All Episodes

September 9, 2025 • 97 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Home of the undefeated Minnesota Vikings in Buffalo Bill's fandom
throwing that out there, that's a good thing. Never I
never doubted. I just want to point this out. I
know some of you probably saw me on the Twitter
there offering words of encouragement. You have to understand how

(00:22):
to manage your team, right, This is what ross. This
is what people don't understand. You're in a pretty good
place because you don't. You really got to do a
lot of managing as you guys have matured. But but
you know, when you have a younger quarterback, it's important
that you post things on the social media during the
course of the show, that may or of the game

(00:43):
that it probably sound a little I don't know, how
do you say this negative? But you want them to internalize,
You want them to feed upon that. You want them to,
you know, bite into that perceived disappointment that you that
you're having because your rookie quarterback a sense for all
practical purposes, not a rookie technically, just but it's his

(01:06):
rookie season because he had a torn meniscus last year
and he never played a snap, So you want him
to take that criticism, albeit well intentioned and then you know,
just feed on it and then you know, spit out
plays and uh touchdowns and and all of that. And

(01:28):
so you know that that requires sometimes every question. Your
parents probably understand. I'm not a parent, so but I
just assume that's how it is. Sometimes you got to
go a little negative on your kid to let him
know you're disappointed so that they they work a little harder.
I feel that my plan was successful yesterday, but understand

(01:51):
that at no point did I think the Vikings were
going to lose that game, even after JJ McCarthy threw
a uh that mean pick six, which isn't his fault.
It's not his fault. Think about this, He's only ever
played professional football in Minnesota. Ross, who's the governor of Minnesota?
Do you happen to know?

Speaker 2 (02:10):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (02:10):
Yeah, it's Tim Walls, a general Jazz hands, that's right.
So poor JJ is sitting around he thinks of pick
six is a good thing because the governor said that,
so you can't blame him. He served one up to
the Bears, who then served up like two hundred yards
in penalties back to the Vikings, and then I you know,

(02:33):
this thing looked like a goose was cooked. Man. And
yet JJ McCarthy came out in the second half and
he looked like a fifth year starter. It was crazy,
but I never doubted, and that's what's important. Okay, So

(02:57):
you're questioning my loyalty there on the the old Twitter.
So look when I tweet things like Vikings haven't converted
a single third down? Should we do that? Is that
a good thing? Asking for my sanity? I'm just letting
them know that they should convert third downs. What did
they do? They started converting third downs. I'd say it worked.

(03:20):
New Viking strategy. Drops don't snap the ball before the
play clock expires, and you can't throw a pick six.
That's true. Then they didn't throw another pick six, and
and he stopped snapping the ball with one second to go.
Here's the problem, because people go, well, he's getting the
ball off before the play clocks out, even if it's
a one second. When the play clock goes to one second,

(03:45):
the defense is coming. It's literally the biggest gift you
can give them, because now anybody who's even thinking of
blitzing can go ahead and tee off on the quarterback's
it's arguably worse. Obviously, they read my tweet and they
fixed that. JJ McCarthy doing somersaults. Did I post a

(04:07):
picture of a panda or a gift of a panda
doing somersults? Yes, I did, just so he would see
how ridiculous that look. Did he stop doing it? Never
doubted you fairweather fans discussed me AnyWho not working on
a lot of sleep. That's okay. I couldn't not watch

(04:31):
what is supposed to be my franchise quarterback for you know,
the next forevers. I had to watch the thing. The
problem that we may run into is I don't believe
we get to play the Bears every week.

Speaker 3 (04:47):
Who uh.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
Look a little rough around the edges. We'll just say that.
So there you go. That was my evening there. Oh
and so I wrote, good job Vikings not blitzing a
quarterback who took nearly seventy sacks last year. Absolutely genius
game plan. Clearly I meant that it was not sarcastic
and it worked. Hey, why would you want to blitz

(05:12):
a guy who took sixty eight sacks last year? That's
just mean, you just being mean. So I did my part.
So send me a check, Minnesota, Lord knows I paid
you enough for the season. Tickets for almost a decade. Anyway,
all right, it is a six thirteen here on the

(05:34):
KCO Day radio program. Coming up on the show, apparently
those of you who were spending your last few days
harassing and haranguing the national media over there choosing to
ignore this light rail story, this horrendous story of this

(05:55):
young Ukrainian woman just randomly stabbed. Now there's the video. Ross,
did you the video? Not to the point of stabbing,
but just the randomness for this guy flips open a
pocket knife and just goes to work. Uh, that's yeah.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
I've had the option of watching it, and I'm like, yeah,
I'm not gonna watch it.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Well, you don't actually see the stabbing in the videos,
but you see the moment when he it's just so random.
He she just sits down, she's on her phone, she's
not looking at anybody, she's paid no mind to him,
and he just something something just gets a man and
he just he pulls out a pocket knife. You can

(06:32):
see him open it or unsheathing. I guess that's hard
to tell what he's doing. And then he stands up
and he goes to work like he's in a chow
line in a prison. Uh, doing a revenge.

Speaker 4 (06:41):
I did see some people online like shaming the victim
because she didn't have quote situational awareness. This I'm not
surprised where people are like, you need to you know,
you need to always sit down, and you need to
cover all your angles, and you need to look at
you know, where the exit is, and you need to
understand who's who's around you. And I'm like, oh yeah,
because the poor girl, you know, wasn't thinking about all

(07:04):
this while she was scrolling on her phone going to
Kung Fu Panda four or whatever she was going to.
You know what I mean, It's so dumb like that.
Don't shame the victim because he's a no.

Speaker 1 (07:14):
No no, but you could. I've seen two versions. I
have seen people doing the shaming. But also I think
it's a fair discussion if I was, If I was,
if I had a daughter and I knew she was
riding the light rail, we would have a conversation about
best practices. Oh, you know, completely. But I mean to
blame her as if she it's her fault. Yeah no,

(07:34):
that's that's that's a that's a different thing entirely. And
frank he goa those people should have to ride on
the outside of the light rail. Listen. When I go
out maybe underneath.

Speaker 4 (07:44):
Yes, when I go out to public places, like if
we even efoun go to waffle house or something, I
literally do that. I always make sure I could see
the door.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
You're Jason Bourne.

Speaker 4 (07:52):
I try to be yeah, yeah, because I grew up
in a really bad neighborhood where you sort of had
to know where the exits were, like it's something you
had to do. It's like it feels at times like
a PTSD thing, like I need to like know how
to get out in case something happens, or you know,
there's some sort of something breaks out. But that shouldn't
you know, that shouldn't be how it is when you're
writing public transit, but I guess it is.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
And that's said, well, if we just had more cops,
I think is really the what we need to remember
according to our governor anyway, who loves cops now. So
the the forced reaction of Governor Josh Stein, which is
just repugnant and viylyiles the Mayor of Charlotte like having

(08:36):
it clearly you guys have been forced to respond to
it and then to put out like it makes me
so angry because they give zero f's and then they
write these things. They're just pure politicians speak and they
write the dumbest crap. These people have. No they shouldn't

(08:57):
be any near any levers of power. None. They're garbage humans.
They're worse than garbage humans. They're garbage humans who can't
just be all garbage on their own where it just impacts,
it affects their own life. No, they fail upwards and
they're ruining yours. They're making yours less safe. They don't

(09:17):
believe a word that they wrote. And how dare the
governor sit there and tweet the oh, well, try to
turn it into one of these wether Republicans need to
fund more police and more of this. The police did
their job the rest of this guy fourteen times. How
dare you blame the police here? How is this guy

(09:41):
in the government? How do if those of you who
voted for Josh Stein, how do you continue to support that?

Speaker 4 (09:48):
But also he's a blaming the police. But every time
the police do their job, a city burns down or something,
or whenever you have on one of these trains, you
try to cancel him. It destroy his life.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
Yes, screw screw all of you. I'm sorry. I'm so
angry over it. I would have preferred you just didn't
tweet yesterday or just didn't put out any anything instead
of the woke garbage bs crap that you should be
h uh, we'll read this insanity. You see where I

(10:26):
am on this not please, not please, whereas the uh
oh wait, that's the lyles say all right, let me
do let me do this because I'm gonna have to
back to back these things. But now you want to
pretend like you care. Did did you guys have a
focus group? Did you get some polling numbers? The police

(10:49):
did their job. This is directly at the foot of
your politics, your love of soft on crime. Judges, this
garbage magistrate who should be there. There There has to
be consequences if Ross is to If Ross went home
today and created a situation that was a dangerous, a

(11:10):
knowingly dangerous situation, and God forbids something to happen to
his kid, do you know what would happened. They would
charge you, They would charge him, They would charge you,
they would charge me. If you create a knowingly dangerous
situation and bad things happen, we have the capacity to

(11:32):
charge people. Judges, who do this and keep a lunatic
out there, maybe perhaps so they can get him to
run through their little side hustle treatment center. I don't yeah,
I don't know. That's a weird thing right there. She
happens to be invested in a treatment center for drug
addle lunatics like this guy. Maybe just maybe. Oh by

(11:56):
the way, Ross, do you know do you know what
she made him do before she let him out? The
last time this guy is judged down in Charlotte, she
made a peaky swear that he'd be good? Was she
in peaky? She made a promise? All right, do you
promise you're not going to murder anyone on the light rail? Okay,

(12:21):
well if you promise, How is this any different than
I who would be held responsible if I was out,
you know, creating a dangerous situation where somebody was injured,
where I could or I could suffer both criminal and
civil liability. This judge needs to be charged. I know

(12:42):
this sounds crazy. They need to be charged. They are
so derelict in what they're doing. In any other profession,
if you did your job so badly as to knowingly
realize you should have known negligence of that level in

(13:04):
any other profession could net you a criminal violation. The
judge needs to be charged. That's it. She shouldn't be
a magistrate. She needs to be gone, but she needs
to be charged. Frankly, her family should be shunning from
the community. We don't do enough shunning. We need shunning

(13:29):
all levels of possible repercussions other than vigil anti justice.
I want to be abundantly clear here. It needs to
follow and track with the same judicial remedies that face
you in your job today, right now as you get
ready to go for it. If I sat here on

(13:52):
the radio and called for vigil anti justice, I could
be criminally charged. If you have a job, let's say
you work, it's some sort of let's see you where
Let's say you're a welder, okay, and you go and
you are so negligent in the way that you handle
the assettling or another piece of equipment to the point
where something explosion happens and one of your coworkers has killed.

(14:14):
You could have criminal liability for that. Do you understand me.
That's how it works in every other profession. That's what
has to happen to this judge. So if Joshtine wants
to pretend like he gives a crap and make me
believe it, And lawmakers want to pretend like they give

(14:35):
a crap and make me believe it. That's how this starts.
And you won't do it because you're a bunch of
cowards who should be shunned at the very least, since
we're about a shunning kick down whatever. You can't you
get what I'm saying, the repercussions that would impact any

(14:55):
of us that they would gladly foist upon you.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
Right.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
Remember, this is why they were running around putting grandmas
in jail for ten years, because their actions clearly led
to the other you know, the handful of people that
were being violent up on January sixth. Therefore, Nana's got
to go to the pokey for ten years, even though
she got maybe three years left. Sorry, can't do it.
It's the law. There needs to be liability for all

(15:24):
of them. I will read these tweets. They will make
you angry. Their absolute garbage, written by garbage, put out
by consultants who consult for the garbage, who are garbage themselves,
and only because they were called. I am heartbroken for

(15:46):
the family who lost their loved one of the census
active No, you're not. You were a g with this
guy was going to release the first thirteen times shut
your face whole. I will read the rest of this
coming up here on the CaCO Day radio program. There
is nobody involved in this story in any governmental position.

(16:08):
We're going down there in Charlotte from an elected official
standpoint or an appointed judge standpoint, that have any business
doing their job at Josh Stein, our feckless governor and
the mayor of Charlotte putting statements out now having not
said anything for three weeks. That's all you need to know.

(16:28):
They didn't care enough for three weeks to weigh in
on this three weeks. Disregard anything they say except for
the purpose of holding them accountable so they can be
thrown out of office. That's it. The judge has to
go is full stop. We have we have expanded liability

(16:58):
for dangerous situation to all sorts of things. If your
kid goes and shoots up as school, they were gonna
want to charge you, and they have successfully. Those parents
in Michigan are sitting in jail now right and they
wanted to do it because it's part of the You know,
the whole gun grabber thing whatever. Then give them a

(17:20):
big spoonful of their own medicine. The judge needs to
go to jail, that's it, so that the rest of
the judges can come correct on this stuff and realize
that you can't. Oh you got a pinky swear you're
not gonna murder and rate people. Okay, well if log
as you pinky swear, we're not playing this game anymore.

(17:41):
We're done, and and and the the dot now are
gonna come in and and uh, you know, all right,
we're gonna take your transportation dollars and then they'll cry
the blues and I don't care. I don't care the
whole light rail think that. Blame Pat McCrory for that too.
That was his. That was what it was, basically his
stupid idea. Sorry, I'm going scorched earth on this right now. Oh,

(18:09):
we're gonna sue gun manufacturers, go to jail, Go to jail,
that's it. They should bankrupt them. Three weeks. How dare
you governor ignore it for three weeks? How dare you
mayor ignore this for three weeks? The hell is wrong

(18:30):
with you? Here's where Josh Stein tweeted three weeks after
the incident. I am heartbroken for the family of Arena
Zuritzki who lost their loved one to the senseless act
of violence, and I am appalled by the footage of
her murder. We need more cops on the beat. No,

(18:52):
that is not what is at play here. The cops
did their job. How dare you try to blame them.
They arrested this guy fourteen times, well fifteen now fourteen
previous times. The police are doing exactly what the police
are supposed to be doing. It's everybody up the food

(19:14):
chain who failed, who needs to go to jail? Can
we citizens arrest the judge? Because like, this is what
you're going to drive people to be doing. When you
create scenarios like this, people start getting a little Western
and you don't want that. I don't want that. I

(19:37):
want things to be orderly, but damn it, they have
to be orderly all around. He goes on to write,
that's why my budget calls for more funding to hire
more Well, shut your faces. Isn't about your stupid competition
with the GOP and your stupid budget. God, you're garbage
human and you if somebody had me explained yesterday, Like

(19:59):
I disc like Roy Cooper's politics, I hate Josh Stein's
willingness to sit here and turn this into a political thing.
But when you're when you're the you're the piece of trash.
You would sit in the back room with Mark Elias
to try to rig elections during COVID. You you clearly,
clearly you have no spine, you have no soul, and

(20:20):
you're gonna pimp your budget. You're the governor. If you
have to work with other lawmakers to purge the cancer
that is a judge like this, then that's what you
should be doing, and then maybe people would believe you.
I call upon the legislature to pass my law enforcement
recruitment and recruit Shut up. I'm done you. Probably he

(20:44):
probably thinks this is funny, or a stupid staff thinks
this is funny watch having me having an aneurysm on
the air this morning. But I don't care. You're going
to cause people to go vigilante and it's gonna be
on you, and then you're gonna wanna hold them accountable.
And then you're gonna claim to want to hold your
law lawmakers that you disagree with, accountable for gitting people up.

(21:08):
That's evil. You're an evil, evil man, You're an evil person.
It's an evil ideology. Call poy legislature to pass this.
The local agencies can stop these horrific crimes and hold
violent criminals accountable. He doesn't believe one word of that,
not one word, and somebody's dead for it. To jail

(21:35):
with the judge. That's it. Civil suits, whatever you gotta go,
whatever's got to happen. This is the accountability you want.
So you can sit here and you know, do your
Second Amendment gun grab or thing you want to throw
parents in jail. If you honestly believe that, then you
should believe that this judge is culpable. Charlotte Mayor vye

(21:59):
lyles all So waited three weeks. Three weeks. We will
never arrest our way out of issues such as homelessness
and mental health. Really that's a meaningless statement. You have
to go case by case. But I'm pretty sure that
if this guy had actually served time for the crimes

(22:21):
that he previously committed, he would have been on the street,
which kind of sounds like that were butts your whole
thing there, she said. Mental health like the schizophrenia Brown
was diagnosed with involuntary commitments need to be treated with compassion.
Diligence and commitment is cancer and the same as cancer

(22:43):
and heart disease. Oh there's cancer here. The cancer is
you and your ideology and your party and the people
around you who sit there and with under guard. Under
guard just did doesn't go anywhere with out members of
the state patrol. And I don't know if he has
the secondary private security like some of them do, Like

(23:06):
he has guys with guns protecting him everywhere he goes.
He doesn't give a crap Yliles, I suspect has some
sort of protection. I'm not sure if it's Charlotte PD
who does it. She doesn't care. I'm sure she lives
in a gated community or at the very least in
an inaccessible community. She doesn't ride the light rail unless

(23:26):
it's a photo op. None of these people care because
it doesn't impact them and they can feel compassion while
this chick gets murdered for the crime of sitting down
on public transit and minding your own business. Resign, resign

(23:53):
and go think on your life. That would be my
advice to you. All right, Oh, but don't worry. The
biggest problem is yet to be unfunned because the media
has figured out the biggest problem here. Oh yeah, well,
I don't worry. I'll let them explain it to you.
Coming up, let's grab a phone call. Yes, Jamal, what's up?

Speaker 2 (24:14):
You know what case You've been screaming what I've been
screaming for the longest time, And think and you saw
one of the things I said, and I had to
thank you and Pete Kyler for what y'all was saying
last week with Casey. This is something I've been saying
for the longest time. What democrats do and liberals do.
They have positioned themselves to implement their liberalistic crap so

(24:38):
they won't be punished. They sit here and they join
and become judges, and then they're able to put these
people back on the streets. And that comment she made
about you can't arrest yourself out, that's the same exact
crap quote that Brandon Johnson said in Chicago a week

(25:00):
ago when President Trump was talking it's talking about sending
the National Guard looking up Kate Sevie when you're doing
your break.

Speaker 1 (25:07):
No, no, he said in a bunch of The mayor
of Meryl Bowser said it in DC it's a fan
favorite among the left.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Yes, and you know what, Casey, if we're gonna hold
politicians as accountable, you got to hold a black community
accountable because remember this, the Democrat Party depends on the
black community turning out and voting for them. And if
they were to go back to the nineteen ninety four
crime bill standards and lock people up, start putting back

(25:38):
three strikes, this boy should have been locked up for
ten years. He would have never been on that rail
because with fourteen felonies, he would have been locked up
for ten years. People saw that George Floyd. You know,
I said that Officer Derrek Chauvin was not wrong in that.
But I sat here and I told people was our
old George Floyd. And people were like, whole black community

(26:01):
going through so much. And I saw a white conservative,
you know, putting a black thing on their page so
they could sit there and be one, you know, with
the community. And I'm like, no, don't do that. And
this is what it's happened. People got to hold a
black community responsible to the black community. We're not gonna
put these politicians in here who are not going to

(26:22):
uphold a law, because that's what the black community want.
They're vote for these politicians. They want this.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
Look again, I'm just saying that if if you want
to sit here and you want to play by these rules,
these new rules that these very same leaders advocate for,
then their opponents would be would do well to use
it against them if it means accomplishing the mission of
having some actual accountability with us, right they want to
create this scenario, then then then you know, that's that's

(26:54):
where this needs to go. And I think that the
judge is the starting point there because it's a very
easy r argument and thanks for the Kuljamol to sit
there and say, Okay, if you think that a gun
manufacturer or a parent of a kid who decides to
go in and do something horrible at a school has
ultimate financial, civil, and or criminal liability because they made

(27:17):
a decision or they chose to ignore an obvious decision
that arguably was their responsibility, then use that. And that's
what you go ahead and you do with this magistrate.
You put her in jail and you sue her into poverty.
And then the next one sits there and goes, you
know what, maybe just maybe at the fourteenth strike that

(27:40):
this guy should not be back out in society running
around getting a stab people. This is no brainer stuff.
And I promise you Democrats to be doing this if
you want to make it political, which Coolystin does because
he wants to pimp his own stupid budget, even though
the governor's budget is meaningless. It's a suggestion. Nobody cares.

(28:04):
And meanwhile he's out there vetoing every bill that allows
you enhanced ability to protect yourself. Remember he vetoed constitutional
carry and the fact that the Republicans can't get it
over the hump is shameful on them. But this guy
vetoed the ability for you maybe to have a chance

(28:27):
in a situation like that without having to go through
the rigamn row of the totality of the concealed carry process.
Should not be taken seriously, and frankly does it shouldn't
be in a position to have any influence They need to.
The GOP needs to render him useless. He can do
ribbon cuttings, put stupid tweets out connive to break the

(28:50):
law in the you know, in the back rooms of
the halls of power with people like Mark Elias until
the court slaps him down. Let'm spend his days doing that.
There's nothing that can convince me that that Josh Stein
in any way, shape or form, is a redeemable human.
I'm just done with it. This was it is a

(29:12):
final straw right here, man, Janet, what's up?

Speaker 5 (29:15):
Okay? Case? I hope you got a minute, because you
just hit on one of my biggest tip keeves. Nothing
makes me angrier than that. Fine for me, but not
for the nonsense attitude out of the people that work
for us. We literally are their employers. Why do we
let them get away with this? Like you said, both

(29:36):
parents out in Michigan. If that judge does not go
to jail, they need to get out. It's an ultimated standard.

Speaker 1 (29:44):
It's the standard that they wanted. This is the standard
that they wanted. So let them let them, let them
cook in their own juices.

Speaker 6 (29:52):
Exactly. But you know, but no.

Speaker 5 (29:56):
On the one hand. But on the other hand, though,
because a hundred of these people they worked for me,
and not only did they keep me at minimum wage
for at three thirty five, for how many decades will
every year vooting themselves a raise? How many times have
you been able to go to your boss and been like, boss, man, look,
I'm sorry but you just get't observe a raised this year,

(30:18):
but I do. This is how it phone got that.

Speaker 1 (30:23):
I tell him that every year or so exactly exactly.

Speaker 7 (30:26):
This is nonsense.

Speaker 5 (30:27):
It's been going on since I was a teenager, and
it needs to stop. It needs to stop right now.

Speaker 1 (30:35):
I So the judge is my starting point. That's there,
the magistrate, that's where we start. You gotta thought someone,
you know why, because eventually we find ourselves dealing what
the UK did yesterday. Did you see what the UK
did with that judge in the UK did yesterday.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
To Smith that one.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
Oh oh, all right, ready, let me get your blood
pressure up. So yesterday a judge in the United Kingdom,
the United Kingdom, after a guy served twenty years, let
him out of jail and told him, you know, all right,
I wish you the best of luck. The guy was
in jail for being part of a terrorist attack where

(31:14):
they bombed a bus and killed fifty six people. They
let him out. In fact, the guy had actually been
captured in the US and the UK and the US
got into a tiff twenty years ago because the US
and if we send him back there, you're not going
to give him life in prison because you don't do that,
and so we didn't want it. We eventually sent him back.

(31:34):
He just did twenty years. They let him out with
no electronic monitoring. He murdered or was part of a
plot to murder fifty six people on a bus, which
they accomplished. Yeah.

Speaker 5 (31:46):
I had to take just a minute to get my
jowl up off of the floor.

Speaker 6 (31:49):
Are you serious?

Speaker 1 (31:51):
Yeah, go look it up.

Speaker 5 (31:54):
Yeah, you're right. I thought you had my blood pressure
up earlier than This is out of control and has
been for more than two decades.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
That is a moral That is a moral failure. It
is a criminal failure on the part of elected officials
in in. Yeah, it's gonna cause people to snap because
you want you want it, you want the you want
the conspiratorial take on it, all right, let me jen

(32:22):
I'm gonna hang up and keep listening just because I'm
up against the clock. Conspiratorial take is they want you
to lose your crap. They want you to snap. They
want you to do something where all of a sudden
accountability will be necessary. Oh, by the way, will probably
have to give them more power. That's the conspiratorial take.

(32:43):
You know, if I was to be conspiratorial and it
takes uh, it takes the village. As Hillary said, it
requires people on CNN like Brian Stelter, mister potato head
there and others to utter the dumbest crap you'll ever
hear in your life. Okay, hey, just stuff like I'm going.

Speaker 8 (33:02):
To turn down to the political firestorm growing in North
Carolina after a horrific murder on a train over the weekend,
the local metro authority released surveillance video showing the murder
of Ukrainian refugee Irina Aerutska. Police say she was riding
on a train in Charlotte last month when the suspect,
to Carlos Brown Junior, pulled out a pocket knife and

(33:24):
killed the twenty three year old. Brown is now facing
first degree murder charges. He's been committed to a hospital
for a judge to do a mental evaluation for sixty days.
CNN has also reached out to his defense attorney for comment.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy claim the incident shows the ugly
truth behind the criminal justice policies of the city's mayor.

(33:46):
Elon Musk posted about the story several times and called
to name and shame they.

Speaker 1 (33:51):
Will be right back back. Oh, some of you think
I'm screaming just to scream, and I am angry, but
you also have to understand that the microphone and the
I feel like it's not registering. Meanwhile, poor Ross his
ear drums are about ready to explode. So it makes
me sound extra angry if that's if such a thing

(34:12):
as possible. But y'all should be angry, and this is it.
And I know that they will sit there and tell you, well,
that would be a constitutional crisis if you started jailing
jailing judges. No, it would be the same level of
liability that they want to hold anyone to and any
other occupation. Every time something bad happens. What's good for

(34:35):
the goose is good for the gander. The railroad conductor
took his eyes off the track for a moment, a
car got hit. Liability. I could go down the list
how many different times has something bad happened and one
of these politicians runs out and they're like, all right, well,
that's criminal liability right there. We got to do something.

(34:58):
So this is where we're at now. You want to
you want to sit here and abdicate your responsibility as
part of the criminal justice system, liability, criminal liability, and
it's important. You got to get standards set and then
those standards would be understood in the same way that
liability that attaches to you or I like, if we're

(35:20):
using a cell phone while driving and you, you know,
you run over a gaggle of kids, liability, Son, You're like,
I shouldn't do that. Liability. This is what you wanted.
I'm just granting it for you. And and and also, uh,
if you want to if you want to know how

(35:42):
how it was easier to get here, but is it'll
be a little more complex. You can't necessarily jail the media,
but understand the contribution that they've provided to analyze this story.
And have mister Potato, had Brian Stelter come to this conclusion.
Lets you know why judges and politicians like Garbage Josh

(36:05):
Stein are willing to act this way because they'll carry
water for them.

Speaker 9 (36:10):
Second, the energy from pro Trump activists. They picked up
on this video from local news and ran with it.
It's a little bit like the times when civil rights
groups have raised at tension about police involved shootings. In
this case, it is Trump aligned influencers who are posting
up a storm about this case on social media.

Speaker 1 (36:27):
Are you implying that the only people who are upset
over this are Trump aligned influencers. I don't think you
even believe that.

Speaker 9 (36:37):
Really, over the weekend, Elon Musk, Charlie Kirk, other Trump
aligned figures succeeded in making this senseless death a symbol
of big city crime.

Speaker 10 (36:46):
We heard.

Speaker 1 (36:46):
Why are you okay if you honestly believe that? Why
do you think they succeeded? Just because you're selling it
doesn't mean people are buying it. Why do you think
that they Why do you think that they they were
so quickly able to quote unquote succeed in making this
a viral thing and not require you and your cohorts

(37:08):
to go hands up, don't shoot with your little pretend thing.
By the way, ross the buddy who told the Michael
Brown's buddy who tested or who told police that during
the incident, Michael Brown had his hands up and said,
don't shoot that guy? Did you see what happened to him?

(37:28):
Was violently murdered the other day in Ferguson. Keep in
mind that maybe the policing in Ferguson it tended to
get a little softer after all of that garbage. AnyWho,
I'm sorry. Back to Brian Stalter, how do you think
they accomplished getting it to go viral? Because people looked

(37:50):
at it and they went, oh, my god, I rode
the subway once my kid rides the subway or public
transit because they're you know, they're in college or whatever,
and the randomness with what had happened, and then they
hear the backstory. You don't have to hard sell people
on being outraged over this story, mister Brian Stelter.

Speaker 9 (38:12):
And Trump asked about it yesterday when he was heading
home from New York City. He didn't even know much
about it. He said he would get briefed, and then
today Trump did know all about it. That's exactly what
has happened here. This story has trickled up from local
news to social media and now to the President's attention.

Speaker 1 (38:27):
Yes, the President of the United States, which has a
bunch of things that he's paying attention to, ask for
more details on a quote. It was a local story.
It's now not a local story anymore. The national I
would argue, almost international story at this point. So the
President asked to inform himself of the story, and then

(38:49):
commented on it would you prefer comments not knowing the
details of it, kind of like you guys tend to
do sometimes. How is this dude still employed?

Speaker 9 (39:02):
Being used that you said, Brian as a political symbol
with MAGA media calling for more forceful punishments and more incarceration.
I have to say some of.

Speaker 1 (39:10):
The replies, no, no, no, no, no, hold on, hold
on potato, not more in some cases some any it
just Anny Annie would be a good start, and then
we'll talk about more.

Speaker 9 (39:25):
Story are baldly racist stoking fear of African Americans because
this man attacked a white woman, the open racism on
sites like x today, it's eye popping.

Speaker 1 (39:36):
I hate to do Oh, it's eye popping. I think
your eyes always look like that. Ross. I hate to
do this. What if the roles were reversed, black women
sitting their mind her own business.

Speaker 4 (39:49):
I think we I mean, I know I thought that
this morning. Because any listen, it's not a political issue.
Anybody can look at this video and you look at
this Ukrainian woman and she's so tiny, this woman in
the seat would the first time I saw this come
across my social media, fege, She's so tiny. I thought
it was a child. Yes, there's a child that is
like a teenage boy or girl with a hat on.
You can't really tell because of the hat. And this

(40:11):
dude behind her is a giant in comparative comparison, gets
some stabs her for no reason in the neck, right,
and you're watching this going this isn't a political issue.
And then what makes it worse is when they come
out with the side by side by, side by side
of all the police mugshots.

Speaker 1 (40:30):
You left out twelve sides, really looked out twelve sides.

Speaker 4 (40:33):
Anybody with a functioning conscience, well look at this and
be like, this is horrific. This is a path story.
And if it was reversed. Oh and we get this
all the time on this show. We've gotten it for years.
People always call up and go, you know, with the
bet thing, or like, if you reversed it, But this
is a serious thing. If you were to reverse this,
there would be cities on fire right now and the

(40:54):
media would not be shutting up about it.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
Right s. Delter would have to do his hits with
a trapper key over his lap, or even you know,
even if he had another Daniel, if that actually worked,
which I'm not convinced it does.

Speaker 4 (41:05):
If you had another Daniel Penny on this train and
somebody had dined up and pushed this guy down and
defended him while he was trying to do this to
this woman, they would go after the dude. They would
go after the guy defending the woman, because we see
that is what they've done before. That is a track
record that is.

Speaker 1 (41:21):
So and it's all because he's black. Is I think
the point you were making was that, no, it doesn't matter.

Speaker 4 (41:27):
He's stabbing this poor little little woman in the in
the chest or in the look.

Speaker 1 (41:32):
She's so tiny you could put her in your plan.
You could pick her up, just put in your pocket.
We're gonna walk around with you in my pocket.

Speaker 4 (41:37):
She's tiny. And this guy, for no reason gets up
and just stabs her. And you're like, people are interested
in this story. Yeah, they are, man, because it's horrific
and it could happen if nobody.

Speaker 1 (41:48):
Yeah, there is a racial component too, which we'll get
to here here in just a moment, let me let
stealter finish his dumb thought.

Speaker 9 (41:54):
There are also legitimate questions about this so called career criminal,
someone who had been a repeat offender, and those questions
I hope they're not lost amid all of the cesspool
kind of comments on social media.

Speaker 1 (42:06):
I mean, they just seeing edis like they've learned nothing.
And if he's looking for a racial angle, all you
have to do is hear what this guy said after
he stabbed the woman. It's a little hard to hear.
I'll fill it in, but here we go. This is

(42:27):
literally he goes. There is blood spray across the floor
of the car, the light rail car. He pulls off
his sweatshirt, which is covered in blood because I don't
know if you know this, when you stab somebody in
one of the main veins there, it gets a little messy.

(42:47):
He then walks to the other end of the car,
whereas part of the security system there's also audio that
records and said this, I got that white girl. I
got that white girl. So pardon people who may feel

(43:10):
that there's a racial component here, just a smidge. I
wonder how they arrived at that, But understand that people
would be equally as outraged regardless of the racial makeup there,
because it's not about the racist the racial side of it.
And although to some extent you could argue, perhaps with

(43:32):
the way that judges handle defendants. There might be, but
you don't even have to get into that. People are
horrified because any crime where they can, where they can
reasonably go. I have been in that same situation. Thank
god nobody stabbed me in the neck while I'm on
my phone looking at tiktoks or whatever. Relatability is what

(43:57):
is driving the story here, Era, Good morning, what's up?

Speaker 6 (44:02):
They kase there?

Speaker 1 (44:03):
Very nice to meet. Yeah, okay, what's up? Good morning?

Speaker 11 (44:08):
Well I don't talk about something I heard or read
I don't remember what it was last night talking about
how police needs to make prevent crimes. Well, like, how
is that at all possible without the media ticking it
to them, you know, saying that they're they're profiling, they're
being racial, you know, they being another controversial thing.

Speaker 6 (44:31):
You know, how can police? How can we rent the crime?

Speaker 11 (44:36):
That makes no sense?

Speaker 1 (44:37):
I think if you've done fourteen crimes and never really
been held accountable, I'm okay with you being suspected or
at least profile, Please have to interact with you.

Speaker 6 (44:46):
Yes, well percent agree with that.

Speaker 11 (44:49):
Heck yeah, that they should have never been out amongst
the many others that I'm sure are right now, And
it just makes me sick, and I do think that
the judges need to be held accountable.

Speaker 1 (44:58):
Yep, yeah, you alright. It's a dangerous situation where you
should have knowingly understood or through your own negligence. People
harm comes to somebody they love, love, love, love love,
holding people accountable in those situations, creating new statutes, prosecuting people,
growing parents in jail for their kids shooting up at school.

(45:20):
If this is what you want, we'll go ahead and
do it. And by the way, I wonder if the
audio you were referring to, ummm Russ, did I send
the uh the Jasmine Crockett audio to you? Maybe I didn't, Okay,
I will find this. Oh, we have some Jasmine Crockett

(45:42):
audio we're gonna get to. We'll piggyback on that. She's
got her own thoughts on the popo. Let me grab
another call, Mike. What's up.

Speaker 6 (45:51):
Good morning, Casey, longtime listener, first time caller, And let
you yah, yeah, my blood pressures three hundred over whatever.
Just like you said, man, you got me this one.
Tal you got me on this one. Uh uh, this
is just this is awful. And the comment I want
to make, uh, this is what you were saying earlier
about you know everybody down there, Charlotte, you know, putting
this off for three weeks. Legacy Legacy Media did the

(46:14):
same thing, which really, you know, and people are still
watching that crap, by the way, and I'm sorry to
say that, but it's true. And and uh and and
now the thing is, you know at the front, the
light in the limelight, and and I just want to
say a couple of things. Your passion is is incredible.
I loved it. I love this. Uh that was I
was telling you Ross earlier. This this poor little girl.

(46:36):
She was adorable. Man. I saw her picture online. She
was a beautiful little tiny he rocked at a tiny
little thing and again perfect he put it perfectly. This
looked like a little kid getting on that that uh
uh light rail. My daughters, Charlotte, she wrote it, I
just told me that last night, by the way, changing
the point one. But anyway, I love your passion, man,

(46:57):
love it. Changing the subject real quick. Uh you probably
lived in Minnesota.

Speaker 9 (47:02):
I know.

Speaker 6 (47:03):
My cousin Frank basselro up there w CCO. Uh, maybe
you don't, but anyway.

Speaker 1 (47:08):
He was I know, I do, I do know, Frank kiss.

Speaker 6 (47:11):
Yeah, Frank, And immedia. He's my first cousin. So I've
been a long time listening to your show, first time caller,
but I had to call in today. Man, I I
just I'm right there with your blood blood pressure, but
excuse me, blood pressure, the whole thing. Casey, thank thanks man,
thanks for what you got.

Speaker 1 (47:28):
All right? Well, yeah, and I just realized, what if
I have criminal liability if one of your strokes out
listening to me today? And then Josh Stein's like, we
need a law. So if you say something by the
radio that causes people to have an aneurysm, then you
got to go to jail. I wouldn't put it past him.
I gotta said, garbage human going to garbage human? Seven.

(47:48):
Hang on, Well, probably want to get to your house
in order. We got our new Doomsday or Doomsday's probably
a strong word. Uh, Jesus is coming and we know
the day according to this pastor here, which is weird
because I understood that no man will know the day,
but apparently this guy knows the day. So that's helpful. Hey, Ross,

(48:12):
what's the expected completion on your new wing? There? About
two weeks? Okay, will you get you get to enjoy
your new wing? For a few days. That's good.

Speaker 4 (48:24):
I don't actually know. I just say two weeks because
that was the line of the money Pit back in
the day, like Wendy, you have no idea?

Speaker 1 (48:31):
Oh God, all right, Well anyway, September twenty third, so yeah,
which is a Tuesday, which kind of sucks, Like, if
we're gonna do this, can we do it like Monday
before I got to come into work. That would be
more helpful. But the twenty third is Rashashana, So I

(48:53):
think that's what this guy is ut. Apparently he had
a vision and Jesus is like, all right, I'm gonna
be here on the twenty third, so you know, tell everyone,
let him know. But I don't know. Man Pastor Joshua

(49:15):
Michela says he saw Jesus in a divine vision returning
to Earth during Rashashha. The rapture is upon us, whether
you're ready or not, he said in an interview with
I don't know some TV show here. I saw Jesus
sitting on his throne. I could hear him loud and clear,
saying I'm coming soon. He said to me on the

(49:38):
twenty third and twenty fourth of September, I will come
back to the earth. So there he go, So mark
that on the old calendar and we'll see where that goes.
I'm gonna I'm gonna say I wouldn't cancel appointments after
that or go out and blow through all your money. Oh,

(50:02):
I'm not gonna. I don't wanna. I don't wanna. I'm
gonna die broke or or rapture broke, or you know whatever.
But I suspect that's probably not true. You know what's
crazy is I saw an article one time where they
were basically they and I thought this was pretty clever.
They they did like profiles of like six pastors who

(50:23):
had they had said that they knew the day of
judgment and then clearly it wasn't the day of judgment.
And then they tried to follow up with them, and
every single one of them had kind of the same
take that they think the prophecy was still real, but
now they were they recognized that it was about Jesus

(50:45):
trying to get people ready and then the dates coming
down the road, so so weird they all kind of
slipped into that that little thought there. But uh, I
don't know. It's on the New York Post, so it
must be true, right all right? Eight eight eight nine
three four seven eight seven four. That's the phone number.
Let me get to a few other things here. Oh,

(51:08):
I got it. Before I do that, I gotta tell
you this thing, all right, this thing. How do you
guys feel about QR codes at restaurants?

Speaker 2 (51:18):
You fan?

Speaker 1 (51:19):
Do you love those? Ross? You love QR codes when
you go to restaurants? You big fan of those? No, Oh,
they're dumb now, And it was one of the you know,
it's one of those COVID holdovers that I think will
never go. Now. There are a few things that are
understandable why that might be from a restaurant perspective. Helpful

(51:39):
if you update your menu frequently, or you want it
to look more professional when you're adding the specials. Clearly
it's easier to do that digitally. You don't have to
reprint a bunch of menus, and especially if you're anicer
restaurant where they're more than just a sheet of paper.
But I got to tell you, I had never seen
the setup that I experienced in a big place the

(52:00):
other day. So I we had a we had a
listener of that Sunday in Greensboro for the High Point Rockers,
the minor league team. We had a little sweet it catered.
It was very nice. We had a good time. Thank
you to the listeners who showed up one tickets.

Speaker 5 (52:21):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (52:21):
I enjoyed myself for Rockers once, so good for them.
So anyway, but I came in Saturday night, So I
drove over from Raleigh on Saturday night, and so I
get up Sunday morning and I'm like, you know what,
I I could go for a little little breakfast sandwich.
I was gonna go to Biscuitville or bow Jangles or whatever,

(52:45):
but somebody had said that there was a bagel place
kind of kind of near where the hotel is, and
then I should try it. It's pretty good. So I
go over. I walk into this place and they have
you know above where you order. They have like the
you know, the the menu, and it's not a complex menu.

(53:06):
It's a bagel place, so they have you know, your
basic standard, different bagel flavors, different cream cheese flavors, and
then the sandwiches, which are various combinations of meats, eggs,
and cheeses. Okay, and they had one with pastrami on
it that looked really good. Swiss cheese, pastrami and egg.
I'm down with that. And I'm looking up at the

(53:28):
sandwich board and I realized that there's no prices, which
is weird, right, It's really weird, And like, I'm one
of these people who loses their crap when you go
on Like, there's nothing that frustrates to me more than
if I want to go look at a menu on
a website for a restaurant, usually it's chain restaurants, and

(53:51):
they'll I have to put in my zip code, and
then even then I have to start an online order
before they'll show me the menu. I'll generally I I
don't know. It just drives me nutty. So I'm in there.
I finally make my way to the front and you know,
some I'm assuming some girl goes to High Point University.
She looks like she's about nineteen or whatever, and I'm like,

(54:14):
how come there's no prices like on any of the stuff.
How do I know how much it is? And I
kid you not. She reaches in front of the register
where there's like a little business card, a stack of
business cards, picks one up, hands it to me and says,
if you want to see the prices, you have to

(54:36):
scan the QR code.

Speaker 4 (54:38):
Wait a second, So you told me the story off
the air. I thought it was like a nice sit
down restaurant or something. This is like a sort of
like a deli style where you go to the counter.

Speaker 1 (54:47):
Yeah, you go up to the counter and uh and
order right there, and then they hand they give you
one of those little buzzer things and then when it buzzes,
you go up to the other counter and you grat
you retrieve your food.

Speaker 4 (54:56):
That is absolutely ridiculous. If there's no prices, and it's
that sort of of like deli style, walk up to
the register and patzer because you're gonna be everybody's gonna
be waiting for you, and yeah, you're gonna be on
your phone and you have to do the QR code
and then see the prices.

Speaker 1 (55:10):
That's nuts. Well, I refused. I'm like, just tell me
how much this costs. And the thing was it wasn't
crazy priced, I think for that. I for the for
the sandwich, which was a it was a substantial sandwich,
like it filled me up.

Speaker 6 (55:27):
Man.

Speaker 1 (55:29):
And so I and it was good and I got
a drink with it, uh uh out of the the
cooler case and it was it was a more expensive
drink than I and I think I paid like ten dollars,
and then of course they want to tip.

Speaker 4 (55:44):
Yeah, I mean right, But if you haven't been to
a restaurant before and you don't know what kind of
sandwiches they have, is it like a you know, like
a like a subway size, is it like a Jersey
Mic size?

Speaker 1 (55:54):
And then the.

Speaker 4 (55:54):
Price it's a babel, it's not a babel. Well, the
price is going to be determined by like how much
you're getting. But if you've never seen product before, I
know where you're going, you need to see the prices
on the menu.

Speaker 1 (56:03):
Right, yes, yeah, if you want to see if if
if the word if killed me. If you want to
see them like I didn't walk in here, you know,
dress like Connor McGregor and that meme where the money's
falling on him and he's wearing the lion's robe, right,
and all the jewelry and the the bling. Right.

Speaker 4 (56:24):
Maybe they're that's maybe they're just assuming anybody going out
to eat right now in the year twenty twenties is rich,
is rich, and they don't have to worry about the prices,
so they don't have to see.

Speaker 1 (56:33):
Them maybe I don't know, what's the dumbest thing I'd
ever seen? And if you, like I said, I refuse
to scan the code, I'm like, just tell me the
price of the sandwich please. She had to go screw
around her computer and she told me, I'm like, all right,
why are you hiding that? And and and I said
posted on line. I post online. People like, well, it's

(56:54):
because they're having to change their prices a lot. Ross
Have you ever seen? This is an invention I'm working on.
So it's a it's like a it's like a flat board,
but it's green, okay, all right, all right, it's green,
and it's kind of rough feel to it. And then
you take this softened rock almost that's white or sometimes

(57:19):
it's pink or orange. It comes in a variety of colors.
And then you take that and you scratch the rock
against this green board thing I invented. And then if
you need to change something this is crazy, you grab
this brick, but it's not like a hard brick. It's
like a soft, squishy brick, right, and then you rub
it on the magic board and then voila. Where the

(57:42):
rock hit the board is gone. And then you can
use the rock again on the board. I mean, I'm.

Speaker 4 (57:48):
Soundly witchcraft right there, man, I don't know, yeah, sound dangerous.
Could that rock hurt your hand or so? What if
you're allergic to the rock?

Speaker 1 (57:55):
You mean, okay, all right, fair enough. So I'm also
it's gonna it's gonna have a cousin who where the
board is white and instead of having a rough feel,
it'll be very smooth. And then you take this other
thing that it looks it has like it smells funny
and it's got like we'll call it ink or something,

(58:15):
and then you take it. You got to make sure
you have the right one, and then you can push
it against the smooth surface. It also make the scratchy
marks that indicate pricing.

Speaker 4 (58:24):
I mean, I'm left handed. It sounds like that's gonna smear.
There gonna be a smearing problem there when I'm running
on that board. So I'd rather go at the first option.
It will also have a similar brick item, okay, which
you can rub against the smooth thing and then you
can rescratch in case of smearing. You know, I saw
a Gordon Ramsey show once and there was an episode
where he went to a restaurant and they didn't have

(58:46):
the prices on there, and he was like, what is this,
where's the price? And they explained to him that the
prices made the menu look messy, so they were going
for like a minimalist sort of thing.

Speaker 1 (58:55):
Oh okay, uh huh. And that was a nice restauran,
I'm assuming, and not a walk up to the counter.
And then the other thing was and this is just
this is just I and I suspect it had to
do with where they could run condo it because the
way that was set up, the drinks are all over
where you pick up your food. They're not buy where

(59:18):
you pay for it, so you have to go over
the other side of the restaurant, retrieve the drinks, then
haul them over there, which isn't a huge thing. But
if you just walk up to the counter and you
want to you ask what the drinks are? You then
have to walk away from the counter while there's a line,
go over the case, get your drink there because you
can't even see it so far away, what all's in there?

(59:39):
And then come back like it's not a good setup.
And it's unfortunate because the food was pretty good, But
I think people are going to be annoyed by those things.
But I had just never seen that ever, ever, ever.
All right, raced agic for the Weather Channel. Sorry man,
no food kick. Apparently Cowboys apparely Cowboys fans are on
a food kick too. What are they doing? The Cowboys

(01:00:02):
just announced that if you're a fatty fatty boom batti,
you're gonna have to buy two tickets you want to
go to the game.

Speaker 10 (01:00:07):
Well, all right, well it probably won't see any empty
seats because they're silly enough to still think that that
team can do something. And oh no, no, no, no, you.

Speaker 1 (01:00:19):
See my Do you see future m v P JJ McCarthy, Yeah,
last night I did.

Speaker 10 (01:00:23):
I didn't see, but I heard and I saw the highlights,
So yeah, good.

Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
Poor Ross went to bed and predicted the Bills would
pull it out on Sunday, and he was right as well.

Speaker 10 (01:00:32):
So yeah, so the Bills did what it was? The Bills?

Speaker 1 (01:00:37):
Yeah, it's let me just say, Ross and I were
talking to Ross. Isn't it nice to be? Want to know?
Isn't that great?

Speaker 6 (01:00:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (01:00:43):
Isn't it a great feeling? I don't know what that feeling.

Speaker 1 (01:00:46):
I can't imagine not being Yeah, yeah, craziness.

Speaker 10 (01:00:50):
At least my expectations are low, so I won't be
let down like you guys will be.

Speaker 1 (01:00:54):
So Okay, it's a positive message. No, right, it's their year.

Speaker 10 (01:00:59):
Help me again. Oh this year is the year.

Speaker 1 (01:01:02):
Yeah, it's gonna get really messy because it's going to
be Bill's vikings in the Super Bowl and then somebody
is going to get disappointed. But not both of those.

Speaker 10 (01:01:09):
Okay, Well, good lucky, good luck to everybody. The weather
is great for that or whatever else. I looked ahead
and I was like, you know what's going on the
next several days? Next week we may see a couple
of days, especially in the Triangle, we could get close
to ninety degrees. It's going to be dry for several days.
Will be the seventies, mid upper seventies. Today, there's clouds

(01:01:30):
from about the triangle east.

Speaker 1 (01:01:31):
This morning.

Speaker 10 (01:01:32):
We should scoot those east and everybody should have sunshine today,
martiall sun tomorrow, similar tempts mid upper seventies, then on
either side of eighty for Thursday, Friday, into the upcoming
weekend and mostly Sunday. Going to be a beautiful weekend.
Tropics quiet as we approach the peak tomorrow. Nothing going on.

Speaker 1 (01:01:49):
Okay, all right, well, thank you very much, sir. It's
what an easy day for weather, because yeah, it was
quite nice yesterda week. All right, yeah, thank you, and
we'll talk in an hour. What is this you have
to ask the price? You can't afford it, blah blah blah. Yes,
but when you're trying to calculate your per diem because
you're traveling for work, you need to know the price.
Eight oh five, we're gonna chat with Senator Ted Budd.

(01:02:11):
We'll talk to immigration clearly, we'll talk about this Charlotte thing.
And I got a whole laundry list here, so stay
tuned for all of that coming up here in just
a few minutes. Dude, you see this video out of Texas.
So you have like this militant activist Muslim dude, and

(01:02:35):
he's decided that he's going to go into stores in
Texas and try to intimidate them into not selling pork
products or alcohol, which is going to go over really
really well in Texas. If I could just point that
out for you. Listen to this lunatic.

Speaker 3 (01:02:56):
The religion of Islam by selling and distributing against the religion,
because we should love what Allah loves and we should
hate what Allah hates.

Speaker 6 (01:03:06):
This is what we're here for.

Speaker 3 (01:03:08):
And and little bout little, one bout one, we're going
to be visiting all of the stores in the neighborhood,
particularly the inner city neighborhoods where the religion of this
flam is ignored.

Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
Yeah, yeah, you're in Texas, bro, I'm I got I
got news for In Texas, they're not going to stop
selling alcohol and bacon. We just talked about how the
Dallas Cowboys are going to charge you, Uh, if you're
a rotund for two tickets. It's not gonna fly in Texas.

(01:03:45):
And yet this is this is what the guy's doing.

Speaker 7 (01:03:48):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
Now, somebody pointed out that the in that video, the
shop owner is uh or the guy working is Muslim,
and so he's a it's a Muslim on Muslim appeal,
but the guy who owns it isn't. And this dude
has been going to a bunch of different stores, many
of which are either not staffed or not owned by
people who are Muslim. No, he just wants in his

(01:04:08):
community these things that he is perfectly fine, he's perfectly
welcome not to purchase. He wants everyone to change what
they're doing. And I'm sorry if you're If you're a
convenience store in the quote inner city, as he just said,
and you don't sell alcohol, I suspect that probably you're
not going to stay in business. Good morning, and welcome everybody.

(01:04:31):
It is eight six here on the CaCO Day Radio program,
and here we go. Sir. My little mouse wasn't working,
and we are very happy to welcome onto the show.
We have spoke. Actually it's been a little while. Senator
Ted Budd joining us this morning. How you doing, sir,
Great to be back with you, Casey.

Speaker 6 (01:04:53):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:04:53):
Are you in DC or are you in North Carolina
where the weather is perfect?

Speaker 7 (01:04:57):
By the way, DC can mean a couple of things.
It can mean good old Davy County, It can mean
Davidson County, or it could mean Washington, d C. So
I've always seems in DC, but it's times this in Washington.

Speaker 1 (01:05:12):
Oh okay, well you are you are missing? I'm actually
in the trihead of my studios over here. Was absolutely
beautiful yesterday. All right, Well, we got lots to get
to and I mean I got to start in Charlotte.
I am apoplectic this morning. The fact that our governor
and the mayor of Charlotte decided to wait three weeks
to weigh in and then came out with two of

(01:05:33):
the worst takes possible. Is one thing I have a
question though. We live in a society and a lot
of times it's folks in your position who are calling
for all right, so something bad happens, we determined that
there was some sort of negligence perceived negligence on the
part of individuals, because we have to hold somebody accountable,

(01:05:56):
and then we do things like up in Michigan where
they jailed the parents of that school shooter, right, And
so my question is, if that's good for the goose,
why does a magistrate who has somebody pinky swear they
won't do bad things and then that person on video
appears to brutally murder a Ukrainian immigrant. Why is that

(01:06:20):
same level of creating a scenario where we should have
known that there was something bad that could happen. Why
Why is that person not criminally liable? Why is that
a good or a bad idea?

Speaker 7 (01:06:34):
Well, first of all, I'm absolutely heartbroken at this. Somebody
that has lived in Charlotte before two of my my
my daughters were born there they are about the same
age as this young girl that was that was tragically murdered.
So I look at this as a father, I look
at as a citizen, and you know, also in my
role as a senators. I am mad, I am heartbroken.

(01:06:57):
I hope to talk with the family and just you
wish you could wind back the clock and change this,
and you just can't. It's just but you can fix
it for the future. And I think that's what people want.
They want justice for what's been done and they don't
want it to happen again. You're asking about criminal negligence,

(01:07:18):
You're asking about criminal intent of the magistrate. You're asking
about you know, is their corruption You got to look
into those things. Is just this is absolute stupidity, you know?
Or is this got some corruption or criminal intent with
the officials that allowed this to happen? Not once twice,
not three times or ten times, fourteen different arrests, unbelievable

(01:07:43):
convictions for felony, robbery, dangerous weapon, breaking in the recommunicating
threats musicis in nine one one, multiple years in prisons,
and they just keep dumping them back out on the.

Speaker 6 (01:07:51):
Streets on Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:07:53):
Well but you know, but you don't necessarily if you
do something a reasonable person should should have known. Is
that is the legal standard they used to convict those parents.
They should have reasonably known that their kid was a
lunatic who wanted to shoot up his school. Right, that's
the way that they approached this. How does a judge

(01:08:14):
somebody who is supposed to be smarter than the rest
of us, Right, but it's not always the case. How
should they not be held to the same standard that
increasingly other people are. Railroad conductor takes his eye off
the rail for a moment a bus gets hit, he's
criminally liable. I could give you example after example after example.
And I think that this is a wonderful deterrence situation

(01:08:38):
right here. And if you've not literally string one of
these judges up, but criminally hamper one of these judges
for making decisions, they're not going to be able to
play politics to this extent. And I understand it's a
slippery slope, but I'm not the one who suggested that
we do this. In all these other instances.

Speaker 7 (01:08:56):
At the very least, this person needs to be fired
and disbarred at the very most, criminally.

Speaker 1 (01:09:02):
I don't think she's born, she's a magistrate, So there's that.

Speaker 7 (01:09:06):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, Well let's let's do this. Let's look
at the details on this. You know, there's an interesting
post by Cash Fattel and it said that the FBI
has been looking at this since day one. I wish
they'd been looking at it day you know, T minus
zero or whatever behind before this happened. But they are
looking at it now, and let's let's see what they

(01:09:27):
come up with. I don't think you should sweep the
son of the rug. I mean, this is absolutely heartbreaking,
but this is Look, this has happened before this. You know,
it was caught on video. It's a beautiful individual. She
lost her life, you know, in the prime of her life.
We all just see the horrors here and we see
fourteen the rest, but it's not the first time this

(01:09:48):
has happened. Yeah, these uh, you know, in this reimagining
that Roy Cooper did of reimagining public safety and then
the then Attorney general was was Josh steinh They were,
you know, we're trying to promote diversion and alternatives to arrest,
and de emphasize criminal felony crimes, and prioritize restorative justice,

(01:10:11):
eliminate cash Bill, all these things that they have released
thirty five hundred criminals on the streets in North Carolina.
So it's not the first time this has happened, but
this is the most visual and visceral and horrific ones
that we can remember. And this is you know, Stein
and Cooper have prioritized the less look agenda over common

(01:10:32):
sense law and horrifically people have paid the price, this
one very visually and graphically. But more people than justice
have paid the price.

Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
Yeah. Yeah, that's why somebody needs to literally go to jail, Senator,
their needs. This is one hundred percent the standard that
we the public are held to in an ever increasing basis.
This is why they were throwing grandmas in jail for
wandering through the capital on January sixth, not the ones
who were fighting with police, but rather the others, because

(01:11:04):
they wanted to. They wanted it to act as a
deterrent to putting oneself in that situation. I could go
on with all these examples, but I this what happens eventually,
And you know this is somebody goes all right, enough
is enough, and they do something, and they do something
I want this.

Speaker 7 (01:11:23):
Criminal landing style.

Speaker 1 (01:11:25):
Yeah, correct, Yes, And I don't want real.

Speaker 7 (01:11:27):
Justice, No, no, no. If you have real justice, which
is not this, which is not the releasing of thirty
five hundred criminals. If you prioritize the Wokes Left agenda
over common sense, that's when people react in an unhealthy
way in vigilante So if you do it right the
first time, you don't have to have vigilantism. So let's
stick with the real law, not some crazy social agenda

(01:11:50):
or this Roy Cooper reimagining public safety and you know,
or this promoting diversion and de emphasizing cash bail and
all this stuff. If you do it right, then you
don't have these horrible crimes. Then you don't have the
reactionary vigilanteism.

Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
The Supreme Court yesterday with a well several rulings, but
the one that I think really was driving people a
Nutso is the idea that law enforcement can utilize the
very same standard that they use in a lot of
different situations, and that's basically preponderance of evidence. Right. This
is a lesser it's a lesser thing than what you

(01:12:31):
would need maybe to conduct a search, but preponderance would
be an example. We know that people who tend to
not speak English, tend to gather in this particular location
for the purpose of getting jobs that are off the books,
and so that was what this case was over. Supreme
Court said that that is perfectly acceptable practice. And I

(01:12:53):
think the Trump administration is going to run with it.
They already decide they're going to go in Chicago on
some of the criminal non immigrant stuff, but that'll have
an immigration enforcement harm. How full speed ahead is this
administration willing to go.

Speaker 7 (01:13:06):
They're wide open and the stated purpose is the worst
the worst. First, you know, you got a guy out
there who's trying to make his family work. He's pushing
a lawnmower, you know, are doing swinging a hammer on
a construction site. You know that they may get picked up.
I can't guarantee that they won't. I have employers that
may have sub and subcontractors to subcontractors on their sites

(01:13:29):
and they're like, hey, I don't know about these some
of these guys. You know, I don't think they're going
to go after them first, But the worst of the
worst of the ones they want to round up. And
a lot of people are self supporting and you know,
I know this is slightly jumping topics, but when you
look at the jobs numbers for last month. I think
that a lot of this is the fact that I

(01:13:49):
think people are still adding jobs. But I also think
you're you're seeing a change for those that are illegal,
probably self supporting, and so I think that if you
break down the job numbers, you're going to see an
immigration effect. I remember, legal with an l legal immigration fine,
you get the best and the brightest around the world
to come here and contribute to the American dream in

(01:14:11):
the right way. That's fine. But those who come here illegally,
they cut in front of others. That's not right. And
so and those that have come here criminally, those are
the first and the worst that need to go.

Speaker 1 (01:14:22):
How are we still dealing with Maryland man? And by
the way, the lawyer here, like, if I'm the Maryland man,
I have to understand that the activist lawyers, the Subrago
Garcia are actively working against my best interests, turning down
the ability for him to go to And I saw
the list twenty two different nations, eighteen of which speak

(01:14:42):
Spanish as their primary language, which would be good for him,
and are in this hemisphere, which would be good for
his family. If they want to visit or move there.
And now we're talking about setting them to a country
that most people don't realize even exists. And judges continued
to hold up the deportation of this guy. If we

(01:15:03):
can't get rid of him, where are we even because
that's this seems like such an easy process. And do
you agree with sending some of these guys to Uganda
and some of these other nations?

Speaker 7 (01:15:14):
Oh, I agree with sending him out of the country.

Speaker 6 (01:15:16):
They're here illegally, right, And look, they all get.

Speaker 7 (01:15:19):
Some form of due process, not the level of a citizen,
but you know there is some due process. It's not
Willie Nelly. I know that Democrats wouldn't have you believe that.
But they don't get the same rights as a citizens,
but they do get some rights. And this this is
a great country. We have to defend it. We have
to stick with the rule of law. But what's happening here,
whether it's Trump sitting in the National Guard to d

(01:15:41):
C or potentially Chicago, or ice raids in Los Angeles
or the Maryland man, you know, or anything that President
Trump's doing with his administration, you're seeing he's forcing the
Democrats to defend illegal, destructive behavior, human trafficker and the
Maryland man. You know, this is a rotten dude, and

(01:16:05):
they're the Democrats are the ones that want to bring
him back the wreck of d C. If you talk
to the taxi drivers. I had a guy come see
me yesterday. He came up from North Carolina and he
said the taxi driver on the way from the airport
was talking about how much And this guy was a
legal L with an legal L and H he's a
taxi driver, and he said, how much cleaner Washington, d C?

(01:16:29):
How much safer it is now that Trump has sent
in the National Guard. So the Democrats are defending the other.

Speaker 6 (01:16:36):
Side of this.

Speaker 7 (01:16:36):
They want a rotten city, graffiti everywhere, you know, fecal
matter on the streets, That's that's what they want to defend.
We want to clean it up and restore law and
order and get people back to having a good life.
I mean, that's my goal is to make life better
for North Carolinians. And if we my policies happen to
be federal, that's going to help people in other states
as well.

Speaker 1 (01:16:58):
Let me and just one more follow up on the enforcement.
Explain to me how South Korea gets three hundred subcontract
workers in here. People think those were Hispanics that were
arrested at that Hyundai battery plant. Thoy were not. They
were South Koreans. Right. How do three hundred people enter
the country illegally to quote build a factory so Americans

(01:17:19):
can have jobs? Never mind that Americans could build that
factory and this not turned into the international incident that
has turned into. Explain to me how that happens.

Speaker 7 (01:17:28):
I think they come in on certain types of visas,
either tourist visas or h one V visas, and those expire,
you know, or they run out, or they're on a
wrong type of visa and they're doing the wrong type
of work. If you're on a tourist visa and now
you're working, you're swinging a hammer, you're running a crane,
or you're doing some type of specialty fabrication to build
a plant, then that's illegal. So I think that's what

(01:17:51):
this was about. In the articles that I've read on this,
there were other types of illegal activities. So there's more
to the story. So while the media is going to
move on from this, you know, from the shock and
all over the weekend about it, I think we need
to keep our eye on that story for the long
term because I think there's more there than's been reported.

Speaker 1 (01:18:08):
Well, and I asked this because South Korea is supposed
to be our friend, and you are going to be
You're going to be charing a sub committee on essentially
figuring out from an AI perspective, how we beat out China,
and I feel like South Korea is going to have
to be a partner in that, so well they will.

Speaker 7 (01:18:26):
I mean, when you look at Samsung and what they're
doing with practical AI built into the phones, I think
they're beating Apple right now. You know, they're a huge partner.
They've tends to hundreds of billions of dollars. They promised
to invest in the US, UH in manufacturing. You know,
they're a huge consumer of Nvidia. I mean, they're just
they're they're they're great companies there that are investing in

(01:18:48):
the US. So uh, it's the arrest in Alabama seems
contrary to the movement of investing capital and hiring at
US employees. But they'll sort through it the laws of
the law. I think more is going to come out
on the story.

Speaker 1 (01:19:03):
Who came up with the title of the hearing Ai've
got a here, I've got a plan. It's AI apostiveve.

Speaker 7 (01:19:11):
I wish you know.

Speaker 6 (01:19:12):
That's pretty cute, and I.

Speaker 7 (01:19:13):
Think it's the typo that we meant to do, so
it's an intentional typo on that.

Speaker 1 (01:19:18):
So but seriously, though, I just got I got about
a minute and a half. What is the number one thing?
Because people look at AI and we see these examples
where it only renders black female nazis right, We've seen
these weird, woke AI things. So how do we continue
to expand this and not just have it be another
adoctrination tool and also allow America to win? Man, give

(01:19:41):
me the sixty second elevator pitch.

Speaker 7 (01:19:44):
Yeah, you collaborate with it as humans. You don't let
it take the place of a human. You've got to
prepare the workforce to use it for productivity. If you
remember the early days of the internet, it was just
about sending dumb stuff. But there's so much connectivity, so
many positive things we do it. You just got to
have more good than bad. And really it's a reflection
and a magnification of individuals and their strike. So you've

(01:20:04):
got to have great people and you've got to make
it a great tool and by the way, we've got
to have the energy and power to produce it. So
at the root of this overregulation will kill our competitiveness
and make us weak against China. So we've got to
have the power, we've got to have the tools, and
you got to have a federal preemptive framework legislatively and
not let states like California lead the.

Speaker 6 (01:20:24):
Way on this.

Speaker 1 (01:20:25):
How dare you refer to early nineties memes as dumb stuff?

Speaker 6 (01:20:29):
Man?

Speaker 7 (01:20:29):
That was my childhood But yes, you and are the
same age they used to come in on fax machines
on thermal paper.

Speaker 1 (01:20:35):
Yeah, all right, well, don't date us anymore. I gotta
let you go. So, yeah, all right, thank you much
appreciate it. There you go. Centered Ted budd here on
the CaCO Day radio program, Hang on Ross, who would
you say your favorite sports person is? Probably what favorite
favorite athlete you had the Josh Allen Lebron James? Right?

(01:20:57):
Probably not?

Speaker 2 (01:20:58):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:20:58):
Oh no, okay, you're gonna go Josh Allen. Okay, I
can see that. Well, if you think Lebron James is insufferable,
hold onto your pan flute. Lebron James has penned an
op ed that appeared in the Chinese newspaper that is
run by the Communist Party, so it is literally their

(01:21:18):
propaganda paper. Apologize, well, it does a number of things.
He wrote an op ed that was published here, I
guess the other day, expressing his adulation over the friends
he's made along the way in China and how the
sport of basketball connects countless people around the world. He
then went on to apologize for statements going all the

(01:21:41):
way back to twenty nineteen with Houston's Rocket general manager
Daryl Morey, as well as a couple other players, including
was it Rick Fox. I remember who the other guy
was who had the audacity to refer to either Hong
Kong should be free or Taiwan as an independent country.

(01:22:04):
He wrote that they were quote not educated on the situation,
so he called him dumb and uneducated, so he wrote.
He wrote an op ed in the Chinese communist propaganda
newspaper apologizing for his fellow Americans who have opinions about stuff.

(01:22:28):
What an absolute piece of garbage, man? Ah? What is this?
James op ed titled basketball is a Bridge that connects
its All was published Monday. Okay, so yesterday's edition of
the People's Daily, The Chinese Communist Papers official newspaper, Communist

(01:22:52):
Party's official newspaper. This is a translate translated it here,
so take that for what it's worth. I am deeply
moved by the passion and friendliness of my Chinese friends.
I can only express my crad Actually I don't care
about this part. Give me the give me the other
part where he's crapping on other Americans with opinions, Well,

(01:23:16):
there's things long and boring talking about all his travels. Okay,
there you go. You just said they weren't educated on
these situations and to not read too much into it.
I don't know what's more embarrassing this or John Cena
apologizing in Chinese, if he had to pick one.

Speaker 4 (01:23:38):
I mean, the stuff from Lebron doesn't surprise me. That
John Cena stuff was That was kind of saws me
at the time. And he's speaking in Mandarin when he's
doing it.

Speaker 1 (01:23:46):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, So which is fine. You want
to learn another language. I as far as language learning,
I understand it's probably one the most difficult in the world.
So it's an accomplishment. But imagine like back.

Speaker 4 (01:23:56):
In the day, like you know, like Hulk Hogan, you know,
apologize and FARSI or something.

Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
Right, basically, what is happening to the iron cheek or something?
I'm sorry because I called him all the things I
called him and then I took his belt away. Yeah, man,
that would not be a good look. I I would
venture to say that if you went back to that era,
you went back to the early eighties and some Hollywood

(01:24:24):
person or or in this case, Hulk Hogan decided to
apologize to the Iranians in your example, that would be
the end of their career? Would it not in the eighties.

Speaker 4 (01:24:35):
Unless it was, like, you know, unless he was turning heel,
you know what I mean? Like if it was so
it was a work, a work, which when John Cena
did that, there were a lot of people in the
wrestling community which is like, is that a work?

Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
That's weird? Man, That was not a work. That was
I want my movie over here because I'm making points
off the box office. That's what that was. That is
just embarrassing. What are you doing? Apologize? Oh? Man? Hey,
there's a rather interesting here we go. Rather interesting but

(01:25:08):
also I think somewhat depressing poll that came out, and
it was it's the articles in titled world war Z.
But basically they polled a bunch of young men and
young women to talk about priorities. Now, I want to
couch the age range here because I think it's important.

(01:25:30):
It included adults ages eighteen to twenty nine. And I
will say this, eighteen year old me and twenty eight
year old me had very different priorities. Ross would you
say that's the same way for you eighteen year old you,
twenty eight year old you completely yes, yeah, you got
different priorities. And especially as people moved, getting married and

(01:25:51):
having kids later and later. Just understand the range here.
That being said, what it demonstrates is a priorities list.
Oh and more specifically, it was men who voted for
Trump and women who voted for Harris. So that's the breakdown,
ages eighteen to twenty nine. And they asked them to

(01:26:13):
rank your what is important your personal definition of success?
Men who voted for Trump, what do you think their
number one important point? Now these were they had the
list and then they just picked from this list, so
that you know, there's there's the crossover is one hundred

(01:26:33):
percent apples to apples. Thirty four percent of men this
was the most given priority. They said that having children
was the most important thing to their personal definition of
success for women that was one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,

(01:26:55):
nine ten. It was the twelfth most important, with just
six percent of women in this age group who voted
for Harris saying that having children is part of their
personal definition of success for women and it wasn't even close.
Whereas I said, the men at thirty four percent, was
the highest vote getter. Fifty one percent of women ranked

(01:27:17):
fulfilling job and career, followed by money to do what
they want, and emotional stability. Those are one, two, and three. Well,
men did have financial independence and fulfilling job career also
in the top three. Being married was the fourth most
important men and it frankly is basically a tie for third.

(01:27:41):
For women, being married was the eleventh. So being married
and having children were the two least at six percent.
How do you square that for the purpose of coupling,
That's what I want to know, Like, I'm assuming I'm

(01:28:05):
not married, ross you're married, I'm assuming you and the
wife have to kind of have some of the same goals,
right right, Yes, it's important, helpful if you kind of
want the same thing out of life.

Speaker 4 (01:28:17):
That's going to be helpful, sharing goals, and supporting the
goals of the other. Yes, yeah, very important.

Speaker 1 (01:28:23):
Like these lists are reversed basically, having children, financial, a
fulfilling job, career, being married, owning a home all highly
ranked for men, but then on the you just reverse
it for women. I thought this was interesting too. About

(01:28:43):
one in four men say that being spiritually grounded is
a priority as part of a definition of success. Less
than ten percent of women agree. Yeah, these numbers just
fall off pretty quick there, But yeah, I thought that
was pretty eye opening. I don't know if that's probably helpful,

(01:29:05):
but I think it deserves a place among many of
these discussions we're having right now about the declining marriage rate,
birth rate, all of those things. But any who, all right,
we got is ray ready to go? We can go
to ray Hill late last time? All right, make it
up for it? What's going on?

Speaker 10 (01:29:24):
And man, nothing, what's going on?

Speaker 1 (01:29:27):
I'm just we're doomed as a species because many women
don't agree on anything.

Speaker 10 (01:29:31):
Yeah, yeah, but don't they say that's the way it's
supposed to be. Do you want to be a notionship
where you know, everybody just agrees on anything.

Speaker 1 (01:29:41):
That's too easy I think that men saying that part
of the definition of success, they had them rank a
bunch of stuff. And men think that having children and
being married is a very important part of that. It's
the least important to women. This is eighteen to twenty
nine year olds. Yes, that's oh, eighteen to twenty nine.
I think a different demo. We think differently. I agree,

(01:30:02):
and that's why I'm pointing this out. But like those
those better get closer together. It's it's done so for us.

Speaker 10 (01:30:09):
Yeah, yeah, as a as a as a species in general.

Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Right, yeah, good run, good game.

Speaker 10 (01:30:15):
Everything was nice and nice now and you give us
a good cut.

Speaker 1 (01:30:18):
And by the way, it's wonderful baby making weather. You know,
if you got a little pressure open the windows.

Speaker 10 (01:30:25):
Yeah, you know, in the fifties and nine, maybe some
low sixties, close to eighty in the afternoon.

Speaker 1 (01:30:31):
To do something to keep one.

Speaker 10 (01:30:32):
Yeah, gotta stay busy. I mean there's plenty to do too,
even into the weekend, into the low mid eighties by
early next week, maybe ninety degrees. I don't know about Monday.
Some of the guidance for the triangle especially may get
us close to ninety. So beautiful week. I do want
to touch on the tropics, since tomorrow is the meteorological
peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, and I'll basically tap

(01:30:55):
on it. No forecasted tropical development over the next seven days,
so nice low and low continues. We're a little behind schedule,
but that's a good thing.

Speaker 1 (01:31:05):
Okay, nobody's complaining if you don't want to have hurricanes,
So that's that's fine. We'll go with that. All right. Well,
thank you very much, sir, appreciate it. How we go
one and we got Jeff Belager coming up, and I
mentioned they had an absolutely adorable immigration bus. It happened
down in New Orleans. I'll tell you about it coming
up next.

Speaker 12 (01:31:24):
Well, good morning, Casey. Apple's biggest product launch of the
year is just hours away. The company will take the
wraps off the iPhone seventeen line up, upgraded smart watches,
and new AirPods, things that hopes will be on a
lot of holiday gift lists. Bloomberg's Mark German is looking
forward to seeing a thinner iPhone, camera and battery upgrades

(01:31:45):
for pro model iPhones, and an end to end refresh
of the Apple Watch lineup. Renting a home is becoming
more expensive, Redfin reports today. The median nationwide asking rent
last month was one thousand, seven hundred and ninety dollars,
two point six percent more than in August of last year.
It was the biggest year over year increase since December

(01:32:06):
of twenty twenty two. Rents a rising in part because
of high home building costs and a cooling supply. Small
business operators cross the country or feeling a bit more optimistic.
The National Federation of Independent Business reports sentiment improved in August,
rising to the second highest level so far this year.
The optimism index was boosted by the most favorable sales

(01:32:28):
expectations in six months. Nearly seven and ten owners rated
the health of their business as good or excellent. The outlook, though,
for job seekers, has deteriorated. The Conference Board reported its
Forward Looking Employment Trends index declined last month, and a
New York Fed report said the likelihood of an unemployed
worker finding new employment within three months fell to the

(01:32:50):
lowest level since it started keeping track in twenty thirteen.
If you seek out advice on your taxes, it is
your responsibility to make sure the advice is coming from
a reliable source. The Internal Revenue Service says it has
assessed one hundred and sixty two million dollars in penalties
on taxpayers who got bad advice from social media sources.

(01:33:12):
And Casey, Uber and Sephora just announced a partnership. Beauty
products from hundreds of Sephora locations can now be ordered
for home delivery by Uber Eats drivers.

Speaker 1 (01:33:23):
Casey, Oh good, exactly what I was always wanting in
my life Spura via uber eats.

Speaker 12 (01:33:28):
So well, you never know you might run out of
FI shadow or something.

Speaker 1 (01:33:31):
Yeah, I know it's a problem, all right, Jeff, thank
you very much, appreciate it. Have a good one there.
Oh you that it's got roasted by Jeff. I walked
right into it. So some people are upset with the
official Twitter account of ICE's New or Lean's office after

(01:33:52):
a photo was posted of and it's you know, it's
the photos you see right where they have the guy
hooked up and then they have the ICE officer wearing
the vests as police, but he's facing away because you
can't show the face because all the lunatics will docks
them and hunt their kids. So but it's the it's
the guy they arrested. And then the wording of the

(01:34:13):
tweet that has people upset because the dude they arrested
is a little person, And so they wrote, Ice New
Orleans arrested Christian Soto Galno, a citizen of Guatemala. His
criminal history includes a conviction for indecent behavior with a minor.

(01:34:35):
He received a two year prison sentence for that. And
then they wrote, we stand ready to face any challenge
big or small, as the people are upset because they
made a height joke because he's a little He's also
a kiddy diddler, so I don't care, and I think, honestly,

(01:34:57):
I think we should deport him creative creatively too, Like
there's no reason to waste a whole airline seat on
one of those repatriation flights when you could just as
easily fire him from one of those circus cannons or ross.
What do you think of this. We'll set up a
velcrow wall just in the border of Guatemala and then

(01:35:18):
some drunk dudes will toss them against it across the
border from like Mexico or Nicaragua, your choice, or Honduras.
I'm trying to think of the geography there. Okay, we
got options, it's all that I'm saying. Or we can
you know, just support him regular But yeah, I'm sorry,

(01:35:38):
you're not gonna get sympathy from me because they took
a shot at him over that, which I get it.
He can't control it, but he can control messing with kids.
So I'm all out. I'm all out of sympathy this morning.
I'm so sorry. And finally, and I didn't spend a
lot of time on this because I don't want to
get conspiratorial, but I don't think those signatures match. The

(01:36:04):
House Democrats released the Leude birthday message. Trump allegedly said
to Jeffrey Epstein, the leude part of it, with all
the really salacious languages, I'm not going to read or
you know where. It's kind of like insinuating something that's
all typed, which is interesting because I guess I thought
it was handwriting, and then that's what the So the

(01:36:26):
only thing where purportedly it's pen to paper is a signature,
which is not even part of the main thing. And
ross that doesn't look like Trump's signature, does it. I
don't want to get conspiratorial here. It doesn't because he's
got a pretty interesting signature.

Speaker 4 (01:36:45):
It's like the most original signa, Like there's no doubt
that's his, right. It doesn't even look real, you mean,
no doubt that it's not his or like his real
life signature.

Speaker 1 (01:36:56):
Oh it's real life. Yeah yeah, yeah, it's crazy how
ornate and flourished and all that it is. This one
it's it's not And it's not even the way that
he words it, where he writes his whole name out,
and it's just I don't know, there's something about it
that just doesn't look like his signature. But also like,
you know, if they want to say that an assistant

(01:37:17):
did it, I don't know. Man. The whole thing looks
now that I'm seeing it, it looks more sketched than
I thought it would
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

24/7 News: The Latest
Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton tackle the biggest stories in news, politics and current events with intelligence and humor. From the border crisis, to the madness of cancel culture and far-left missteps, Clay and Buck guide listeners through the latest headlines and hot topics with fun and entertaining conversations and opinions.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.