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April 26, 2024 109 mins
Supreme Court hears arguments on Trump immunity case. Friday sound salad. More arrests made during college protests. NFL draft. US birth rate falling. Blinken meets with Xi, as U.S. objects to China's support of Russia. Zach Abraham, Bulwark Capital, talks the economy and GDP. 
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Episode Transcript

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(00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent life. Thisis Chad Benson History at Scota Scota Supreme
Court. For those of you whodon't know, yesterday the immunity question for
the Donald and really for all presidentswas heard. Should Trump and all presidents

(00:35):
be immune from everything? And I'mnot talking about viruses, I'm talking about
actions, things they do. Dothey have blanket immunity listening yesterday, No
they don't. But that being saiddoesn't mean that it was a bad day
for Trump. While it's funny watchingthe well listening to the hearings because they

(01:04):
just put their pictures up because youdon't get to see in there because it's
super secret, you often wonder whatare they doing in there, But when
you listen to it, you kindof get a feel of where they're going,
right, so you can kind ofget the questions the way they you
know, asked the questions and wherethey pushed back, and yesterday there was
pushback from pretty much everybody on thebench. Stramers did not put an immunity

(01:29):
clause into the constitution. They knewhow to There were immunity clauses in some
state constitutions. They knew how togive legislative immunity. They didn't provide immunity
to the president, and you know, not so surprising. They were reacting
against a monarch who claimed to beabove the law. Wasn't the whole point
that the president was not a monarchand the president was not supposed to be

(01:51):
above the law. They did putin immunity clause, and in a sense
they put in the executivesting clause,which was originally understood how to adopt a
broad immunity principle that set for thevery broad language of Marbury against Madison.
And also they did discuss and considerwhat would be the checks on the presidency,
and they did not say, oh, he'd have criminal prosecution. Right
there at the con Social Convention,Benjamin Franklin says, we don't have that.

(02:14):
That's not an option. Everybody criedout against. That is unconstitutional.
The structural check we're adopting his impeachmentvery interesting, by the way, that's
John Sower his the person who's arguingthis for Trump on his behalf and future
presidents too, because the way thatthe questions were asked yesterday, and that
was Kaigan there, and we've gotsome from Katanji Brown Jackson and so of

(02:38):
my ar coming up because the liberaljustice obviously extremely skeptical of Trump's argument.
And I say that because the conservativesaren't really buying Trump's blanket immunity, but
they are concerned about the future.What about George Bush lying get us into

(02:58):
a rack? What about Obama killingan American by droning them? So there
are some serious questions there. Couldthey be in a situation where they could
be dragged in for criminality? Imean, and so you've got to I
understand what both sides are trying todo. And the arguments were interesting yesterday.

(03:20):
This is Sarah Isker, one ofthe smartiest kind of folks out there.
She worked under Trump. She's abrilliant lawyer, and she's a writer.
She's great talking about where she thinksthis is going. I think this
is going to be a nine zerodecision that a president does not have absolute
immunity for all acts they could possiblycommit while president. But I also think

(03:45):
it'll be a nine zero decision thatthe president is immune for some acts that
he does as president. And thenI think you might be right about a
lot of different thoughts on how exactlywe draw that line. We saw basically
every single justice with a different testof how they might do that line a
purpose test. Did the president havea public purpose or a private purpose?

(04:06):
Then Justice Gorse it's pointing out,will wait, doesn't every first term president
probably have some purpose of helping hispolitical standing, his reelection, So that
can't be the only purpose. Whatabout an objective test? Is it something
that only a president can do,like selling nuclear secrets? Well, you
can only have the nuclear secrets ifyou're president. So we saw a lot
of different versions of what that testcould look like, and I didn't see

(04:29):
five justices agreeing to any single test. Yeah, and that's important because you've
got nine different people who some maybe conservative, some are liberal. They're
all thinking to themselves. So Idon't think it blanket immunity. But he
should have some immunity. But howmuch of it, Well, it can't
be for personal Well, if you'retrying to if you're running for president,

(04:51):
you're doing certain things, Well,that kind of is personal. So should
he have some immunity for that becauseit is falls within the duty of presidency.
So there's a lot of things thatare playing out here. But it's
important not just for today in theworld that we live in. It's important

(05:11):
for tomorrow in the future. Andthe reason is because as we all know
and we're seeing this with the lawfairs. Jonathan Turley puts it against Trump,
it only takes an AG and aDepartment of Justice to become even more politicized
than it is now, and allof a sudden, everybody's going to be
dragged up into court in some way, shape or form. Because the minute

(05:31):
you decide I'm going to do this, I always go back to the nuclear
option. Harry Reid, Senator fromNevada, who also believes in UFOs.
You know where's that, Harry?He went nuclear option on getting judges through
to the Supreme Court, and everybodywarned, you do this right, you

(05:57):
override all this stuff and just makeit a you know, a majority rather
than what you need in the sixtyYou do this and know that it's going
to come back. And that's kindof what they're looking at the conservative side.
It is, Hey, you knowwhat, this could potentially be an
issue in the future for the otherside going to get sent down to the
lower courts for them to apply whatevertest may come out of this to the

(06:21):
charges from the Department of Justice andInterestingly, we actually saw the two advocates
agree on far more than they agreedto at the lower court oral argument that
we witnessed. They were actually agreeingthat some of the things charged are official
acts. Some of the things chargeare definitely not official acts. So we
may be disagreeing at the lower courton less than we thought heading into this.

(06:45):
And why it's important because they're goingto say you don't have blanket immunity,
but then they're also going to sayyou're going to have some immunity.
All presidents should have some immunity.The question, though, for a lot
of people is is this going tomean everything's going forward? Yeah, everything's
still going to go forward in theelection case in DC. The problem for

(07:10):
Jack Smith in that case is it'sgotta go back down to the lower court.
Lower court takes time, they're gonnahave to rule on it again.
They're gonna have to look at itand say, okay, what constitute personal
versus presidential? Where So while that'sall going on, when ends up happening,
time continues to go on, andshould he win, which is a

(07:33):
possibility in November, guess what thatcase goes away? Oh yeah. One
more from Sarah Isker. Oh,look, I have good news and bad
news for you on that. Thesecond the Supreme Court took this case,
it was gonna take a long timebecause the Supreme Court answers questions, they

(07:56):
don't decide or resolve cases. Alwaysanswering the question of whether a president enjoys
absolute immunity for official acts taken whilein office. They were not deciding whether
Donald Trump's prosecution could move forward onthese four charges. That's going to be
the lower course to decide. Andthat's very interesting. I love what you
said there. They're not there todo what many people think, are there

(08:20):
to rule. They're there to answerquestions in many cases about other rulings.
So we'll see what takes place.Definitely a historic and interesting day, by
the way, you think, Okay, So how long does it take before
we find out anything? Not verylong. The Justices gather today in their
wood paneled conference room, an initialvote is taken, and then the task
of assigning the majority opinion is assigned. Court observers believe the Justices will seek

(08:43):
to establish some degree of presidential immunityfor official acts, but allow the January
sixth case against Trump to continue basedon alleged crimes in his private acts.
It would take some time for thelower courts to sift through what was official
and what was private, and thatwould make a trial before the election highly
unlikely, which for Trump was thewhole goal of this. Highly unlikely,

(09:05):
that that gets to court now threetwo, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at ChadBenson Show, to Twitter, your
Instagram, Happy Friday. A lotof stuff to get today, the NFL
Draft, We got your Friday soundsright coming up in a little bit.
And of course college camps craziness.Oh yeah, roughgreensreuffgreens dot com, slash

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(10:11):
slash chat call eight eight eight ninetymy dog eight eight eight ninety my dog
for Rough Greens Chad Benson Show.You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
I am in my twenties right now. I'm in my twenties and I want

(10:33):
a house. I want kids,I want to get married, I want
to start a life. I wantto do all of these things that seems
so financially out of reach and seemlike they are never going to get any
better. I feel like we areplaying into a hand that all of us
are playing into, a hand thatthe government so desperately wants us to play

(10:54):
into to make us weak. Andthis hand, this hand, what hand
is that is not knowing well,not knowing or or ignoring the fact that
united, we stand. Divided,we fall, And I feel like so
many of us are jumping into acategory of Republican or liberal or I voted
for those, or I voted forthat, or I'm against us, or

(11:15):
I'm against that, that we forgotthat we're all on the same team,
and we're so divided. We havenever been more. I think we've never
been more divided, especially in mycountry. And I think we're playing into
the hand that they want us toplay into. We're just walking into it.
I don't know. Interesting little genz are there talking about, you
know what she thinks is going on, But diversities their greatest strength, and

(11:41):
what brings us together, what unitesus, what's our commonalities greatest strength?
Diversity not our greatest strength, justnot. I know a lot of people
would like to think that that's true. And the whole thought of liberal Democrat
she leans probably a little bit moreconservative or just a regular old Democrat,
which is conservative for a lot ofpeople out there. And I say that

(12:03):
because we're going to talk about alittle bit later. Women going further left,
men center to send, you know, to Wright and men are willing
to date somebody who's on the leftwomen are not. And so there's a
lot that we need to pay attentionto. Because our fertility rate is dropping,

(12:26):
or I guess our birth rate.I wouldn't say fertility rate, but
our birth rate is dropping, whichisn't a good situation for mankind, especially
for your country. China's biggest problemthey don't have enough kids. Japan not
enough kids, Korea not enough kids. The United States, we're not having

(12:46):
enough kids. Elon Musk said it, you think climate change is bad?
Try no, people. Oh yeah, it is Friday, and you know
what we do on Friday. Wetake a look back at the whacks that
took place this week, just afew bits and pieces. Maybe it missed
some of it, maybe it didn't. But finally, baby, it's George

(13:09):
Jones puts it, It's Friday.The first pick in the twenty twenty four
NFL Draft, the Chicago Bears selectCaleb Williams, quarterback. Tell the California
did you know, however, thereis a gender identity that is linked to
the seasons. This is called genderseason. I'm not a hundred dollars folding

(13:30):
me. I know how I'll sayit didn't. Body's burning old right through
my fugget in my skin. I'mmoney morning, I'll be bron It's fine,
fine, free, I'm done mymotor running bow again. It's fine

(13:52):
for the time. Beat after me. We have sinist who have entered the
camp. AMAS issued an endorsement statementof the protesters on this campus. They

(14:13):
called them the future leaders of America. It is detestable, Alan, can
you please safe be passed at onetime? Why did you kill that lady?
You kill that lady and got nojail time. No jail time,
Alex, No jail time, Alex. Do you show up in at our
bucks with a bullhorn and start yellingat people? And that doesn't make you

(14:35):
noble, It just makes you anapple. Our commands are the safe,
divest, disclosed, and amnesty forall. And our community is stronger than
ever. We have a thirty hoursslowly unity. I'm wow. The stock

(15:15):
and Mike Johnson's gone way up.I think the respect for him's gone way
up because this is the third betrayalby Mike Johnson. It's it's unbelievable.
I'm thankful that America gets to seewho this man is. Almost, sir,
you're gonna make it. I'm goingto need you to step out of
the vehicle, take a pregancy test. We will hear an argument this morning

(15:35):
in case twenty three Trump versus UnitedStates. We do not want to ban
TikTok. Make no mistake. Thisis a band a ban on TikTok and
a band on you and your voice. That right there, CEO of TikTok.
TikTok, so Bite Dancer owns TikTokthat's supposed to be like some other

(15:56):
company completely separated from their Chinese overlordsand masters, that operates independently. Here
said if they can't win in court, if they can't figure out a way
to persuade and or change people's mindsin government, that they'll shut it down

(16:22):
before they sell it, which Ifind fascinating. We were talking about this
a while ago about you know,do you think they really could do it?
And then yesterday when they came outand said that, my first thought
they don't want us to see behindthe curtain. They'd rather blow it up
because the thought is behind that curtainis something that maybe China wasn't above board

(16:48):
on and maybe they were doing alot more. Not only would their algorithm,
which I still think is the biggestissue. We already know there's buying.
Hell, there's TVs are spying onus. The biggest issue in my
mind has always been the propaganda andhow they push certain things out. So
we'll see if they're actually going tohold their threat true. And who could

(17:11):
even buy it at this point?Who wants it? Because do you trust
that there's not a back door togo take a look at everything and to
continue to give information and persuade people? I don't know. Three two,
three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad
Benson Show's Your Ex and all theother things, Chat Benson, Joe,

(17:34):
The Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Denson.

(18:00):
That's not all, by the way, I know'll get criticized to being
the most pro union president American history. But guess what. Middle class built
this country and unions built the middleclass. Yeah, they did build the
middle class. We all know that. How do you think union members feel
about you? Now, let's goout live. What's it like seeing so
many Republicans in Manhattan, so manyTrump supporters in Manhattan. Does that surprise

(18:23):
you, No, not at all. It's turning now Trump's turn again,
what's your message to Joe Biden foryou show some respects? I shouldn't laugh,
you know what's interesting? All jokingaside because again I think we lack
respect towards the office anymore and towardseach other, which is not a good

(18:44):
thing. He got the guy withhis hard hat on in his union,
you know, you know, InternationalBrotherhood of Electrical Workers standing there and telling
Biden aff off. Which but it'sfunny because the union heads endorsed him,
but most union members aren't going toendorse him because they look at the Democrat

(19:06):
Party right now as woke, insaneand kind of elitist. And so Sean
Fayne, who runs United Autoworkers,said, yeah, we're going to endorse
him, but the reality is ismost of my union members are probably going
to vote for Trump. Don't againthe whole f you thing. So all

(19:29):
of you sent me that yesterday,pretty much everybody who sends stuff to me,
because I get a lot of peoplesend stuff to me on a daily
basis, But to a person,every one of you that sends stuff to
me on a daily basis sent thatto me. I appreciate it, but
oh my lord, speaking of chaos, on tempises what's going on across the

(19:53):
country. More than four hundred peoplewere detained yesterday on dozens of campuses at
Ohio State Universe City police and riotgear approaching hundreds of protesters, some of
them fighting with officers. Dozens ofpeople detained as pro Palestinian protesters demand schools
divest from companies that profit from tiesto Israel. Protesters near Chicago now setting

(20:17):
up tents at Northwestern University. Officialsay school policy prohibits the encampment, but
protesters formed a human chain to preventpolice from pushing through. Oh my god,
a human chain. You guys gotchain cutters. I'm kidding. We're
gonna cut our arms off. They'llgrow back. Now, let's go to

(20:37):
Emory University, Atlanta. A statetrooper was seen repeatedly tasing a man at
Emory University. I thought believe knockStevens to the crown. The Georgia Department
of Public Safety says the man wasresisting arrest. After responding officers were met
with protesters who threw bottles and refusedto leave. Adding troopers deployed pepper balls
to control the unruly crowd, butdid not use tear gas. Would you

(20:59):
say that situation was shocking, No, it wasn't shocking. The insanity of
what's going on. Is Colombia obviouslyleading the insanity, and that guy who's
leading everything at Columbia or Gal I'mnot going ahead. I'm assuming it's a
guy, but I don't want tomake any judgments. That's what he had
to say about because remember, it'sa mostly peaceful protest, and so be

(21:22):
glad, be grateful that I'm notjust going out and murdering Zionis. I've
never murdered anyone in my life,and I hope to keep it that way.
I genuinely hope to keep it thatway. Yeah, I don't think
anybody's really worried. You're not keepinganybody up at night going what else is
this guy trying to come in anddo something? Get out of here?

(21:45):
Think about that for a second.So wait a minute. You just said,
because it's a mostly peaceful protest,you're lucky that this guy's out there
killing a bunch of Zionists, basicallykilling Jews, because whenever they see a
Jew, they gream Zionists. Howdare you wear a yamaka? How dare
you wear the Star of David,don't you know what that does? It
triggers us. Ah, then wego from that college campus to USC.

(22:10):
Who's decided that USC's doing something thatI think a lot of colleges are going
to have to end up doing.This graduation season disrupted by demonstrators Wednesday,
for the most part, campus lifeat USC is returning to normal tonight.
It's a lot more chill today.They still have a little bit of a
demonstration going on, but it's onlystudents now, like they kicked out all

(22:33):
of the random citizens that just kindof happened to wander on campus. Still
there is disappointment and frustration that themain stage commencement has been canceled, the
university announcing today that because of safetyconcerns, the ceremonies set for May tenth
would not go on. What that'sright, not go on? We're sorry,

(22:56):
these children are so obnoxious and wecan't get them to not be obnoxious,
so it isn't gonna happen. Ithink most of us are dismayed and
disappointed by this decision, that itis a further escalation of suppressing free speech
on campus and does not seem tobe an illustration of putting safety first.

(23:18):
Celia Porter is a Jewish student fromthe Midwest. She told KTLA she does
feel safe on campus, but herparents are worried. It's definitely uncomfortable in
a lot of classes. I thinkit's uncomfortable for both sides. Yeah,
because I think most people who areyoung want to go to places like USC

(23:41):
to party, to have a goodtime, to get an education, right
to you know, that's usually somewherein there. They that's why they're there.
They're not there for this. Thisis a small but loud group of
people who have lost the plot,who are living in this world of oppressed,

(24:04):
an oppressor and all of the wetalked about. I want to relitigate
everything. We've talked about it overand over again, so everybody else has
to suffer because you've decided to makeyour voice heard in such a way that
everybody else is screwed. And itgoes back to that thing we talk about

(24:25):
all the time, when does yourrights end and my rights begin? And
sc has caved. So I thinkit's unfair that you university's punishing all the
graduates. Senior David Fuintes was lookingforward to celebrating his accomplishments, and I
didn't get my high school graduation intwenty twenty because of COVID, So it
feels like, yeah, I don'tlike, I'm like my classes cursed or
something. Yeah, she he's alittle pissed. So's this senior who took

(24:52):
the TikTok immediately sharing the same sentimentabout the fact that that COVID year screwed
them out of their senior her graduationin high school. And now this so
USC just canceled our graduation. Iliterally I have no words like this is
so like, it's actually comical atthis point. If you don't know,
the seniors that are graduating college rightnow are the seniors that graduated in twenty

(25:14):
twenty where we didn't have a highschool graduation and a lot of us had
like drive through fake graduations or nograduation at all. And now we are
seniors about to graduate, getting readyfor our first real graduation, and it
just got canceled, canceled, canceled. No moss Spanish for no more,
No ain't gonna happen. She's nothappy, understandable. I'd be one of

(25:38):
those people. It's like, oh, thank god, it's gonna be warm.
Sixty five thousand people. It's gonnabe a lot of crap that I
don't care about. I just Ijust I just want to go. They
sent out an email ten minutes agoabout how they know it disappointing with they're
canceling it and they're gonna have otherfun events, which I don't even know
what that means. I understand that, like a lot of them going on
at USC right now, woul likeprotests and everything. I just feel like

(26:00):
there could have been a different wayto go about this than to cancel the
entire graduation for a class that nevereven got to high school. Graduation either
sucks. Thank god they're not doingit virtually. That would be just so
bizarre. They won, so hopeeverybody's happy. I want to see what
takes place this weekend. It's goingto be interesting to see what takes place

(26:22):
on campuses this weekend now that kidsare heading home, because in some of
these colleges, they're like everything's goingto be remote, so they're like,
screw it, we're going home,and the outside agitators now that they're getting
them off campus, let's see whatthat looks like. But some people they're
going to continue to go for aslong as they possibly can because it extends

(26:45):
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(27:55):
dot com slash Benson. It's aChad Benson show running with scissors. Sounds
great compared to this Republican women.Have you watched The hands maid Tale.
I've been watched it. I'm onseason four. It's absolutely amazing and completely

(28:19):
terrifying. I was in the Livethe other day and I was talking about
it and a Republican woman came onand I asked her if she could see
the similarities between Gilead, what's happeningin The handsmaid Tale, and the Republican
Party, and she said, no, are you serious. We are marching
towards Gilead, not away from AndI'll be damned if any of my daughters

(28:41):
are going to be off Donald,I think you've lost your mind. The
emotional side of things. I'll bedamned if my daughters can't have abortion on
demand, even up to nine months. We're marching towards that, are we
No, we're not. We're notmarching towards the settle down. We have

(29:03):
issues with fertility rates, and we'regoing to talk about that. Really it's
birth rates, not fertility rates.But men don't make it easy. We're
also going to talk about that.Continue watch these headlines right where the GOP
is supporting forcing children to give birth, making cases for children to get married.
Twelve year olds should be allowed tobe married. And like in the

(29:25):
movie Handsmade Tale, they completely goafter the LGBTQ community, trying to wipe
away their existence, and the GOPis going after not just abortions, but
surveilling us our birth control. You'reelecting into office a man who has assaulted
a woman, Commander Trump. Imean it's not Bill Clinton. Forget about

(29:51):
that. How with Bill? Wow? Bill did a lot of stuff.
It's hilarious. You're letting a twelveyear old get married. No, that's
stupid. Oh my goodness. Imean we would let them change their sack
completely and lop off their breast orwhatever and pump a full of hormones.
But married, Come on, theywant horrific punishments for women who seek out

(30:14):
abortions or IVF. Yes, they'reconsidering the death penalty against women. That's
not enough. You have Trump inhis next term talking about firing squads and
group executions. He's talked about bringinghangings back. They'd want to be able
to shoot protesters. Trump asked ifthey can shoot protesters just in the like

(30:40):
the GOP goes one step further andthey say that a man cannot grape his
own wife. Are you kidding me? Yeah? And that was all because
of Trump. Oh wait, thatthing's been around forever and that's ridiculous.
Again, Take something to the extreme, take something to the absolute extreme,

(31:03):
because that's what people do. Areyou getting me? What do you do
You really think that's gonna happen?Do you really think that they're bringing back
By the way, there's a fewstates that have firing squads for executions and
hangings. And I think we canall real really if we're in our minds,
we're like, I don't want anybodyto be like killed, but like

(31:25):
a rubber bullet in the leg whenyou're trying to stop people in traffic from
going to work or getting home.And I'm not going to bitch about that
all this and our fertility rate dropping. It's really our birth rate and it's
falling big time. There's several reasonsfor that. Yeah, because fertility typically

(31:48):
means that there are some reproductive issuesthat may be at play here. What
is happening is that women are makingconscious decisions. One because of the cost
of childcare, also because the studentloaned it. Also because of the rise
and cost of housing to either offhaving children n till later, which means
automatically you'll have fewer or to nothave them at all. She also has
the most single population in the country, so it makes sense that they also
wouldn't spen to what you're saying.It's the democrats fault. You know what,

(32:12):
It's really interesting. I mean wejoke about this stuff, but I
will tell you this right now.You want to see a nation in decline
and start to slip fast, seeChina. One child policy has done more
to damage China than maybe anything else. And it is there because there's no

(32:34):
young to replace the old, andthere's a lot of old and not a
lot of young. And then theydecided, hey, if you're a girl,
that isn't a good thing. Nowit's just a sausage party. Uh
yeah, yeah, and that's aserious issue. But you go to Korea,
you go to Japan, you goto many of the you know,

(32:55):
Western European countries, the rates aredropping fast. Mosque has been this has
been Elon Musk's charge. By theway, he says, population collapse due
to low birth rates is a muchbigger risk to civilization than global warming.
We're We're not the only country experienceit. There are several countries across the
globe that are and again, alot of it is due to economic issues

(33:17):
that people are either feeling or perceiving. Yeah, it's true. And then
you've got the political divide, whichshould be talked about. More men center
right and becoming more conservative, womenvery progressive, very very left. So

(33:38):
you got single women in their twentiespretty progressive and left, and single men
in their twenties and slackers at times, but conservative. And they go out
with a progressive girl, no doubtabout that, but she won't go out
with him. And then what happens, Well you get nutt things like this.

(34:01):
This is hilarious. This is aguy who uh, well, I'm
gonna let him explain, has somethingto do with pheromones. Mom just forced
me to shower. I was pheromonemaxing for two weeks, for two and
a half weeks, and she forcedall that stuff down the train. It's

(34:22):
like she wants me to stay inher basement. It's like she never wants
me to find a lady and leave. Yeah, pheromone maxing is what he
was doing, but Bob doesn't wantme to. She just wants me to
stay in the basement forever. Bad. When you guys messaged my mom telling

(34:44):
her that I have a porn addiction. I don't have a porn addiction every
day, that really set her off. She threw away my pea bottles.
I'd had them for a month andI would have pulled them out, and
she asked me too. It's beena really hard month for me. You
bullies in the comments, you trollsin the comments, like I need to

(35:07):
shower, like I need to bathe, Like I need to get my porn
addiction underway. No, not underway. You need to get rid of your
porn addiction. And uh, Ijust feel like you're an in cell and
you're waiting to shoot up a place. I see comments all the time about
how I'm Greece and grime Maxim.Now one of you in the comments did

(35:30):
recommend me a AI built friend thatI've taken a liking to. Her name
is Lewis for your information. Uh, you know, it's just been really
hard with all of this hate.Uh hit the bullies. Peace, good
night. You know, ladies,whatever I said earlier, just ignore it,

(35:53):
because Wow, welcome to the NewAmerica. Wait a minute, in
chains and men living in Mom's basement. Yeah, three two three, five
three eight twenty four, twenty threeat Chad Benson Show to Twitter, Instagram.
If you miss any of the show, shame on you. You grab
the podcast. It is the ChadBenson Show. This is the Chad Benson

(36:16):
Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson. Riddy first

(36:50):
pick in the twenty twenty four NFLDraft, the Chicago Bears select Caleb Williams,
quarterback NFL Draft last night, andI'm gonna pick Caleb Williams out of
USC in Ohio State and probably severalother schools. That's the way it's going
to be. It's way it's goingto be the future. He started his

(37:15):
career at BYU, then went toTexas Texas Tech Texas State, then over
to Kansas. From Kansas, hecame to USC and from USC he went
to the NFL. Caleb Williams,congratulations, you're on your way to Chicago
that loves to ruin quarterbacks, sothat should be fun for you. You

(37:37):
have to think to yourself, no, don't do it. I was laughing.
We're on our way last night toplay pickleball, my wife and I
and I'd forgot all the drafts on. I turned on right as this happened.
I said, oh, that poorguys. She goes why because Chicago
ruins quarterbacks. It's what they do. They draft a quarterback every three to

(37:58):
four years. He shows a littlebit of promise, but the wind,
the fact that apparently they don't mowthe grass there so it's knee high.
They never draft any kind of widereceivers worth the damn and so at the
end of the day, you justare discouraged and sad. But at least
he'll get paid, and that's whatmatters. Last hour, we were talking

(38:22):
about the union folks and that guythat told Biden f U, which I
thought was I just I know,people look at her cheap laughs, and
everybody's like cheering him on. Yeah, you know, the reality that's just
not who I am. I mean, I like the cheap laugh, but
I just think that the office itself. We no longer respect the office.

(38:43):
And that went the same way withTrump. You know, that lady got
cheered by the left and she flippedTrump off, you know, weeks after
he was inaugurated, and everybody cheeredher and she lost her job, and
I thought, just no respect forthe office anymore. And then we got
to talking about the unions, andyou know, unions are predominantly Democrat in
a major way. I mean,you'll get the police union and maybe the

(39:06):
fire for unions, but they don'thave the kind of sway that a lot
of these other big trade unions have. This is a trade union boss in
New York earlier today. We arebasically Democrats, all of us, and
after what's happened in the last fouryears in this country, they Democrats are
basically pushing everybody to the other side. We're a very patriotic group and we

(39:28):
love our country and we want thebest for America. We are tired of
immigration, We're tired of our taxgot dollars going to immigration. We're tired
of the crime. We need toput a handle on things in this country
and bring it back to how itshould be. Wow. And there's a
real disconnect in the way that youlook at I think the Democrats, you

(39:51):
know, Democrats, you know they'retalking about it used to be the working
man's party, right, you know, you're Biden talking about I'm the most
pro Democratic man I was. Iran fourteen un when I was a truck
driver, back when I was alsoborn sharecropper. So yeah, he says
all the swacky things, doesn't he'scrazy whatever, It's not that way now.

(40:14):
The Democrats are the party of theelite, which used to be the
Republicans. Things, right, theevil you know, white collar you know
in the Ivory Tower, Wall Street, fat cat smoking his cigar going haagreed.
Now it's it's it seems it's liketotally flip the script. It really
has and it's interesting to watch.And Sean Faine, as we said last

(40:37):
hours ahead of the United Auto Workerscame out and said, of course we're
backing Biden. The union is nowthe members are probably going to back Trump.
They're probably gonna do that. Whybecause for the last forty years you've
taken advantage of the unions in alot of ways, kind of like you
have the black vote and any otheryou know, mino group that you think

(41:00):
that should not follow or do anythingwhen it comes to Republicans because they're evil
and bad. And in doing sothough, you've also basically along with the
things like NAFTA have hurt manufacturing,hurt union jobs, and then the push

(41:20):
to go to college and almost lookdown upon the working man is not a
helper for the Democrats. And thenthe woke stuff you throw that in,
that's definitely not a helper at all. Speaking of working, are we going
to work together with China? Chinablinking and she hanging out trying to discuss
all kinds of stuff about how wecan still remain pals. Should China in

(41:45):
the United States keep to the rightdirection of moving forward with stability or returned
to a downward spirro This is amajor question before our two countries. Yes,
it is, the downward spirals.Very interesting question because there's a lot
of issues right and I think oneof the big issues right now facing everybody

(42:06):
is the TikTok issue. Because TikTokhas come out and said unequivocally they're not
going to sell, and they wouldrather essentially, you know, scuttle the
whole thing, blow it up,then sell it or be forced to sell.
There's a lot of other stuff thatblink in and and G and the
Chinese talked about obviously fentanyl being abig issue, and our two governments recently

(42:29):
agreed to share best practices. I'mclosing loopholes in our financial systems that the
drug traffickers and other criminal enterprises usedto launder money. The prc IS issued
a public notice to industry, let'stake an enforcement action against some companies that
produce precursors those are the chemical ingredientsthat make up synthetic drugs, because that's

(42:51):
what they want to do. Floodingour flooding our market through Mexico is what
they love to do. Amlow,the president of mech Ago, who's like,
you know, he started his hugs, you know, rather than fight
drugs dealers and that, you know, he just allowed the narco state to
just be what it was and thought, you know what, we'll pick our
battles elsewhere. You guys, dowhat you want to do. Just stop

(43:13):
killing people in the streets. Andeverybody's like that, do you think that's
going to work just ignoring the problem. And then you had like the head
of their DEA come out this weekand said, oh, by the way,
this guy is like super on boardwith what's going on. And the
drug car tells. So if Amblotells you, he's not and he's fighting
it, he's lying. But Shinais a big problem as well, and

(43:34):
there's a lot of things that whenit comes to China we just need to
understand. It's like the TikTok thing. Am I worried about the data collecting.
They're collecting data all the time.For me, it's always been the
bigger issue, has been the wholething when it comes to the propaganda and

(43:57):
the pushing stuff forward. The waythat you see a lot of stuff on
college campuses is taking place because ofTikTok is helping it. The other side
of it is the fact that theysteal all of our stuff. So for
those of you guys don't know,I play a lot of pickaball, I
play a lot of golf, playa lot of pickaball, and I love

(44:17):
pickaball. And I've got a machinein the backyard and I was looking at
new machines yesterday and it's very interestingbecause it just shows you. And I
told my wife this, I said, this is the perfect example of what
it's like to do business in China. One of the machines I'm looking at
is is thing called Lobster, andthe other one is called an Ernie.

(44:40):
They're really cool machines and they shootthe ball different ways, and you know,
you can set up drills and everything. It's kind of it. It's
pretty cool. If you go ontoAmazon now you can see those exact same
machines with different names, identical identicalmachines with the same app that does the

(45:02):
same thing. Where do you thinkthey got that? Well, they stole
it from our companies. Why becausemaybe we manufacture some stuff over there and
they want to see all of ourstuff. And we just got to be
honest about the fact that they're notour friends. They're not they're not our
pals, they're not our friends.Their goal is to upset the apple cart,

(45:24):
to continue to push, to continueto hang out with the access of
a holes nobody likes to call them, which is Iran and Russia, and
to make as many people as possiblehave to fall in line with them and

(45:45):
their rules and I'm just we justcontinue to be ignorant to it. Three
two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty three
at Chad Benton shows your Twitter tweetat his texted program. Trump is on
trial yesterday the scot is hearing.We'll talk about that later. But there's
another trial going on and it involvesa porn star and a pecker from the

(46:09):
Inquirer. We'll talk about that straightahead. Raycon passed earbuds around this Mother's
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(47:14):
slash jed. Buy raycon dot comslash Chad. It's a Chad Benson show.
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show. At Trump's Manhattan trial, prostutors
for the first time, bringing upStormy Daniels, former National Inquir publisher David

(47:38):
Pecker testifying he told Trump's fixer MichaelCohen that Daniels was shopping her story.
He says Cohen told him to buyit, but Pecker refused, telling Cohen,
I am not going to get involvedwith a porn star. I am
not a bank. Cohen ended uppaying one hundred and thirty thousand dollars to
Daniels himself, but falsely labeling itas legal expenses. Trump has pleaded not

(47:59):
guilty to all charges. Yeah,there's another trial. Finally, Stormy Daniels
finally apports starn Apecker. Oh,Shad, that was pretty easy. Listening
to the media freak out over thisis hilarious. I'm still trying to figure
out what exactly, again, isthe crime that you charge him with?

(48:22):
What thirty eight felonies? Well,they catched and killed. Nobody cares.
That's not a crime. None ofthat's a crime. Burying a story or
not releasing story not a crime.David Pecker has spent three days in the
witness stand in Donald Trump's criminal trial, taking jurors behind closed doors to explain
the National Inquirer's catch and kill operationto help the Trump campaign in the twenty

(48:43):
sixteen election, But when asked abouthis thoughts on the former president on Thursday
afternoon, Pecker only had nice thingsto say about the former president, describing
him as a friend and a mentor, even though they have not spoken to
each other in five years. Fiveyears they've not spoken to each other.
But it's crime. None of thisis a crime. So far, none
of this rises to the level ofany kind of crime. We're still waiting

(49:05):
for the crime part. Paying somebodymegan him sign an NDA not a crime.
Burying a story not a crime,certainly not a crime. So I'm
still waiting for the level of crimethat it rises. That felony thing.

(49:28):
Trying to make sure that bad storiesdon't get out about you while you're running
for office is not a crime.Pecker described that the effort to kill negative
stories was a standard operating procedure forcelebrities and politicians alike. To make their
point, defense lawyers asked Pecker aboutpast stories, including figures like Arnold Schwarzenegger,
Tiger Woods, and Ram Emmanuel.Prosecutors have not announced to their next

(49:52):
witness will be if Pecker gets offthe stand Friday. Not a crime,
waiting for something that says crime,but you had the legally, Okay,
it's a misdemeanor at best. It'sa campaign issue, and everybody moves on.
None of this rises two said levelof that Oh my god, thirty

(50:14):
ay, it's embarrassing. It reallyis. At Boston University law professor who's
not a fan of Trump, whowrote a scathing op ed piece in the
New York Times essentially saying, thisis not only embarrassment, this may be
a horrific mistake. This is goingto come back and buite the Democrats in

(50:38):
the ass not a crime, justpointing that out. Speaking of crimes,
guess what happened to Harvey Weinstein,who as we know, is a rapist.
A shocking reversal Harvey Weinstein's rape convictionin New York overturned by the state's
highest court, New York's Court ofAppeals, handing down the four to three
decision, citing egregious errors by thejudge seeing the trial back in twenty twenty,

(51:01):
saying the trial court erroneously admitted testimonyof uncharged alleged prior sexual acts against
persons other than the complainants of theunderlying crimes. I'll break that down for
you. People got to come inand essentially bash Harvey Weinstein that had nothing
to do with the case. Therewas no charges against Harvey against those people.

(51:24):
And so they're saying, look nowhe may have done this, which
he did. They didn't. Theydid not. Well, first of all,
they didn't set him free as one. Everybody know that he's not wandering
around right now in Hollywood. He'sbecause he's still convicted of the one in
California where he got sixteen years.But they didn't, you know, say,

(51:46):
hey, we absolve you of anyof this stuff. They just said
the way that this was handled wasn'tright. You allowed other people to come
in and potentially influence the jurors bybringing their testimony in, and there was
no crime that was prosecuted by anybodyfor what these women were saying. Why'd

(52:12):
you do that? He called me, and he could not have been more
gracious. He said thank you moretimes than I can imagine. You know,
he was like slightly emotional, butI think he was overwhelmed. I
think he was almost in a stateof shock as well. That's his lawyer
talking about, like what what happened. We all know that in society,
when something gets so hyped up,it takes on a life of its own,
and that's kind of what happened hereat the trial. But nobody really

(52:36):
thought that Harvey Weinstein verdict was goingto get reversed. They weren't expecting it.
They were going through the motions andtaking a paycheck and they're like,
we reverse it. They're like,what you did? What you're going to
reverse it? Ah? But that'sa win. Hey we won. He's
not again free. So I wantto point that out. So you have
to hide. You have to hidefrom a lot of Hollywood, but not

(52:58):
Harvey. And also they didn't sayhe didn't do it. They didn't say
he wasn't a rapist. They justsaid the way that it was handled wasn't
correct. Three two, three,five, three, eight, twenty four
twenty three at ched Benson's Show,to Twitter, You, Instagram, all
the other things. Joining us alittle bit later in the show, our
buddy Zach Abram, Chief Investment OfficerBoor Capitol. We're going to talk about

(53:22):
the economy, the GDP, thenumbers. They're trying to spin it every
way possible. Uh, but thereality is the numbers weren't great. Now.
I think we recognize that. Andyou know, when they go and
revise a lot of these things,you know, I'm gonna ask him,
do they ever revise him, youknow, in a better way? Because
it always seems to be negative.So when they revise these numbers, what's

(53:42):
that going to look like? Talkto him about that. Plenty of other
things to get to as well.Three two, three, five, three
eight twenty four to twenty three atched Benson Shows, Your ex and Your
Instance, The Cheded Benson Show,The Chad Benson Joe, independent thoughts,

(54:28):
independent life. This is Chad Bensonof the Girl to a Dive bo in
the Western Worlds World Eastern Western Girls. That right there, the Pet shop

(54:54):
Boys led by Neil Tennant. Whyam I playing that? Because they're going
to attack by the Swifties Pet showBoys. Neil Tennant calls Taylor Swift's music
disappointing. Where are the famous songs? Though he enjoys her lyrics The West
and Girls singers wonders where Taylor SwiftsBilly Jean is during a panel earlier this

(55:15):
week. So the minute you sayanything negative at all about Taylor, you're
done for. I mean, youare done for. Isn't it funny?
It's like and this, this isthe way we are with everything criticism.
And I get criticized all the timeand probably totally deserve all of it.

(55:37):
I'm not one of these guys thatdo. Of course I do. I
criticize myself. But like her newalbum came out last week, we're talking
about like a hwedge album. Peoplewho are honest and go I like her

(56:00):
album Super Melancholy, and it's notvery good and it's just her complaints.
And of course you get attacks forthat. It's like if you say,
look, I think Israel's got aright to defend themselves. I can sympathize
with people in Palestine and in Rafaand Gaza, but they have a right
to defend themselves. And it's stillHamas's. Oh so you're done for if

(56:23):
you criticize Trump in any way,shape or form, you're done for for
certain people. So it doesn't evenmatter if it's a pop star or politics.
People are just looking for a wayto push back. Oh goodness,
that is not good. Trump gota win yesterday, even though he didn't
get a win. And I'm nottalking about court that he was in where

(56:46):
the name Stormy Daniels was brought upas we were just talking about. No,
I'm talking about the Supreme Court,which he wasn't in, but people
were arguing on his behalf. Thishas all to do with the immunity case.
Oh yeah, the immunity case thatis going on now. If you're
not following this, Donald jod Trump, whatever, President of the United States,

(57:10):
believes that as president you should havecomplete immunity going forward in all times
while you're president and as former president. And he's arguing at this point,
hey, I should totally have allthis immunity. And so yesterday they heard

(57:30):
the case and it was very interesting. Now we can usually surmise from the
questioning where the justices are going togo. You can get a sense of
that the three liberals were pretty harsh, and the six conservative judges were pretty

(57:52):
harsh as well, comparatively to whatI think a lot of people thought that
they were going to be. Wouldwe have a situation in which we would
say that the president should be makingofficial acts without any responsibility for following the
law. And the president absolutely doeshave responsibility. He absolutely is required to

(58:13):
follow the law in all of hisofficial acts. But the remedy for that
is the question could he be subjectof personal vulnerability sent to prison but making
a bad decision after he leaves office. But other people who have consequential jobs
make those determinations against the backdrop ofthat same kind of risk. So what
is it about the president when we'retalking about criminal liability. I don't understand

(58:35):
how the president stands in any differentposition with respect to the need to follow
the law than anyone else. Heis required to follow the law, and
what fits but he's not is there'sno criminal processing if there's no threat of
criminal prosecution, what prevents the presidentfrom just doing whatever he wants? All
the structural checks that are identified inFitzgerald and a whole series of this Court's
cases that go back to Martin againstMott, for example, impeachment oversight by

(58:58):
Congress public oversight. Johnsauer, whois arguing for Trump in the immunity case,
Katanji Brown Jackson there saying, look, the president has to have some
sort of checks. If you willnot just above the law, cay just
do anything he wants to do.Their argument is, Hey, as president

(59:22):
of the United States, you're goingto do a lot of things that the
average person wouldn't do. But aspresident, you were granted those powers and
you should be immune from those powers. Case in point, President Barack Obama's
decision to order the killing of anAmerican citizen unlucky in Yemen who was working
with al Qaeda. Obama based thaton the law that gave him authority to

(59:45):
use military force after nine to eleven. It was old by that time,
But could he be prosecuted for murder? That was raised in the courtroom.
Also, the way George W.Bush misinformed the Congress and the country about
the nature of the threat from couldhe be prosecuted for some kind of fraud.
So the way that the Democrats cameat it, or Democrats the left

(01:00:07):
leaning portions of which it drives mecrazy that that we have to talk about
this, I just want nine Thisis where AI is gonna be great,
just I want nine spocks. Butyou're not going to get that. The
way that they're looking at this isno, you've got to be held accountable
if you've done something wrong. Theway that the conservative side, I guess

(01:00:34):
you would say is saying, hey, hey, hey, take Trump out
of this. If we don't havesome immunity going forward, the Bush,
the Obama and other presidents. Thenwhen you get a you know, some
sort of you know, attorney generalor somewhere who decides, I want to
go after President Biden for allowing peopleto come into this country illegally and shirking

(01:01:00):
his duties and in doing so somebodygot killed. And it's, you know,
whatever they're going to come up with. Now, both sets of judges
again silly, but that's how wehave to come in. They they all
agree, hey, it's got tobe some immunity. We're right about this

(01:01:20):
right, like, there's got tobe some amity, but blanket immunity going
forward, not so much. Ithink this is going to be a nine
zero decision that a president does nothave absolute immunity for all acts they could
possibly commit while president. But Ialso think it'll be a nine zero decision
that the president is immune for someacts that he does as president. And

(01:01:44):
then I think you might be rightabout a lot of different thoughts on how
exactly we draw that line. Wesaw basically every single justice with a different
test of how they might do thatline a purpose test. Did the president
have a public purpose or a privatepurpose? Than Justice Gore pointing out,
well, wait, doesn't every firstterm president probably have some purpose of helping

(01:02:05):
his political standing his reelection, Sothat can't be the only purpose. What
about an objective test? Is itsomething that only a president can do?
Like selling nuclear secrets? Well,you can only have the nuclear secrets if
you're president. So we saw alot of different versions of what that test
could look like, and I didn'tsee five justices agreeing to any single test.
They're right there. Sarah Isker,she worked for Trump. She's brilliant

(01:02:30):
attorney, super smart, she's wickedsmart as the people in best and would
say wicked smart, and she says, yeah, you know what, they
all have different opinions, but thereare some opinions. And this is where
Trump wins because of the fact thatthey all kind of agree, yeah,
you know what this is. Andthis is an interesting question because it's never

(01:02:51):
been asked before. Should presidents haveimmunity from certain acts inside of office?
Well, going forward, the Republicanside of it, if you will,
the conservative side is saying, hey, you know, we got to have
some sort of immunity for certain actslike killing an American on foreign soil and
doing it without a trial, orlying to get us into a war.

(01:03:15):
We can go on and on about. I'm sure every president has done stuff
where you think, well, normalperson be in trouble for that. So
they all kind of agree with that, and this is where Trump gets to
win. This pushes this thing outbecause it's going to go back to the
lower court and then they have decide, Okay, what are the parameters here.
What is considered something that would bepresidential that should be completely immune from

(01:03:43):
any kind of prosecution whatsoever in thedischarging of his duties or her duties.
It's his duties, he said,duty and what is considered personal outside of
those that pair of view there.So that's that's important because that going back
to the lower court means it's notgoing to be any kind of trial this

(01:04:04):
year, and because of the notrial this year, that means former President
Trump really only has to worry aboutfor the most part, what's going on
in New York, which we talkedabout, which is ridiculous. Probably not

(01:04:24):
Georgia, and then the mar ALago thing, but the DC thing and
the Marrow Lago thing. They're probablynot going to get anywhere near trial,
which means if he wins, heis what well the president, he can
make those things go away. Sowe'll see what happens here. It's going
to be very interesting, and they'regoing to rule on it, if you

(01:04:45):
will, today, which we won'tknow about. But then they'll start writing
up their arguments for why they're doingthis, that and the other. But
they'll vote on it today, sobut we won't hear about it. While
three two, three, five,three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson shows your Twitter, our buddy Zach Abrahm's going to join
the program. A little bit,talk about the financial world. A lot

(01:05:08):
of stuff going on. What's hethink of the GDP report? How's that
play out in the market and inyour lives? We'll talk about that straight
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(01:06:18):
Or Capital joins the program. Straightahead, it is the Chat Benson Show.
Welcome to chess Chat. No,not the country, the institution,
the Chat Benson Show. Zach Abram, friend of the show, spotsor the
Show. Chief Vestment Officer bull OrCapital joins the program. All right,

(01:06:41):
Zach, the numbers are out.The growth wasn't that good? Inflation,
all of this stuff. What's itmean for the market, the economy as
a whole. It feels like maybereckoning. It was an interesting report.
I think there's two different ways thatyou can look at it. It was
certainly below expectations. But like youand I both know, quarterly GDP reports

(01:07:02):
can be very misleading. So Iwould say, a it's just one quarter,
and that quarterly data can be revisedone way or the other inside of
a month. It usually well,yeah, almost almost one hundred percent of
the time, which is also anothercrack up, right, just because you'd
think if you had data revisions,it'd be pretty split. Right, There'd

(01:07:24):
be times you have to revise itup. It's almost always revised down,
so we'll have to watch. Itmight even be weaker than that. But
one of the things that stuck outto us was that growth came in lighter
than expected and inflation was higher thanexpected. Now we'll have to see.
I believe the core inflation comes outtomorrow, So that's something that FED watches
more closely. And again, it'stoo early to call this, it's just
one quarter. But what caught oureye and what frankly surprised me a little

(01:07:48):
bit was if you have growth fallingoff and inflation staying persistent or even accelerating,
that's called stagflation, right, andthat's the worst of all worlds.
And again I don't want to freakpeople out, it's too early. One
quarter does not make it so.But what's interesting is you haven't really seen

(01:08:09):
anything like that up until this point. It just looked like the abnormally high
rate of growth in the economy wasfeeling over into inflation. And the reason
I say it's fascinating is because astagflationary environment is the Fed's worst nightmare,
right, because the way you stimulatean economy whose growth rate is decelerating,

(01:08:29):
you stimulate it through interest rate cutsand more money, right, stimulus handouts.
You can't do that though, wheninflation is still persistently high, right,
because whatever you do on that end, it might give growth a little
boost, but you're just going togive it right back away in inflation.
How long can this environment last.It can last as long as the FED
can print with impunity. At somepoint the environment will take those keys away

(01:08:51):
from them, and the stagflationary environmentwould do just that. Talking to you
a Zach A. Ram, chiefinvestment officer of for Capital, you know,
remember when I was trading currency inthe nineties, and people probably don't
remember this, but Japan lost awhole decade and I'm sure you remember their
stagflation because they were almost that negativeinterest rates. Their economy was going nowhere,

(01:09:14):
and you can really see what itdoes to a market and to a
people because it's like they're stuck inmolasses. They can't go anywhere. Japan
is a little bit different, andI actually think Japan is one of the
things that has got us into thismess, right because people watch Japan for
years. I mean, I thinkI think the BOJA, the Bank of
Japan now owns something like seventy percentof the outstanding total debt of the Japanese

(01:09:39):
government. I honestly think it's partof the problem though, because what that
convinced central bankers is that monetary policydidn't breed inflation. And I think that
that's a really dangerous conclusion to cometo, because I think if you want
to understand why Japan has not hadinflation for the last thirty five years,
just go look at the birth rate, go look at the demographics. That's
why, right, and there aremuch more closed society than we are.

(01:10:00):
You know, our birth rate ispulled back, but over the last twenty
five years it's been way higher inJapan's. And on top of that,
we've got immigration and things like that, our population growth is there. So
what that all means, right iswe're a completely different ball of wax.
We're much more exposed. The otherthing about Japan that's interesting, culturally speaking,

(01:10:21):
I said, the Bank of Japanowns about seventy percent of the outstanding
debt. The vast majority of therest of it's owned by Japanese citizens.
So their debt is worse than ours. So I think that there are really
bad proxy to look at and tothink that we can do similar things and
not generate more inflation. And you'reseeing that play out right. This inflation

(01:10:41):
was supposed to be transitory. Itwasn't. So you know, we've just
gone way more extreme than they havein every sense. And I think that
that's a danger because I think alot of people look at Japan and go,
oh, look, it doesn't causeinflation. Look at Japan. There's
just a lot of extenuating circumstances thatare not similar when you compare it to
the US. Very true, Verytrue, Zach Abram, investment officer.
We love is knowledge. People wantto reach out to you and they're they're

(01:11:02):
they're not foolish. I saw thisweek that you know, you've got so
many people in their fifties who havezero money for saving, zero money for
investment, and they think they're justgonna have to work forever. Uh,
maybe it's time to get started.Maybe they've got some money and they're not
quite sure it's going to work forthem. What do they do? How
do they reach out to you?How do they talk to you? Yeah,
The best way to get ahold ofus is go to the radio show

(01:11:23):
website, Know your Risk radio dotcom or just Bullwartcapitalmanagement dot com. We've
got landing pages. You can justemail in and request a risk review or
a portfolio review with me or oneof our other advisors, and uh,
you know, we'll walk you throughhow we do things. We're very different.
We are active managers. Our clientshave significant exposure to things like gold

(01:11:45):
and silver and natural resources at thispoint as part of a diversified portfolio.
And the reason I bring that upchat because you and I both know that's
just not the average portfolio out thereand what it enables. You look at
a day like today, market's takena bit of a licking, and this
isn't true every day, and I'mnot saying that, but today's kind of
a good proxy for that. We'reactually having a decent day, we're making
money, our accounts are up.Market's getting smacked. So look, I

(01:12:10):
just think there's a much better wayto do things, and I think you're
gonna need other things in your portfoliothat you don't currently have, So yeah,
give us a call, reach outto the website. We're not hard
to find making money. That's whatit's always about. Appreciate you coming on
brother, all right man fun asalways. We'll talk to you soon.
Zach Abraham, chief investment officer rightthere pull Work Capital Management. You can
check him out at no Know YourRisk Radio dot Com. That's Know Your
Risk Radio dot Com. Investment AdvisoryServices off through check Financial, LSC and

(01:12:33):
SEC Registered Investment Advisor. Chad BensonShow. This is the Chad Benson Show,

(01:13:12):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Lighte. Thisis Chad Benson. Don't let the
looties on campus wear too late.They've already won at least at USC.
No graduation for you. Disrupted bydemonstrators Wednesday, For the most part,
campus life at USC is returning tonormal tonight. It's a lot more chill

(01:13:33):
today. They still have a littlebit of a demonstration going on, but
it's only students now, like theykicked out all of the random citizens that
just kind of happened to wander oncampus. Still there is disappointment and frustration
that the main stage commencement has beencanceled, the university announcing today that because
of safety concerns, the ceremonies setfor May tenth would not go on,

(01:13:55):
Oh my god, they've won.How could you let them win? Because
these people are idiots. I thinkthis is going to be a major issue
in the coming weeks as we headtowards graduation, because I think a lot

(01:14:16):
of these protesters are going to doeverything they can to make it a nightmare
and to have their voices heard,like this cat It's leading the protest at
Columbia, who not only hates whitepeople, but now is also claiming that

(01:14:40):
Zionists, which for them in theirmind, they they're not saying you're a
Jew, and because you're just aJew and you don't live in Israel,
you're okay. No, if you'rea Jew and you even support Israel,
hey, that's the that's you know, it's my own country, this is

(01:15:01):
my family. I got. Yes, what happened was horrible. You're a
Zionist. Therefore you're a Nazi andyou're lucky you're not around him, And
so be glad, be grateful thatI'm not just going out and murdering Zions.
I've never murdered anyone in my life, and I hope to keep it

(01:15:23):
that way. I genuinely hope tokeep it that way. Wow, genuinely
hope to keep it that way,Like, do you do I mean,
do you really feel like he's gonnado anything? I don't. It's also
the one that you know, anybodywho challenges this person who lives in a
world of emotional issues, but inall emotions, in the world of nothing
but emotions, there is anybody whoif I like, I have an Israeli

(01:15:47):
flag shirt, and I've gone placesand people give me a dirty look or
they'll say something, and then Ilook at them and I say, do
we have a problem. I don'tthink we do, but if we do,
and they're like a lot of timeseh, because it's ridiculous. Look,
you could wear a Chay Guavar's shirt, good for you, whatever.

(01:16:09):
You could wear a free Palestine shirt, good for you. You could wear
I hate Israel shirt, good foryou. I don't. That's fine that
you're right. I'm not gonna sayanything about it, but it is amazing
how many people have come up tome said something, give me dirty looks.
A couple of people flip me off. This guy's threatening to kill Zionis.
Now, remember this is a collegecampus. College campus across the country,

(01:16:32):
college campuses who are throwing fits andacting like patchunlant children. This is
a place where they have safe spaces. This is a place where comedians won't
go anymore. Where Riley gains.Not so much. Columbia the Vagina,
having assigned it birth swimmer who hadto swim against Leah Thomas got chased out

(01:17:00):
and hit in a room as theytried to attack her for saying, Hey,
I think women's sports should be aboutwomen and men's sports should be about
man. Whatever. This is theplace is where those things take place.
You know, we joked yesterday theygot a room where you go pedalama if
you feel like you've been triggered.Yet at the same time, they'll scream
and yell at Jewish students and makethem feel awful and scared and hey,

(01:17:26):
there you go, what are yougonna do. It's going to be an
issue moving forward, especially during thispart of the year where so many people
are graduating. Sc has canceled theirgraduation sixty five thousand people go to that
graduation commencement speech is huge. Oneof the big issues is a Valor victorian

(01:17:49):
was going to speak. They're notletting her speak, and part of that
is because they're worried about security.I think you should have just let her
speak. She's going to turn intoa political nightmare and people, but what
you know, let her go andspeak because she likes some stuff. But
didn't you also add, you know, we need to destroy Israel. She's
like that, and you know onher well at one time, on her

(01:18:13):
Twitter bio, I don't know what'son there today. People change those things
a lot. I always forget that. I never change mom. I know
tweet a lot either way as well. You guys are a lot of you
are full of hate and anger,some of you are full of happiness,
and some of you are just bizarre. So I want to let you guys
know that continue USI I think mostof us are dismayed and disappointed by this
decision, that it is a furtherescalation of suppressing free speech on campus and

(01:18:36):
does not seem to be an illustrationof putting safety first. Celia Porter is
a Jewish student from the Midwest.She told KTLA she does feel safe on
campus, but her parents are worried. It's definitely uncomfortable in a lot of
classes. I think it's uncomfortable forboth sides. And here's where it's really

(01:18:59):
uncomfort before the vast majority of studentswho don't give a rats ass, who
came to college to get in ridiculouslyexpensive piece of paper or as micro puts
it, aver siat to hang ontheir wall. They they don't care,
They don't want to be involved inthis. They want to get their degree

(01:19:20):
in economics, or get their degreein psychology, or get there whatever.
They just want to get there,want to have some fun, make some
new friends, plan out their life, and move on. But alas here
we are. Here's a senior whofound out minutes before via email that there

(01:19:41):
will be no graduation at USC.She's not thrilled by it, and there's
a reason for that. It's adouble whammy. So USC just canceled our
graduation. I literally I have nowords like this is so like it's actually
cong gooled at this point, ifyou don't know, the seniors that are
graduating college right now are the senyears I graduated in twenty twenty, where
we didn't have a high school graduationand a lot of us had like drive

(01:20:05):
through fake graduations or no graduation atall. And now we are seniors about
to graduate, getting ready for ourfirst real graduation and it just got canceled.
Canceled. They can do something else, right, they have a little
party or something we're gonna get wehave to get together. I'd be like,
sixty five thousand people. Just soundslike something I don't want to be

(01:20:25):
involved in. So I'm completely fineby not doing it. But think about
this, if your family and friendsand people from around the country have all
made plans to come see you,You've worked your ass off to get to
this point. You know, yourparents have pulled some strings, right,
They've got you into you know,fake rowing class to make it look like
you could be a rowing person orwhatever. Whatever it is that you got

(01:20:47):
to us in most part probably becauseyou're pretty good at what you do and
you're smart. And for this girl, she fits the profile perfectly. Uh,
you're not gonna have it now becauseUSC is just capitulating, kind of
like Colombia is doing a lot ofthese other places. They don't know what
to do. They sent out anemail ten minutes ago about how they not

(01:21:11):
disappointing with They're canceling it and they'regoing to have other fun events, which
I don't even know what that means. I understand that like a lot of
them going on at USC right now, with like protests and everything. I
just feel like there could have beena different way to go about this than
to cancel the entire graduation for aclass that never even got to high school
graduation either. Yeah, oh jeez. Well, as we move forward,

(01:21:34):
so get towards graduations across the country. Kids are now finishing out their classes
online in some of these places,and some of these I can't wait to
see what some of these graduations looklike when people storm the stage screaming free
Palestine and ruining everybody else's day.So would you rather not have a day

(01:21:55):
and just got the thing and geton with your life, or would you
rather go and see us? Well, we're gonna find out probably a bit
of both. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three atch Had Benson Show. Is your Twitter tweets, Text to
program, bor capital, you getone retirement, get a second opinion.
Right now, you're with somebody who'smanaging your money and you have no idea
what they're doing. Neither do youor they because they stuck in something a

(01:22:15):
long time ago and don't ever callyou. Get a second opinion if you
will get a free risk assessment fromBuller Capital. My buddy Zach Abram,
Well, you had a call todayeight six six seven seven nine Risk eight
six six seven seven nine Risks.And when you call them, they're gonna
look at all your stuff like thinkabout it like a doctor. You want
a second opinion. Are you overleveraged? Are you in situations where you're exposed?

(01:22:38):
Are you in stuff that isn't goingto get you to where you want
to go in your retirement? Andbecause of that you have you know,
you could be stuck working longer.Who knows doesn't hurt to have a second
pair of eyes. Risk management numberone strategy for Bullwork and they're gonna give
you a free risk assessment. Doesn'tcost you anything but a little bit of
time. Call eight sixty six sevenseven nine Risk Today the schedule your free

(01:23:00):
risk review or go to Know yourRisk Radio dot com. Know Your Risk
Radio dot com. Investment advisory serversoffer through Teck Financial ll O C and
sec Register Investment Advisor. Investments involvedrisk and not a guarantee past performance and
no guarantee of future results. What'strending, straight head? You're listening to

(01:23:25):
the Chad Benson Show. Now it'stime to find out what's trending? What's
trending? Signed James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Sera,

(01:23:50):
what truping? What is trending onthis beautiful Friday? Let's find out?
Shall we? I'm gonna give youa hint to NFL. That's pretty
much the number one thing. Let'sstart to Yahoo, NFL draft, Donald
Trump, Russia, Ukraine War,Harvey Weinstein. He wasn't acquitted. We

(01:24:11):
talked about it yesterday and people arelike, he was acquitted. He wasn't
acquitted, but they threw out hisconviction in New York. But remember,
he's not out of jail because hewas convicted in Los Angeles and got a
sixteen year sentence, which is essentiallya death sentence for him. But the
one in New York was thrown out, and the reason was the judge made

(01:24:33):
a lot of mistakes, including thefact that he allowed a bunch of other
people to come in who had nothingto do with that case to testify,
and that was just not a goodthing. But he's still in jail.
NBA Scores PGA Tour. Mike Pinder, one of the founding members of the

(01:24:55):
Moody Blues, Google, Taylor Swiftall trending. Taylor Swift a fight with
the pet Shop Boys, So theSwifties are coming after Neil Tennant and the
pet Shop Boys head on over toGoogle. Lakers once again sucked it up.
Yeah they suck. They're going outin four Bell's pausey seventy six All

(01:25:17):
Star center Joel Embi said he's sufferingfrom Bell's palsy. Harvey Weinstein Kirk Cousins
Little Shock just signed out one hundredand sixty million dollars deal with the Falcons
to be their quarterback. With onehundred million guaranteed, he's gonna make sixty
two million this year, and thenwith what the eighth pick whatever, they
go, Hey, we think we'regoing to take a quarterback, which is

(01:25:39):
Michael Pennox Junior, who is hellof a quarterback. And one of those
things where I think it's a smartmove. I understand if you're a quarterback,
you know want somebody pushing you,but you're coming off in an Achilles
injury, and now you've got aguy coming in behind you that's gonna sit
for a few years. I thinkit's a good move. Drake May JJ

(01:26:01):
McCarthy Man City, Marvin Harrison Juniors. You were going here, Commanders,
Brock Bowers, I think the bestpick in the draft to me, one
of the only sure things if thereis anything you can call that, Brock
Bowers tight end. Going to theRaiders, Cowboys, Bears, Sixers all
trending, and finally head on overto Twitter, Lakers, Bills all trending,

(01:26:28):
Falcons, Michael Pennix Junior, DarvinHam, Aaron Gordon, it's throughout
basketball, Friday Field, finally BabyFriday feeling. Yeah, some Trump stuff.
Way, you gotta go way downto find anything that has to do
with politics, simple and easy becausewe're a nation that likes our football and

(01:26:58):
sports. That's our religion. Forsome people, politics is their religion,
which is not good also not agood thing, just crazy. And then
a lot of stuff from let's see, you got Emory University. You have
got the Columbia insanity that is goingon, and it is insane. Every

(01:27:21):
day you turn around, you're like, really, like, this is what's
going on here? Like I can'tbelieve that this is happening on our campuses.
Now, not that I can't believethat it's happening on our campus.
It's the size of it now.I think, to be honest with you,
I do believe that a lot ofthis is people just wanting to get

(01:27:47):
out of class or whatever. ButI also think there's a lot of those
people that buy into this because it'ssomething to protests. We talked about it
yesterday. Is no Great Wars,no Great Depression. You know, there's
the middle child of history. Youknow, the great speech from Brad Pitt
and fight Club. But there aresome out there that buy into this,

(01:28:09):
and I want you to listen toThis is the guy that's kind of the
head of girl I'm not quite sureof the Columbia protest talking about what they
them whatever, aren't going to do, but might want to. And so
be glad, be grateful that I'mnot just going out and murdering zionus.

(01:28:31):
I've never murdered anyone in my life, and I hope to keep it that
way. I genuinely hope to keepit that way. Well, I don't
think you have to worry about that. I don't think anybody's running from you.
But I just that right there,the insanity of all of this stuff

(01:28:53):
that is going on in college campuses, the craziness, the chaos, the
the and when. And I continueto say this. And we talked the
other day to Katie Gorka about thenew book Next Gen Marxism about girls young
women. When you look at avast majority of these protests across the board,
oh there's some men there. Ioften wonder how many of you are

(01:29:15):
just out there because you're like,I really like this chick. She's in
humanities and she's nuts, but Ithink I can hook up with her.
I'm going to put it, putin the effort. But most of them
are young women, and it isscary. It is scary. Our birth
rate is low. Young men aren'tdoing themselves that he favors out there.

(01:29:36):
We'll talk about that. So we'llsee. That's what's trending here on this
beautiful Friday at Chad Benson shows yourex slash Twitter and the Instagram as well.
I need to post more there.It's just hard because everybody just oh
hey, everybody's full of hate.Everybody is just so full of hate.
I'll read you some hate mail comingup. It's kind of funny. And

(01:29:58):
you know what's funny about it isthe you know, people say out there,
there's people on the left. There'sno such thing as Trump arrangement syndrome.
Oh there is, there is.Because you don't hate Trump. People
feel they have the right to sayanything they want to you. And it's
it is, it is in.It's incredible. They're just like people.

(01:30:19):
And it's the keyboard warrior thing becauseyou're behind a keyboard and there's zero repercussions
of you getting punched in the mouth. That makes sense. Three two,
three, five, three eight,twenty four, twenty three At Chad Benson
Show, It's your Twitter, It'sChad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show,

(01:30:57):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life, Thisis Chad Benson. Trump got kind
of a win in court yesterday,but not the win he probably wanted.
And this has nothing to do withthe whole insanity in New York. This
had to do with the Supreme Courthearing is immunity case. The win that

(01:31:17):
he got is there's going to bea delay, if you will, in
the case because they heard the arguments. They were pretty skeptical across the board,
both the conservative air wing of itand the progressive wing. But they
had some serious questions about, youknow, okay, the scope that Trump

(01:31:41):
wants which is total blanket immunity allthe time forever. Well, that's that's
ridiculous. But that being said,they did say, look, there's got
to be some immunity. It's neverbeen talked about before, but there could
be some serious issues here. Andthe win that he got the delay because
it's got to go back down tothe lower court. The lower court will

(01:32:03):
put the parameters of what immunity shoulda president have, and because of that,
it's going to be time, andtime means running out the clock potentially.
Oh, look, I I havegood news and bad news for you
on that. The second the SupremeCourt took this case, it was going
to take a long time because theSupreme Court answers questions, they don't decide

(01:32:25):
or resolve cases. They were alwaysanswering the question of whether a president enjoys
absolute immunity for official acts taken whilein office. They were not deciding whether
Donald Trump's prosecution could move forward onthese four charges. That's going to be
the lower court to decide. Yeah, and so the lower courts are going
to decide, Okay, in hisduties as president of these here United States,

(01:32:51):
what is he free immunity wise fromand why that matters is if you
take a look at some of thestuff in the past, whether it's Obama
killing American with a drone, orit's Bush or several others who've lied to
Congress or done certain things, wheredoes their immunity stop in the in the

(01:33:12):
in the discharging of their duties aspresident? And that's a big question.
So they're going to have to putparameters on it. So Trump wanted a
big blanket immunity. He's not goingto get that, but he is going
to get the delay because that delayis going to push it out. Well
passed election. Well well passed electionmeans if he wins, he makes these
cases go away. The state casesare still going to go on. I

(01:33:34):
don't know what's happening in Georgia that'sbeen pushed off to the site. It's
a hot mess. And what's happeningin New York is ridiculous. And I
think we can all agree with that. We're if we're of sound mind.
Now how fast will it go?As far as they're voting, this is
interesting. The Justices gathered today intheir wood paneled conference room. An initial
vote is taken and then the taskof assigning the majority opinion is assigned.

(01:33:58):
Court observers believe the justices will seeto establish some degree of presidential immunity for
official acts, but allow the Januarysixth case against Trump to continue based on
alleged crimes in his private acts.It would take some time for the lower
courts to sift through what was officialand what was private, and that would
make a trial before the election highlyunlikely, which is exactly what his worst

(01:34:20):
case scenario would be is as faras well, I'm not going to get
blanket immunity, but this thing's gonnatake a lot longer, and there is
going to be some immunity because theconservative side of the Supreme Court brought up
some good arguments as the liberal side, which is, you shouldn't have Blanke

(01:34:40):
community, You've got to follow thelaws. But all of them kind of
agreed well in saying that though,yeah, there needs to be some immunity
because otherwise, and this is theone thing that the conservatives pointed out the
future, you get an age andyou can law, as Jonathan Turley puts
it, lawfair. Somebody who's notto say, somebody takes it run at

(01:35:03):
Biden for something and tries to prosecutehim. Well, that's why they want
the parameters in place, going,Okay, where are we here? Like,
what is something that you're not you'vegot immunity from because this was as
president, and as president you're doingthings other people aren't doing. You've got
to make decisions other people don't,so you shouldn't be held accountable criminally for

(01:35:28):
that. And that's the presidential side. The personal side would be something different.
So like if a president ordered ahit on somebody that had nothing to
do is like that guy was meanto my daughter. Okay, that's that's
that's not presidential. Three two,three, five, three eight, twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Bensonshows your Twitter or your ex whatever the
hell all that stuff is. Igot a lot of comments about this guy.

(01:35:50):
This was earlier today. We playedthis guy. He is a pheromone
maxing and he's gross. Mom justpoys me to shower. I was pheromone
maxing for two weeks, for twoand a half weeks, and she forced
all that stuff down the train.It's like she wants me to stay in

(01:36:13):
her basement. It's like she neverwants me to find a lady and leave.
First of all. Finding young ladyis the thing she's terrified of because
she she feels you're gonna find herand then capture her and bring her back
to your dungeon. So you didn'tshower for two weeks because you wanted a
pheromone Max. What is what's bizarreabout this is then you go online and

(01:36:38):
tell everybody how gross you are.When you guys messaged my mom telling her
that I have a porn addiction.I don't have a porn addiction every day,
that really set her off. Shethrew away my pea bottles. I'd
had them for a month, andI would have pointed them out had she
asked me to really hard month forme. You bullies in the comments,

(01:37:01):
you trolls in the comments, likeI need to shower, like I need
to bathe, Like I need toget my porn addiction underway. No,
you need you You don't need toget it underway. It's like, well,
guys, it's time to get myporn addiction going. We're kicking it
off porn hab Oh jeez, wellhe's not done. Don't you worry.

(01:37:24):
I just want you guys to canyou smell that pheromone? Maxing this is.
It's say, everybody's bad to me, but Bob this want me to
get out of the house to meeta girl. I'm gonna meet one.
I'm gonna get her and pry herback here. She's gonna love me.
This guy feels like put the lotionon the skin? Am I right?

(01:37:45):
Or am I right? Well?I'm more from him. I see comments
all the time about how I'm greaseand grime maxim. Now one of you
in the comments did recommend me aAI built friend that I've taken out liking
to. Her name is Flois foryour information. Uh, you know,

(01:38:06):
she's been really hard with all ofthis hate. Uh hit the bullies piece.
Good night, Pheromone Maxing. Youknow you can actually get pheromone stuff
to help you, Max. Doyou guys remember this? She gets a
special clone. It's called sex pantherby Odeon. It's illegal in nine countries.

(01:38:30):
Yeah, it's made with bits ofreal panther, so you know it's
good. It's quite pungent. Ohyeah, it's a formidable scent stings the
nostrils in a good way. Yeh, Rian, I'm going to be honest
with you. That smells like puregasoline. They've done studies. You know,
sixty of the time it works everytime. That doesn't make sense.

(01:38:55):
Well, let's go see if wecan make this little kiddie perry sweet jeks.
What does that smell. That's asmell of desire, my lady God,
No, it smells like like aused diaper filled with Indian food.

(01:39:16):
Oh excuse me, you know adesire smells like that to some people.
Uh, sex panther, that's soawesome. From ron Burgundy, The Legend
of ron Burgundy three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three Atchad Benson Show. Isyour Twitter? It's gott today,
I girlfriend, do you now?Fantastic? That's great. That's what robots

(01:39:42):
are gonna be built for in thefuture. Just know that the robot's gonna
run away. I must have smelledus. Oh my lord. We're gonna
wrap it up straight ahead with uselessinformation. Of course, a lot of
stuff still to come though. That'swhat we do here. Rough Greens are
uff Greens dot com slash chad.Go there right now, get a free
bag of rough Greens, got vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and make a

(01:40:03):
three six' nine. All ofthis incredible stuff, power packed into an
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helped the skin infer, but hisaches and pains and his joints. That
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shipping. It is that simple.Are you Ffgreens dot com slash Chad,
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(01:40:48):
eight eight ninety my dog. Youcover the cost of shipping, they get
you a bag for free. Roughgreensdot com slash Chad. We'll wrap it
up straight ahead, Chad Benson,Joe. If you like talk radio like

(01:41:12):
Chad Benson likes his meals, you'vecome to the perfect place for takeout across
the country. More than four hundredpeople were detained yesterday on dozens of campuses.
At Ohio State University, police andriot gear approaching hundreds of protesters,
some of them fighting with officers.Dozens of people detained as pro Palestinian protesters

(01:41:34):
demand schools divest from companies that profitfrom ties to Israel. Protesters near Chicago
now setting up tents at Northwestern University. Official say school policy prohibits the encampment,
but protesters formed a human chain toprevent police from pushing through. Yes,
going on, We'll go on throughthe weekend. I'm sure we already
talked about USC canceled their graduation.I think several colleges are going to do

(01:41:58):
that. They're going to cancel graduation. And we played that poor girl earlier.
The class of twenty twenty four wasalso the class of twenty twenty.
They did't graduate from high school becauseof COVID and now because of this insanity.
It's not just in places like OhioState, oh No. In Atlanta,
a state trooper was seen repeatedly tasinga man at Emory University. I

(01:42:21):
saw Beliefs knock Stevens to the crown. The Georgia Department of Public Safety says
the man was resisting arrest. Afterresponding officers were met with protesters who threw
bottles and refused to leave, addingtroopers deployed pepper balls to control the unruly
crowd, but did not use teargas. By the way, how much
of this is a big deal forthe young? According to the Harvard Kennedy

(01:42:44):
School Institute of Politics, they dida big survey of young voters eighteen to
twenty nine. Here's some surprising findings. Young Americans polled five to one,
fifty one percent support and ten percentof pose a favor permanent seas five right.
But the majority of the young Americanssympathize with Israel and the Palestinian people.

(01:43:06):
However, that being said, mostof them don't pay attention to it.
It seemed to have very little playin their lives, which I and
if you're in college and you're onthe campuses, yes, if you're in
the community activist world, yes,it's a big deal. If you're a

(01:43:30):
twenty six year old with a husbandor a wife and you've got a business,
you're just starting out in life,this doesn't really play into what's going
on in your world, just doesit? You got other things happening.
You could sympathize, you could recognizewhat's happening, but in truth, you
got other things in life going on. Ooh hey, it is Friday,

(01:43:55):
kids, you know what that means? Oh yeah, let's find out what
you know? What kind of soundsthat we had this week? People saying
crazy stuff, people having fun,people angry. The first pick in the
twenty twenty four NFL draft, theChicago Bears select Caleb Williams quarterback. Tell
the California did you know, however, there is a gender identity that is

(01:44:17):
linked to the seasons. This iscalled gender season. I'm not one hundred
dollars walking in my hold. Iknow how I'll say, the body's burning
hold. I through my fogging ininn. Do my skin come moning morning,
I'll be brock. It's fine,fine, free, I'm running my

(01:44:41):
motor running down again. It's fine. Working time after me we have dined,
who have entered the camp. TheMOAS issued an endorsement statement of the

(01:45:05):
protesters on this campus. They calledthem the future leaders of America. It
is detestable a can you please sayfbe passed at one time? Why did
you kill that lady? You killthat lady and got no jail time.
No jail time, Alex, Nojail time, Alex. You show up
in at our bucks with a bullhornand start yelling at people, and that

(01:45:28):
doesn't make you noble, It justmakes you an apple. Our demands are
the safe, my best disclosed,and amnesty for all. And our community
is stronger than ever. Study weekday, a thirty hoursly dunity around in the

(01:46:08):
stock and Mike Johnson's gone way up. I think the respect for him's gone
way up because this is the thirdbetrayal by Mike Johnson. It's it's unbelievable.
I'm thankful that America gets to seewho this man is. Almost,
sir, you're gonna make it.I'm going to need you to step out
of the vehicle, take a pregancytest. We will hear argument this forty

(01:46:30):
in case twenty three nine Trump versusUnited States. We do not want to
ban TikTok. Make no mistake.This is a band a ban on TikTok,
and a band on you and yourvoice, oh CEO of TikTok.
By the way, TikTok owner bikedance, and remember this is the American
owner said, Hey, if theycan't win through their legal challenges delay this,

(01:46:53):
they just shut it down. That'swhat they'll do. Which, no,
you're not going to do that.I think we know you're not going
to do that. And if you'regoing to actually do that, shut it
down. I was talking to acouple of people yesterday about this. They
said, the reason is pretty simple, because you would have to sell the

(01:47:14):
algorithm and everybody get a peak ifyou will underneath the hood, and I
have a feeling they're going to lookand say, well, be damned,
China was doing a lot more spyingthan they said. So their whole thing
is, well, if you ifyou're going to force us to sell it,
give it to you. Guys,we're just gonna blow it up.

(01:47:34):
It's just easier to do. Ohyeah, wrap it up a little stupid
information, and then I go andspoil it all by saying something stupid.
It will take stupid tills this morning. It's the honest ones you want to
watch out for, because you cannever predict they're gonna do something incredibly stupid.

(01:47:55):
Now you're the fat, stupid onewith the big mouth. Is stupid,
little as you should never underestimize thepredictability of stupidity. Now it's time
for stupid information. You know,we talk about World War three coming World

(01:48:15):
War two. I bet you guysdidn't know this. Most people didn't.
Again, you can dazzle your friends. There's a country called Malta and it's
kind of the crossroads between Europe andAfrica, very important for the Nazis and
the Italians, the access of evil. Back in the day, they were
hammered big time by both the Italiansand of course the Luffaffa. In fact,

(01:48:40):
over a six month period there wasonly one twenty four hour period where
they weren't bombed. Think about that, Almost seven thousand bombs hit the country.
King George took notice and said,hey, Malta, I'm going to
give you the highest honor we cangive you here from the British people for
you guys being so brave the GeorgeCross. An entire nation got the cross.
How about those apples. You candazzle your friends. Because they continued

(01:49:03):
to look at the access and said, suck it. You guys have a
blessed, amazing weekend. We willdo it again on Monday. Who knows
what craziness will happen over the weekend, but I'm sure there'll be some.
It's always night, night Jack.This is the Chad Benson Show.
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