have the tattoo, the whole military thing where you
go to the stadium. That's that's interesting. It's very touristy,
but it's very cool to watch. This is a thing
(19:03):
they do. It's kind of their ceremonial thing there at Edinburgh.
I guess maybe the gunfire is scaring people. I don't
know social media for people under sixteen birthday cake and
orange juice in child settings, so basically you would be
precluded from serving birthday cake or orange juice like in
(19:24):
a nursery or a primary school or something like that.
So pint glasses with alcohol branding. You know, everyone's drinking
all the time over there, right. More importantly, it is
not socially inappropriate to go have a few pints at lunch.
(19:46):
It's very madmen in what is fine over there? But also,
what do you put in a pint glass? I mean
you don't have to. When you think of a standard
pint glass one you may encounter at a pub, you
put beer in there, or maybe a hard sider. I
guess whatever, do your thing. I'll judge. But that's okay.
(20:09):
Nuclear power and again cats you're gonna ban cats? Man?
Do they? Now? I have so many questions? Do you
are you gonna? Are you? Do you the cats that
are pre existing? Are they grandfathered in?
Speaker 5 (20:26):
Or you just.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Is that what you do I want. Also, you're not
on an island alone. Okay, Now, if you were Ireland
and Ireland was you know, reunified, and so it was
all one thing you could do that Try to take
a cat to Hawaii. It's not easy. I only know
(20:49):
the apartment that I ended up taking over in college
when I moved to Colorado. The girl who was living
there was in the process of moving to Hawaii, and
so I went and looked at and she was there
and hear and I, uh, we talked a few times.
Maybe we'ven met for lunch one time because I want
to find out about the owner and whatnot. And she
(21:10):
was unloading on me just because she had a cat.
And there's the nightmare scenario bring because you got a
quarantine and then it was a whole thing, and she
didn't have a paperwork because it was rescue and just
a nightmare. But you're not you at the UK right
here and they have cats. Are you gonna what are you?
Are you gonna set up a little cat checkpoint at
Hadrian's Wall, which isn't the actual border by the way
(21:32):
of Scotland and England, but used to kind of be.
The Scots will tell you it was to keep the
English out, and then the English. Well, anyway, it's a
whole thing, he asked, anyone when you're over there, it's funny.
Will they have tiny cat asylum stations where the cats
can present themselves, make the claim that they're being chased
by a dog, even though you don't see the dog.
Maybe the dog's right over the rise there, you don't know,
(21:55):
and the cat fears for its life, and so you
allow the cat into the interior with the court date
warriors down the road. But since cat's be you know,
they didn't live a certain length, but it's a lot
less than us. Many will not even make it because
they'll get run over by a car or something, or
just dump them into the interior. All right. Will three
hundred thousand kittens go missing? We don't even know where
(22:17):
they are. They crossed with a cat male relative. We
didn't check, but that's what he said. And now we
can't find the kitten anywhere. Lord knows where the kitten is.
Maybe he's up by the O Bond Distillery. You don't know,
but you're not going to make any active effort to check.
Will there be little cat migrant groups there? What about
the cats. They're living out the grandfather period in that village.
(22:42):
Who you know, they got eight hundred cats in the
village and now you got ten thousand brand new cats
they got just left in there, and society's just beginning
to change, and nobody communicates with each other, and there's
animosity among the pre existing cats. Will all of these
things exist? Will a bunch of self righteous cats start
(23:03):
going on cat television and telling you that they need
these other cats here because if they don't have these
other cats here, there won't be blueberries for their stupid
soccer mom smoothies. And we'll have to sit through that.
I know what you're thinking. You're saying, k C. Come
on now, you're just making up stuff. I would tell
(23:27):
you that I'm not just making up stuff. I can't.
We didn't play the audio the other day, did we.
There is audio I didn't even get to didn't even
get to of Nitwitz over on CNN sitting there and
literally running the whole who's gonna pick our food argument? Apps?
(23:48):
I was just unmitigated insanity every step of the way.
So will there be a version of this? But the
version is for cats. I need to know these things.
I can't fool Did you just put it up there?
Hang on, Rossmoy just put it up there. Yeah, here
we go. This is an actual thing. I want to
know if there's going to be a cat.
Speaker 6 (24:08):
Version, wait until American women can't get blueberries for their smoothies.
I cannot wait until there is a full crackdown on
all small businesses. As if that's going to be the
solution to the immigration problem. It is just going to
put immigration related issues further into.
Speaker 5 (24:30):
The darker corners.
Speaker 6 (24:31):
We're not going to see them. It's just going to
become even harder to solve the problem. It's it doesn't
make sense to punish individuals and people when there is
a broken system.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
Can you imagine if they can't get their cat dip
for their morning whatever. By the way, do you know
where the Do you know where the majority of blueberries
are grown? Because I I this was easy to look up.
You know you know what countries have the most blueberry production?
Speaker 3 (25:02):
One?
Speaker 1 (25:02):
Canada is one of them, by the way, but the
vast majority come from Mexico, which could be an issue,
although apparently after a few hours it wasn't, and Chile both.
That's who's producing the majority of her blueberries. Now, we
make a lot of blueberries, don't get me wrong, but
what are you talking about. You can't have blueberry stree.
(25:24):
Do you think that that's on this whole issue which
involves separated families. Yes, those three hundred thousand kids I
mean incorporated in my whole cat diatribe and all of
these things. And you think Mexico and Canada is not
going to do it. Did you see how fast they
bent the knee yesterday? They took just long enough that
(25:47):
idiots like Michael Steele and others were able to go,
see tallet tariffs don't work, and tomorrow everyone's jobs are gone.
Mexico was forty eight minutes Canada was Canada held out right.
They put up a good fight, which was about early lunchtime.
(26:10):
We got an inkling that was coming and by the
time you got done digesting your subway sandwich, they were like,
all right, we're gonna do this, because somebody put both
those leaders in a room and went, even if they went,
you know, you're right, at least from their perspective, we're
gonna have double unemployment tomorrow, which would have been really
(26:31):
what happened in Canada. It would have doubled their unemployment.
Now you have people like Ford, who I thought it
was the crackhead dude, but it's not. It's a different
dude named Ford who kind of looks like him, Unlike
he's a crackhead still running stuff, but not. He's the
premiere of Quebec and he's doubling down on this. Really
(26:52):
we're gonna can And they canceled like a bunch of
Starlink contracts and stuff like that'll show Elon. Elon clearly
doesn't care, and he also realizes that if you're in
the northern reaches of any of these provinces, you don't
have any other options short of these boondoggles that pay
on average three thousand dollars a year to maintain a
(27:13):
high speed internet connection in some of these Inuit villages,
when in reality, you can get everybody, you get everybody there,
own starlink, pay the bill and save most of that money.
So let them have a hissy fit.
Speaker 3 (27:28):
Again.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
It wasn't just reading about the USA stuff. It was
passively watching what was going to happen with Mexico and
Canada yesterday. And like we told you on the show, Chile,
Excuse me, China is going to be a bit of
the outlier. But how long did those two last ros?
Were you surprised see Canada and Mexico come around? I
(27:48):
saw you posted about it yesterday.
Speaker 3 (27:50):
I was laughing hysterically. Yeah. The day before you had
these people on social media that were going, look at Trudeau,
look at Trudeau at that poety show to make why
he's a great leader, and why he you know, he's
speaking two languages at once somehow, and he's going back
and forth, and he's going to show Trump the business,
you know what I mean, He's gonna show them what
(28:10):
Canada is all about. And all we need to do
is turn off their electricity, even though our pipeline goes
through the United States before it comes back to our east.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
But never mind all I said, because the keystone Nextcellen
h was.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
Going to show them. And then it was like Lessen,
what what it was ten hours or something?
Speaker 1 (28:27):
Yeah? Twelve, man's generous, but yeah, yeah, yeah, ten hours
to be official. I think about seven when.
Speaker 3 (28:33):
They said they were going to do it, just completely
caving and giving us exactly what we wanted. And you
know what Trump was asking for. It wasn't a crazy ask.
It was like Hey, how about you look at your
side of the border. Can you just sort of, you know,
patrol that side of the border and make sure the
drugs and stuff aren't coming through here? And they're like, no,
I can't do that.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
Yeah, what are you expect you to get it perfect?
We just expect you not to have triple which I
didn't realize triple the number of actual apprehensions of Mexico,
which doesn't mean they're doing a great job over it.
There's still a percentage of it. It just shows you.
It shows you that. Also, the Canada has become the
premier entry point for people on the terror.
Speaker 3 (29:08):
Watch list, but there's more ways to enter.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
Yeah, there's one hundred. If I could tell you how
to cross the Canadian border right now, go in, have
a good time, and come back out on a dirt road. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (29:21):
I mean, just look at the map, because marketing and
were looking at this yesterday because we were curious before
Canada actually you know, caved how many entry points are there,
and obviously the borders. But yeah, dude, there's so many.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
Mountana's litter with them a Minnesota and that most of
them are rule man and I've crossed over. I told
you when I was crossing over the War Road. Now
now there is a legal thing there, but it's so
life is so different there that because I was crossing
in the morning as school was getting ready to start.
In the opposite lane coming into Canada from me is
(29:54):
a steady stream of high school kids. They don't even stop.
They don't even stop, just wave at the US customs
and a guy kind of writes the license plate down.
And the reason is is because in Warroad, Minnesota, which
you go up find Lake of the Woods and it's
it's on the left side there you have Bidet, you
have War Road, and then as you cross over you
(30:16):
have very rural portion of Canada. There is a reservation
there on the on the lake, but there's also just
a bunch of people and the closest town by a
mile is War Road. So they do all their grocery
shopping there. And this is more important when they have
their babies. That's the hospital they go to and War Road,
so those kids are technically US citizens even though none
(30:41):
of them live in the US. They they use they
that was the they use it to go to school there.
In fact, the way the whole thing's funded up there
is a little different, and it's just because there is
nothing in Canada there of any decent size until you
get all the way up to Saskatchewan and stuff, because
you're in rural Manitoba there, and so people all come
(31:05):
down and so the kids that are coming in to
go to school, it would be insane to stop them.
It's very loosey goosey. A lot of it's built on trust.
And that's an actual checkpoint. You go fifty miles towards
the North Dakota border where there's nothing and you can
get into northern Montana. There's ranches that use service roads
(31:25):
as part of getting departs of the ranches that technically
cross into Canada, and it's not marked. You just got
to know what you're doing. Me and my cousin, Me
and my cousins used drive on some of these roads. Now,
we didn't use it to necessarily access Canada and the
people around there. We did it to go shoot birds
and stuff. So that's what's going on here, and yeah,
(31:48):
what they were asking for is pretty reasonable. The question
is how did we get here? Well, it's the same
way we got here with the USAID programs and everything else.
We used to have a balance here in the US
because we primarily funded our country based on terrace, but
we had a balance. We would look at somebody who
wanted to do a business and we'd find out what
the mutual benefit was, and yes, we would even yield
on the side of giving a little because we wanted
(32:09):
that revenue. We wait, we wanted them addicted to doing
business in the US. And over the years, what happens
is soft politicians went, you know, it's not really fair
because they're so poor compared to us, They're GDPs not
as high, and so we would get increasingly worse situations
and they would they would take an inch, they would
take an inch, and I would understand why they would
(32:31):
do it right, because they're negotiating for their country now
they're people. So if you have a soft politician who's like,
oh shucks, look at that. Look at the little guys
just getting going with their stuff, well, you know what,
we're not gonna We're gonna tear if they're stuff. They
had mouths defeat and whatnot. And then so they established
sectors in there. And then they start establishing sectors where
laws are written and put into place, like they did
(32:54):
with the California flower industry, not the bread flour, but
the pretty flowers, right that you're all gonna buy on Thanksgi,
on Thanksgiving, on Valentine's Day because you're a schmuck. And
so they we basically turned that whole industry over to
Columbia's part of a trade deal. In fact, there are busted, old,
abandoned greenhouses in Marin County, California that used to grow
(33:18):
all of not all these, but a crap ton of
these flowers. But we just opened it up to Canada,
to Columbia. We did it because we felt bad. Look
at it. It's a lot of violence down there. People are poor.
What are we going to do? And they went all
shucks all the way through instead of constantly reminding politely
that were the United States and doing business here is
really good for you. And so Trump's looking at all
(33:40):
these after years of neglecting, going look, we're going to
bring these back to where they need to be. And
of course it's a painful process, but it's a process
you all allowed to happen, and he's going to be
the adult. We'll be back. But like literally all the
stuff where there's proposals to ban or kurtell it up there,
and what are you guys doing? Man? So if you
don't know, there is uh they're looking at banning cats
(34:03):
and I'm just want like, how do you enforce that
the can't tiny cat checkpoints? Will smugglers still be called
coyotes because I don't know if you know what happens
when coyotes and cats get around each other. It's usually
not good for the cats, like or little dogs. Do
you remember when Jessica Simpson got her dog eating by
coyote and then went on social media, uh all about it?
(34:29):
I think you did a parody Now I don't remember it.
I think we did a parody song. See if I
can find that trying everybody did the parody song too.
They just get another dog or something, all right, you
know what. That's right, that's how my brain works. So
everybody just play in or plug in because I'm gonna
find this real quick. Yeah. Yeah, when the uh they
(34:55):
don't they don't do well? Oh man, it would be
under song, wouldn't hold on? Yes? I found it so
uh in the Hollywood Hills, she had a she had
a little dog, a little purse dog that went missing.
And then there was some trail cam video and there
like is that your dog near a coyote? Well, where'd
your dog you go? And then she she posted these
(35:19):
like long, I don't celebrate their little dog got eaten.
But man, if you got coyotes around, even if you're
in there, you don't let small animals out. The coyotes
don't eat them. The eagles will. I told you it
had some of my friend's parents. I was there at
an event they had like a big cookout thing and
two hours of it was what happened to a little
the other yappie Pomeranian and an eagle happened. So, yeah,
(35:45):
you gotta be careful. That's what it was. It was
a three dog night.
Speaker 7 (35:51):
Jessica, vent's a dead dog.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
Nobody. You will have a fine back up. She'll come
out instead of that chiote is behind. So let me
give you some advice. Skip the twegt your mode alone,
then go by and dumb doll.
Speaker 3 (36:16):
But if it.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Fits, send your person. It's kyoted feed so by a
different breathe advice that you were a smart arct girl.
You exa did as true.
Speaker 7 (36:31):
That the lion drink said, it's a circle of the fire.
Speaker 1 (36:35):
She's now kayoting poop.
Speaker 8 (36:38):
Skip the tweg your mod along, then go bye and
dumb doll.
Speaker 1 (36:46):
But if it fits, send your person. It's kyoted feed
so by.
Speaker 3 (36:51):
A different breathe, all right.
Speaker 1 (36:53):
So that's and that's just that, that's just the tip
of this. These are all proposed things again, not that
they're all gonna pass, but are all proposals currently in
the Scottish legislature. So fireworks banning those raf flyovers, because
why would you want you know, that probably scares some people.
The one o'clock gun at Edinburgh Castle, which is kind
of a it's a traditional thing, but it's a tourist
(37:15):
thing too. Burning wood that to be fair, finding trees
in Scotland can be a little difficult around many of
the more popularized areas. They do have forests, and especially
if you get up where that the big British monarchy
have there. They do all their stag hunting up there
and stuff that's pretty impressive and you can kind of
look over the hills at it. Social media under sixteen
(37:39):
birthday cakes and orange juice. They're also want to ban
bagpipes in certain circums. How do you do that? How
do you put any restrictions on bagpipes? How do you
Bury police if you don't have bagpipes? I don't even
know how that works. I thought bagpipes are required for
any gun salute a fallen officer funeral. And that's just
(38:03):
in the US. It has to be that way in
the UK, nuclear power, you name it. So I don't know, man,
I think I think William Wallace, if you'd have told
them all this, would have would have let the British
people or the British lords just uh just have their
way with your just prema knock to the hell out
(38:24):
of your wife and just look the other way, because
you'd be like, what am I fighting for? Man, it
can't be this all right, you know, it'd be real,
real sad is Donna? Hello Donna?
Speaker 3 (38:33):
Are you good morning?
Speaker 8 (38:34):
Casey?
Speaker 1 (38:35):
Good morning?
Speaker 9 (38:37):
So are they gonna have a Gimo equivalent and call
it kipmo?
Speaker 1 (38:41):
You know what, here's the thing. I don't like the pun,
but I'm I'm willing to agree if it means that
there's a giant cat prison.
Speaker 5 (38:48):
So that's terrible.
Speaker 1 (38:50):
You know, the problem.
Speaker 5 (38:51):
The problem with Scotland is it's a soul of scott Now.
Speaker 1 (38:56):
Now that's it. That is a famous quote.
Speaker 5 (38:58):
So yes to steal.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
Yeah, I will say this, though, I don't think you
put it in Scotland. I think you do. You put
it in El Salvador because that guys like willing to
build mega prisons for us.
Speaker 5 (39:08):
So yeah, right on.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
Plus it would give all the other people some to eat.
So all right, all right, so I'm gonna mark you
out for not moving to Scotland. Okay, yeah, Donald wouldn't.
She couldn't function there having access to kats. Yeah, if
you didn't see this, the president of l Salvador is like, hey,
all right, so I know you can only store like
(39:32):
thirty thousand at this skipmo thing. You're proposing what and
you have all these countries they are going to make
it very difficult to bring about. What if we built
you a mega prison because I don't know if you
know this, we're kind of into mega prisons right now,
and you know we could do that you just pay us.
And Trump's looking to that, going that's a damn fine idea. Oh,
(39:53):
people are gonna lose their minds. Absolutely. So not only
are you not are you deported from the US, but
because by the way, these are not just random folks.
These are the very same people that Columbia tried to
turn back because we had them shackled in a plane. Yes,
that's right. We had a plane full of people who
(40:13):
themselves are all murderers or suspected murderers or or drug
kingpins who Colombia didn't want to allow a plane to
land because we had them in shackles.
Speaker 3 (40:26):
I don't think we didn't go far enough there. They
should have all looked like Hannibal Lecter.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
Said about with one of the full wheelchairs with the
masks and the whole con Air fields.
Speaker 3 (40:36):
Right, Steve Bushemi and Cony Air. Yeah, with the mask
and the dolly and then when the when you would
land and you would open up the back of the plane,
you would just kind of roll them. They would roll
down the dolly.
Speaker 1 (40:47):
H yeah, line of sorts. Yeah. So, but like Columbia's position,
what do you think if we just let them all
run around like it's business class, But they knew that
this plane was literally flying them back to the country
where they're probably gonna get thrown in the poke.
Speaker 3 (41:04):
Then it actually turns into kan Air.
Speaker 1 (41:06):
Then it is kan Air five minutes because what do
they have to lose? You absolute luned to what do
they have to lose. They'd be up there like that
Somali pirate going I'm the captain Now. In five minutes,
they'd be falling out of the air and they'd be
pulling that and it looked like that crazy fight scene
with Bain right get in the opening of that mission
(41:29):
Impossible Planes. Like they're not going to go back. Of course,
they're at shackles. They just they they didn't get the
full outfit the Ross wanted. So that's a very interesting proposal.
I don't know what that looks like. People lose their
buying because they're already losing the mind over the audacity
of El Salvador to basically jail career criminals there, which
(41:54):
the people seem to like, not all of them, obviously,
if they got relatives locked up in there. But and
don't get me wrong, is else are there people locked
up in there that l Salvador may have fast tracked, probably,
but there that's also El Salvador. So the US, if
they have any concerns with that, needs to be very
vocal about, Hey, while you guys may be running it,
(42:15):
it will be run to US standards or not. But
the screeching will get it will continue I promise yes, Janet,
what's up?
Speaker 9 (42:29):
Hey, So that crazy woman you are playing a clip
on earlier? What is she talking about? Who's coming ford
blueberries for smoothie? All the other examples she gave, Like,
that's not already happening too, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (42:45):
Hold on, let me play the audio again. She was
really into the blueberry smoothies. But here we go.
Speaker 6 (42:50):
I can't wait until American women can't get blueberries for
their smoothies. I cannot wait until there is a full
crackdown on all small businesses.
Speaker 1 (43:03):
As if that's going to be the solution.
Speaker 6 (43:05):
To the immigration problem. It is just going to put
immigration related issues further into.
Speaker 5 (43:12):
The darker corners.
Speaker 6 (43:13):
We're not going to see them. It's just going to
become even harder to solve the problem. It's it doesn't
make sense to punish individuals and people when there is
a broken systems.
Speaker 1 (43:25):
So it sounds like her two points were the blueberries,
but also the smoothie shop.
Speaker 9 (43:29):
So right right, Like, hello, COVID crack down on small businesses.
I mean, COVID could go anywhere except Walmart.
Speaker 1 (43:39):
Yeah, but these are smoothie shops, Janet, where they serve
fresh blueberry smoothies.
Speaker 9 (43:45):
Just stupid is wrong with this one?
Speaker 1 (43:48):
Yeah? Well even the people in the panel were kind
of looking at her like, would you stop bringing up
agricultural examples because we're kind of fitting a pattern here.
So yeah, all right, well I'm sorry, I'm sorry about that,
but your smoothies are in periled. But it sounds like
obviously they were already imperiled for you Janets.
Speaker 3 (44:05):
So nothing does that woman that was unseen? And then
does she really speak like that the Valley girl? Yeah, yeah,
she sounds doesn't It sounds like a parody.
Speaker 1 (44:15):
Yeah, That's why I kind of smacked when I was
making fun of her, because it's very.
Speaker 3 (44:19):
I mean, yeah, you Blue Buys and you weren't gonna
be like where the Mexicans like.
Speaker 1 (44:23):
It's so groty. You know what I'm saying is how
grotty it is? Good point, Oh my gosh, so grody
to the max. Some would say it's to the max grody.
I don't know if i'd go there, would you would
you say? To the max? Ross? Or almost to the max?
Almost almost to the max? Okay, all right, so it's
groedy but not quite to the max. It could be groedy?
Or is all that we're saying seven seventeen. The grotty
(44:47):
will continue next hang out at the very leadst A
very good way to expose the sheer hypocrisy of people.
Let me let me ask Ross. I'm gonna ask you
the question, do you think women have agency? Grown women,
not women suffering from any sort of thing that may
call into question their ability to make legal, rational decisions.
(45:08):
I still question the rationals sometimes. But but do women,
adult women have agency to make their own decisions?
Speaker 3 (45:16):
Of course they do, I believe right.
Speaker 1 (45:19):
You even have a wife, right, and you feel that
she has agency? Do?
Speaker 3 (45:22):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (45:22):
You do? Okay? Okay, So if your wife decided to
show up to an event wearing nothing and then drop
trou in front of all the cameras, would that be
on her a little bit? Not that not that your
sweet wife would do that, But would you go, oh,
obviously somebody made her do that? Or would you be like,
(45:44):
oh my god, what is going on?
Speaker 3 (45:46):
I think in her? In her? You know, if it
was it might be mind control of some sort, because
it's so would be so car.
Speaker 1 (45:53):
But there's not a So there's not a pattern of
your wife showing up at red carpet events there with
her boots out or anything, okay.
Speaker 3 (46:02):
Which seems to be that's the thing that Kanye's is
his wife.
Speaker 1 (46:05):
First, Oh you knew where I was going with this. Yeah,
I guess they're married.
Speaker 3 (46:07):
So they're married, okay, yeah, No, it seems to be
like a pattern with her because every time you see her,
she's not wearing pants, or she's not wearing a shirt,
or she's doing things to Kanye on a boat or whatever.
Speaker 1 (46:18):
Like what putting sunscreen on her? Yeah where all over
all over? Yeah? Okay, but especially lower than all over
maybe yeah, and not with her hands anyway. So here's
the thing. So ever, since she's throwing the red carpet there,
(46:38):
like the other half of Twitter, the one who wasn't
melting down just over the exposing of all of this
USA boondoggle, the other half of Twitter yesterday was like
trying to have some sort of like Bianca Sence sorry
which is her name intervention because they were like slow
rolling the video and at some point Kanye talks to her.
(47:01):
They don't know what he says, and they were saying, well,
obviously what's happening is she is under his control. She's
not making her own decisions, and he's ordering her around.
Look just look at her. She you can tell that
that is Stockholm syndrome or something. The boat thing that
he's referring to was a specific act and like and
(47:25):
and all that, and none of it's her fault. It's
not her making a decision.
Speaker 3 (47:29):
Right, It's just he has her under his control, right, Yeah.
Or they're both crazy people that found each other.
Speaker 1 (47:35):
Right, there's that. That's the other One's the other one
he could go with. Yeah, So, like you just assume
because she's doing this, that Kanye is obviously forcing her
to In this day and age, for a woman to
make the decision that she wants you to see part
of her nether regions, especially in a public set, in
(47:58):
a publicity driven setting, it has to be a man
forcing him to do it. Then you don't believe in
agency of women if that's your default, because one, OnlyFans exist.
So like that barrier's broken. Two, this is hot. How
many wardrobe malfunctions some intentional, Okay, a lot of them
(48:20):
intentional are part of the Hollywood celebrity zeitegeys Right, Yeah,
I remember Britney getting out of that car. Remember the
super Bowl, right, which Anna Jackson and Justin Timberlake and there,
even there, they tried to go, well, Judd justin did
that to her. She couldn't have done that. Maybe Kanye
is just dating somebody who wants you to see your body, man,
(48:43):
she said, and look, she got a pretty good body
on her. I didn't want to look. It just happened
to show up at my news feet. Nothing I could do.
And because everything that Kanye does is seemingly reaction publicity driven.
This guy loves stirring the pot man. He's very good
at it. So you think the woman by his side
(49:07):
isn't going along with it? Sure, she probably adores him,
but I don't think he had to talk her into
this stuff, and I don't think he's given her hypnotic orders.
Are you talking about TikTok prank? Which I'll do in
a moment. Oh you're kidding me. All right, here's the headline. Wait,
hold on, I gotta do. It's New York Post, so
(49:27):
I have to have nine little splashovers and pop up
ads and then it'll allow me to here we go,
illegal migrant cut loose in plea deal after raping sleeping women.
But then the Fed stepped in, all right, so we
can get some sanity here. Yeah, here we go an
Ecuadori and migrant to cut a plea deal with Queen's
(49:49):
prosecutors that allowed him gave him no jail time for
raping sleeping women? Is it not as raping if they're sleeping?
Am I? I have to ask whoope? Since she delineates
these things, was it rape or was it rape? Rape?
Speaker 6 (50:06):
Ugh?
Speaker 1 (50:09):
So this twenty seven year old kel cardenis, I don't
know if i'd pray kal kyle kail kai l. I
don't even know how that'd be pronounced anyway, picked up
by federal agents Monday morning, less than a month after
being freed for the horrifying twenty twenty three rape and
sex abuse case. So yeah, the Feds are getting a
(50:32):
little proactive here man. And so they watched this playout obviously,
you know, going back a month under a different administration,
and prosecutors up in Queens are like, yeah, about that
thing where you were literally raping somebody was trying to sleep.
We gave you no jail time. The Feds were not
having them. So where did this take place? On public transfers?
Speaker 9 (50:53):
Are now?
Speaker 1 (50:54):
Okay? So was at an apartment party in Jamaica Queens.
The woman told authorities that she had passed out and
woke up to basically having her clothes removed and this
guy literally in the act of it, and they weren't
even going to give him jail time. Listen to the
(51:17):
evidence they had for this, so they kind of knew
each other, but not really. One of the pieces of
evidence the prosecutors brought to trial was messages between the
victim and her attacker, in which he stated that he
saw her sleeping and had to start touching her. So
while she's passed out, while he's escalating to full on
(51:40):
sex with this woman, He's also explaining via Instagram texts
why he's doing what he's doing. You look so hot.
I saw you sleeping. I figured, hey, this is as
much chance. So you have you have an admission. You
have an admission. You have the witness testimony or the
(52:00):
victim testimony. You have a witness who testified because she
started screaming, people ran in what's up? And you require
Here's what he was sentenced to. One year of sex
offender counseling but no jail time. That is amazing, I mean,
but it's really not. That's uh, you know DA and
(52:23):
prosecutors in the Manhattan area right there. Oh, he also
had to stay away from the victim. I guess whether
she's awake or asleep, he's got to stay a certain distance. However,
federal agencies decided to go ahead and pick him up
because while that he may have been adjudicated on the
state charges there, the fact remains that he crossed the
(52:47):
border illegally, and I guess there's some other charges he
has too, And they're just like, nope, we're going to
scoop you up in our with our big criminal migrant
goldfish net. Well that's good. I don't know, maybe you're
on your way down Salvador two, sir. Absolutely just nothing
(53:08):
but wins all week man and just stupid stuff. Do
you see the governor of New Jersey who was like
he's in an interview and he's wanting to act tough,
and he's just like, ah, I have an illegal migrant
in the governor's mansion. What are you going to do
about it? And then they asked Homan at home and
it's like, oh, really that's true. Do you got is
(53:30):
that happening? All right, we'll get a warrant for that.
And that piece of garbage, was literally backtracking by by sundown.
He's like, just kidd, we don't have no, we don't
have it. A I'm not harboring an illegal immigrant in
the in the in the governor's mansion. That's crazy. And
it's like, well, hold on, so were you just lying
all morning or was the person there and now they're
(53:54):
not like none of this makes any sense? Or did
you get called on your bs and you realize the
whole You a doug, Because let's look at the options.
Even in New Jersey, which is a state that is
not outside the realm of purple right, they have Republican
governors there. They have a very contentious race coming up.
(54:15):
A lot of people throwing their hat in to be
the Republican person there because right now, if you can
get in there and you don't have a major scandal,
you got a pretty good chance. And the last thing
this term limited democrat up there would do is create
this scenario where the Feds are raiding the governor's mansion.
What if he was harboring them there? People are going
(54:36):
to have a very different response to that because it
looks so insane and it just shows you how backcrap
crazy people are, especially if it's somebody who has a
significant criminal background, which is the focus of immigration. They're
not even coming in and getting your domestic help. Or however,
(54:57):
you see these people every time you open your mouth
and Trump's Trump's guy Homan called you on your bs
and you immediately folded. Sure, you're Canada now in Mexico
and Honduras, in Colombia. You're all the things. Meanwhile, Joe
Biden's moving on to his next chapter in life. What
(55:18):
do you what do we think in rom com buddy comedy?
Maybe a reboot of Weekend at Bernie's. That'd be amazing.
Speaker 3 (55:29):
I'm thinking like a combination of Weekend at Bernie's, would like, say,
like a Liam Neeson movie, Like.
Speaker 1 (55:36):
So, okay, all right, but you know Liam Neeson's character,
which is usually the same. It's just taken on a
snowplow or taken on a train or a plane or whatever.
Although I watched the latest one where he's just trying
to reconnect with his dad's very it's it's not the
usual stuff. I can't remember what the name of it is,
(55:57):
but it's a it's a big drama. And yeah, don't
get me wrong, he is a criminal dude with a
heart of golden there or whatever, but he was a dragger.
So anyway, I only asked because Biden already has been
signed as the to a talent agency, one of the
one of the big boys there, which I mean, this
(56:19):
is just I understand why the talent agencies are coming
out because there's so many production options nowadays, even ones
that he could probably make it through. But it was
it Cia right who handles, and they're a big moon back.
These are the yeah, creative artist agencies CIA. This is
a big one. When you normally hear about these guys,
(56:41):
it's because somebody in Hollywood had a conservative opinion and
they drop them as a client. So they immediately signed
Biden and so now you know, it's just keep the
money spiger going. Here we go. We don't know what
the services are, but I have to wonder. I don't
get right, I don't know if it would be a
(57:02):
dramatic role, and it would be funny watching him issue
threats to you know, a group of Albanian gangsters or something.
But if you thought that video of from the Irishman
that we mocked of of de Niro pretending he's fifty
years younger. Herb stomping that shop owner was funny to
(57:22):
watch because his legs just don't move like that. Can
you imagine him having to do a fight scene with
Joe Biden?
Speaker 3 (57:29):
You know, the handlers would have to jump in and
do it.
Speaker 1 (57:32):
He'd be dead. He'd be dead. They'd be like, why
don't you stretch mister proble?
Speaker 3 (57:37):
My gosh, she's I don't know, man, he's surpry.
Speaker 1 (57:41):
What's he gonna do? The awkward, weird downhill walk with
his arms flailing like he's trying to go down the Like.
The fight scenes aren't gonna be on the roll upstairs
to the plane, I can tell you that much. You're
not Jackie Channing anything on there. It would be funny
to see some like thirty year old stunt dude with
(58:02):
like the hair plug hit in film from an angle.
Speaker 3 (58:05):
But I mean the Albanians could be chasing him up
the stairs and then he could fall backwards and take
them all out.
Speaker 1 (58:10):
Oh that's a good point, like bowling pins just knock
them all out. So more of a more of like
a mister Bean as a spy kind of thing. There
you go, all right? Yeah, so yeah, we don't even
know what's gonna be going on, but that is getting
signed to. That means there's a bunch of money that's
going to be changing hands. What other cameos could we
(58:30):
do for Biden? That's what I want to know. What
other reboots would fit? Like we can at Bernie's the
one that comes to mind, which would be an easy
like reboot because it's Hollywood, and then they can just
haul Joe Biden around places, get some secret service guys
to play as you know, the buddies there. So if
you can get a couple that can act, you got
(58:52):
a lot of options. Man. Also, it says here he
and members of his family. What's Hunter Biden gonna do?
Train Spotting? I mean, what's his movie? Are we gonna
do a reboot? But instead of DiCaprio in the Basketball Diaries,
it's Joe Biden. Oh, it's gonna be amazing or the
(59:16):
People Versus Larry Flint Part two or something, whatever it is,
it's gonna have tons of T and A in it.
Can we just agree? Okay? All right? Seven forty five
raced Agic from the Weather Channel. He's hanging out with us.
What's going on, sir man? Much are you. I know,
we're trying to figure out so Biden signed to this
(59:37):
big Hollywood talent agency and we're trying to figure out
what movie they're gonna put him in, and all we
can come up with is Weekend at Bernie's Reboot. So
oh wow. Yeah, yeah, there is not a lot of lines.
Maybe more phasical comedy. Yeah, I guess we'll see. Yeah,
it works because he's a former president, so it's just yes,
(59:59):
it's easy to get paid once you're done the man,
Yeah for sure. Right, but let's turn from fiction to nonfiction,
well regulated fiction, right, yeah, that's that is and fifties
a little mid fifties.
Speaker 7 (01:00:16):
Normal high normal lows in the low thirties. Take a
look this morning, real quick, already seeing upper forties, low
fifties for morning lows. So we're almost surpassing the high
temperatures for the date, not the morning lows, and that
means load to mid seventies. Today we get the seventy
six that would tie a record in Raleigh, record of
(01:00:36):
the Triad, I think is a little bit lower. Seventy
three actually, so pretty dark close for everybody. Now, there
are bigger changes coming though tomorrow. We've been talking about
this last couple of days clouds that can get this
east flow low pressure going north of us, and what
that means for you really is a much different data
than today. You're going to find the jackets again, a
lot of clouds in the afternoon, some light rain and
rain into Tomorrow night.
Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
We're only going to be in.
Speaker 7 (01:00:58):
The mid upper forties tomorrow, so about a thirty degree
temperature swing between today and tomorrow. Then we're back up Thursday,
maybe a little rain early, then low seventies in the afternoon,
and that chance of rain will come in as we
go through Thursday night. We'll get a break Friday morning,
another round of rain for Friday afternoon, low seventies, and
then we're dry Friday night late, and then another chance
(01:01:20):
of rain Saturday, but dry Sunday. So every couple of
days it looks like a chance of rain. The timing
case do you think we'd have to work on, But
I think in the next forty eight hours we'll go
from short sleeves today, near record warm to much cooler
tomorrow and rain most of in light but still quarter
inch in some spots later the tomorrow afternoon into Tomorrow night,
either rainfall, the Weather Service still, you know, talking about
(01:01:41):
how the fire danger is still pretty high across most
of the southeast with the lack of rainfall, and we'll
get a little bit it's needed, and then I think
unsettled after that, every couple of days some chances of rain.
Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
So unsettled is to be interesting. So that's fine. Yeah
for me too, no ice, not st possibility, so yeah,
maybe you know. Okay, all right, well, thank you very much.
Do appreciate it, sir. We will chat with you in
an hour. Okay, yes, sir, there you go, race stagic
from the Weather Channel. No, people are coming up with
Joe Biden movie titles. See I was gonna suggest that,
(01:02:15):
but I'm going to have to you guys know what's up.
All right, We'll see if any of them are funny,
and we'll get your calls next. Hang on, do you
guys know Ross? Do you guys even go out or you? Yeah? Yeah,
you made the wise decision. A lot of people ain't
having that. Apparently police had to show up to the
chilis at a mall in Nashville, the Opry Mills Mall.
(01:02:38):
I don't know what it is. I don't know. I
probably in trouble for this. I don't know. I have
no beef with chilies, but I always find the mall
adjacent chilies are more interesting, you know what I mean
by that? More interesting? And I don't know, maybe maybe
it's just everyone's in mole mode, but whatever least recalled
(01:02:58):
after gunshots around. Also, I have a question if you're
in if you let's say you go to Chili's to
avail yourself of endless baby back ribs, which I would understand,
I'm here for it, Yet you're only on let's say
you're only on your second platter and you're a you're
a three or four platter kind of person, right, you
make Chili's executives nervous and gunshots rang out, So like
(01:03:23):
the rest of the folks in this story, you all
run outside because you know you don't want to get
Swiss cheese while you're eating your ribs. Does that stop
the clock? Or are you that's just it? They were
endless until you know, because if you read, they have
actual verbiage on what endless really means. Because people suit
(01:03:46):
them for stuff like you can't do take out. There's
a certain timeframe all of this I don't know. Once
the police clear the scene, can you go back in
and then boom? And then they got to bring you
a fresh platter because that other one, because you know,
it takes a while to process. The scene's probably cold.
Don't know the answer. Witnesses say there was panic because
(01:04:07):
people sprinting out of the mall. Quote, we were sitting
on the little swings over there, right past the food court.
So this is literally this one's in the mall. I
guess and uh. A witness named Ladonte described to a
local news station, all I see them on their walkies
and like, oh, they're shooting. You need to run, run run.
(01:04:29):
What if you're really hungry and your ribs just got there.
Another woman said that she was checking out at the
adjacent Bass Pro show. It just gets better at the
bass Pro shop. Wait, do you have a bass Pro
shop directly next to a Chili's and it's all enclosed.
That's like redneck Kevin Man. People were running through yelling
(01:04:53):
code red, code red. Everyone's got to go. It's just
you hear code red. That's a mole cop speak for
a not good. The Chili's, which sits directly between the
TGI Fridays and Applebee's in case you didn't know, cause
(01:05:16):
where is the chili that's right next to the other.
Two Fast casual also saw patrons fleeing after they heard
the gunshots and the commotion. In all, police say, seven
shots may have been fired. If you do that thing,
or I guess your other expects you to. You got
a week and a half, so probably go ahead and
get on that. I guess the big story today is
(01:05:40):
the absolute panic going on over the US AID program
established via executive order by President Kennedy. The programs as
it has ballooned, has become more secretive. The last administration
(01:06:00):
changed basically the transparency part of it, where you could
see where a lot of this is going and who
was attached to and and the Biden me or the
Trump administration said, no, we're going to dig into this thing,
and by the way to do it, we're basically going
to get six super genius like twenty somethings to go
(01:06:21):
in with their laptops and just start purging this. And
these are not normal. When I say not normal, I
mean those are not just normal actuaries or accountants or anything.
These are dudes, Like one of these dudes, and they've
all been doxed. Wired magazine decided to do a whole
profile piece on him, given all of their information, because
they think they're dealing with bureaucrats and they're not. You're
(01:06:44):
dealing with You're dealing with guys who've accomplished more in
their high school career than most humans will, including one
of them. One of these young men who when he
was eighteen, was bored and decided he was going to
tackle something that science hadn't come up with an answer with.
(01:07:04):
And specifically, the problem they had is they had a
bunch of old scrolls, right, we got old scrolls. There's
a whole program obviously that surrounds the Dead Sea scrolls,
but there's other scrolls and they get found and it's
not like you can just unfurl them like you're in
an Indiana Jones movie. The papyrus or whatever they're on
is so brittle you would absolutely destroy it. And so
(01:07:28):
what did he do. He's like, well, I'm really really
into the AI stuff right now, and we can do
a lot in being able to scan even items that
are rolled up like this to delineate some markings, but
how do you fill it in? And so he literally
customized an AI program that helped him and everybody else
(01:07:51):
to read the scrolls, and he was still a teenager
because he just this is all he knows, and this
is all these guys know. So they're happy to sit
in the Eisenhower Building with an endless supply of little
Debbie snacks, probably pizza takeout and and some Mountain dew,
(01:08:12):
you know, code red or something, and spend all day
doing that. And that's what they're doing, and they don't really.
These are not partisan people. You think you're you can
attack them with partisanship. You think that you can attack
them with things like, well, if you do that, none
of the girls with nose rings you're gonna have sex with?
(01:08:33):
You guys is that they don't care. I'm not trying
to demean them, but I think their dating life is
probably not their priority. Right now. You are dealing with
individuals who the only thing they love is solving stuff
like this. They're the ones who buy the code books.
They're the ones that get in and their conversations that
(01:08:56):
they have online are almost indecipherable because they're almost not
using English anymore. They're they're they're they're they're speaking nerd.
And I mean that with all due respect to each other.
They they're probably they don't even see They probably don't
see this. They don't see the stuff they're being that's
being written about them. They don't care. They're in heaven.
(01:09:19):
They are in number crunch. Figure out a problem nerd
Heaven right now, and you can't. Those are not people
you can attack the same way that you go after
some bureaucrat who's worried that they won't be on the
gravy train anymore. Do you think any of that was there,
six of them. Do you think they care for a
moment that some politician on the other side of the
(01:09:40):
aisles holding a press conference talking about how they're committing espionage.
I don't believe they do. I I don't think it
motivates or demotivates them. I think they're just gonna go
ahead and do it. Why Because the stuff that's getting
that that's emerging from this analysis, just the first little
look at it, is absolutely insane things. And there's a
(01:10:02):
reason that people realize, like a lot of things in government,
that this is a slush fund. This is a slush
fund for progressive programs. But it's more than that, it's
a safety net. So that you can go and you
can get a job in the government, and you can
do insane things, and eventually some of you will get purged.
But never fear, Never fear that you were redirecting all
(01:10:23):
the money to DEI programs and then covering it up
when there was changes. Sure, yeah, you lost that job,
but hey, how'd you like to be the executive director
of whoever's planning some of this three.
Speaker 8 (01:10:35):
Dollars we spend in every program we fund will be
aligned with the national interest of the United States, and
USAID has a history of sort of ignoring that and
deciding that there's somehow a global charity separate from the
national interest.
Speaker 3 (01:10:48):
He's a taxpayer dollars.
Speaker 8 (01:10:50):
And so I'm very troubled by these reports that they've
been unwilling to cooperate with people who are asking simple
questions about what does this program do, who gets the money,
who are our contractors?
Speaker 9 (01:11:00):
Was funded?
Speaker 8 (01:11:01):
And that sort of level of insubordination makes it impossible
to conduct a sort of mature and serious review that
I think foreign at large should should have. We were
spending taxpayer money here. These are not donor dollars. These
are taxpayer dollars, and we owe the American people sure
the assurances that every dollar we are spending abroad is
(01:11:21):
being spent on something that furthers our national interests.
Speaker 1 (01:11:24):
And it's clearly not. It's clearly not that. So that's
Marco Rubio, Secretary of State also now the head of
US eight. That's right. That's the extra part of this.
So they didn't just do that, they took control from them.
They had literally they had people who were in management
positions shown up to the office list and they're like, yeah,
you don't. You don't get to come in here, and
(01:11:45):
then they would immediately go out and add a little
press conference or they're just rotating folks in and they're like,
can you believe this is happening? Yeah, yeah, I kind
of came to the USAID.
Speaker 4 (01:11:55):
Over the past several years. These are some of the
insane priorities that that organization has been spent money on.
One point five million dollars to advance DEI in Serbia's workplaces,
seventy thousand for a production of a DEI musical in Ireland,
forty seven thousand for a transgender opera in Colombia, thirty two.
Speaker 1 (01:12:16):
And it just goes on. So, yeah, yeah, in the
same way that and I mentioned this before, in the
same way that Trump owes a large part of his
election success to just a bunch of dudes who don't care,
who are willing to work twenty hours a day because
they're just into it. They in that case, they just
love doing internet beams and trolling people. Well, that's what
(01:12:39):
he's got, he said, elon's what's the You got a
group of like super smart eighteen to twenty five year olds,
I think is the age range. One of them's a volunteer.
I think, Yeah, you got a bunch of guys who
aren't gonna who don't care, who just want to run
the numbers. Say absolutely, I got them coming out my
you know you know what, and he just here you go,
(01:13:02):
here's your office in the Eisenhower Building. Do what you do.
And they don't care. And whether it's they don't care
for for whatever reason, they don't care. Because people are
people are speculating that they're high functioning autistic. They probably are,
(01:13:22):
which also means that the way that you deal with
them and you threaten them like you get the old stuff,
ain't gonna work with them. I have a hard time
believing any of them are nervous because they're in heaven.
Look what they get to do. They get to take
all this stuff that they design on the side to
(01:13:43):
impress their buddies or solve, you know, actual problems, and
they get to put it to work on a real
world application, which is the largest budgetary application of anybody.
That's the largest budget in the world. Correct me if
I'm wrong, the US budget. You're not going to stop
(01:14:05):
these guys. I don't care if you're Van Jones screaming.
Speaker 10 (01:14:07):
About people are going to die in very large numbers
around the world.
Speaker 1 (01:14:10):
Who the people going to the Columbia Transgender Opera are
going to die because they can't see the transgender opera?
Or do you mean the small part of the program
which may go there, which likely will not be a
part of the cuts that eventually end up there. What
are you talking about? The re again? When Van Jones
and Democrats sail this stuff, they're like, people are coming
(01:14:31):
to the border and they're crying and they're going to
die if they is food. The people you have to
blame are you? Did you decide to take this program
which people just assumed was nothing but those un food
biales and medical supplies getting air dropped into remote villages,
and you turned it into your slush fund for all
(01:14:52):
of these weird things. That's why we're here. So if
there is negative impact on people, it's because you took
the apparatus and you turned it into something else. This
is your fault. So if people die, it's on you.
If people come to the border, because cartels were able
(01:15:12):
to convince people that there was a process that would
allow them into the interior, so they sold their everything
they owned, they borrowed money, they sold their sold to
work in sometimes sexual servitude. That's on you. That's not
because they canceled. Somebody canceled their appointment. You saw what
was going on. You didn't care. We called it. We win,
(01:15:34):
all right. We grab Anthony's call on the Biden movie. Yes, Anthony,
what's up?
Speaker 5 (01:15:40):
I was just gonna say that Bob would be a
dead ringer for Frank Drebn. But I follow of another one,
Like you said something about Son of a Woman. There
could be a sequel called Son of a youngin.
Speaker 1 (01:15:49):
Yeah, no, that's what I'm saying. It's just get him
into the franchise. He's probably very interested. So and by
the way, you see Trump with the little girl there
for a signing yesterday, and he didn't smell her once
she got to sit in the chat at the office,
didn't sniffer at all. What are you even doing if
you're the pay as get to smell the little girl?
Come on, man, Yes.
Speaker 5 (01:16:09):
But I was also also going to say, you know,
the whole thing with Tanya and his whatever she is.
That's not unusual because I've only been on Twitter for
two months and I'm a shot at how many four
foot eleven? I want to be strippers and like my comments,
and that's all I do is make smartay comments on
people's other people's posts. I don't even post anything.
Speaker 1 (01:16:31):
Well, sir, what do you want?
Speaker 9 (01:16:35):
That?
Speaker 5 (01:16:35):
And that? And all these billionaires they want to give
me money, but they all want the same amount somehow.
Speaker 1 (01:16:40):
Yeah, no, no, no, let's go, let's go back to the hotties.
So you just you getting you just knee deep in
trimm or what's going on? Man?
Speaker 5 (01:16:47):
What I don't know?
Speaker 1 (01:16:49):
Okay, all right, thanks for something so I can research.
All right, So that guy's problem is women want him
too much or their bots. But guys, you know, don't
sell yourself short. Obviously, women wants you and photos and
links in the description, so they're obviously organized. So I mean,
(01:17:12):
what more could you want? Eight eighteen? Hang on? I
understand Los Angeles, I understand New York. The likelihood is
nothing bad's gonna happen to you. But when you start
like going, hey, you know, to be really funny, why
don't we pretend to kidnap children for a TikTok video?
(01:17:37):
And you don't get you know, pumped full of lead.
That's impressive. You did get arrested though, all right, so
check this out. These two idiots right here, nineteen year
old Cain Villarial and eighteen year old Lane Birch from Kyle, Texas,
come up with a what they thought it was a
(01:17:58):
great excuse me I roll TikTok prank. All right, So
here's how it went. They went to an elementary school
and I guess they went down the street just a
little and then they waited for the kids to emerge.
And we're talking I think the kids aged in range
that they interacted with from seven to nine. All right,
(01:18:20):
so these are little kids, and they would wait for
him to walk down the street, right they're walking home.
They probably live very close and then the pair would
roll up and then they were all like, they were
all decked out as creepy dudes. I mean, you're already
creepy if you're doing this right, but they were turning
on the creep factor and so here was the prank.
You're ready. They'd roll up and their little peto looking
(01:18:44):
thing and they'd be like, hey, hey, you want to
be kidnapped. Kid, you want to be kidnapped? We got
some stuff for you, and rightfully the kids would run.
One of the kids, I guess filmed them because he
had a phone, which again sometimes I'm like, why do
you have a nine year old phone? I don't know,
maybe for this, but in reality, most of them called
(01:19:05):
their parents and some parents responded, and literally the lucky
thing for these two was that the police responded and
basically took them into custody, probably so the parents couldn't
dismantle them, and eventually the two were arrested, I guess,
and the kid and the parents did call the police
(01:19:26):
instead of just going down seeking justice, although I think
when police showed up there were some parents they're looking
for him, let's see Kyle. P D public information specialist
Ashley Bradshaw said the two teens tried to tried the
prank once near the school, uh, and interacted with one
kid who was seven and one was nine, and then
(01:19:47):
they I guess some others too, But that was the
one that really got the ball rolling because those kids,
as they'd been taught directly, they got out of there,
got to a safe place, called their parents, and you
know this thing went down. Uh. They sent out a
letter reminding parents about stranger to What is the joke
you're going for? Right, That's what I want to know. Look,
(01:20:09):
most of those videos, those prank videos, most of them
are fake, especially some of the big ones. And if
it seems unbelievable, but some of them aren't. Remember the
guy in the mall up in Virginia who was harassing
the uh what was he? A door dash driver? Was
put his hands on him and the guy's like nope,
pulled out a gun, shot him, not going to do
any jail time. And then the prankster his mother is like,
(01:20:33):
oh it was it was My kid's fine, he's perfect,
and it's just like, oh my gosh, your kid is
Jack Dorsey all over again. That punk But what's the
joke there? Like, I don't under I don't even understand
what the what like? So what does a win look?
What does good content look like? There would the kids
go with you and eat candy and pet puppies and
you just don't molest them, like at least with the
(01:20:56):
other dumb pranks where they're like, I'm gonna go to
the hood and screen the where most of those are
fake too, by the way, but let's say you did
do that, like I understand kind of what you're going.
Do you see that dude down in Arizona who just
killed himself that was doing pranks, Because here's the prank
he thought was funny. He went to a coffee and
it's one of those sexy waitress baristas kind of right
(01:21:19):
where they're either in bathing suits or lingerie or whatever.
And he went there and he'd go to the drive
through with no pants on and not hiding it, and
then the you know, the girls had opened the window
and they'd be like, oh my gosh. And then he
kept doing that. So what did they do he came back.
They filmed them. They didn't throw hot coffee on his
you know area or anything. They just filmed them. And
(01:21:42):
he realized that that that's a sex offense in most states,
let alone in Arizona or New Mexico or wherever he lived,
and the dude took his own life. Man when all
of a sudden, when the police started getting involved, I mean,
I don't want that, but like, did you gave it?
Speaker 6 (01:21:59):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
F lot clearly. And then what's even worse is he's
got a following of these guys who quote unquote goon out,
which I'll let you go down that figure, you know,
all of that terminology and figuring out what's going on there,
who then started harassing the baristas because their buddy did
(01:22:20):
this thing, realized he messed up, and because they filmed
him and called police. They they just started harassing them.
And they're posting videos of them going through the drive
through screaming at him, Oh you killed a guy. No,
he did because you thought it'd be funny. I just
don't know what a good version of attempting or asking
(01:22:42):
kids if they want to get kidnapped, and then would
you have done it? If the kid's like, hell, yeah,
I want to get kidnapped, free candy, sign me up.
I'm eight. I make bad decisions. What would that have
looked like? Because there's no possible win there unless it's fake,
and it clearly wasn't because police're involved. This is why
(01:23:02):
I can't be a TikTok influencer. I guess I just
don't understand how the rules work. All right, let's see
here eight forty one. I had one more piece of
audio I wanted to get to. Nope, Nope, played the
Van Joe. No, I played all of it. Oh well,
what do you know? All right? So a couple other things.
Fans in Canada were booing the national anthem ahead of
(01:23:28):
both an NHL and NBA game that took place over
the last few days. What was the first one was
Wings Canucks, Right, so that's going to be Vancouver and
the NBA game. I don't even know what it is
Clippers playing Toronto again, I know so little. And by
the way, they're booing the Star Spangled banner there and
(01:23:49):
it's like a like a little girl, like a fifteen
year old girl singing it. So that's that's gotta be
awesome for her. I don't know what her comfort level
with crowds was, but she sure probably didn't think she
was going to show up to do this thing, which
might be the highlight of her singing career only to
get booed. But then there's the other thing, And I
(01:24:11):
don't mean this in a like almost every Canadian that
I know, and I know a lot of Canadian living
in Minnesota, you know a lot, but also working in
certain capacities where we were filming TV and stuff over there,
and just taking a lot of trips. Almost every single
Canadian I know is somebody you'd want to have as
a neighbor. They're not a lunatic. They're very conservative, but
(01:24:32):
they're in their own way for the most part. They're
very no nonsense, and they're not the warmest huggy people
out there, which is fine for me because I'm not.
But they're genuinely nice people, and almost exclusively they all
got beef with their own government. But they don't hate Americans.
But if you pull people in Canada at large and
(01:24:54):
the US, you will find out that Canadians on average
have a negative opinion of American much more. I'll crack
jokes about how they haven't hoisted a Stanley cup since
the Clinton administration, which, by the way, if you really
want to get under a Canadian skin and you're not
friends and you're just going with it that one. Usually
it works. They will start explaining to you why all
(01:25:17):
the good Canadian players play in the US, and then
when you ask them why that is because they save
an ungodly sum on taxis and those are large media markets.
In a way, it's a bit of a cell phone.
But you know, they still have what five teams out
of thirty, so feasibly they should win one like every
(01:25:38):
six years. So yeah, do a bunch of Canadians, hyped
up on Canadian beer at a Canadian sporting event booing
Americans because they're in a tiff right now? I don't know.
Does anybody care? Ross? You care? Do you care that
they're booing the national anthem at the hockey game you
weren't going to go to anyway? Don't know. Ross doesn't care.
(01:26:02):
I don't care. Most people don't care. I don't like it.
Here's what I don't like. I don't like the part
where you know all of this is going on. But again,
this is what happens when you constantly you neglect the
obligation that his economies grow and relationships grow and everything else.
(01:26:23):
There still is a pecking order, and it is a
pecking order that is defined by who needs whom more
and who has established large segments of their economy around
these individuals you know, in these programs and these politicians.
(01:26:43):
That's all. And the fact is that the US, in
almost every situation, especially with the countries who dealt with now,
is going to have more leverage. Trump literally wrote a
whole chapter about leverage in his book and you can
go see it. And it's something that is utilized all
of the time, all the time. You use it transactionally
(01:27:06):
every day. How many of you have exerted leverage over
your kid who wanted to do something You're like, no,
we're gonna do this. Why because I'm the parent. You
just did it. You just exerted leverage. I control your
food and your action and your stuff. And but grudgingly though,
all right, yeah, I guess that's that's true. That's what
(01:27:28):
you do it every day. You do it if in
you're a position of power at work or if you
have more influence or longevity there every single day. Why
wouldn't the president do that on behalf of people? So no,
sign me up for I don't care, sign me up
for weather with raced agic that I care about, because yeah, yeah,
care more they than Canucks booing in Vancouver, which people
(01:27:52):
will never go to. That you should. It's beautiful Vancouver's courts.
Speaker 7 (01:27:57):
Yeah, I don't know. A long time ago, is there?
The diacor falls thing is a kid? Oh okay, it's
about it right yeah twice. Oh wow, that's you're bragging now, Yeah, bragging?
Speaker 1 (01:28:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 7 (01:28:07):
Stuff, And let's see how many of us are in
the seven of us in a Chrysler. Cordoba asked me
how that went.
Speaker 1 (01:28:13):
That's awful.
Speaker 7 (01:28:14):
Yeah, four kids in the back, my godfather driving, my
godmother in the passenger seat. My mom sat on her lap.
That's the way we did it back.
Speaker 1 (01:28:21):
And then your in laws fell of the falls. No,
oh man, that's good. It's all good. So it's a
good uh stuffing your family members down in a barrel
weather you could say that it is.
Speaker 7 (01:28:35):
I really want to let people know that tomorrow is
going to be completely different, so I know it. Short
sleeves today, hey, maybe even the shorts. Lot to mid seventies,
close to record warmth, lots of sunshine, a bit of
a breeze, and then we're down to forty tonight, so
we'll be a little chillier. And then Tomorrow, there's gonna
be a storm going north of us, and we're gonna
get this north northeast flow, a little bit of an
east wind, if you know what that is. We kind
of get wedged in with.
Speaker 1 (01:28:56):
The cold air. A big change for tomorrow.
Speaker 7 (01:28:58):
We struggled to get out of the mid upper forties,
and we may have a little light rain tomorrow and
tomorrow night. So completely different day tomorrow, So prep for
that chance to rain even around early Thursday.
Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
But Thursday we're.
Speaker 7 (01:29:10):
Gonna go back to the low seventies and then we'll
get a chance of rain Friday afternoon after morning sunshine,
low seventies and a little bit of rain on again,
off again over the upcoming weekend. Not really sure on
timing for the weekend, but again, temperatures are going to
be back down into the upper fifties and mid fifties Saturday,
and then we're back up to the little mid seventies
on Sunday, and then we're back down to near fifty
(01:29:31):
on Monday. So real roller coaster ride coming. My best
advice right now is, dude, you got to do outside.
Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
Do it today.
Speaker 7 (01:29:38):
Today is probably the last day of a completely dry
day and a mild day, although we'll be mild some
of these days coming up. Case we'll have some rain
chances than the cool days. Even we'll have rain chances too.
So I think today's the best over the next seven.
Speaker 1 (01:29:53):
All right, thank you sir. We'll chant tomorrow it good
and coming back with Jeff Bellinger next. Hang on, Jeff,
what's going on?
Speaker 3 (01:30:00):
As Mordy Casey.
Speaker 10 (01:30:01):
After talks with the leaders of Canada and Mexico, President
Trump announced he will delay his tariffs on the two
nations for a month, and that was some relief to investors.
The major stock averages managed a partial recovery before the
markets closed yesterday, but the tariffs on China have gone
into effect. China has retaliated with its own tariffs on
(01:30:22):
US goods. That's keeping investors off balance this morning. S
and P futures are unchanged at the moment. Nasdaq futures
are up thirty points, the Dow futures are down eighty
eight points. Egg prices are nearly double what they were
a year ago. This is because of bird flu. The
Department of Agriculture says large eggs cost just over seven
dollars a dozen wholesale in the Midwest, and eggs are
(01:30:45):
in short supply in some areas. Now, federal employees have
just two days left to decide whether to accept buyouts
and leave their jobs as part of President Trump's plan
to trim the government workforce. Workers who take the buyouts
will not be able to turn around and sue the government.
They will have to sign a waiver requests a releasing
their agency from all liability. One company monitoring the status
(01:31:08):
of tariffs on Mexico is Newal Brands. It makes Coleman coolers,
Sharpe markers, Papermate pens, and a lot of other products.
New will make some of its goods in Mexico, but
says it could easily shift some production to its existing
plant in Tennessee if tariffs become an issue. The company
says it could hire more US workers and scale up
the factory, and it would not have to hike prices
(01:31:31):
and case. It turns out Apple had good reason to
be concerned about the European Union's Digital Markets Act. A
pornography app called hot Tub now being marketed in the
EU by a third party marketplace that was enabled by
the new rules. The developer of hot Tub says the
app is Apple approved. Apple says that's a lie, and
(01:31:51):
it's concerned the Apple then undermine consumer trust and confidence
in the company's ecosystem.
Speaker 1 (01:31:57):
Casey, okay, all right, well I heard of that app.
Thank you very much, Jeff, do appreciate it.
Speaker 3 (01:32:03):
Okay, have a good day.
Speaker 1 (01:32:04):
All right, there you go, Jeff Pellings he Bloomberg News