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September 10, 2025 • 98 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I love the whole crew over in the Greensboro iHeart facility.
Oh and boss lady over here feeds his lunch like
every day, which is uh.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
Maybe that should get back to Raleigh. That being said,
I cannot wait to be back on my normal Mike
or my you know, my Raleigh studio Mike tomorrow because
I'm sick of screaming through this thing. And Ross is
sick of having the right levels. I don't know why.
It just sounds even it feels like I'm not hitting
the levels again this morning.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
Ross.

Speaker 1 (00:32):
I'm assuming the levels are fine on your end, probably
a little over, a little over modulated. Okay, all right,
So Annie who? Annie who?

Speaker 2 (00:42):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (00:42):
So I have a question. This is probably not where
you thought I was going to start. Don't worry. We'll
get to the uh, We'll get to the Charlotte primaries yesterday.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
I don't know what to make of that. I have
some thoughts.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
I have some thoughts that are kind of uh, you know,
go to a dark place, and I'm really trying not
to get there. But I I you'll have to help
me work it out. We'll we'll we'll get into that
here in just a moment, Ross, did you happen to
see the video footage that who is the congressman Congressman

(01:24):
Eric Burlison, who's he's a Republican from Missouri or however
they say it in the the ad there, uh for
Cordell and Cordell.

Speaker 2 (01:35):
So he is.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
He's part of these uh, these hearings about UFOs and stuff,
and uh he he brought a video to the committee
hearing yesterday. And if you have it, actually let me.
I thought I was Ross ever chatting and I was
going to email this to him, and then I.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Got distract ude.

Speaker 1 (01:57):
Let's send you the uh your post article on this thing.

Speaker 2 (02:06):
All right, So that's on its way to you.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
Did you see the video of us hitting some orb
or thing that's ripping across the top of the ocean
like the flight of the Navigator. It looks like the
flight of the Navigator ship, which is a little disconcerting.
In fact, I can envision that, I know, like visually
in my that's crazy visually in my mind, Russ, I

(02:28):
bet in your mind the scene where he's where the
flight of the Navigator ship turns to like the super
ship and is gliding across the ocean like I can
picture that in my mind.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
I watched that damn movie so many times.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
And so this thing's off, It's off the coast of Yemen,
and for whatever reason, we decide we're going to hit
it with a hell fire missile and it just eats
it for lunch. It just bounces it off like it's
no big deal, keeps on trucking.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
It's crazy video.

Speaker 4 (02:57):
Man.

Speaker 1 (02:57):
I look, I you know, I don't know the providence
of it. I I don't know anything. I just my
question is, if we don't know what it is, and
it's moving at at a pace and it's traveling in
a way that frankly doesn't match aircraft that any of
us are familiar with, is the best thing to do

(03:17):
to hit it with a hell fire missile? That's how
intergalactic wars start, isn't it?

Speaker 2 (03:24):
Look at that bounces right off that thing?

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Yeah, isn't that crazy?

Speaker 2 (03:28):
That is so like?

Speaker 1 (03:30):
So why are we trying to hit it with a
hellfire missile? If the things acting like it's not from
this planet?

Speaker 2 (03:36):
Obviously, the next thing you need to do is hit
it with a nuke? Right?

Speaker 1 (03:40):
Well, no, what about Moab first? The mother of all bombs?

Speaker 2 (03:42):
Yah, it's fair.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
Yeah, and then sequentially and then yes, obviously you want
to go City of Houston nuke like in independence days.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
See if that works.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
But like it, a hellfire missile would know there's not a
plane in the sky you could hit in that fashion
and wouldn't do anything. This guy just he deviates course
for a moment that he's right back at it.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
You've got a guy, you know, like really serious pilots
with tons of experience, right on record over and over
again saying they are seeing these things in the skies.
They don't know what they are. They don't go along
with the laws of physics. They just make up the
rules as they go, turning on a dime, rotating in
the sky, bouncing off hellfire missiles. So yeah, if it

(04:25):
is an aliens, it might be a bit more concerning
because that would mean somebody on this planet has technology
that is way beyond what we can even comprehend and
pull up correct correct. Yeah, There of course is a
third option, they're hours, with which I would prefer. That
would be a great option.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
If they're hours and we're testing to see hellfire missiles
bouncing off of them, it's a possibility, I guess I uugh,
I just if it's the thing, if it isn't ours
and we we don't know it to be or suspect

(05:02):
it to be like China's or something, I just don't
know that trying to missile. It's a good idea because
if the day have technology to just you know, act
like it's nothing, they probably have the technology to really
really make things uncomfortable for our own military.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
One of my favorite theories on this stuff is that
it involves simulation theory, and it's sort of like, Okay,
you're looking at your computer right now, right, so, yeah,
move the mouse around on the screen right to guy,
select something or do something?

Speaker 4 (05:37):
What?

Speaker 2 (05:37):
Yeah, sold on the selected something or did something. Your
mouse is going all over your screen. You can see
your mouse.

Speaker 5 (05:43):
Ye.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Now imagine that thing we're seeing in the sky is
similar to like a mouse, and somebody is directing a
simulation or creating something, so you can't actually interact with
it because it's it's separate from the programming. Who the
hell do you think? I mean, that stuff is fascinating
when you get to it, you know how.

Speaker 1 (06:02):
No, yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely, dude.

Speaker 2 (06:04):
I mean, if we are living in a simulation, some
of these program it and create it and put stuff.
It's like in the SIMS where you have your you know,
you have your plane or you're building stuff and you
move your cursor and you select it and something pops
in there. Whatever. It's the same sort of thing. We
can't interact with it because it's not part of the program. Oh,
this is good. I did bait somebody into this, so people.

Speaker 1 (06:24):
Uh so Earl Wrights, He says, fake video on the
hell Fire missiles blow up on contact. I agree with
you that that's my thought process. But I've literally read
a theory on this stuff that they can they can
essentially render a missile inert using technology.

Speaker 3 (06:41):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Where did the video? Where did the video come from?

Speaker 3 (06:43):
What?

Speaker 2 (06:43):
Because I know a lot of these videos have come
from like the Navy or like the Department of Defense.
Remember they were released that one? What was yah?

Speaker 6 (06:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (06:50):
Yeah yeah, the ship out in California, the TikTok video.
So what's the source of the video?

Speaker 4 (06:55):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (06:56):
The source of the video?

Speaker 1 (06:57):
Well one and the sort I mean, the person who
brought it to light is this congressman.

Speaker 3 (07:03):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (07:03):
And this was part of the This was part of
a hearing on Capitol Hill yesterday.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
Where they have viewed this.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
H the video appears to be video that our own.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
Let's see here.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
Okay, so it must be air force. It must be
air force because it's stamp Vandenberg.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
Yeah. So the article here in your post underneath the
one photo says yeah it's a it's from a US
military drone.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
So yes, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah so so US. I
guess the video comes from US.

Speaker 2 (07:39):
I don't know, man, because again it's just otherwise you
can sit back and be like, oh, that's a I
or something, but yeah, it's being produced by you know,
our military, Like our military said, hey, we have this
video similar to the tic TAC video. You can kind
of have to give it some credence and be like, hmm,
you know.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
Unless the Congress people involved are the as but the
shape shifter kind or the lizard ones where like they
kind of look like humans, but every now and then
they slip. So what a way to start the morning. Here,
let's see here. They had several other people testify, including

(08:19):
several US Air Force veterans who witnessed both issues off
of Vanderberg and also out of Langley. The Langley incident
involved a one hundred foot equilateral triangle take off from
near the NASA hangar on the base. I don't know, man,
it's all crazy, all right. Good theories are rolling in.

(08:41):
Theories are rolling in. This is why I'm just attacking it.
Oh that's a good one. Ross you ready, that's the
Wakandan Air Force. I didn't even think of that.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
Now. No, if you do come in contact with one
of these flying entity whatever the hell it is, yeah,
it crashed and you notice some black oil coming out
of it, you want to you want to eat. You
want to cover yourself in that. You want to cover
yourself and lick up that oil. That's what you will.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
It's good for the skin. I understand that it's really
good for this. For the skin, Yeah, makes it. It
takes years off of your life. But in the other
way anyway. Uh So again, my only question I can't
speak to you know whether it's true, whether it's not,
what it is, any of the rest of it. But

(09:31):
if we if we think it's aliens, could we not
shoot hellfire missiles at it, although maybe it doesn't care
if it can essentially render them inert?

Speaker 2 (09:41):
Is it?

Speaker 1 (09:42):
Why is Russia to Boston? Paul try to keep up buddy,
this is from outside Yemen. It's not a Russian drone
into Poland or a Jewish murder drone chasing Greta around
which turned out not to be a Jewish murder drone.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
What's up? If these things operate the way that Bob
is has claimed they operate, He's the guy that that
he worked at Area fifty one. He was on Joe
Rogan a while back, right, he said, like.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
And if you listen to Coast to Coast, he's been
on there.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
A billion times yeaheah. And of course there's a way,
you know, you can look into his history and you
can doubt it or not. But if you believe what
Bob Lazar said, Bob Lazar said, these things move by
they don't actually move. The space around them moves, which
allows them to go through.

Speaker 4 (10:22):
You know.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
It's sort of like Star Trek really when you think
about it. So, I mean, if you're firing a hellfire
missile at this thing, you're not going to hit it
because the space around it is sort of bending, so
it's gonna.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
Cop right off, you think, they say make it so
I hope, so, okay, that'd be cool, but in their language,
so maybe we wouldn't understand, right, all right, well, Eddie
who That's That's how I choose to start the Wednesday
show because I was watching that thing on a loop
this morning. I'm like, what in the world, why are
we shooting at that? I know that sounds a little cowardly,

(10:53):
but like there's a certain strategicy to it.

Speaker 2 (10:57):
As George Bush said, disagree. I would say everything you
have at it, you know, and it's like, uh, you
deal the same way with hurricanes, right, just fire the
nukes at it. Yeah, I fire your gun at the hurricane.

Speaker 3 (11:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:09):
Okay, that's good advice right there, dude. Every time they
have to ask people not to do that, just to
make do you ever when they put the somebody put
the graphic out like how the bullets could whip around
and come back at you.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
Yeah, I saw that graphic and I'm like, this is
the most Unamerican graphic I've ever seen, or.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
Is like South Carolina, South Carolina put that out or something. Oh,
Lower Carolina never changed, by the way. I did learn
a it's unfair to pick on the South Carolina. Did
learn a fun fact about South Carolina. Yesterday or the
other day. I've been webbed, just kind of holding this
in the holster. Did you know that South Carolina has

(11:51):
the highest percentage of its residents that live in a trailer,
So like hurricanes are a big damn deal there, man,
And it's not even closer parret. I had no idea
it was South Carolina.

Speaker 2 (12:03):
So there you go.

Speaker 1 (12:04):
Fun facts to start a fun show with some unfortunately
unfun topics.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
All right, we're.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
Gonna do the post mortem on the Charlotte primary yesterday
because I don't know what I don't know what to think.
I don't know what to think of a huge swath
of the population in Charlotte. Now I'll explain coming up

(12:31):
next here on the CaCO Day Radio program. Normally I
wouldn't give a flying well UFO slash hell fire missile
about the Charlotte primaries for the municipal elections.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
You know, Charlotte.

Speaker 1 (12:45):
We do not have a station in Charlotte, although we
do have the ninety four to five signal from Greensboro
does hit down Lake Norman and whatnot, so we actually
have quite a few listeners down there, so that we
appreciate that. But the actual city of Charlet Proper is
not It's a pet calendar problem. Can't wait to talk

(13:06):
to him on Friday. So normally wouldn't care. Kind of
cared this time around for two reasons. One, I want
to know what's going on with incumbents, and most important
of the incumbents would be the mayor of Charlotte, who
put out that absolutely awful series of statements following what

(13:28):
happened on the light rail there, basically talking about compassion
and we need more police, which, by the way, I
did see an update from Joe Bruno, who's a pretty
good reporter out of Charlotte. And remember how she said
they're immediately gonna get more police on the They didn't.
She literally lied about that the other day and has

(13:50):
not done it. So I'm sitting here and I understand
it's the primary, this is not the general election, but
let's face it, in the city of Charlotte, I don't
know that you know, Pat McCrory will probably be the
last Republican mayor of Charlotte, just like what happened with
Raleigh and various other communities. Raleigh's cooked as far as

(14:12):
ever having another Republican mayor, I don't think that ever
happens again.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
Ah, But.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
This is the This is the mayor that lorded over
a lot of this restorative justice stuff and stuff that
Cooper going back to and and Josh Stein is a
g by the way, even though he's now governor. Going
back to the George Floyd era, apparently there was a
MacArthur grant of over three million dollars to essentially incentivize

(14:45):
the city to uh, you know, fast tracked dirt bags
back out of jail. This is this is all her
her reign. And did you ross did you see the
photo the still photo of this this Ukrainian woman after

(15:05):
she had been stabbed, cowering in a ball looking up.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
Yeah, I no, she was in complete shock and nobody
helped her. It's I that was like watching that, like
she maybe they didn't realize what happened because it happened
so fast. But she said, well did once you see
the blood spray, Like, yeah, it's really hard to not
figure out what's going on. Didn't that? But that photo? Man,

(15:29):
I got sisters.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
But so the mayor of Charlotte won her primary by
seventy point seven percent. Sorry, I'm flabbergasted. Seventy percent of
Democrats in the city of Charlotte who voted still have
confidence in this mayor? What does that say about you?

(15:53):
Back at his six thirty five here on the CaCO
Day radio program, I am I am simply reflecting this
morning on the Charlotte municipal primary election which took place yesterday,
specifically over on the the.

Speaker 2 (16:06):
Democrat side o things.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
And what I cannot what I cannot understand is after
the you know, what happened on the light rail, the response,
the horrible statements, the failure by the way to even
beef up policing, which is clearly where Josh Stein and
the Mayor of Charlotte want to go. They want to say, oh,
it's a police issues, we just need we need more money.

(16:35):
What in reality they have They have both participated in
the absolute dismantling of accountability within our criminal justice system.
So the fact that twenty seven thousand, five hundred and
six people in the City of Charlotte would vote for Vylyiles,

(16:56):
the incumbent, the current mayor, who is part of all
of this, I don't know how to process that. There
are twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six people that
reside within the City of Charlotte who see apparently not
enough of a problem to wanna, you know, change it up.

(17:20):
So I'm gonna go with you're okay with this? Why
would I go to the city of Charlotte. If there's
twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six people who are
okay with this? Why would I step foot in there?
That's that's crazy. That means that if you go to

(17:43):
the city, let's say you run the Let's say you
go to I don't know, why do people go to Charlotte.
You go to Panthers game maybe, or God help you,
you get tricked into going to ikea guys ough, at
some point you're gonna come in contact with one of
the twenties seven, five hundred and six people that thought

(18:05):
that looked at what happened on that light rail and
everything that surrounded it and went, that's our gal. I
don't trust those people.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
How do I I?

Speaker 1 (18:15):
Because I'm gonna I assume that they're also violent lunatics,
because you'd have to be to approve of this. So
you have twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six violent
lunatics roaming around the city of Charlotte. Yes, I'm gonna
go here. I don't care who it is. This is

(18:35):
not By the way, none of this is contentious. This
is not like it's all documentable. She put the statements out,
you saw what happened, and you still went, yeah, yeah,
show work, and I did a little research. Look, you

(18:56):
know there's four other four other main I guess competitors
for the mayor's race.

Speaker 4 (19:01):
There.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
I'm not necessarily tracking politically with them. But there's a
couple options that wouldn't have been crazy. I mean, did
you're already really to the left anyway in a city
like Charlotte so like? But you know, you went with that.
You went with the person who's was in charge and
and really supported a lot of things that allowed this

(19:24):
to happen, whether it's through dereliction of duty or party
politics or whatever. Twenty seven five hundred and six of you.
But uh, maybe that's not fair. Maybe all twenty seven
five hundred and six people voted for vy Lyles in

(19:44):
the primary yesterday or just hurting. That's what we really
need to understand. One of the worst bits of analysis
I've seen each and every day, each and every day,
has been conducted by Van Jones, who who is just

(20:04):
getting owned if in fact he cares where initially he's like,
there's no racial component here. The only racism is the randoms.
It's like doje he said I got the white girl,
got that white girl, and then the lunatic says this yesterday.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
I don't know why that man did what he did.
We don't know how to deal with people who were
hurting in the way this man was hurting. Hurt people,
hurt people. What happened was horrible.

Speaker 7 (20:30):
No one mentioned the word race, white, black or anything
except him.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
How is the message still not got to him? Hurt people,
hurt people. Ross You ever been hurt?

Speaker 4 (20:44):
You?

Speaker 1 (20:44):
Ever been hurt?

Speaker 2 (20:45):
Buddy? Hurt inside? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (20:49):
You know what. I absolutely obliterated my right big toe
yesterday because the hotel has one of those beds where
he can't really see that it's wrapped bored around the bottom.
So I got too close to it. Oh who do
I get to murder today? Do I get a freebie?
I get a freebie?

Speaker 3 (21:06):
Right?

Speaker 2 (21:07):
I think?

Speaker 1 (21:08):
I don't know if the nail's gonna come off. But
oh man, the words that came out of my mouth
last night as I was headed to bed should not
They're not family friendly.

Speaker 2 (21:19):
Well, I mean, you know de van Jones's point. You
know The point is van he shouldn't have been out
on the street to commit the crime. That's the prime.
If you want to know, like why this guy is
hurting or what you know, what is the psychological makeup
of this monster? Put him in a padded room and
study him for twenty thirty years, as we do with
psychotic murderers, right right, Yeah, you know, like you get

(21:40):
to the Ted Bundy level or the Gacy level, and
before they you know, they zap your brain or your
body with the electric chair. They study you for a
decade or so until your until your appeals right now,
and then they murder you.

Speaker 1 (21:51):
And then after they execute you, they pull the brain
out and dissect away, right yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:56):
I mean yeah, yeah, Well you want to know why
he's hurting, lock him up, put him in a room,
and study him like the monster that he is. I
don't care.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Can we study twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six Charlatans?
Is that what they call people from they call them Charlatans?
Is what do you call somebody from Charlotte's? Is that
not correct? I just assumed that was correct.

Speaker 2 (22:19):
Immedi Charlatonian or something. I don't know.

Speaker 1 (22:21):
I like mine better I do too. Yeah, twenty seven thousand,
five hundred and six. Here's another question, Ross, of the
twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six, how many of
them do you think have Ukrainian flags in one of
their social media bios?

Speaker 8 (22:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (22:36):
I mean those people have been pretty silent, haven't they.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
I bet at twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six do.

Speaker 2 (22:44):
And once again going back to yesterday's conversation, it isn't
political because the average person can see this story. You're
scrolling through your social media feed at your house and
you've got other things in your life going on. You
got work and kids, and you got some downtime, and
you open your phone, you scroll and you see do
you see this? And you see this teeny tiny girl
who is so tiny you don't even when I first

(23:06):
saw it him like is that a teenage boy? Is
it a teenage girl?

Speaker 1 (23:09):
But with the picture of her sitting before the stabbing
with the hat, You're right.

Speaker 2 (23:12):
Absolutely, When I first saw it, I thought it was
like a teen boy because it was so tiny. Like
I said yesterday, you can put her out in your pocket
and walk around like a little tiny and then you
have this dude stand up for no reason stab her
in the neck. Yeah, and then people around her are
just sort of like looking at it, like what just happened?
And she collapses in her own blood. It's awful. The
average person looks at this and they say, I have

(23:33):
a daughter, or I have a son, or you know,
I've written on publicis I want them to say, and
they can relate to this horrific, awful crime. And then
you see the mugshots of her, of the mugshot of
the dude, side by side by, side by, side by side,
going fourteen times, and you say, what was he doing there?

Speaker 1 (23:50):
Van?

Speaker 2 (23:51):
What was he doing there? Van Jones? That's the issue.
He shouldn't have been on that train.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
His own family, his own mother and brother were like,
this guy should not be on the streets.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
And and and I.

Speaker 1 (24:05):
Saw people trying to play it off. Yes, say this
is where the politics comes in. They're like, well, you
can't be mad at that magistrate she was facing. It
was just a case of misuse of nine to one one. No,
it wasn't just that it was a folder. I'm assuming
that his inches thick of everything that's due every violent
outburst and crazy thing this dude had done. Now, answering

(24:28):
for this specific charge, a charge where bail is allowed
and remand is something that can happen in certain circumstances.
And a guy who is telling the court not that
he missd dialed nine one one, not that he didn't
understand that maybe he didn't rise to the level of
it he told the court. Are you aware of what

(24:48):
he told the court?

Speaker 3 (24:49):
Ross?

Speaker 1 (24:49):
This is like cold, I don't think we've talked about
this yet.

Speaker 2 (24:52):
I've heard it.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
He told the court that he called nine to one
one because somebody put a secret alien tracker under his skin.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
Right, So this isn't like an whoopsie or a whoopsie
or these things.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
He's telling you he's not there.

Speaker 2 (25:08):
This is like you took out your phone. You ever
do the thing where you actually do the nine to
one one call on your phone, like you know, it's
like a butt dial, But it's the worst case in
that you look at your phone. I've done this before
and suddenly, oh god, no, terrifying. You know your your
iPhone has that thing where it'll come.

Speaker 1 (25:22):
Of the emergency, yeah, that you can make an emergency.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
At it before and I'm like, oh, and it's like
I'm gonna go to prison.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
Yes, this guy thinks he's this guy's think he's got
the black oil in him.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Right, So as a judge, you got to listen to
this lunatic who's talking to you about this stuff, like yeah.

Speaker 1 (25:39):
And then look at his rap sheet where he gets
crazy violent.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Right, Yeah, you say, okay, crazy man, let me look
at your mug, your rap sheet. And you're like, oh,
this is as big as an Encyclopedia Britannica back in
the day. You're I don't believe it. I think you're
gonna stay here. Yeah, we're gonna put you in that
room and study it.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
You don't have to, by the way, you don't have
to at that point put him into jail, but like.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
Put him in psychological room and study correct. Yes, So
don't give me that garbage.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
And for twenty seven hundred and six of you, I don't,
I don't. I don't feel safe around you. I mean
I probably feel a little more safe, especially if I'm
not in a gun free zone. But that being said,
you voted, you voted for this chick who's at the

(26:26):
center of all of this.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
I don't know what to do with that.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
And the crazy thing is they basically threw that Tijuana
brown out. She lost her primary, she still got twenty
five percent of the vote, which is remember she's indicted,
So like, what what's the bar for you guys not
to vote for vy Lyles? If she's the stabber? If

(26:49):
if if, if, all of a sudden they get that
to Carlo whatever. I hate using his name, the el Stabber, there,
the Charlatan, and it's like a mission impossible. Mask comes
off and there's vy Lyles. Would that be enough? Would
you then go, all right, maybe we should. Yeah, let's
let's try somebody else.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
I don't know. I don't feel safe.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
I'm concerned about poor Trevor Ross all right, because how
many how often does Trevor go down to Charlotte. Plus
he stays at the Murder Hotel, which is like an
inside joke. Sorry, sorry, he's pretty bad, But he's down
to Charlotte all the time. Our boss could be in
peril and he may not know it. Twenty seven, five

(27:38):
hundred and six people went, Nope, this is fine. You're
the meme with the coffee in the fireroom and the dog,
except this is real life. Six forty seven, Hang on, welcome,
six fifty three Here on the Cacoday radio program eight
eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four. That

(28:00):
is the phone number you want to be on the show.
Looking that we get called coming in right as I'm
saying it perfect, so we get some calls on the
Charlotte primary. Also, should we be firing hellfire missiles at
things that we think are alien ships?

Speaker 2 (28:15):
I don't know. Don't you know?

Speaker 1 (28:19):
We don't need an intergalactic war. It's some crazy hearings
up in Congress yesterday. We do have to talk to
about cracker barrel. So yesterday I May I just casually
mentioned to somebody that I was going to go over
to crack the cracker barrel over on I guess still

(28:40):
around wind Over anyway, and that one over there, if
you're familiar with where they are in the Triad's gonna
pop over just because I wanted to see I want
to get a sense. And then I didn't make it
over But the response was why would you go there?
After what they did? And I we have to have

(29:01):
a talk about not being the woke mob. I think
Ross and I had an off year discussion about this.
We we have to have a conversation about not being
the woke mob. So we'll get into that, because like
I feel like Cracker Barrel's literally now done all the
things plus some other things. And you you got to

(29:23):
know when to say when. I guess it would be my
point so that in the moment, let me grab a
call first, Jake, what's going on?

Speaker 4 (29:31):
Hey, good morning.

Speaker 8 (29:33):
I was I was talking to Ross about my my
buddy lives on pch Out in California right now, he's
got mental issues.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
He was a straight A student and everything.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
Else like that.

Speaker 8 (29:41):
He was he was the guy I wanted to be
the best man at my wedding and something happened to him,
and now he's got mental issues.

Speaker 3 (29:50):
I mean, the Charlotte case would be the main reason.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
Why I wouldn't trust him around my family.

Speaker 8 (29:55):
And I mean, that's that's sad to say, because there's
a lot of people with mental issues that aren't violent and.

Speaker 2 (30:01):
All that stuff.

Speaker 8 (30:01):
But I mean it's just at what if point that
gets in back in your head and then nobody pays
them any mind, any attention. We need to bring back
mental institutions and properly care for these people.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
Uh yeah, And we just there was a substantial investment
in the last allocation of our state budget.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
I think it was.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
I'd have to look up the number. It's like six
or seven hundred million dollars. And and so, by the way,
that's why it's really disingenuous for people like Alma Adams yesterday.
This congresswoman is an absolute lunatic. I honestly, I think
we should do a mental check on her. She's just like, Now,
this has nothing to do with criminal justice. It's all
the nobody they took. They stole all the mental health money,

(30:44):
and it's like, I don't know, they just allocated a
bunch more in the but the previous budget, I don't
know what's going.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
To be in this one.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
But like, this is a lot of difference. Yeah, but
let me point this out. The difference is it sounds
like your buddy maybe in his twenties he started with
the mental health probably schizophrenia.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
Right, No, he was about in the thirties.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Okay, well I'm not a doctor, but but it clearly
developed later and later in life because you know previously
using Okay, that being said, does he have a thirteen
count rap sheet of some of the most violent stuff
that you can think of?

Speaker 8 (31:24):
No?

Speaker 4 (31:25):
I know one thing. I know he resisted the rest
a few times, and.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
I think that, Okay, when.

Speaker 9 (31:28):
He resists the rest, he got clovered in the head,
and I think that's what you.

Speaker 3 (31:31):
Know, cowards fired.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
Well but but but like so I'm just pointing out
how crazy outside of the norm and thanks for the call. Like,
there's no question the judge is looking at this, well,
this guy's trying to scratch a hole in his skin
because of the black oil and goes and then looks
at that rap sheet and goes, Now, he's probably fine.

(31:53):
He thinks the government or space creatures are trying to
you know, get him. But now we'll put him out there.
Ah No, yeah, no, he's got a whole track record
of handling this perfectly.

Speaker 2 (32:04):
No, so for that.

Speaker 1 (32:08):
And by the way, when I said that that judge
or magistrate needs to be held accountable, I don't just
mean that one. We need to go through each and
every one of these, especially when we get into the
more violent stuff. We use a lot of different analogies
on the show yesterday. I even tried to get Senator
bud to kind of unilaterally come with me. He hmmed

(32:30):
in Haut a little more than I than I'd like,
But the point remains if parents can be held responsible
when their kids shoot up at school, If gun manufacturers
you think you can hold them responsible. If every bartender
in North Carolina who overserves somebody has liability, and the
event of a horrific crash where people are killed, then

(32:51):
why not judges? Why not elected officials? Back in your
phone calls here in just a moment, So hanging loose,
John and Jamal and everyone else? Uh we just I
just yesterday I had a little interesting conversation and I
harkened back to a conversation Ross and I had. I

(33:12):
can't remember if we had it on the air off
the air, but I think it's I think people need
to just take a breath, okay, as it pertains to
the cracker barrel stuff. So basically, yesterday I wanted, well,
one I was hungry, so that's a pretty good motivator.
And two I was thinking to myself, maybe I'll go

(33:36):
to the cracker Barrel over over on Wendover because it's
not it's not too far from where the studios are
here in High Points, kind of a straight shot past
the Palladium and all that, and I go get me
some some of that wonterful potato castrole and then they
have the full potato castroles that are smothered. Now, which AnyWho,

(33:57):
And so I was I was communicating this to somebody
who was among those who was very upset with Cracker Barrel.
It was not important who the individual is. But I've
seen well a lot of this online too, because yesterday
Cracker Barrel basically yielded the final piece of what people

(34:20):
were purportedly upset about. And that was well, first, you remember,
it was the logo, right, They're like, all right, we
heard you, and I know the first time they pretended
that they didn't hear you, but then they realized that
I better hear them, and so they said, all right,
we're going the old uncle Herschel's back right sitting by
the barrel. The cracker and the barrel will return. So

(34:42):
that was number one. There was some meal issues, and
I noticed I did glance the menu online Herschel's Favorite
or whatever that's called, and some others were back. So
they that, you know, that was another piece, a little
component there. They also took down basically all their DEI

(35:04):
stuff off their website, which is now irritated and some
of the alphabet folks, but they did that, even though
that wasn't initially part of what people were getting into.
I think they realized that it was becoming an issue.
And then yesterday Cracker Barrel put the following out. It

(35:25):
says that all modern restaurant renovations are canceled. Now there's
some that are already renovated. It just is what it is.
But if your restaurant here's what they wrote. If your
restaurant hasn't been remodeled, you don't need to worry.

Speaker 2 (35:41):
It won't be.

Speaker 1 (35:42):
With our recent announcement that our old timer logo will
remain along with our bigger focus in the kitchen and
on your plate, we hope that today's steps reinforce that
we hear you. You won, okay, you got what you wanted,
and I thought it was. What was crazy to me
is I see a bunch of people who are like, no,

(36:03):
then and then they'll they'll throw something else in No,
we gotta they gotta fire the CEO publicly on game
show or something like. You're becoming the woke mob.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
When you do this.

Speaker 1 (36:16):
Remember how we say never give in, because it will
never be enough. If you want people to take you
seriously in the future, when you have a valid concern,
and they have addressed your valid concern, then you go
thank you, and then you go do what you're doing,

(36:36):
because other companies watch things like this and if they
feel in the same way that they've clearly in some
instances you know, seen the left operate, if the right
operates like that as well, then all they're gonna do
is they're just gonna run numbers.

Speaker 2 (36:53):
Man.

Speaker 1 (36:54):
They don't care customer loyalty and the run. They don't care.
So they're like, you know, just the one of the
one of the people who say, oh, you're going to
Cracker Brot. Yes, yeah, I want potato castro, but I
also want to kind of check out the vibe in
there right now.

Speaker 2 (37:10):
I mean, with all due respect, you're an idiot. We
need to kick what the Cracker Barrel employees into the pit.
They need to be kicked in. Well, hold on the
pit of despair with the machine or like the Spartan pit.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
Oh, we're back with the spartan pit three times.

Speaker 2 (37:26):
If Cracker Barrel doesn't have a Spartan pitch, I demand
a Spartan pit to click to kick the employees into.
We'll call it the cracker pit. I demand a cracker.

Speaker 1 (37:33):
I know that sounds a little racist. Actually that's I
don't know that we should call it that. Ah see,
you want us, you want a cracker spartan pit, I'm
like saying it. I don't think I'm asking for too much.
Who gets to kick the employee? Why are you kicking
the nice employees in? What did they do?

Speaker 2 (37:53):
You know what they did?

Speaker 1 (37:55):
I don't think they do. I think it'll be I'll
come as a surprise. I think if we do need
people to, you know, randomly and indiscriminately kill people, we
could recruit the twenty seven, five hundred and six Charlatans
who voted for vy Lyles in the primary yesterday, because
clearly they have no conscience.

Speaker 2 (38:16):
What do we doing?

Speaker 1 (38:18):
But to the point, you're the one who made the
damn point, It's like, when you've won, shut up, right,
shut up, you won, You got what you wanted. Don't
be the thing that you hate. So if they've acquiesced
everything that you wanted, go go go to cracker barrel

(38:38):
and eat some damn food on whatever regular schedule you
were doing it. Don't be obnoxious about it, or or
I guess they have. If they open the spartan pits.
I guess then it's it's like medieval times at that
point the well, you know, one of these entertainment restaurants, which,

(39:03):
by the way, I have like almost all of those
have gone by the wayside. I'm trying to think of
any like the Medieval Times, and I don't even know
that still operate.

Speaker 2 (39:12):
I'm so upset I never got to experience it. I
really wanted to sit there at that.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
Oh I did get to go, Yeah, I didn't get
to go yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (39:20):
With the big Turkey leg and the theatrical Challas. Yeah.
I wanted to go. Yeah, yeah. I went as a
college kid. Man.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
It was it was interesting, it was fun.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
I'm not gonna be were missing out. It angers me.
It creates this well, stirs of this emotion, and I
want to kick their employees into the pit.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
Why is with what is with the pit man? Why
is everything a pit?

Speaker 5 (39:45):
Is?

Speaker 1 (39:45):
There was there no entertainment restaurants, uh, dinner in the
show kind of things or interactive thing where you grew up.
Do they not have anything like that up in Schenectady.

Speaker 2 (39:53):
I'm asking no, not that I know of, And if
we did, we couldn't afford it, so my parents had
probably shield me from it, so I didn't know about
out it. It's it's like how they like hid the
Nintendo from me for like five six years and no
idea it existed. Do you know?

Speaker 1 (40:07):
Do you know what we got to do twice a
year and it only because it then, only because of
South Park to people even know this was a thing.
When I was a kid, anytime we went anytime we
went to Denver, we got to go to Casabonita.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
Wait, that's a real place.

Speaker 1 (40:23):
That's a real place. That's part of that's part of
my child It's a core memory from my childhood.

Speaker 2 (40:28):
Man, it's even better now, I know.

Speaker 1 (40:30):
Yeah, Cosabanina is a real thing and it looks just
like it was portrayed in the South Park episodes.

Speaker 2 (40:36):
But you can go ahead and watch, you.

Speaker 1 (40:38):
Know, the whole thing, and you go in there, and
as a kid, it's amazing. I don't know what it
looks like through the lens of an adult, because I
was never an adult when I went there. I was
always a kid, And you know, high school was probably
the oldest. But when you were when you were a
little kid was magical because there's all this stuff going
on just everything going on. And there was another restaurant

(41:00):
called Feta Rico's that was kind of their competition, but
it was pretty low wreck compared to Casta Benita. So
and I'm sure they had stuff like that in North Carolina.
I just I don't know what it uh, what it
would be. I like out of the mountains.

Speaker 2 (41:16):
You got to have something. Right in the future, it'll
be like BUCkies, right, everything will be BUCkies. No, it'll
be like get married at a BUCkies, you get cremated
at a BUCkies. But it's exciting. It's like Cassabanina and BUCkies. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (41:31):
Yeah, but like that's not a show per se. So
all right, Well, anyway, let's go ahead, get some phone calls. John,
you're up first, go right ahead.

Speaker 4 (41:39):
Yes, how you doing today?

Speaker 2 (41:42):
I'm just reminiscing, sir.

Speaker 4 (41:45):
I was actually listening earlier since this haul Ordeo with
the Charlotte murder of the Ukrainian girl, and like I've
been seeing on somebody's social media and everything that people
are talking about. You know, his mom said that he
was diagnosed because aphrenia and everything, regardless of his rep
sheet that he had of the fourteen other different charges

(42:06):
that he's had in the past. But yet you know,
they say that the mental system that had why uh
selled everybody and everything like that. But I look at
it like, you know, if his mom said that he
was diagnosed with schizophrenia and everything, how far back did
he go? Was he was he diagnosed whenever he was
a child, a teenager or an adult. And on top

(42:26):
of that, you know, you allowed him to supposedly be
out there when you knew he had issues that you
could have simply either maybe admitted him to a psychiatric
board and everything to avoid actions or anything like that.
I mean, regardless, I'm like.

Speaker 3 (42:42):
The guy mom.

Speaker 1 (42:43):
Also, mom also said that he needed to be not
on the street.

Speaker 4 (42:48):
So okay, but why did mom not do anything whenever
he supposedly was diagnosed.

Speaker 1 (42:53):
I don't know many mom, Well maybe mom doesn't have
money for private health mental health care.

Speaker 4 (43:01):
Yeah, But at the same time, if we have people
like that, technically they should be taken off the stream,
because I mean, if someone actually is trying to commit suicide,
you know, we can actually admit them for what twenty
four forty eight hours if they feel like they're a
threat to themselves.

Speaker 1 (43:15):
But yet, then you know, sir, I understand your frustration.
I would encourage you to and thank you for the call.
I would encourage you to learn more and and read
more about different scenarios and situations. There are a lot

(43:35):
of stories where people have pled with police, judges, social workers,
you name it, that they want their loved one essentially
put into an asylum. And they want them because one,
they don't want their loved one. They don't want their
loved one to get hurt. Right, there's a certain self
little selfishness, but you know that's that's family. But also

(43:58):
they recognize that the damn image that their loved one
could do. Like I have, I have a there I
I don't know as we speaking on people's business. I
have somebody that that I know who had a family
member that committed suicide and they they they ran into

(44:24):
a sit like they tried to get them forcibly committed
and it was barricade. Is not in North Carolina. It
was barricade after barricade after barricade, and.

Speaker 2 (44:35):
You know, because what can you do?

Speaker 1 (44:36):
The person is an adult and eventually the you know,
the inevitable happened. So I don't know that I'm ready
to sit here and cook Mom over this, because every
statement I've seen from her is she wants, she wants,
she wants her son off the street. But you're right,
in some instances people protect the individuals and then go

(44:59):
out and and do the other stuff. So if we
want to have a real deal adult conversation about I'm
with you, sir. But to pretend that the process can
work just because a family member would want it to
happen when the family member in question is an adult,
it's not as simple as that. I guess what I

(45:20):
would say, Jamal, what's up a kac?

Speaker 3 (45:24):
And just to let you know, chicken crass state with
white white grave saw mill, what do you.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
Think of cracker?

Speaker 1 (45:34):
Hold on, Jamal? What do you what do you think
of the cracker hole idea? Ross's spartan hole? No cracker
excuse me, cracker hole?

Speaker 3 (45:45):
Cracker? Yeah, who loved me? Remember the same from the
spy who loved me? When he put together the girls?
She got the elevated and drop me and pull around
the water with the sharp No spy who loved me?
I'm going to old school spot elevator. But you know what, Casey,
my wife said, pulling Dick Park is now apart. So

(46:07):
he'll know, they'll open back out to another rules. But Casey,
we need to go back to three strikes rule because
this man would have been on the floor they called
the habitual following and locked up for ten years. And
they need to go back to this. Right here is
a prime example. Obama Obama Obama start writing eos that

(46:29):
shredded the three strikes rules. And when President Trump the
last his first time, when he did the prison reform,
that's one of the things as well. They need to
go back to the three strikes rule. The three strikes
rule made a mandatory in minim it took. It took
the back from a judge to decide whether or not.

(46:52):
Oh I'm gonna.

Speaker 2 (46:55):
Yeah, and hey, hey let's speak.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
But I want people to understand because I think some
people when they hear three strikes, they think of California's
version where three strikes and it's.

Speaker 2 (47:07):
A life sentence.

Speaker 1 (47:08):
But in reality, a lot of states and a lot
of places have three strikes. And then what Jamal's talking about,
where if it's your third felony, it's an automatic like
ten years or fifteen years or whatever it is. So
there is there are very different versions of this. Before
people just object to, you know, out of hand, because
I don't want to go to prison for life. You
can write it however you want, but what you're attempting

(47:30):
to do is keep it so judges can't play games. Okay,
all right, go ahead, jam you got about a minute.

Speaker 3 (47:36):
Oh okay, won't carown ahead ten years and we need
to go back there. Republicans need to do that now.
Also they need to get rid of people who are
magistrate who are not lawyers.

Speaker 4 (47:48):
Did you know?

Speaker 3 (47:48):
And this is one of the things and kept quite
around the woman who released him on the all all
more than an attorney. She was just someone who.

Speaker 2 (47:57):
Ran there later her automatic thru yes.

Speaker 3 (48:03):
And so they need to go and for someone to
be a manister who was not an attorney, they need
to at least be a police officer. And these district attorneys,
because you know we have one here in Durham who
did and who do the same thing. District attorneys least
need to be someone who's a district attorney to be
if you don't tell me, in order to be a
district attorney, I need to at least have a law degree.

(48:26):
Then in order to be a district attorney, you need
to be a former district attorney to take that position.
Those are laws we need to take. But immediate stop
is to return back to an habitual fellas because this
man would have never been on the streets.

Speaker 2 (48:41):
I appreciate the call.

Speaker 1 (48:42):
Yeah, I'd be fine with bringing the ten year thing back.
I'd be fine with just using some common sense and
then we wouldn't necessarily be here. So if the guy
thinks there's alien bugs under a skin and he's trying
to dig him out in your courtroom, maybe some mental
health services.

Speaker 2 (48:56):
I don't know. Anyway, we'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (48:58):
Hang on, O many just over on and I mean currently,
not over the life of How how long have you
owned that SUV that.

Speaker 4 (49:04):
You drive.

Speaker 2 (49:06):
The one right now but since COVID I think twenty twenty? Okay,
all right.

Speaker 1 (49:10):
So I don't mean throughout the totality of your ownership
over the last four or five years, but I just
just right now, how many roughly rancid dismembered corpses.

Speaker 2 (49:21):
Do you have in that right? So that'd bean none?
Are you sure I am positive? Well?

Speaker 1 (49:28):
I mean maybe you think you're positive.

Speaker 2 (49:30):
I bet. How do you by the way, how do
you hell do you say this? Singer's name.

Speaker 1 (49:35):
D four VD. Is that is that David spelled in
a weird way?

Speaker 3 (49:42):
Man?

Speaker 4 (49:43):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (49:43):
Kids love D four VD? They love them? No, it's
just D four VD four VDD. Oh my god, straight fire,
no cap And.

Speaker 1 (49:51):
Does the VD stand for what I think VD stands for?
Probably not right, although we don't use VD anymore, right,
they use the.

Speaker 2 (50:01):
Anyway? All right?

Speaker 1 (50:02):
So I don't know who this guy is, but apparently
he's a popular singer. Huh uh any who uh?

Speaker 2 (50:09):
He's uh?

Speaker 1 (50:09):
He says, cooperated with cops after a rancid dismembered corpse
was found in the trunk of his tesla. I don't
think you have a choice but to cooperate with cops
if they find a random dismembered corpse in your trunk
and it's and you claim it's not yours, right, they're not.
I don't think they're going to take your word for it.

Speaker 2 (50:32):
But I don't know representatives for D D for v D.
Who is dude?

Speaker 1 (50:43):
There is some Millennia? Are there some z gen Z
listening to this right now here? You driving with their parents?
That's losing their crap? With whom pronouncing this guy's name?

Speaker 2 (50:50):
I'm sorry, I don't know who can. It's a dumb name,
you know, yes, you know, thank you. Bands have always
had weird names and right like butt hoolesurfers, right, weird.
But the words. We knew how to pronounce the words,
but you knew how to read the word, and they
were actually words. They weren't like a abbreviations. It wasn't
like you're trying to like figure out the Samarian or something,

(51:11):
you know. I mean, I have no idea what that
name is.

Speaker 1 (51:13):
No, no, no, hold on, hold on.

Speaker 2 (51:15):
One guy did do that, remember, and that's where we
got the Inanaki from. Yes, no, I was talking about Prince.
Oh that guy. Yeah, No, that's different.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
Well why because he's immensely talented or.

Speaker 2 (51:30):
He was the first one to do and he's being
weird in it. I don't know. But we still call
him prince, right, you still call him Prince. Yeah, but
he was for a while, he was a symbol.

Speaker 1 (51:39):
Okay, But but to your point, yes, yes, but there's
still words or they're proper pronunciations. By the way, I
just thought of a good band name. You're ready cracker
hole or do you think the band cracker would sue?

Speaker 3 (51:52):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (51:53):
I like Cracker Hole and they could perform next to
the pit. Oh, we make it a super band. It's
Courtney Love. Yeah, and then the guys from Cracker What
do you think? By the way, were you blown were
you a little blown away? When she actually can kind
of singh.

Speaker 2 (52:13):
Courty right with Hole? You have the band Hole?

Speaker 8 (52:16):
No?

Speaker 2 (52:16):
No, I was okay, he was good.

Speaker 1 (52:18):
Yeah, I just I didn't see that coming, especially because
you accused her of murder. So I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (52:24):
It's not that I'm accusing her of murder. It's a
vast majority of the fandom. Ah, Okay, I see.

Speaker 1 (52:31):
So anyway, uh D for v D, who's probably apparently
he's he's pro v D, which is I don't know
why he would be pro v D, but whatever.

Speaker 2 (52:42):
Is set.

Speaker 1 (52:43):
Uh basically was informed, informed about what had happened, and
he's so he's out on tour, is the deal?

Speaker 3 (52:51):
Right?

Speaker 1 (52:51):
He's not driving this tesla around. So police discovered the body,
which reportedly wasn't fully intact, sealed in a bag of
the front truck a trunk. Oh that's right, the trunks
are upfront. Anyway, it was in the trunk Burke's tesla.
Monday afternoon, after passers by reported a foul odor coming
from the vehicle. Ord he's noted to take some time

(53:12):
to properly identify. Oh this, Yeah, it's been cooking in
the California. He whoever this is in there is probably
soup man. But yeah, he's out on the road doing
whatever he's doing. It's an interesting thing. Hold on, somebody wants.

Speaker 2 (53:32):
To shut up?

Speaker 1 (53:41):
No, no, no, no, Ross. Do you want to know
how it's pronounced? You want to know the proper pronunciation
of this. I refuse to play along with this. David
kiss my butt? No, then spell it David. By the way,

(54:02):
his name is David. You don't put D four v D.
I'm calling you d I'm calling you pro v D guy. Okay,
until you change the name like a normal person.

Speaker 2 (54:13):
Said the same thing to Kesha back in the day.
When I go to play that is new music, I
would the symbol the symbol H every single time. Every
good for you?

Speaker 1 (54:22):
Yes, yes you want Look you want to write it
this way?

Speaker 2 (54:28):
This is what you get?

Speaker 1 (54:30):
Who was the rapper? Who is the snitch with all
the multi colored hair? I still know how to pronounce
that dude's name. It's David spelled D four. V Shut up,
it's not Your legal name is David, so I know
you know how to spell David. And since when does

(54:51):
the number four make an a sound?

Speaker 3 (55:00):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (55:01):
Lord?

Speaker 1 (55:01):
The number four also has a deeper meaning, representing four
universes with different.

Speaker 2 (55:05):
Oh shut up?

Speaker 1 (55:08):
Why do you got a body? Why do you got
a human soup in the in your Tesla truck? And
how who else on this planet could have police roll
up on their vehicle find a dismembered, rancid human corpse
in there, and then they're still out running around touring internationally.

(55:29):
You got some good lawyers.

Speaker 2 (55:30):
Well, I don't think it's gonna be for VD. It's
not going to be for long, right, I mean, I
can't imagine that soon he'll have a whole bunch of
numbers on the clothes he's wearing. And uh, maybe I
don't know that he's occupying you would think so anyway?

Speaker 1 (55:45):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (55:45):
Maybe?

Speaker 1 (55:46):
And and who died by boy? I'm not necessarily accusing
him of it. I bet he's got himself a whole
group that you know of hanger ons. Most most musicians do.

Speaker 2 (55:55):
That would suck, wouldn't it? Like it's this one of
your buddies who often dude or whatever, and they put
him in your car. Yeah, Whoopsie.

Speaker 1 (56:04):
The reason you have uh uh you know the posse
with you so they can hold your drugs and your guns.

Speaker 2 (56:09):
Do people not know this that way?

Speaker 1 (56:12):
If something happens, that's a that's a music tale as
old as time.

Speaker 2 (56:18):
Right there, it's witch you.

Speaker 1 (56:21):
You want to get a bunch of uh uh uh
you your entourage so your drugs can be carried and
you don't have to carry them.

Speaker 2 (56:27):
Sure, they protect the rich guy, but part of protecting
the rich guy means don't put a dead body in
his trunk.

Speaker 3 (56:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (56:33):
No, that was just to say this is an entourage No, no, one,
oh one, Yeah, don't literally create this scenario. What do you,
Ray Caruth?

Speaker 2 (56:41):
Right, you go through like the introductory like video of
like joining the posse, right, and they sit you down
with the like the employee handbook, and they're like, hey,
don't do that, don't do that.

Speaker 1 (56:50):
Wait, what if one of the entourage is Ray Kruth?
Didn't he just get out?

Speaker 2 (56:55):
I don't know. That'd be embarrassing, right.

Speaker 3 (56:58):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (56:59):
I can't stop putting bodies and trunks.

Speaker 2 (57:01):
Man, it's an addiction. Sorry, I have a disease. It's
just this the darkest segment, so bad.

Speaker 1 (57:10):
All right, let's is racedagic there because I don't want to.
Let's talk about football teams that have never had any
criminals play for them.

Speaker 2 (57:17):
No, pac man blank here, let's see. I don't know
really drawing. You want me to do?

Speaker 1 (57:27):
You want me to list all the rest that did
not have Oh yes, that was being sarcastic, because it's.

Speaker 2 (57:35):
I can tell you surely my team would never have
a murder on it.

Speaker 1 (57:39):
No, that's a good point. Ross's team, buff Buffalo Bills
would never have a murder.

Speaker 2 (57:43):
And Buffalo is the greatest.

Speaker 9 (57:45):
They're the best team, best team ever. I mean, you
watched the Dallas Cowboy documentary, right, they did lose four
in a row, right, you know, like seventy years ago.

Speaker 1 (57:56):
Well, I want to say the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders documentary.

Speaker 2 (58:00):
That the one. He refers, Oh no, no.

Speaker 4 (58:01):
No, not that one.

Speaker 2 (58:03):
I did not watch that one, at least not yet anyway.

Speaker 1 (58:07):
No, like this Ross said, somebody just sent me. He's like,
oh what about Oj?

Speaker 2 (58:10):
I'm sorry? Was Oj convicted a murder? I don't think
he was. I know, if I remember correctly, the glove
did not fit, so they had to and you must
have quit.

Speaker 1 (58:17):
Yeah, so sorry, emailer, Maybe you should pay attention to
stuff anyway.

Speaker 9 (58:22):
It's going on, Yeah, not much, not much like it slight,
a little change in the weather from yesterday. Seeing some drizzler,
maybe some light rain around the Triangle in spots this morning.
That's really not much. The story's real of the dry,
cool weather getting milder over the next several days and

(58:42):
I mean even into next week. Now we're gonna hit
ninety right now, it doesn't look like it, but we
could be well into the eighties by Sunday and Monday.
So this morning we do have that chance of some
light rain or drizzle around, especially from the Triangle east.
Otherwise partial sunshine upper seventies today, tonight, in the upper fifties,
low sixties, and either side of eighty tomorrow probably upper seventies,

(59:03):
low eighties on Friday, partly to mostly sunny those days,
and over the weekend sunshine low to mid eighties to
the middle eighties by Monday. Really a very tranquil weather
pattern jump into the tropical Atlantic quickly. Today is September tenth,
the climatological peak of the Atlantic hurricane season, and there's
nothing out there. I think the last time on September

(59:26):
tenth name storm is two sixteen. Good exactly, so running
quite a bit below now. September can still be We're
not even halfway through a very busy month, so can October.
Storms can develop in any month, but we're in the
two busiest months for now. We've shut it down. Let's
hopefully keep it that way.

Speaker 1 (59:47):
Okay, all right, thank you very much, sir, appreciate it.
We'll talk in an hour, and it is seven forty six.
We'll take a break, be right back. It's very very
shocking news. Apparently after spending most of the day they
claiming that a fire that or I guess the last
two days, a fire that broke out on Greta Dunberg's
Goza flotilla insanity was done by a Jewish murder drone

(01:00:13):
or some fire drone or something. Right, They basically like,
go like what Israel did to us. They tried to
light our boat on fire. Authorities in Tunisia, where they
are off the coast the North African nation there of
Tunisia say that there is no basis in truth to that.
As they have they have you know, pretty significant radar systems,

(01:00:38):
and there clearly was no drone in the area. And
now there's also some video, and in the video you
see essentially like a like a ball of fire come
down and land on the land on the part of
the deck there and start the ship on fire because
it's a flare, because it's flair. And let me just

(01:01:01):
point out Tunisia backing the fact that it's not a
Jewish murder drone is important because Tunisia is a Muslim
country and friggin hates Israel, so they're no friend. They're
no friend to Israel.

Speaker 2 (01:01:18):
This is like the equivalent of the waitress writing the
racist message on the receipt. And every time we see
this story, it turns out to be like fake, right,
because they're trying to draw attention to something that didn't
actually happen because they want to feel better about themselves.
Nobody cares about your stupid boat going to Gaza. Nobody cares.

Speaker 1 (01:01:36):
I care now if they're gonna light, if they're gonna
be so stupid and reckless with a flair that they
may literally self immolate themselves. I kind of want to.
I want to see how this plays out.

Speaker 2 (01:01:45):
Should you play it out? To the end sink. But yeah,
like they're so self important that they don't realize people
don't care. Nobody can even if you got to Gaza.
I'm convinced if somehow miraculously they got to Gaza happen, right,
it will never happen. I think even the Gonsens wouldn't care.
I think he'd be like, what are you doing here?
Go away?

Speaker 1 (01:02:04):
Well first they'd be like, ah, what'd you bring us
to eat? And they're like, yeah about that, we ate
all these snacks.

Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
Sorry, I do.

Speaker 1 (01:02:14):
By the way, the flotilla now on social media in
Europe is trending where they basically refer to as the
selfie yacht.

Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
So yeah, no, that's fair. And they're just trying to like,
you know, get attention so people will care and and
and then they're trying to like act like this was
like a hate crime done by Israel to sink their boat.
Like I said, it's the waitress writing the racist message
on the receipts, the same exact thing, it definitely is,
and how they chose to do it.

Speaker 1 (01:02:42):
I but I still think that the actual lighting themselves
on fire was just sheer stupidity. And then they spot
it like somebody didn't understand how a flare works or
something right, right, and then then they then they decided
to spit it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:59):
It was a juice.

Speaker 1 (01:03:00):
Yeah, it's totally not you're holding you're literally holding the
flair gun.

Speaker 2 (01:03:06):
I think that.

Speaker 1 (01:03:07):
I think somebody was out, don't know where they did,
maybe spinning a flare gun around like they're an old
West gunfighter. Yeah, no you're not, look at that. Annie
Oakley never burned her own boat down lunatics. I thought
the Whale Wars people were insufferable and incompetent. Do you
guys ever watch that show? There was always emotional drama

(01:03:29):
on the whale lor on the on the the green
peace side or whatever the organization was, whereas over on
the Japanese fishing boats they gave zero you know what,
man just there because they're there at work. You know,
I guess technically these guys are at work.

Speaker 2 (01:03:46):
Yeah. They were super dumb because they would like and
they're in their little tiny boats like Grut his boat,
and they'd be like, oh, we're gonna stop this giant
Japanese ship from going after this whale, and then they
sandwiched themselves between the giant Uh. Yeah, uh sea creature
and the Japanese boat and then their boat takes damage
and they're like, how could have this have happened? I
who could have foreseen this?

Speaker 1 (01:04:06):
Yeah, at least they didn't blame the Jews, right, do
you know what I'm saying. They they're like, you know,
they blame the Japanese. Which it's still that's not even
fair because the Japanese ship is literally under movement, underway.

Speaker 2 (01:04:22):
Doing this thing.

Speaker 1 (01:04:23):
Plus you have the giant sea creature you pointed out,
and you're like, what if I roll a little dinghy
up in here?

Speaker 2 (01:04:28):
Then the whole thing's dumb, because, like I said, even
if they got Toganza, you're not going to accomplish anything.
You're not accomplishing anything. No, it's a complete waste of time.

Speaker 1 (01:04:38):
Well it's not because then idiots keep funding them, and
so they get to literally live out their little adventures,
their little there a little cosplay ads other boats.

Speaker 2 (01:04:49):
Man, you feel like you're important and you're doing something.

Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
Yeah, they figured out they figured out a way how
to live on a yacht in the Mediterranean.

Speaker 2 (01:04:57):
That's a lot of people. That's people's goals.

Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
Man, I'm gonna spend the rest of my life. Living
on a yacht in the Mediterranean is something people have
said to themselves for a long long time.

Speaker 2 (01:05:11):
Many people. She just figured it out. Of course.

Speaker 1 (01:05:15):
You're surrounded by all the most awful people in the world.
Every time I learn or meet, we learn about or
meet another cast member of this this Gaza flotilla, the
selfie yacht.

Speaker 3 (01:05:27):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:05:28):
It like, my anxiety goes up about how long I
would be able to last on that ship surrounded by
these people. We're just talking with some technical issues off
the air. Ross has the oldest board I've ever seen
in radio, and he is absolutely connected at the hip
with it, and I hope it works out for you guys. Man, Hey,
loyalty is a thing. So AnyWho, what are the computers

(01:05:51):
at Ross's studio this morning? Sounds like there's alien components
in it and it's gonna explode and it's probably, I
don't know, a dirty bomb or something.

Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
So well, we had a list around before we had
Jake on the phone. Yeah, one of my computers here
was making a beeping sound I haven't heard in like
fifteen years. I was like, what's that beeping sound?

Speaker 8 (01:06:09):
Like?

Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
It kind of like, you know, spooked me a little.

Speaker 1 (01:06:11):
Bit, it's a countdown, that's some sort. Yeah it stops,
so it's fine. Oh okay, well they never mind.

Speaker 2 (01:06:19):
Uh, don't worry.

Speaker 1 (01:06:20):
I'll tell I'll tell our engineer not to worry about it,
sause I have to see her engineer in the kitchen
there during the break. Uh okay, A few things, few things.
I just want to if I could. I don't want
to take a victory lap because this is not good
for society. But I told you so, and some of
you argued with me.

Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
I told you that not only in the.

Speaker 1 (01:06:42):
Philly baseball controversy thing, is that woman an absolute piece
of garbage. But so's dad, because what he taught his kid.

Speaker 2 (01:06:56):
Is is awful.

Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
He taught his kids that what whatever, whatever bully wants,
you give that to them as you as you cower
and considering the news cycle. What a horrible message.

Speaker 2 (01:07:11):
To be sending to the kid. Anyway, But uh and
and that was embarrassing.

Speaker 1 (01:07:16):
And then when you heard from dadd, He's like, yeah,
when she touched me, I shuddered, You're a grown man.
And I think the disconnect was that people assumed that
I was I was saying that Dad needed to Going
back to Ross's parent. Favorite example, Sparta kick.

Speaker 2 (01:07:31):
This chick, and I wasn't.

Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
I was pointing out that the middle ground here is
too firmly but without yelling. If she's yelling and she's
dropping expletives, as you said, then you don't meet You
don't meet that level of crazy. What drives them more
crazy is if you appear that you're you're being very
sane about this, but you're not going to be a pushover.

(01:07:58):
I was embarrassed. I was embarrassed for this kid, knowing
that that's his father, and I stand by it. But
the do can't shut up. She just wants to prove
my point for me. Drew felt Well told USA today
that he has a message for people who are still

(01:08:19):
mad at this woman. He said, don't do anything. Leave
it alone. Somebody who knows her can talk to her.
That's different. But I don't want people, you know, breaking
into the house again. That's that these are not there's
not these are mutually exclusive things. You don't have to
tombstone the chick. You don't have to commit b an e.

(01:08:45):
But the idea after what she did and and and
you cowardly left your son in between her and you,
which I don't even understand, uh that you're now telling
people that they can't feel a certain sort of way. Sorry,
people that feel exactly how they want to feel in

(01:09:05):
the same way that you. You can go ahead and
you can retrieve the ball if it's in that no
man's land. So I'm sorry, Drew felt Well, I don't
care what you say. I hope they put this woman
on blast.

Speaker 2 (01:09:19):
I really do. Yeah, they're both horrible, but at least
the entire incident has given us some good memes. They
have been great to see the Willy Wonka one night.
I sent that one to Marky yesterday. Yeah, I like,
he's so good ticket and she's like, that's mine. I
saw one yesterday where it's like a dog jumping in
the air catching a frisbee, but she catches it with
her mouth.

Speaker 1 (01:09:38):
Yeah probably, Yeah, yeah, I like good memes are always appreciated.

Speaker 2 (01:09:44):
Philly's care.

Speaker 1 (01:09:45):
By the way, although I think jt Our boss is
mad at me our program director, because he had so
we had that the listener event right.

Speaker 2 (01:09:53):
On on Sunday for the baseball game. How many balls
from kids did you steal?

Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
I stole all the balls, and then I stole the
ball from the dog. Because they You know that a
lot of the minor league clubs have the dog that
grabs the bat. Yeah, I stole that, and then I
pushed the Uh. I pushed the mascot over the railings.

Speaker 2 (01:10:14):
So he's dead. Yeah, no, no, no no.

Speaker 1 (01:10:17):
But in all seriousness, you know, JT's got an adorable
little daughters in second grade, right she's in there.

Speaker 2 (01:10:23):
She had a bunch of.

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
Those laboo boo dolls. I probably shouldn't say that that
was house gonna get robbed. I and I actually got
to see what one of those are. I don't know
why you all are fighting each other over him. She's
she's like seven.

Speaker 2 (01:10:33):
That's fine.

Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
Let her. She's spright older than seven, seven or eight
or whatever. But but that's not the point of the story.
Point of the story is I taught her some language.
And I don't know that he's pleased with that because
I taught her. Philly dirt bag. I probably heard that
phrase a.

Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
Lot of times.

Speaker 1 (01:10:54):
It's you know, Eagles fans who decide to eat horsepoop.
You're like, oh, Philly dirtbag what? And this is the
Philly things, So Philly dirtbag.

Speaker 6 (01:11:01):
I did not know.

Speaker 1 (01:11:04):
Ross do you know where JT's wife's from.

Speaker 2 (01:11:06):
Oh no, I didn't know. Yeah, obviously I know JT
a bunch, but you know, he's my first real boss
down there.

Speaker 3 (01:11:12):
More.

Speaker 2 (01:11:13):
Yeah, I know. He's a big Red Sox fan. We
go back and forth baseball.

Speaker 8 (01:11:18):
I know.

Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
I am the wife though. So she's from Philly. Yeah,
and I armed an eight year old with Philly dirt.
It's probably like my sister being like a good Karen.
My sister's name is Karen, and she's wonderful. I'm sure
it's the same way with JT's wife. No, no, I'm
not saying she is a Philly dirtbag.

Speaker 1 (01:11:36):
But now I have this thing where she strolls in
the living room and loudly says Philly dirtbag.

Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
And then JT's wife's like, why does she know that?
And now I'm I'm the guy. I'm the problem here.

Speaker 1 (01:11:47):
So I was just waiting for that hand grenade to explode,
much like yours call screener computer, just waiting for he
to explode. But yeah, no, Dad's like, uh, all right,
don't do anything. So no, she somebody in her life
will deal with it. No, No, you know why, because
your failure to do anything is probably going to make

(01:12:10):
this woman thinks she can do it to somebody else.
So you don't get to tell people what they can
and can't do. Just get that through your head. And
by the way, I don't think you'll push back on it,
because you don't push back on anything.

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
So whatever. Maybe his point is similar to what you're
saying with Cracker Barrel though, because obviously she's been under
constant attack by the internet for like a week now.

Speaker 1 (01:12:32):
Nobody's identified. They haven't identified her. I thought, no, no,
they found the woman They thought they found was another
woman who, by the way, handled it hilariously. She's like,
I'm a Red Sox fan and I wish I was
as skinny as that chick, right, and then everyone just
like now is fan is like friends with her, So.

Speaker 2 (01:12:49):
That's crazy they haven't found her yet. That's not nuts.

Speaker 8 (01:12:52):
M m.

Speaker 1 (01:12:53):
It's Brian Alien man, that's what it is. It's one
of the shape shifters.

Speaker 2 (01:13:00):
The ball, So that's why the ball was so important.
It's like an Earth relic.

Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
Yeah, well, what's uh isn't that one of the what
was the movie where the guy uh I was at
the baseball game and the guy was actually an alien
and they needed the ball for something. I can't remember
if that was one of the men in blacks or
what it was, but whatever could be, could be all
those things, but not I haven't found her yet. So

(01:13:24):
like there's been no justice yet or internet justice or
whatever you want to call it, that that's not a
thing that exists yet.

Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
This is a little bit of justice.

Speaker 3 (01:13:33):
Though.

Speaker 1 (01:13:33):
I could watch Tom Homan deal with moonbats just all day, man.
I really enjoy it, whether it's in a congressional hearing,
he's doing an interview, whatever. And so he decided, uh, okay,
well let's let's chat with Mika Brazinski and you just
know that's going to be contentious. And I would say
he is absolutely running circles around her.

Speaker 5 (01:13:56):
I see on the show this morning you have Governor
Heay talking about PRIST doing it forcement operations at a church.

Speaker 6 (01:14:02):
Fault they were they did not do an operation there.
She said they were parked in a public space legally,
but just.

Speaker 5 (01:14:10):
Say that and to push that out there put fear
in the immigrant community.

Speaker 8 (01:14:15):
Let me tell you.

Speaker 6 (01:14:17):
To park ice agents vehicles.

Speaker 1 (01:14:26):
Listen to the standard that Mika's trying to. You can't
park in a public parking spot. You can't be are
you guys doing any business? And no, no, just parking.
Oh that's a bridge too far, you can't do that.
These are the same lunatics. Yesterday NBC News wrote a
big article, uh and they said, they said that Homean

(01:14:50):
and Homeland Security just negated the paperwork that ICE agents
had to do as part of their apprehending of people
here illegally. That's a big accusation, right that basically they're
not documenting it anymore. And ICE had to issue a
Department of Homeland Security had to issue a statement. Ross,

(01:15:10):
what do you think the real story is? Because I
didn't send you that story, what do you think the
real story is? Where they NBC claimed that they told
that the agents don't have to do paperwork anymore where
they apprehend criminal aliens.

Speaker 2 (01:15:23):
This is the spin is amazing.

Speaker 1 (01:15:26):
So the real story is they do it digitally now,
so they still have to do They still literally have
to track all this stuff. It's just not done on
physical paper anymore. That's how dishonest NBC presented. That got
rid of the paperwork leads people to conclusion that oh

(01:15:46):
well they just they just willy nilly. Now there's No,
there's no accountability. No, they literally just well got into
the you know, early two thousands with the ability to
enter all this stuff digital. So dishonest to.

Speaker 5 (01:16:03):
Respond to a criminal alien release pulled aside the road.
Let me tell you in the last couple of days
what's happened in Boston. They've arrested Victor Goldbetz Paris, the
thirty three year old criminal alien from Guatemala with charges
of aggravated race assaultant batty with dangerous weapon in decent
assault and battery a victim fourteen years or younger. They
arrested Katie Espinoza, thirty fe year old criminal alien from Columbia,

(01:16:25):
with charges of aggravators assault on a pregnant victim. They've
arrested Joshua Gonzalez, a twenty four year old criminal alien
from Dominican Republic, with charges for trafficking heroin, morphine opium,
resisting police, dislready conducting drug distribution. They also arrested Samuel
Armando Barrera, a twenty year old criminal illegal anily from Guatemolo,

(01:16:45):
openion charges for sault and battery on a child.

Speaker 2 (01:16:48):
So Mayor Wu and Governor Healy they.

Speaker 5 (01:16:52):
All be calling ice and thanking them for making their
streets safer, protecting their communities, and taking these people off
the street. They've turned a line nine to this or
sanctuary city sanctuaries. Cities and sanctuary states are sanctuaries for criminals.

Speaker 1 (01:17:05):
All right, Look, and I understand what Tom's getting at,
but really, if you want to make the streets of Boston, say,
if you're gonna have to arrest all the Patriots fans,
really because I think that's but in addition to the
criminal illegal aliens. So he's having none of her stuff
and she just sitting there, Normally she'd be interrupted. I
think she's just a little overwhelmed with how aggressively he's

(01:17:26):
feeding it to your rice.

Speaker 5 (01:17:27):
Access to the jail to rest a bad guy in
the jail rather than have to go into the community
to find them. Because when you go into the community
find it puts ice officers at greater risk, It puts
a community at greater risk, It puts the alien at
greater risk, because anything happrimes treat a risk.

Speaker 10 (01:17:42):
This is what we're trying to do.

Speaker 5 (01:17:43):
We're trying to prioritize public safety trust. But when you've
got governers and mayors who have releasing these public state
to trusts every day in to the community that causes
the crime. Right, and we've seen some terrible incidents in
the last few days where innocent victims are murdered. This
pat here, I've seen innocent Americans raked and murdered by

(01:18:03):
people who are not supposed.

Speaker 2 (01:18:04):
To be here.

Speaker 5 (01:18:05):
So rather than going back and forth saying, well, I
got a car park near a church, that is ridiculous.
You're out there looking for people like this exactly what they.

Speaker 6 (01:18:13):
Well, I would argue that actually that the ice vehicle
parked outside a Spanish mass is a frightening site given
what has happened in this country. I also, with respect, sir,
thank you the information that you have shared on this show.
But we would appreciate all of the information, all of it,
all of the.

Speaker 2 (01:18:33):
Data you have.

Speaker 5 (01:18:35):
I've done this show several times. Every time on your show,
I speak with integrity, I speak with honesty, and I
speak with facts. The bottom line is, because of all
this fussy and you used the term disappearing people.

Speaker 6 (01:18:49):
To the group, thatsentially.

Speaker 2 (01:18:54):
Citizens.

Speaker 5 (01:18:54):
US citizens get arrested every day. US citizens get rested
by priests every day. Are they being just appeared you know,
their laws are being they're being arrested, they're being put
in attention because they committed a criminal What you're doing,
we're enforcing the law and arresting people here in violational
law that the public states of trust. That's not disappearing people.

(01:19:16):
That's enforcing the laws of this country and make this
country safer.

Speaker 1 (01:19:20):
Because again, and Mika knows this, or the very least
should know this, and I think she does notice. And
it's it's the one thing, it's the one thing that
people disconnect from, and once they've learned it, they should
understand and reevaluate their position. And that is deportation by
people who do not have a right to be in

(01:19:40):
the country has been ruled by the Supreme Court as nonpunitive.
So when something is nonpunitive, it does not attach the
same level of uh, you know, due process that we have.
This is this is so easily explained and yet is
so often and I know what you're saying. You're going, well,

(01:20:01):
it is punitive because they get deported maybe they had
a job, or they're leaving their family. It's not punitive
on the part of the government because the government wasn't
the one who put them there in the first place,
although maybe you could make an argument they were because
Biden was basically letting them in.

Speaker 2 (01:20:17):
But that's not how our legal system sees it.

Speaker 1 (01:20:19):
You have no inherent right to a visa or a
green card or any of it unless you are an
actual citizen, and so denying you the ability to operate
in that fashion is not a punitive thing. It is
simply the right sizing of it. And that's what courts
have held.

Speaker 2 (01:20:39):
Her beef.

Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
Well, you partner your a church. It strikes fear, and
it strikes fear into their hearts. She used some other,
much stronger language. It's all nonsense, and I'm not surprised,
not surprised at all. I'll tell you it's not not sense.

Speaker 3 (01:21:00):
Though.

Speaker 1 (01:21:01):
The US Attorney here in North Carolina Ferguson talking about
what's going on in Charlotte and fielding some of the
dumbest questions. We're gonna we'll revisit that story, because I
don't know if you guys, if you didn't join us
earlier in the show, know this. Yesterday in Charlotte they
had primaries, and among those running in the primary was

(01:21:26):
the mayor of Charlotte, the mayor who put out all
those stupid statements. Was part of these programs to get
people out of jail. Gladly accepted the MacArthur Foundation grants.
And let's just say that the election results are staggering
and kind of psychotic. We'll get into that the audio

(01:21:48):
from the US Attorney and we'll do it next CaCO
Day Radio program, Witness Day Morning. So yesterday was Tuesday,
so I was stressing that it was Wednesday, and of
course tuesdays or days we do elections. And in Charlotte
they had themselves a little primary election there. Normally wouldn't care,
but there were a couple things that kind of wanted

(01:22:10):
to check on. It's just me, like, let's see here, Oh,
I don't know Tijuana Brown, the indicted lunatic lady.

Speaker 2 (01:22:20):
She lost her primary.

Speaker 1 (01:22:22):
But the one that really really had me a wondering
is vy Lyles, the mayor of Charlotte. Considering everything that's
going on, and I am very unhappy to report that
even in the face of this whole incident on the
light rail, this horrendous, horrendous story, the clear cut trackable

(01:22:46):
actions going back to George Floyd and probably before quite
a bit before as well. But if we just start
there and you see what the Democrat Party decided to do.
The grants that were received from the MacArthur Foundation, who
donated millions to reduce the jail population, which was then

(01:23:08):
openly embraced by many on the left, including sources open society,
which is kind of like the I don't say that
the competition the MacArthur Foundation because they basically throw money
in the same direction over and over, so you know,
that embraced ideology. Based on what happened, you would think

(01:23:29):
that viy Lyles wouldn't even win her own primary. Does
the chances are whoever's going to be mayor is going
to emerge from the Democrat primary. If anything, this should
I don't know. Maybe it will help perhaps a Republican
or independent challenger, but I just don't know, because even
after everything that we've seen, the horrible statements that she

(01:23:52):
released talking about compassion and all of this, and never
really never really wanting to address this huge issue, and
then jumping on the ostein it was oh, we just
need more cops. No, you need a complete reimagining of
how people are sentenced and what you can do when
you notice repeat offenders. I saw a stat yesterday. Where

(01:24:17):
did I don't know where I put it. It's basically,
somebody attracked down the highest offenders list. We always see
these numbers, and there are more than a dozen people
in the city of Charlotte who have rap sheets that frankly,
make this guy with fourteen make him look like a rookie,

(01:24:44):
which just that's pretty horrible. You think fourteen is a
high number. In fact, Ross, what do you think of
the top ten frequent flyers in Charlotte?

Speaker 2 (01:24:53):
How many arrests do you think they've had? Oh, man, no, no, thirty.

Speaker 1 (01:25:01):
You're gonna have to You're gonna have to go higher,
sir fifty. Oh you are absolutely one hundred percent lower.
No higher, you're low.

Speaker 2 (01:25:11):
You need to go higher. I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (01:25:13):
Sixty two, Bob, all right, Yeah, it's between fifty five ish.

Speaker 2 (01:25:17):
So oh that was the light rail crashing.

Speaker 1 (01:25:22):
So yeah, yeah, they are actually between fifty and seventy.
The highest has seventy. But if you average the top ten,
they're all floating low fifty, So somehow it averages up
to like fifty seven or something. But yeah, seventy arrests.

Speaker 2 (01:25:40):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:25:41):
I feel like if you've been arrested seventy times. A
pattern has emerged. I'm not a mathematician, but a pattern
has clearly emerged. You got some issues there, and by
the way, before you go, well, what are they, Yeah,
oh there's some trespassing stuff. Sure, yes, but also in

(01:26:03):
each of those instances there's violent charges as well, So
pound sand on your excuses. And then after literally getting
caught red handed, just ignoring this stuff. And then twenty
seven thousand Charlatans, which we've decided on the show as

(01:26:24):
somebody from Charlotte as a Charlatan, which whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:26:28):
I don't know if that's accurate, but it works.

Speaker 1 (01:26:30):
Twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six people felt so
confident in the leadership of the current mayor of Charlotte
after what happened happened that she won seventy point seven
percent of the vote against her four challengers. I want
to point that out again. So you had roughly about

(01:26:52):
forty thousand people voted in the primary. Twenty seven thousand,
five hundred and six voted for the mayor, meaning they're
comfortable with what's going on. Meaning I think you got
twenty seven thousand, five hundred and six Psycho paths running
around Charlotte, and I don't want to go there. I
don't want to be around anybody who thinks that that

(01:27:12):
says perfectly, that's okay, and that's not a problem. This
was your opportunity to go This is not okay and
twenty seven thousand what now, I'm fine with this. And
so the idea that you might come into contact during
on a visit to Charlotte with one of the twenty
seven thousand, five hundred and six psychopaths are okay with

(01:27:33):
you know, random murders on the light rail. It's pretty high,
especially if you go to like a busy you know,
you go to a Panthers game, or you go to Ikea,
so that you know a few days down the road
you and your significant other could have a relationship ending
fight over furniture assembly. Chances are you would have walked
by one of these psycho paths, especially in Ikea, because

(01:27:53):
you kind of have to be a little psycho to
want to go there except to get the meatballs.

Speaker 2 (01:27:58):
Those people are okay. Yeah, I don't know how he
fixed that.

Speaker 1 (01:28:04):
And then as the media gets caught burying this thing
as well, and I saw some people send me emails,
Ross tell me if you believe this, I'm gonna run
it by you that in my opinion, they think that
I'm being unfair, attempting to indict the twenty seven five
and six people voted for vy Lyles of the primary

(01:28:24):
because a lot of the people who voted for probably
didn't know the light rail thing happened. Do you think
that's possible in Charlotte?

Speaker 2 (01:28:36):
In Charlotte, we had a caller earlier, yeah, who was
sort of saying the same thing, but he didn't have
time to go on the radio. He had work and stuff,
and he wouldn't be surprised by that because he was
watching I believe it was CNN maybe yesterday was the
network he brought up, and he said the way they
reported at it on it, and this was yesterday, was
that the woman was attacked on the train station. That

(01:28:58):
he used the word attacked, not murdered, not stabbed in
the neck.

Speaker 1 (01:29:03):
I still feel like that's okay, that's CNN. But there's
too much local especially if around any sort of social media.
Everything on Facebook and Twitter is this. I mean, I
would think there's no way you could possibly be living
there and not know. Yeah, if you live in I
understand if you live in Houston, right or LA or something,
probably New York City, But I don't know that you

(01:29:25):
could live in Charlotte and not understand at the very
least of this chick's dead. I'm sorry. I don't believe it,
not for a minute. But you know, it's an interesting theory.
And then the very same media who chose to ignore it,
are they're going to show up or they're going to
ask the US Attorney here in North Carolina.

Speaker 2 (01:29:42):
For the Eastern District.

Speaker 4 (01:29:44):
I guess.

Speaker 1 (01:29:48):
Stupid questions, And I'm glad that he has ready answers
for stupid questions, because they're going to position it as well,
this is this has been turned political. That's the right,
that's all the narratives that you saw. Oh they turned
it political?

Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
How dare they? Here's what he said.

Speaker 10 (01:30:06):
I don't see how you would see this case as
political grandstanding. And if you do, I think you should
have the conversation that we just had with Arena's family,
because there's nothing political about that. This is a heinous
crime and we are going to remedy it.

Speaker 2 (01:30:20):
I don't know what the politics is here.

Speaker 10 (01:30:22):
If this was a political grandstand, there would be an
opposite side to this, is the opposite side. Let's allow
murders on our light rail is the opposite side. Let's
let people out of state prison so they can commit
other crimes. There's no other side of this. There's no
politics to this. This is a pure and simple federal case.

Speaker 1 (01:30:38):
Okay, all right, so yes, that is the correct answer there.
How is there another side of this? And did you
see what the New York Times attempted to invoke? So
the New York Times piece, I just just when you
think you can't get more insane, basically argued against making
a big deal out of this because of the Wilmington
race riots. That's no, that's that is literally what they

(01:31:03):
decided to argue, that people are getting all ginned up
and upset over this or on the cusp of going
to Wilmington and murdering six blast sixty black people, which
is for all the reasons that that should make your
head want to explode, The main one is a woke
newspaper in New York is upset that this thing that

(01:31:24):
happened one hundred and twenty five years ago, which was
primarily driven by the publishers, reporters and editors at our
current woke newspaper, the News and Observer. They feel that
the general populace is the problem. It's like, your counterparts
are the ones who basically did this.

Speaker 2 (01:31:44):
I mean, let's be honest. The reason they're not talking
about it, or the reason they're trying to spin it
as horrifically early are, is because it doesn't fit their
narrative at all at one hundred percent one hundred percent.

Speaker 1 (01:31:54):
So I would I would prefer they just ignore it, man, uh,
because what do they do with The New York Times
is convinced that we're such a bunch of knuckle draggers
here in North Carolina that there's gonna be extra judicial
race you know, race killings.

Speaker 2 (01:32:11):
That's where we are. That's what they think of us.
That's what they think of you.

Speaker 1 (01:32:14):
That's what they think of me and Ross and anybody
else who would dare talk about this.

Speaker 2 (01:32:21):
I digress, poor race Agic. We got to get him
in here, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:32:23):
Let's let's pivot to the weather so my hen doesn't explode, Okay,
So make make it nice, please?

Speaker 9 (01:32:30):
Yeah, Well it's not great. Clouds a little thicker from
about just east of Roxboro through Durham and Sanford down
toort of fayette Fille and there are spotty light rain showers.
So yes, that is a little rain coming out of
the sky. If you're in and around the Triangle right now,
coming in from the northeast. Believe it or not, there
is an airy blow pressure out over the water, but

(01:32:51):
could be forcing some of this moisture to come on in.
So a little bit different than I was thinking yesterday.
But we should get some sunshine this afternoon. Right now,
as you go further west and get into the Triad,
sun's out in some spot. So this rain looks like
a triangle y.

Speaker 3 (01:33:06):
You know this.

Speaker 1 (01:33:07):
Every time I have to drive I'm at the Triad
studio and I have drive at the Triangle, you always
make it rain.

Speaker 9 (01:33:14):
Yeah, it's not a bunch, So wipers on for a
little bit and then you're out of it. So but
as I said, better upper seventies today tonight, Maybe a
couple of showers around, especially from the Triangle at points east.
Otherwise cloudy partly Sunday, Tomorrow, mostly sunny Friday, we'll get into.

Speaker 2 (01:33:30):
Some better weather everywhere.

Speaker 9 (01:33:31):
Upper seventies, low eighties, lod to mid eighties over the
weekend lo to mid eighties early next week. Don't think
we'll hit ninety, but we're gonna stay dry and Sunday,
we get past today and tonight absolutely stunning weather for
this time of year. Tropical Atlantic is quiet. Let's hope
it stays that way.

Speaker 1 (01:33:46):
Okay, all right, we get the rest of your day, sir,
Thank you, and we'll come back with Jeff Bellinger next.

Speaker 2 (01:33:51):
Good morning, Casey.

Speaker 7 (01:33:52):
We find out this morning there was a slight easing
of inflation at the wholesale level last month. The producer
price fell by a tenth of a percentage point in August.
Economists thought we'd be hearing about a three tens percent increase,
so this is better than expected news. The year over
year increase and the PPI was two point six percent.

(01:34:13):
The consumer price Index, even the more important number, will
be out tomorrow. At this time, Wall Street's record books
got a rewrite after yesterday's session. Modest gains pushed the Dow,
the NASDAK, and the S and P five hundred to
all time HIGHS futures are narrowly mixed right now, S
and P and ASDAK futures are higher.

Speaker 3 (01:34:32):
Now.

Speaker 7 (01:34:32):
Futures are off by six points. Investors apparently were not
impressed by the new products unveiled by Apple yesterday. Shares
of the tech giant fell. Analysts said there were no
major surprises during the event. Apple introduced four new iPhone models,
three new watches, and the third generation of its AirPods
pro earbuds. Bloomberg reporters say the iPhone lineup feels exciting

(01:34:56):
again after years of incremental changes, and there are models
that tempt users to upgrade. The new devices will be
available September nineteenth. Pre Orders begin on Friday. Ads for
prescription medicine will likely look different in the near future.
The Trump administration is cracking down on pharmaceutical advertising on
television and social media. A memorandum signed by the President

(01:35:19):
calls for federal health agencies to enforce existing rules about
misleading ads and require more disclosures about the potential side
effects of the drugs being promoted. The new rules do
stop short, though of banning the ads competitions. Speaking of drugs,
competition in the market for weight loss drugs taking a
toll on Novo nor Disk, the maker of Ozepic and Weigovi,

(01:35:42):
is cutting nine thousand jobs around the world, and some
welcome news for would be home buyers. KC mortgage Bankers
report the average interest rate on a thirty year fixed
rate home loan fell last week to six point four
to nine percent, and that is the lowest rate in
almost a year.

Speaker 2 (01:35:58):
Casey, Jeff, can I ask a question? You got just
a moment?

Speaker 1 (01:36:02):
Sure, I'm sorry with the revision of these jobs numbers,
this is one of the craziest stories where they're essentially
saying that they juiced a million jobs. Does Wall Street care?

Speaker 2 (01:36:13):
Do they not care? Because I care? They care.

Speaker 7 (01:36:17):
It's because it's it's this should put more pressure on
the Federal Reserve to right to cut interest rates. And
that's what Scott Bessen said yesterday. He took two x
to say that, you know, the President was right that
the Fed is holding back economic growth.

Speaker 1 (01:36:35):
I mean, this is this is a big deal. This
is the point I want to stress like these numbers
were kind of crazy man.

Speaker 2 (01:36:40):
All right, nine eleven thousand jobs erased. Yeah, yeah, they
are very big numbers.

Speaker 1 (01:36:47):
Yeah, okay, all right, thank you very much, appreciate it,
Thank you, Jeff. Take care, Yeah, they go, Jeff Ellener,
Bloomberg News. I mean that story, I know I probably
could have focused on it just a little more nine
hundred and eleven few or a thousand fewer jobs created
between April twenty fourth and March twenty five.

Speaker 2 (01:37:04):
And also there was another four hundred thousand during the.

Speaker 1 (01:37:11):
From the previous year, like we're talking about, you know,
one point three million jobs that just never existed and
likely were used as an excuse. I don't believe the
FED didn't know. I don't believe the Fed didn't know.
And I am I am a good little conspiratorial I'm
convinced that Jerome Palell and others they knew exactly what

(01:37:34):
was up, but they knew that lowering interest rates would
be a positive thing for Trump, and they were not
They were willing to have an economic malaise to own
the right. Sorry, the numbers are too they're too big
to explain away. If you're supposed to be somebody who's
plugged in, and you don't have to be some financial guru,

(01:37:58):
you just got to be a normal person and to
recognize that something wasn't right with these numbers, because because
anecdotally around you, it doesn't represent anything you were seeing,
no matter what was happening over on Wall Street, and
as per usual, probably nobody will be held accountable
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