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August 28, 2024 110 mins
Trump says he's reached agreement to participate in September 10th debate. Harris and Walz to sit with CNN for exclusive first joint interview since campaign began. Trump faces revised 2020 election interference charges. Woke Wednesday. RFK Jr faces call for investigation into claim he chainsawed whale’s head off. Bald eagle too fat to fly. 
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent life. This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
They will debate, I repeat, they will debate, and she
will interview kind of sorta we'll talk about that, but
first the debate. The rules go back go forth. I
want this, I want that, I want this, I want that.
Oh what about this? What about that? He's got to debate,
absolutely must debate. It needs to happen. It does. This

(00:42):
is his chance to put her to the test. I
know she's doing a hard crushing interview pre taped with
her co host Tim Walls, but and we'll get to
that in a second. This is his chance to expose

(01:05):
her in her flip and her flopping and to get
her to say the things that they're by the way,
they're terrified to allow her to get out there without
that runway that she has that is very short and
very scripted, because she knows that she's not good at that,

(01:30):
and the word salad will come up and she'll get
tongue tied and twisted. But at the same time, Trump's
team is worried about Trump because the reality is without
the muted microphones, god only knows what he would say.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
I think Trump actually benefits from having the mics muted
because he's prone to outbursts, and with the mics off,
you're less likely to hear them. It's one way to
keep him somewhat controlled. So I think that's a victory
for Trump that they've muted those mics.

Speaker 4 (02:01):
Probably better for him. I see why Harris wanted the
MIC's on.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
She thought she could, you know, she could probably trigger
Trump to say something pretty outrageous and pick it up
on the mic.

Speaker 4 (02:11):
So that's a victory for the Trump team.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
A victory for the Trump team is the rules stayed
the same. That's a victory for the Trump team. It's
going to be on ABC. It's on the tenth, so
we're approaching it. We're sixty nine days away from the election.
She starts her bus tour today. It's a two day
bus tour with coach him, and she's going to be preparing.
She's got that big interview tomorrow. We'll talk about that

(02:34):
in a second. But he needs this, he does because
there are people out there that can't stand him. We
know that there are people out there that hate him.
We know that people out there who think like.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
This, Hey for real, for real, Just so everybody knows.
I don't give a who's at the top of the
Democratic ticket. If there is a Boloney Sandwich that is
registered as a Democrat and is running for president, and
that is who have an option to vote for against
Donald Trump, then I'm voting for a Maloney Sandwich.

Speaker 6 (03:05):
Do you understand what I'm saying.

Speaker 7 (03:07):
It doesn't matter, we're voting against fascism.

Speaker 2 (03:11):
You're nuts. But there's still about twelve to fifteen percent
of undecided that are sitting on the fence, particularly in
the states that matter, the swing states. So that's why
this is important. You've got to go out there and
expose her for the flips, for the flops, for this,
for that. I don't like racking. I would get rid

(03:33):
of fracking. That's the voice I've given her. That's not
very nice, Chad. That's very sexist. And it's just it's
super it's sexist. And she's never once gone back and
forth about you know, the wall or fracking or health
insurance or any of that stuff. Chad, you're so full
of it.

Speaker 7 (03:53):
There's no question I'm in favor of banning fracking.

Speaker 2 (03:56):
So yeah, no question, no question about that. And let's
not get started with the wall. I mean, good god,
it's just why what.

Speaker 7 (04:05):
He is now holding the American people hostage over a
vanity project that he calls a wall around a vanity
project called a wall. The president's medieval vanity project is
not going to stop them. This issue is about a
vanity project for this president.

Speaker 8 (04:24):
Right, Okay, how would you vote on the wall?

Speaker 7 (04:26):
Let me be very clear. I'm not going to vote
for a wall under any circumstances.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
And of course, yesterday I was reported that she would
be all for the wall, a couple hundred million dollars
plus plus plus to finish the wall, build the wall.
So you know, this is your chance to get her
to explain those things.

Speaker 8 (04:44):
This is her chance and why you went from point
A to point B.

Speaker 2 (04:47):
Why banning was bad but now it's good, Why health
insurance privately was bad, but now you're okay with it. While,
of course the wall and immigration, you were four no
wall because it was un American, You said you would
never vote for it. You wanted to decriminalize illegal immigration,
you wanted to do all of these things. And now

(05:09):
you're trying to be a hawk on this. This is
your chance to put her feet to the fire where
she's not gonna have tim walls next to her, holding
her hand. She's not gonna have, you know, Obama's folks
whispering in her ear, telling her, hey, here's the script,
stick to it. It's not gonna have any of those things.

Speaker 9 (05:30):
And Trump needs this to pay. He had to take
it all right, and he instinctively knows that. And it's
going to get an enormous rating. Why because there's nothing
more than America likes than a train wreck, and they
saw one on June twenty seventh, so they go tune
in and hope to see another train wreck.

Speaker 10 (05:50):
People just love train racks.

Speaker 9 (05:51):
They'll line up Fealta and you know the last one,
this all was one, maybe the biggest ever, and they'll
be watching anticipation comes to Temptah.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
Of course there will, James Carveld there. It's the reason
we watch race car driving because there's that chance that
something may happen, the reason we used to watch evil
and Evil because there was a chance that something may happen.

Speaker 8 (06:18):
And with Trump, you never know.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
And so that's why the microphones being muted is an
absolute win. Wan and he could be out there saying
now I want him on, I want all of these things. No,
if you're I and I'm thinking Corey Lewandowski had a
huge part in your sticking to these rules. You are
not going to have the mic because you get frustrated,

(06:41):
you get pissed, and you will say something stupid. And
while that may excite your base, the reality is for
the people that you need, they're not looking for stupid.
They're looking for some policy. They're not looking for anger

(07:01):
and a laughter. They're looking for somebody to say, Hey, look,
let me tell you how we're gonna get over this
inflation nightmare. Let me tell you how we're gonna become
more energy independent. And it's not even just about bringing
down the cost of fuel and making things more affordable.
It's also about the safety of America. Let me tell
you how we're gonna get out of these wars. Let
me tell you how we're gonna fix the immigration I'm

(07:22):
let me tell you about these things, and then paint
the picture you need this, uh, speaking of the picture
painted tomorrow night, Dana Bash, how exciting is she gets
to ask the questions, She gets to be the person

(07:44):
that gets to interview the vice president hoping to be
president in the first one. Oh nope, not one. I
want Chad wrong what it's They're both gonna be there, Tim.

Speaker 11 (07:59):
What let me say something about Dana Bash the reason
that Dana is maybe the best person to do this interview.
She's covered both of them in the Capitol. And I
can tell you when working in house leadership, when Dana
calls you and you don't have a good answer, you
don't answer the phone because you don't have a good answer,
And Dana's going to get you. If I'm Tim Walls
and if I'm Kamala Harris, I'm really nervous about doing
this one with Dana because she knows where all the

(08:21):
bodies are buried in the House and in the Senate.
And a lot of the people who have been talked
about at other networks who are qualified hosts and all
that they don't have that depth of knowledge that she has.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
No, they don't. Nobody has that depth of knowledge that
Dana Bash has. Why are there two people there out
of curiosity asking for the nation? Just why can't she
do this by herself?

Speaker 8 (08:46):
Is it? Because? To me this says we do not
trust her.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
We do not trust her to go back to the giggle,
which you haven't heard at all.

Speaker 8 (08:59):
We do not trust her to ida know say something
like this.

Speaker 7 (09:03):
You know, every election cycle we talk about this is
the most election of our lifetime.

Speaker 8 (09:07):
This one is yeah, this is the most election of
our lifetime. We do not have.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
Any belief that she will not be unburdened by some
of the stuff that she's done in the past.

Speaker 12 (09:17):
I think it's incredibly weak, weak sauce to show up
with your running mate, the fact that they don't have
enough confidence in her to let her sit herself the
actual top of the ticket and do a single interview.
In fact, I think the hand ringing and the gyrations
over this over the last month show a troubling lack
of confidence in her political ability, which also makes you wonder,

(09:38):
as a voter, well, what kind of president would you
be if this kind of a small time decision?

Speaker 13 (09:42):
Can we do an interview or not?

Speaker 12 (09:43):
What does that look like for your decision making process?

Speaker 2 (09:45):
So on.

Speaker 12 (09:45):
So yes, I think Republicans are going to think it's
pretty weak to show up with effectively someone to take
up half the.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
Time damn skippy, And I have a feeling it's going
to take up even more than that. And I have
a feeling halfway through he's going to think to himself
Why aren't I just.

Speaker 8 (09:57):
Running for president? What do we need you for?

Speaker 9 (10:00):
Oh?

Speaker 8 (10:00):
Because you're chick and a person of color, You said, chick.
I know so sexist, right dudes?

Speaker 2 (10:08):
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Speaker 14 (11:27):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 15 (11:29):
Parenting is always a journey, but a newly released advisory
from the Surgeon General revealing just how stressful it can
be and the impact that is having on mental health.
New data showing forty eight percent of parents say most
days their stress is completely overwhelming, compared to twenty six
percent among other adults without kids.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Okay, Now, those other adults include people who had kids
but are now empty nesters. Life is stressful. That's one
of the things they point out in this new report.
Thingy stress is contagious, said Murthy. Mentioned studies show that
children of parents with poor mental health are more likely
to have depressed and anxiety in their children, as well

(12:14):
as behavioral and academic problems.

Speaker 8 (12:16):
Okay, okay.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
Digital Age Dangers offers new stress parenting is a solo sport,
which it was never meant to be.

Speaker 8 (12:26):
Is stressful. Life is stressful.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
We need to do more. We need to let people
know we're not alone. Okay, I get it. Parents are lonely.
Parenting is tough. I think we understand that I've got
four and essentially they're all mine. I have two step

(12:53):
kids who I adore, I love their mind as far
as I'm concerned, and I've got two of my kids,
And yeah, it can be stressful every day making sure
you know I'm in charge of your world. My wife's
in charge of your world, making sure that you eat

(13:13):
your clothes, you get to school, you survive. But it's
very stressful, it is. We get it.

Speaker 8 (13:23):
Do we really need a report?

Speaker 6 (13:25):
Surgeon General VIVEC.

Speaker 15 (13:26):
Murphy's report citing common parental stressors like financial strain, worries
about children's health and safety, technology and social media and
time demands, saying all of these combined are contributing to
the nationwide epidemic of loneliness and isolation.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
Everything is an epidemic. Everything is an epidemic. You know
what's not an epidemic? Epidemics? This should we have an
epidemic of epidemics. It's ridiculous. We get it. It's a
tough job. Trust me, I get it, as do many
of you listening right now.

Speaker 15 (14:01):
Health officials warning it is vital that parents receive support.
Murphy calling for a culture shift, policies and programs to
better enable parents to thrive.

Speaker 16 (14:11):
Whether it's just simply showing up to let a parent
know that they're not alone, that we've got there back,
those small moments of care and kindness, they make a
huge difference to parents.

Speaker 8 (14:24):
We don't need policy.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Not everything has to be government controlled policy, And when
it comes to something like this, it just are you
kidding me? Yeah, we need policy for parenting. No, we
don't parent It's tough. You know, I watched the TV
show or movie should have been. I'm gonna say this
right now. I like it. It's great. I want to

(14:49):
get this out of the way. Horizon. That is the
That is this Kevin Costner thing. That's a two parter.
It was three hours. I think it could have been
one of those should have been the History Channel thing.
But it's about the West and the whole nine yards.
That kind of parenting was tough. You had eight kids,
cause five weren't gonna survive. Okay, that kind of parenting

(15:13):
was absolutely tough. Our parenting today. It offers some toughness,
it offers some different challenges that they didn't have. But
we overthink and we have somewhere along the line we've

(15:34):
just just fallen apart in our mental health and our
stick to itness and are getting through life's challenges. We've
just decided, Nope, can't do it. It's an obstacle that's
just too big.

Speaker 8 (15:47):
I give up.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
I need help. Every once in a while people need help,
but too many people just freak out over the little thing.
Oh my god. We should have some sort of I
don't know, mandate or government should come in and help us.

Speaker 17 (16:02):
Oh jeez.

Speaker 2 (16:04):
Really, life is hard. It's also what it says inside
of this report that oh yeah, by the way, life
is hard for even people who don't have kids.

Speaker 8 (16:19):
They're almost as stressed.

Speaker 2 (16:24):
Okay, I wouldn't trade my kids for anything, And I
didn't have kids until I was forty, and I wish
I would had kids earlier.

Speaker 8 (16:33):
Wouldn't trade them for anything in the world. And is
it stressful?

Speaker 2 (16:40):
Yes, you know what my life was before that stressful
because I put stress on myself in different ways. Stress
and challenges of life are always there. Sometimes though, when
your life changes even for the better. You will get
new stressors and new strains.

Speaker 8 (16:57):
On your life.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
Three two, three, five eight, twenty five War twenty three
at Chad Benson Show. That's your Twitter, your Instagram, all
of the other things.

Speaker 8 (17:06):
Yes, we're gonna talk about Robert F.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Kennedy Juniors, well fun even I like what every time
with you?

Speaker 8 (17:16):
Something new every day?

Speaker 2 (17:18):
First the Bear, now this, We've got some woke stuff
coming up as well. If you're miss any of the show,
make sure you grab the podcast. It is the Chad Benson.

Speaker 18 (17:28):
Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson with.

Speaker 8 (18:06):
All the excitement of the debates. In the Big interview.
Forgot that Trump got indicted again.

Speaker 19 (18:12):
The four counts are the same in this new indictment,
but the narrative offered by prosecutors is somewhat different. In
an attempt to adhere to the Supreme Court's recent ruling
on presidential immunity, this new indictment removes references to things
Trump allegedly did as president, including enlisting the Justice Department
in a conspiracy to overturn the election. The High Court
ruled in July that Trump would be entitled to absolute

(18:35):
immunity for that.

Speaker 2 (18:38):
What's it mean? It means going to the Supreme Court
and this thing's not going anywhere. Jack Smith wants this.
Why he's doing it at this point in time? I
don't know. Does it look even more partisan, even more
of a gotcha moment for some to look that way.

(18:58):
I just think at this moment in time, you didn't
get what you want, You're gonna go back. You've changed
the wording a little bit, and it looks like law fair.

Speaker 8 (19:10):
So could you have done this on January tenth?

Speaker 2 (19:14):
You could have? Could you have done this on November tenth,
you could have? December tenth you could have. Should you
have done it? Then that's a fair question. So do
I think it's gonna go anywhere again? I don't think
it's getting the court anytime soon. And should Trump win,
it's not going to court ever. Is what I'm trying
to tell you. Hey, it's Wednesday, Say no, what that means?

(19:35):
Let's get woke today? What the woke want the woke get?

Speaker 20 (19:40):
Every time they refer to me, it's always lady girl,
it's non stop.

Speaker 21 (19:48):
Me are contributing to our fat phobic society?

Speaker 22 (19:52):
Someone fat like me, black like me, beautiful like me.

Speaker 7 (19:58):
No offense.

Speaker 10 (20:00):
Oh so that's my intentional weight losses.

Speaker 8 (20:02):
Fat rooms out your mouth.

Speaker 10 (20:04):
Who's fat?

Speaker 2 (20:07):
It's time for woke Wednesday. By the way, the fat
like me. We're joking, you know, because you got Lizzo.
She's possie positive. I don't know if you guys have
seen this. She's lost a bunch of weight, says she's
kind of taken you know, some me time time away
from the body positive because she wants to get healthy.
And I absolutely applaud her for that. You go, girl,

(20:28):
get healthy, do it. Do it for you. And the
fact that one day you got family and kids or
or whoever you want to be around a while, do
it for you. I applaud that. I give you an applaud.
Low's knows that di I wasn't going to work, especially

(20:50):
if Robbie Starbucks found out who you were and what
you were doing at Low's with diversity equity Inclusion PS
and they said, now we're not going to do that.

Speaker 20 (20:58):
Those saying change to its DEI programs have been in
the works insisting we believe in inclusion, not exclusion. Our
hiring is not and has never been based on numbers
or targets. Analysts say some companies are also pulling back
on DEI policies due to legal concerns after the Supreme
Court ruling on affirmative action.

Speaker 2 (21:19):
Yeah, because nothing says fixing racism by more racism. So
they are stepping away. They are not going to be
doing anything when it comes to DEI in the way
it's scored and the fact that they were making you
do all of this crap to have some magical score
on some wacky thing right for their equity and inclusion

(21:42):
to doing so what matters, No, what matters is meritocracy.
What matters is treating everybody the same, regardless of color,
not putting other people on a pedestal, not shaming other
people for something they did not do. That's what matters. Hey,
we're all here, let's get to work. It should be

(22:02):
that simple.

Speaker 23 (22:04):
It looks like we don't even need to do these
videos exposing these companies anymore, at least not every company,
because many of them are willing to just change their
policy as soon as I reach out.

Speaker 8 (22:13):
Now, that is Robbie Starbuck.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
And if you don't think that's true, So he reached
out to Lows and he said, first of all, Low's
made a huge mistake because he's on LinkedIn. He goes
around and looks at these companies and he looks for
their DEI policy if they have one, and how ridiculous
they are and what they're kind of based on, and
then he goes after them.

Speaker 8 (22:39):
He wasn't looking at Lows.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
They came to him actually on his LinkedIn and he
thought and he found out it was their diversity Equity
Inclusion manager and then he said, oh oh, and he
chased him down and said, how much do you think
it matters to these companies? Now, I've told you we
have interviewed a lot of CEOs over the years, and

(23:05):
we interviewed a CEO. God, I want to think us
about eight years ago, seven eight years ago. We first
really the show is just starting to take off. And
he said to us because he had a book out about,
you know, really social media and the pitfalls of social
media in the workplace today and this was well before
it's time. And he said to me, he said, you know, Chad,

(23:26):
I don't worry about and most CEOs, CEOs don't worry
about a recession so much. They don't worry about a
down quarter or two in their business because that happens.
They do worry about the social media aspect, you know,
the pressure, the woke craziness that can land on their

(23:48):
stocks and crush them. And there was a fear there.
And Robbie Starbuck has gotten to the point now where
these companies are are getting ahead of the game.

Speaker 23 (23:59):
If you've been falling following my series taking down woke companies,
you've seen we've taken down Tractor Supply, John Dee or Polaris,
Indian Motorcycle, Harley Davidson, and now our very first preemptive strike,
Jack Daniels must have known we were coming for them.
Next we were looking through LinkedIn pages. They probably saw
my name. But they announced last night to their company
they're getting.

Speaker 24 (24:18):
Rid of woke policies.

Speaker 23 (24:19):
Let me tell you all, it was a very wise
decision of them to cut the woke policies before going
through two or three or four weeks of me exposing
stuff like this every single day.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Yeah, there's a bunch of drag queens and stuff, and
I support. Look, I got no problem. If you want
to support Pride and the LGBT community, you should. I
guess they were problem with doing it. Because you feel
like you're being forced to. That's not good forcing other
people to go through some sort of weird freaking training

(24:50):
like it's you know, South's North Korea. I don't want
any part of that. I don't think anybody in realit
wants any part of that. It's finding the balance of
common sense and not insanity, which is hard for these
companies to do because they want to be liked and

(25:13):
it's yeah, how about this, sell your product, make it good.
I don't need to know who you're voting for. Sell
your product, make it good. I don't need to know
how many people are trends in your company, how many
people are people of color in your company, how many people?

Speaker 8 (25:34):
I just I'm here to buy your product.

Speaker 2 (25:36):
That's it should be that simple, and in many cases
it's not.

Speaker 8 (25:40):
We move on. Who's up for some chest feeding the sis?

Speaker 25 (25:44):
People have been getting what they want for forever. If
you want to call chest feeding breastfeeding, I don't give
two ships on my platform where I want to make
people from the alphabet mafia more comfortable. Because I am
a part of the LGBTQ plus community, I'm going to continue.

Speaker 6 (26:01):
To say chest feeding.

Speaker 25 (26:02):
We live in a society where the word breast has
been over sexualized by the men, by the CIS men.
So for a lot of us, chest feeding just feels
less sexualized.

Speaker 8 (26:14):
It feels creepy actually. And so there's that.

Speaker 2 (26:19):
Chest feeding. Oh like when they when they change the
the the whole it's a front now instead of a
vagina JJ or a. It's just it's the front.

Speaker 25 (26:32):
But again, there are those who are non binary and
those who go by other pronouns who feel more comfortable
with the word chest feeding. I don't give two shits,
not one fucking nun about CIS women being offended by
chest feeding.

Speaker 7 (26:48):
I'm not doing it.

Speaker 6 (26:50):
I'm not doing it.

Speaker 21 (26:50):
I don't care.

Speaker 8 (26:51):
She's not doing it.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
She's not doing it. Shit, don't care, she's fun chest feeding.
That's the insanity, you know when we talk woke here,
it's the insanity like that that then comes into your
business and then you're forced to do crazy things where

(27:13):
now you are spending more time having your people train
on ridiculous things that don't matter. So we can be
even more divided that we have somehow decided meritocracies.

Speaker 8 (27:27):
Not it's important.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
What's important is how many letters you have in your
alphabet money, What color are you? What religion are you?
I mean, it's just and it's a business. I remind
everybody this over and over again. The DEI world, the
racism world, the LGBTQ activism world, all of those things
are businesses. They're not interested in us having equality in reality,

(27:52):
they're interested in the division because in that division is
their money. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
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Speaker 2 (28:26):
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cooking it and then you mix this. No, it's just
sprinkled us on top of your dog's food and watch
what happens with all of these amazing vitamins and minerals
and everything's and fruits and all this incredible stuff. It's
gonna help your dog at the nutrients they're missing right now.
Because your dog food is dead food shelf stable rough

(28:47):
Greens is healthy. It's gonna help with their aches and
their pains and their joints. Canna help with their digestive
track their teeth, their gum, their skin, their fur, and
their energy levels. Try a Jumpstart trial bag for free today.
All they ask you to do is cover the cost
of shipping. Call eight eight eight ninety my Dog. That's
eight eight eight ninety my Dog. Or go to Roughgreens
dot com slash chat It's the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
Hashtag me too, hashtag immigration reform, hashtag help. I'm trapped
in a hashtag factory and I can't get out the
Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 26 (29:27):
A fan in front of me hit a bear and
killed it, a young bear. So I pulled over, and
I picked up the bear and put him in the
back of my van because.

Speaker 17 (29:37):
I was going to skin the bear and put the
meat my refrigerator.

Speaker 26 (29:40):
And you can do that, Or to say you can
get a bear at tag for a.

Speaker 17 (29:44):
Road killed bear.

Speaker 26 (29:45):
I said, let us come point the bear in a
central park and we'll make it look like you got
anty it.

Speaker 17 (29:50):
Everybody thought that's a great idea.

Speaker 26 (29:52):
So we one and did that, and we thought it
would be a music for whoever found it or something.
The next day it was on every television sting. It
was a front in every paper.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
That right there is RFK Junior telling the story of
the bear that he found. So if you don't remember
that saw somebody hit a bear, it was a young bear.
He thought, oh cool, I'll you know, I'll get it.
I'll skin it. It's perfect. And then he puts into
the back of his car, goes out to dinner with
his friends.

Speaker 8 (30:21):
They're having a good time.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
He's got to get to the airport and he's like,
oh my god, I got this dead bear in the
back of my van or whatever way you have advances
a little creepy or whatever. And then he's like, I
got a great idea, I'll put it in central Park.
And then it becomes this big story and nobody ever
knew what it was. And then he confessed on Roseann's
podcast that's what it was. And you're thinking, my god,
those stories he tells are incredibly bizarre. And then it
got topped yesterday by a news story that's coming out

(30:46):
about RFK Junior and thwhale.

Speaker 27 (30:50):
A million whale watchers come to New England each year.
But it was a dead whale that brought Robert F.
Kennedy Junior running in the nineteen nineties to chainsaw off
its head and strap that massive cranium to his van.
According to his daughter Kick, just six, when it happened,
every time we accelerated on the highway, whale juice would

(31:12):
pour into the windows of the car and it was
the rankest thing on the planet.

Speaker 2 (31:17):
The rankest thing on the planet. Chainsaw the head off
is what she's saying. And she being Kick. She's the
second oldest daughter of Robert Kennedy, named after her aunt,
who was also her nickname was Kick. Interesting. She was

(31:40):
an actress. She studied acting. Lately, she's been hanging out
with recently divorced Ben Affleck.

Speaker 8 (31:50):
She's been in some television shows. She's an activist now.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
So this is coming from her that Pops in her
went well watching in a different way by Pops going
all Jason for keys like Friday the thirteenth and lopping
off the head of a whale.

Speaker 27 (32:05):
RFK Junior's menagerie of animal companion should be called eccentric.

Speaker 28 (32:10):
Tragic discovery in New York Central Park, beer cub found dead.

Speaker 27 (32:14):
But other tales about his antics with animals have also
popped up.

Speaker 17 (32:18):
Said, let's complain the Central.

Speaker 27 (32:20):
Park from the ravens in his backyard.

Speaker 26 (32:24):
Join me for meditations every morning on my balcony.

Speaker 27 (32:28):
To the sea lion he once had in his pool.
To the regular lion he took on walks until he
says it slaughtered a deer. To the pet emu with
his wife, actress Cheryl Hines.

Speaker 2 (32:39):
The emu thing, that's okay. Emos are cool. The lion,
that's a little bit much. And trust me, I am
like exotic animals. As you guys all know.

Speaker 8 (32:48):
The ravens is a very if you know nothing about ravens.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
Ravens are awesome, smart probably smartest birds ravens crows. So
that's kind of a cool thing. I'm not quite sure.
Still about the bear cub and the seal in the
backyard and the head of the whale that you sawed off.

Speaker 27 (33:08):
Still those stories pale alongside matters like the persistent claim
RFK junior ate, a roasted dog overseas, something like that,
and the parasitic worm, he says, doctors found in his brain.

Speaker 26 (33:23):
No, I've lived a very I would say, vivid life.

Speaker 8 (33:28):
Yeah, say the least very vivid life.

Speaker 2 (33:32):
Now, ecological groups are coming out as well as the
government saying, hey, anything that you have like that you
shouldn't have.

Speaker 8 (33:42):
You need to turn that over now because this has
become something.

Speaker 2 (33:45):
I wonder how his kids get along because Cheryl Hines
got blasted by several Hollywood people because he sided with Trump,
if you will, And I wonder how his kids and
stuff get along with him because they look over and
they think Trump's a scumbag. That's I'm going through what
they're thinking and all of these things. And I just wondered, like,
you know, how does that work? Is he still just dad?

(34:09):
Dad's eccentric, right? I mean, we had a lion growing up,
for God's sakes, we.

Speaker 8 (34:14):
Had a sea lion in our freaking pool.

Speaker 2 (34:20):
Oh my god. Three two, three, five, three eight twenty
four twenty three at Chad Benson's show, It's your Twitter
tweet at his text the program. I love hearing from
all of you. Speaking of animals. It's a fantastic story
right here. Look, kids, up in the sky, it's a bird.
It's a plane. Nope, nope, it's not a bird. It's
definitely not a plane. Well, I mean, you know, in

(34:42):
the sky at least it's not a bird because you
see the birds on the ground.

Speaker 29 (34:44):
Wildlife conservation experts came to the rescue of a bald
eagle they thought was injured, but they later realized the
bird was healthy.

Speaker 8 (34:51):
Just too fat to fly. Poor guy, too good of
a predator.

Speaker 29 (34:55):
The eagle was found at Wilson's Creek National Battlefield in Missouri.
An X ray show parts of what appeared to be
a raccoon's paw inside the eagle, an indication that it
might have feasted on raccoon roadkill, which is one of
their favorite delicacies. After some rehab, the eagle was released
near where it was found and is expected to be fine.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
Yeah, he's got an eating problem. That is such a
perfect thing that is America right there. Do you guys
know that our bird is obese and can't fly.

Speaker 8 (35:31):
I went to.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
Alaska on a cruise and we're out doing the little
sight seeing thing, and I was getting ready to go fishing.
I went fishing up there, and I'm talking to the guy.
I'm like, God, look at all these eagles, man, they're everywhere.
He goes, yeah, go walk over there. I go, well,
the fly away. He goes, No, they won't. They goes

(35:52):
they've been feeding on all of the salmon, so they've
gorged themselves and they can't take off, so they just
kind of bounce around and just kind of slowly trod away.

Speaker 8 (36:06):
I thought, that's awesome. Oh my goodness.

Speaker 2 (36:09):
Watch out, though, because if a Kennedy's around, you may
lose your head. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three At Chad Benson Show. It's your Twitter, your Instagram,
all of the other things. If you're missing the show,
I'd love it if you go grab the podcast. It
is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life,

(36:54):
this is Chad Benson.

Speaker 5 (36:55):
Hey, for real, for real, Just so everybody knows, I
don't give a show who's at the top of the
Democratic ticket. If there is a baloney Sandwich that is
registered as a Democrat and is running for president, and
that is who I have an option to vote for
against Donald Trump. Then I'm voting for a Boloney sandwich.
Do you understand what I'm saying? It doesn't matter. We're

(37:16):
voting against fascism.

Speaker 8 (37:17):
Fascism because he's a fascist.

Speaker 2 (37:22):
No, No, he's not. Nobody is Nobody's not. Yeah, look
at all the things he wants to do. You guys,
do realize he was president before?

Speaker 4 (37:30):
Right?

Speaker 2 (37:32):
Like I always try to remind everybody that some people
are like, he was Are you sure?

Speaker 8 (37:37):
Yeah? He was president before?

Speaker 2 (37:40):
So you know what do you think he was just
going to take a run at it sea howt went
and then in the second.

Speaker 8 (37:50):
Four years that he had.

Speaker 2 (37:51):
He was going to be like, all right, now I'm
really going to be a fascist.

Speaker 8 (37:55):
It's like, is that what you think? It's amazing?

Speaker 2 (38:00):
Uh, a Bolooney sandwich.

Speaker 8 (38:03):
I'm gonna vote for a Boloney sandwich.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
That shows me everything I need to know about you
when it comes to politics. You may be a wonderful
human being. You may be I don't know, but I'm
just putting it out there that if you truly are

(38:25):
voting for anything that isn't Donald Trump because you feel
like that's the thing I have to do. Man, that sucks.
I mean, let's be real. How many people vote for
the people we want Now, I would say Trump supporters

(38:46):
voted for Trump, they love Trump, some held their breath.

Speaker 8 (38:55):
And voted for but a vast majority of field they
loved Trump.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
People who voted for Biden voted against Trump. And now
that's looking like in some ways you're getting that although
you know she's transformational, I'm like she's something. Can't wait
to hear the interview with Tim Walls. Still fascinated by

(39:21):
the fact that you have to have your training it
wills with you. Uh. More and more needs to be
talked about this, but it isn't being talked about the
way it should be. And the fact that the media
silent is fascinating. The other night, Mark Zuckerberg told everybody, oh, yeah,

(39:43):
we were totally centering stuff. We were we were like
totally involved. The White House was calling us FBI, CIA,
we were doing all kinds of stuff because we felt
we had to put some pressure on us. We capitulated.
It is and the fact that the media is not

(40:04):
saying anything is fascinating. I mean, you get it with
the right leaning media because they were the ones told
it was a conspiracy theory. Remember that how bad it
was shadow banning.

Speaker 8 (40:15):
None of it's real. You guys are lying.

Speaker 2 (40:17):
This is Michael Schellenberger, smart dude, and he ran for
governor against Gavin Newsom just to exposed Gavin Newsom for
the freaking scumbag he is.

Speaker 30 (40:28):
Well, I mean, look, I think you know, obviously it
would have been better for Zuckerberg to have sent this
letter before the Supreme Court ruled on this issue. I
think the Supreme Court decision might have gone the other
way because that case, unfortunately the Supreme Court filed was
you know, before the Twitter files, before the Facebook files,
So you know, it's a little bittersweeten that way, but

(40:49):
obviously we should take the w here. You know, he's
acknowledged what many people had dismissed as a conspiracy theory.
We now know that the FBI was directly involved in
spreading misinformation about the laptop before it was released. We know,
of course that the CIA, including the Director of the CIA,
was involved in spreading that misinformation, suggesting that it might

(41:10):
have been Russian disinformation related to laptop.

Speaker 24 (41:13):
We know that wasn't true. So it's nice to see
that those.

Speaker 30 (41:15):
Things that people had said were conspiracy theories were in
fact being confirmed is true.

Speaker 2 (41:20):
They were.

Speaker 8 (41:22):
I mean, how many times.

Speaker 2 (41:25):
Many of you listening were just spend it for a
week or suspend it for a month, or you had
stuff taken down, or I mean, how many times did
that happen to you? I'm sure numerous it happened to us.
We posted a picture one time on Facebook of like
a climate summit, and there was one where it was

(41:47):
Greta Tunberg and a whole bunch of other climate people
and they said it was a It was actually the
headline for the New York Times, and it was a
picture from the New York Times. They took it down
and said it misleading and that it was we made
it up. And I thought to myself, what are you
talking about? Like, this isn't us. The headline's absurd. We

(42:12):
didn't write the headline. We wanted to show the absurdity.
They wanted to suppress speech and the fact that it
doesn't bother people because the hatred for the most part
of Donald Trump. It gave people the belief inside that

(42:40):
we're only going to let them suppress the speech and
this kind of stuff once because his people are bad
and he is bad, and anything he stands for, even
if it's true, has to be bad, so we have
to allow them to do this or else.

Speaker 24 (42:58):
I think the thing that people need to know is
that there was so much censorship by so many people.
It was the White House, it was the Department of
Homeland Security, it was the FBI, and you know, they
created sort of third party groups, particularly one really connected
out of Stanford. Happily that was actually shut down, the
Stanford Internet Observatory. So on the one hand, it feels

(43:20):
like it's winding down, you know. On the other hand,
I think that there's still these guys.

Speaker 30 (43:24):
Are all under a lot of pressure, meaning Zuckerberg, from
groups that want to see more censorship. I mean, you're
still being censored. I'm being censored on a bunch of things.
There's not really any transparency on it. There's no real
proper set of appeals. But I think it's going to
be a little bit harder now for the government to
get involved in censorship.

Speaker 24 (43:42):
I think they've been exposed, you know.

Speaker 30 (43:44):
So even though we didn't win with the Supreme Court,
I think that the conversation, at least the public conversation
has changed pretty significantly.

Speaker 2 (43:52):
Michael Schellenberg right there. Why more people aren't talking about
this fascinates me because we all should be talking about
the fact that the government was involved in censorship and
pressuring companies to stop people from sharing conversating bringing up ideas.

Speaker 8 (44:08):
Some of it's disinformation and misinformation.

Speaker 2 (44:10):
Some of it is I'm not gonna lie to you
on that, but as I pointed out yesterday, you need
to do your due diligence. And so many people are
looking for affirmation, not information. So if somebody is out
there putting stuff out there that's disinformation, you need to
do your due diligence. If it's misinformation, and let's separate

(44:33):
the two as we need to. Sometimes misinformation and disinformation.
Sometimes you share something that you think is real, it
looks real. You're not doing it with malice, you're not
doing it to fool people. You and your heart genuinely
believe it's real, so you share it. On the other

(44:54):
side of it, you've got people out there that are
putting stuff out there that is app absolutely disinformation. They're
doing it on purpose to stirb the hornet's nests, to
piss people off. There are foreign government I mean, we
go on and on and on about so much of this,
but we need to be absolutely diligent in protecting our rights.

(45:26):
And it should piss you off. And the fact that
more people aren't pissed off is fascinating. That you've got
arguably the biggest town square on the planet.

Speaker 8 (45:41):
At the time, Facebook.

Speaker 2 (45:44):
And people were being censored over the dumbest things out there,
even satire and humor, and even when stuff was true,
they wanted them to make sure that they shut down
the conversation, even if it was not only true, it

(46:04):
was true based on things like the FDA.

Speaker 24 (46:07):
I mean, I'll give you one example.

Speaker 30 (46:09):
Chris Facebook at one point told the White House that
censoring often true stories of vaccine side effects would actually
increase vaccine hesitancy. And the White House said, do it anyway.
And the White House, I, you know, ironically or not ironically,
was under pressure from the media to censor more. Of course,
there was a conflict of interest because Sfiser was funding

(46:31):
a huge amount of advertising. But when you look at it,
it's you know, what was so disturbing about it is
it was just a kind of blindly irrational desire to
shut people up.

Speaker 2 (46:44):
Wow, even telling people, hey, taking this vaccine, you may
have side effects. And the White House is saying, well,
that'll I mean, yeah.

Speaker 8 (47:00):
That's all true.

Speaker 2 (47:00):
But if you post that, then some people won't want
to get this because they're worried about side effects. Oh
my god, Why are people not more pissed about this?
Why are people not talking out more about this? Why
are people not letting their voice be heard? It fascinates me?
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson's show, is your Twitter tweet at a
text to program?

Speaker 8 (47:21):
It's Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (47:22):
We got some woke stuff coming up, because we do
wokey things here. I'll tell you that right now. Kids
got some crazy woke stuff today as well. Little End
to the DEI already at Low's. That didn't last very long. God,
we got to put it into that stuff. I'm always fascinated, Like,
if you want, you know, diversity, equity inclusion should be

(47:44):
simply about, hey, guys, we're all equal here, get on
with your work. I'm gonna treat everybody the same, and
that's it. Like, isn't that what everybody wants?

Speaker 21 (47:57):
No?

Speaker 2 (47:58):
And the reason is simply this diversity equity inclusion is
about money. Racism at this point in time is a
business and people are capitalizing on it. We're gonna talk
about that a lot of other things to get to
some nature going crazy. Litt'll mess you up, and sometimes
nature gets messed up as well. Talk a bit about

(48:20):
that as well. Roughgreens areuff greens dot com, slash chat vitamins, minerals,
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(48:41):
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(49:02):
a free jumpstart trial bag of rough Greens, or you
can go to Rough Greens areu f f Greens dot
com slash Chad. When you do that, they're going to
send you that Jumpstart trial bag. All they ask you
to do. It's free's cover the cost of shipping, it's
a few bucks. Try it now, put it to the test.
Watch what Happens with your dogs? Roughgreens dot com slash chat.
Ruff Greens dot com slash Chad. It is the Chad Benson.

Speaker 14 (49:34):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 8 (49:37):
This is about winning?

Speaker 31 (49:39):
What what?

Speaker 32 (49:40):
Most people don't give the Democrats enough credit for, all right,
but we give the Republicans credit for It's like, no,
sometimes it's just about winning.

Speaker 8 (49:49):
And it doesn't matter how we look at this moment.

Speaker 24 (49:51):
It's about right.

Speaker 8 (49:53):
This is about winning.

Speaker 18 (49:55):
Yep, no, it is.

Speaker 32 (49:58):
It's a mad dash and she is running and she's
not stopping to stumble, and you know what, and there's
nothing among the stopping this. I'm gonna vote for her
phone anyway, no matter what she says in a stupid
fire boat.

Speaker 2 (50:11):
Don't fop ah that right there is Quentin Tarantino. It's
about winning. Don't do an interview. Well, she is kind
of sorda. Be guys, haven't heard VP Harris is doing
her first sit down interview with Dana Bash.

Speaker 11 (50:26):
Let me say something about Dana Bash. The reason that
Dana is maybe the best person to do this interview.
She's covered both of them in the Capitol. And I
can tell you when working in house leadership, when Dada
calls you and you don't have a good answer, you
don't answer the phone because you don't have a good answer.
And Dana's going to get you. If I'm Tim Walls
and if I'm Kamala Harris, I'm really nervous about doing
this one with Dana because she knows where all the

(50:47):
bodies are buried in the House and in the Senate.
And a lot of the people who have been talked
about at other networks who are qualified hosts and all
that they don't have that depth of knowledge that she has.

Speaker 2 (50:56):
Oh they don't, Doug High right there, share o the
depth of knowledge. These other people don't know anything about anything.
Dani's got it all. She's going to come hard. Now
you're thinking to yourself, Chad, we at least she's doing
an interview, well kind of sort of she's doing interview
because she brought a training wheels with a.

Speaker 12 (51:12):
I think it's incredibly weak, weak sauce to show up
with your running mate, the fact that they don't have
enough confidence in her to let her sit herself the
actual top of the ticket and do a single interview.
In fact, I think the hand ringing and the gyrations
over this over the last month show a troubling lack
of confidence in her political ability, which also makes you
wonder as a voter, well, what kind of president would

(51:34):
you be if this kind of a small time decision?

Speaker 13 (51:37):
Can we do an interview or not?

Speaker 12 (51:38):
What doesn't that look like for your decision making process?

Speaker 4 (51:40):
So on?

Speaker 12 (51:40):
So yes, I think Republicans are going to think it's
pretty weak to show up with effectively someone to take
up half the time.

Speaker 8 (51:45):
Well, it's is what it is at this point in time.
With the Democrats, they don't care.

Speaker 2 (51:51):
You heard that lady at the beginning, I would vote
for a baloney sandwich as long as it beats Trump. Now,
if you're thinking, well, Dani's got the first interview, she
doesn't see a TikToker actually had the first interview already.
Here's some of that hard hitting interview that took place
about a week ago.

Speaker 17 (52:08):
I need to see you, to.

Speaker 33 (52:10):
See you, hi, guys, I am here with Vice President
Kamala Harris at the Democratic National Convention. I am so
honored to be here. Thank you so much for speaking
with me. And a little fun fact. My last name
is Gopaulin. I know, which is your mom's last Yes,
it is. And you know I grew up going to
India in the summers and I know you did that

(52:31):
as well, when you were you in the fall, Yeah,
when it's not so hot. And I wanted to kind
of hear from you what your fondest like memories were
from them.

Speaker 7 (52:40):
Well, some of my fondest memories are with my grandfather.

Speaker 2 (52:43):
You know.

Speaker 33 (52:43):
It's funny because Kamala Kamala in Indian is lotus, yes,
and Kamala in America's potus.

Speaker 7 (52:52):
So lotus for.

Speaker 8 (52:53):
Potus, lotus for potus.

Speaker 2 (52:56):
Man, that is hard hitting.

Speaker 8 (53:00):
Oh my goodness, me lotus fropotus.

Speaker 17 (53:04):
I love you.

Speaker 2 (53:04):
You're awesome, You're great. Let's do an interview. Why are
you the best? We need more Mamla? Oh my lord,
oh goodness. The debate could or couldn't be on. I mean,
he's agreed to it. I've agreed to it. It's gonna
be awesome.

Speaker 8 (53:21):
Here's the thing. What he's agreed to is the thing
that matters most.

Speaker 2 (53:26):
No mike's on when you're not talking, meaning if you
weren't asked the question, your mic isn't a which is spectacular.
That saves Trump. You gotta save Trump sometimes from himself.
And if I'm the Democrats, I'm still fighting for the
mics to be on because you know, at some point

(53:47):
in time you're going to figure some way out to
piss him off. He's going to react and you've got
your gotcha moment. That's the discipline issue I have with Trump.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chet Benson Show to Twitter or Instagram.

Speaker 8 (54:02):
If you miss any of the show, shame on you.
Grab the podcast Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 18 (54:19):
Such Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (54:40):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life, This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 8 (54:45):
A new survey shows sausage sales are up.

Speaker 28 (54:47):
Experts say that typically happens when shoppers are looking to
stretch their budget, opting for sausage over more expensive steak
and chicken. Inflation is down, but overall food prices are
up more than twenty percent since before the pandemic.

Speaker 8 (55:00):
Up been away but don't worry. Kamala is gonna solve it.

Speaker 2 (55:05):
It's got all I mean, she agrees this is all
too expense and Donald Trump is to blame for all
of this, and she's gonna fix it all. You know,
he's been in the White House for not the last
three and a half years is how long he's not
been in the White House?

Speaker 8 (55:23):
You and Biden?

Speaker 2 (55:26):
And a side note here, he's on vacation again. Who
the f is running our country? Out of curiosity? I'm
asking for all of the world, who is running our country?
Back to Kamala.

Speaker 8 (55:44):
So she's gonna fix all the problems that have happened
because of Donald Trump. It's gonna take place. She's gonna fix.

Speaker 2 (55:51):
Them all, and she's gonna let everybody know because she's
got a big, giant, huge interview she's gonna do with
Dana Bash on CNN and Tim Walls. He's going to
be there as well, because that is needed. Okay, he
needs to be there because he's part of this too.
And because if I start to go all over the place,

(56:13):
he's gonna hit me. We got to sign. He's gonna
nudge me. Stop it, stop it, don't say anything stupid
shuch Shiska Bob. They can't protect her though in the debate,
which will be coming. I think they've kind of agreed
to everything. But you know, here's the thing. Do I

(56:35):
believe it's coming? I think at some point? Do I
think it's coming on the tenth? I would like to
think it's coming on the tenth. But do I take
everything at this moment and time with a bit of
a nah, we'll see kind of attitude? I do, partially
because in today's world, you just never know.

Speaker 12 (56:55):
Look, I think having a debate is good for Trump
because if he doesn't pin Kamala Harris down on her
record and what she's done as vice president and her
previous statements when she ran for president.

Speaker 13 (57:05):
Before, I don't think anyone else is going to do
it for him. So he needs this debate.

Speaker 12 (57:08):
So from a Republican's perspective, it's good that it's happening.
The CNN rules worked for him before. It seemed to
be fine, and so if this is the agreement and
this is how they got it done, then good for
Team Trump. I've never been all that interested in the
manutia of the rules. I just wanted to make sure
they had a debate because I think the American people
deserve to see one.

Speaker 13 (57:26):
And so if we're going to have that on the tent,
that's a good thing.

Speaker 2 (57:29):
Let's get it.

Speaker 8 (57:29):
Did Trump needs it. James Carvell's right.

Speaker 9 (57:33):
And Trump needs this debate. He had to take it
all right, and he instinctively knows that. And it's going
to get an enormous rating. Why because there's nothing more
than America likes than a train wreck, and they saw
one on June twenty seventh, so they go to tune
in and hope to see another train wreck. People just

(57:53):
love train rack So wine up, Valpa and you know
the last one, this all was one, maybe the biggest ever.
And they'll be watching anticipation come September tenth antcipation.

Speaker 2 (58:06):
He's right about a train wreck. So the reason we
watch stuff that's theared devili whether it is race cars,
whether it is it's just anything like I mean, we
used to watch Evil canievl We tune in Saturday Wide
World of Sports. Evil Canievels decided, Hey, I built a
rocket ship with my drunk friend inside of a garage,

(58:28):
and now I'm gonna shoot myself in a leather suit
across this ravine, this should totally work, and we're like,
let's tune in and see what happens. Let's do it
because there's that potential for it to go sideways. That's

(58:50):
that's huge. Like we watched Saturday Night Live, or used
to because it was funny, but also when they did
it live, you never knew what was going to happen.
Somebody's gonna miss the cue, somebody's gonna say something stupid,
somebody was gonna get the giggles. There was something like
that that was going on. You there's that anticipation, and

(59:10):
there's definitely that with this. The one thing though that
Trump got, even though Trump may not have wanted it,
his team got it, was the microphones will be muted
when he is not being spoken too.

Speaker 3 (59:23):
I think Trump actually benefits from having the mics muted
because he's prone to outbursts, and with the mics off, you're.

Speaker 4 (59:31):
Less likely to hear them.

Speaker 3 (59:33):
It's one way to keep him somewhat controlled. So I
think that's a victory for Trump that they've muted those mics.
Probably better for him. I see why Harris wanted the
MIC's on. She thought she could, you know, she could
probably trigger Trump to say something pretty outrageous and pick
it up on the mic.

Speaker 4 (59:48):
So that's a victory for the Trump team.

Speaker 8 (59:50):
Yeah, it absolutely is a victory for the Trump team.

Speaker 2 (59:52):
Even though he may not feel like it's a victory
for the Trump team, it is a victory for the
Trump team because poking him, calling him, felon, calling him,
you know, all of the things that the name calling
was gonna go say, you know, happened from her, which

(01:00:13):
is a smart thing to do, because the whole thing
is let's get under his skin.

Speaker 8 (01:00:16):
Let's do that. That's exactly what I would do. That's
what I would advise her to do that right there is.

Speaker 2 (01:00:24):
Why he needs to have the mics muted, because at
some point in time, they were counting on him saying
something ridiculous, saying something stupid, saying something over the top.
I mean, it is just speaking over her, and then
she getting snied with him, and he getting snide, and

(01:00:44):
then him saying something absolutely ridiculous regardless of what he says,
she says to him, but they're counting on him saying
something that would keep people going, Oh, and that's what
they wanted, and they're not gonna have a chance to
get it.

Speaker 8 (01:00:58):
At least not this time.

Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
We shall see what happens. Indeed, meanwhile, it is Wednesday,
so let's just do a little bit of woke and
you know what, let's do the work people.

Speaker 8 (01:01:10):
Let's decolonize the classroom.

Speaker 10 (01:01:12):
What's up doctor Peardy here?

Speaker 22 (01:01:14):
And I'm going to talk to you a bit about
how to decolonize a classroom and how I declonize my teaching.
First things first, we do not grade over here. Okay,
anyone who takes my class automatically gets an A. They're
told in the first week that they're going to get
an A. The only thing that's required is attendance. And
I have weeks of excused absences built in so that

(01:01:35):
if people are sick or they have family obligations, it
won't affect their grade.

Speaker 2 (01:01:41):
Man, the hell is wrong with us, Hey, but it's good.
We're decolonizing the classroom. So everybody gets an A and
all I have to do is show up and watch YouTube,
pay no attention to you.

Speaker 4 (01:01:55):
I like that.

Speaker 22 (01:01:56):
So since I'm not grading them, I'm just giving them a's, Like,
how do I know that the doing anything? And how
do I know that they're learning anything? And so I
also don't give homework. How surprise, surprise, And I run
a discussion style classroom, so my students and I have
equal part when it comes to bringing information to the table.

(01:02:16):
We all sit together and share what we're talking about,
and they get to use their critical thinking skills to
apply the things they've learned in all their other classes.

Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
Oh my god, sign me up for that. The hell
is wrong with us? Look at our grades, look at
how our kids are testing? Well, Chad, we teach for
the test.

Speaker 8 (01:02:36):
I get that. But teaching for the test.

Speaker 2 (01:02:39):
If and I said this to a teacher the other day,
you know it sucks because we teach for the test.
I get it.

Speaker 8 (01:02:44):
It's not great, but you suck at teaching for the test.

Speaker 2 (01:02:53):
So if if you tell me, well, you know it's
not really good because we're teaching for a test, that's
not really educating whatever you want you want to come
up with, okay, fine, But if teaching for the test
is we're doing this, the test numbers should at least say, hey,
they maybe learning the way that we want them to.
But those test numbers are pretty damn good, and that's
what you want us to get. You're not even getting

(01:03:15):
that except in this lady's class, who by saying decolonizing
apparently says, hey, come on in, you're getting an a
oh my god education in this country kids, the hell
is wrong with it, and it doesn't matter where it is. Yes,

(01:03:36):
you can look at some places are doing better than others,
but across the board that ridiculous chaos of covid as
set kids back in such a way, then you throw
in the lunacy that is going on in some schools,

(01:03:59):
not all schools. The way that kids nowadays just don't
seem to give a rat's ass and have zero manners
or want to pay any attention with very little worry
of any repercussions. It's a recipe for stupid. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson shows
your Twitter what's in that recipe? Stupid? That's what's in

(01:04:20):
the recipe. Just lots of stupid and sausage and hot
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Speaker 17 (01:05:02):
What do they have?

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chad coming up. We're gonna talk to our buddy, Zach Abraham,
chief investment office from Bullwork Capital, find out about Hey,

(01:05:48):
I don't know the market it is election time. It's
a great article about what happens during election years, after
labor Day all the way up to the election time,
how volatile it can be. We're gonna ask Zac if
that's true. If you miss any of the show, make
sure you grab the podcast. It is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 6 (01:06:18):
Welcome to Chat. No, not the country, the institution, The
Chat Benson Show is that time of.

Speaker 2 (01:06:25):
The week now talking a little bit econd of me
with our buddy Zachy ramchievestment officer.

Speaker 21 (01:06:29):
Boll We're Capital, friend of the show, sponsored the show.

Speaker 10 (01:06:32):
All right.

Speaker 21 (01:06:33):
I read an article last week in Bloomberg.

Speaker 34 (01:06:34):
I read one this week in MarketWatch that between now
through the labor you know, heading to the labor day,
all that stuff, till it is time to go to
the polls, that these may be the most topsy turvy
volatile market times that we'll see this year and over.

Speaker 21 (01:06:52):
The last couple of years.

Speaker 31 (01:06:53):
Is that reels it is Actually it tends to be
more generally upward biased, especially in an election year. And
that it's kind of one of those phenomena that always
catches people off guard. Why is the mark going up?
There's uncertainty.

Speaker 10 (01:07:09):
But here's the deal.

Speaker 31 (01:07:09):
It also coincides with some of the worst seasonality of
the year, which is, you know, September and October.

Speaker 10 (01:07:15):
Why is it like that.

Speaker 31 (01:07:16):
There's a lot of different reasons, you know, you know,
I think you make a big mistake trying to pin
it on one thing.

Speaker 10 (01:07:23):
But you know, if you just look at all the
major market you know.

Speaker 31 (01:07:26):
Catastrophes, I'd say probably better than two thirds of them
occurb somewhere between September and October. The reason why I
would say I think this one will be could be
sportier than normal, is just the extremes that you have
represented by each candidate right now.

Speaker 10 (01:07:44):
I'm not sure.

Speaker 31 (01:07:46):
I'm trying to think in modern history, you know, people
would cite Hillary and Trump.

Speaker 10 (01:07:50):
I would disagree. I think that Hillary and Trump's policies while.

Speaker 31 (01:07:54):
Being very different, and then you know Trump and Biden,
you know, different policies, but I think a lot more center,
a lot more middle ground between both of those scenarios
than there is today where and I don't mean this
as a political statement at all. But I think it's
probably pretty hard to argue that Kamala Harris is not
the furthest left candidate we've ever had atop the Democratic ticket.

Speaker 10 (01:08:17):
So, you know, pretty stark contrast.

Speaker 31 (01:08:21):
And you know, I would expect, looking at this market,
looking at the valuations, I would expect if Kamala's looking
good and promising, I would expect that to be worse
for the market when you consider her cap gains, stuff
that she.

Speaker 34 (01:08:35):
Wants to do, and explain everybody the cap gains because
the insanity of this, I can't even begin to tell people.

Speaker 21 (01:08:46):
It's so insane what she would you know, they're suggesting
to do.

Speaker 35 (01:08:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 31 (01:08:53):
The thing that's the most concerning to me about it
is it marries up perfectly with that whole statement you
will own nothing, and you will you will like it right,
Meaning you.

Speaker 10 (01:09:01):
Really have to question.

Speaker 31 (01:09:02):
First of all, you have to question the I think
it's completely unconstitutional to do that, and to a certain extent,
if you do that, you sort of evaporate the concept
of ownership of assets, meaning if you don't control when
profit is realized and when profit is taken in any
given investment or any given asset, it's kind of hard

(01:09:23):
to make the argument you own it right, Meaning what
is one of the main features of ownership. It's the
decision to purchase and the decision to sell.

Speaker 9 (01:09:32):
Right.

Speaker 31 (01:09:32):
So effectively, if you do that, you're basically rendering that
decision to the government right all intents and purposes, because
they decide when your asset gets taxed. So effectively, they
decide right, and taxation of a gain is the result
of the decision to sell and.

Speaker 10 (01:09:51):
Realize a profit.

Speaker 31 (01:09:53):
Well, if they can make you or mandate they you
pay taxes on a gain that you haven't realized, and
do you really own that asset? You got to pay
taxes all the income it produces. Then they tell you
when to realize the capital gain. Then you have to
pay taxes on that you don't really own it. And
that's the thing that's the most scary to me. Obviously,
the tax implications are horrific and nonsensical, but effectively it

(01:10:17):
would work like this, right, So let's say you know
a lot of retirement portfolios out there. Now I'm not
saying they would do this to retirement portfolios, but the
concept is this. You know this stock market, you know
the SMP's rally, what three hundred and seventy three hundred
and ninety percent or something like that since the bottom
of O nine.

Speaker 10 (01:10:33):
So let's say you had a portfolio that was worth
a million back then it's now worth four four and
a half million, whatever.

Speaker 17 (01:10:38):
That would be.

Speaker 31 (01:10:39):
Effectively, they could tax you on that three and a
half million dollar capital gain even though you haven't sold
a single fund or a single stock. So it's it's insanity.
I don't even know how it's possible. I think it
would be devastating to asset markets. I think it would
absolutely rock the stock market because you'd you'd have a
ton of selling as a result of that.

Speaker 10 (01:11:00):
So yeah, it's crazy, it's unconstitutional.

Speaker 31 (01:11:04):
And here's the thing where we're at, too, chat And
this is one of the scary things about it is
it's not that I just personally don't like it. There
is nobody in this country that will benefit from this law.

Speaker 10 (01:11:14):
Nobody.

Speaker 31 (01:11:15):
And as a matter of fact, I don't think that
there's anybody in the country that will be not negatively
impacted by this job and or by this policy. And
as typical, I think it'd be the lowest guy on
the you know, the lowest common denominator, those that are
that are the least well off economically that'll be hurt
the worst.

Speaker 34 (01:11:32):
Well, you know it's in so many of these things
and policies like this. It is tell everybody what they
want to hear, which is we'll take from others and
give to you. And in reality, those people will take
their money put it elsewhere, and then you'll have less
of what you thought you.

Speaker 21 (01:11:45):
Were going to get and yeah, like you said, they
end up losing. His name is zach A Ribachi, Vestment Officer,
Board Capital. People to reach out to you. They want
to get a free risk review because you get what's
going on.

Speaker 2 (01:11:55):
What do they do?

Speaker 31 (01:11:56):
Easiest way to do? Look us up online. Know your
Risk Radio dot com the name of our podcast. We
do our Daily Dots every single day, which is a
twenty five to thirty five minute segment on everything that
is important that happened in finance, markets and politics relating
to finance and markets, and then we do our weekly
one hour show. Go to Boardcapitalmanagement dot com, Know your

(01:12:16):
Risk Radio dot com, Google, Know your Risk Radio Podcast.

Speaker 10 (01:12:19):
We're pretty easy to find.

Speaker 21 (01:12:21):
You demand you have us toff a good weekend, a
good labor day and we'll talk to you next week.

Speaker 10 (01:12:24):
All right, fellas, have a good one and thanks for
having me. The's fun as always.

Speaker 8 (01:12:27):
Zach Abraham, Chief Investment Officer right there, pull Work Capital Management.
You could check him out at Know Your Risk Radio
dot com. That's Know Your Risk Radio dot com.

Speaker 2 (01:12:35):
Investment Advisor, Reservice Officer, the Truck Financial LLC and sec
Register Investment Advice or the opinions expressing this programmer for
general informational purpose online and are not intended to provide
specific advice or recommendations for any individual or specific security.
Any reference to performance and security so thought to be
materially accurate and actual performance may different investments involved. Risk
you know not guarantee past performance, is not guarantee future results.

Speaker 8 (01:12:52):
Tret two four three zero way He's old.

Speaker 2 (01:12:54):
We discussed Chad Benson Show three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 8 (01:13:00):
Is your Twitter, Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.

Speaker 14 (01:13:33):
This is Chad Benson zip Bound.

Speaker 35 (01:13:36):
The weight loss drug made by pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly
is now available direct to consumer with a doctor's prescription.
The drugmaker cutting out a visit to a pharmacy, instead
offering its Lily direct service to patients with a phone
at a savings of about fifty percent off.

Speaker 13 (01:13:50):
Three for the low dose and five nine for the
high dose.

Speaker 35 (01:13:54):
CEO Dave Rix on Good Morning America announcing patients, we'll
have to use a separate syringe different from competitors like ozimpik,
and will go with the use autoinjectors at a higher price.

Speaker 8 (01:14:05):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:14:06):
This is the weight loss battle in the pharmacy world
is about to explode. Who can make it cheaper, who
can make it better? Who can deliver it easier? Where's
the one without the shot? Where's the patch? Where's the pill?

(01:14:28):
Where's the delivery system? That's a donut. I've always said,
you want to be the richest person in the world.
Figure out how somebody can eat a donut and lose
weight and it's a double win. So now though you
can say, ha, I don't need to go to the insurance,
I'm gonna go straight to you pay cash.

Speaker 36 (01:14:42):
This new version of zep bound in the vials is
available starting today. Eli Lilly is one of several companies
also working on a pill form of the drug, which
of course would cut cost dramatically even more in the future,
but as with all medications, there could be a number
of side effects and still a lot we don't know
about the long term use.

Speaker 8 (01:15:00):
This is the way I look at this.

Speaker 2 (01:15:01):
If you're losing weight, you've got to temper this with
the excitement of the magic. I just take a shot
and I never have to worry about anything again, because
there are a lot of people out there.

Speaker 8 (01:15:13):
Do you remember Finfinn.

Speaker 2 (01:15:16):
Finfinn was a weight loss drug in the nineties that
came out and everybody got excited and a bunch of
people lost weight, and then they're like, hey, it's like speed,
except your liver falls out of some ridicular, your kidney's failed.
And then they took it off the market fast. But
for a lot of people it seem to be like
a magic thing. They were looking at that magic pill.
But you have to make lifestyle changes. It's a great

(01:15:38):
jump start.

Speaker 8 (01:15:39):
And you shouldn't.

Speaker 2 (01:15:39):
Here's the other thing you shouldn't if somebody uses this
to lose weight making because I've seen people out there
make fun of people. No, it's a good start, but
if you don't do the other stuff, you know, because
I think a lot of people think, well, I'll take
it for a while.

Speaker 8 (01:15:54):
I'll get down to where I am and then and
then what are you eating better?

Speaker 2 (01:15:59):
Are you just not eating? Are you working out or
are you just not eating? And you know, playing soccer
and doing the things I did. I remember people just
tell me all the time, you know, when we would
do because I remember the first time we had a nutritionist.
You know, I'm at seventeen year old snot nos kid
who had no business playing you know, trying to play

(01:16:21):
soccer in Europe, and and we had a nutritionist and
it was interesting, you know, going through like Okay, this
is what I want you to eat, this is what
I want you to eat, you know, and it's not
like it is now. I mean you now, if you've
not ever seen you know what these young trainees in
soccer so over in Europe, you're a white tes boy,

(01:16:41):
an apprentice, so like you'll train with the club and
play with them, so you could be at like Manchester
United when you're twelve, eleven, ten nine. Some of these
kids start when they're like six or seven, go all
the way up through and then when they're like fifteen
that decide, hey, we're going to sign you to essentially
a professional contract, but you're an apprentice. They get there,
and it's funny because I'll follow some of these young

(01:17:02):
kids who are coming up and it's like, here's a
day in life of you know me, and they're like
seventeen and they're, oh, we get there. They have a
Schmorgesborg of food. It's all prepared for him, everything's done
for him. That wasn't the way it was when I
was playing. But just listening to the guy going, look,
if you want to lose weight, it starts in the kitchen.
If you want to get fit, that's the working outside

(01:17:23):
of stuff. And for all the great stuff about these drugs,
if you don't do the other things, then you might
be on them for a while or forever. Because I
think that's what we're waiting for, is what's it looked
like after people come off of it, Because if you
needed it for a jump start, you drop thirty five pounds,
but now you're at the point where you're working out
again and you're doing those kind of things and you're

(01:17:44):
maintaining great. If you drop thirty five pounds and went
straight off it and balloon back up because you changed
none of the habits. That's that's not the drugs problem. Okay,
I'm going to play this for you and I want
you to understand something can be hell and it would
suck the diet work. But the way this lady died

(01:18:06):
wasn't so much the sucky part. Because she's dead, that's
a horrible thing. It was what happened.

Speaker 37 (01:18:10):
Her boss had emailed her, he didn't receive a response,
so they went to go check where she normally sits,
and that's how they found the body.

Speaker 2 (01:18:19):
She was dead at her desk and people worked around
her and nobody knew.

Speaker 24 (01:18:28):
What it's.

Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
Well's Fargo employee in Arizona and apparently, uh, just dead,
dead at the desk, Like that's crazy. They don't suspect
foul play, They don't expect anything other than natural cause
they're not looking at anything else.

Speaker 8 (01:18:50):
But the person was at their desk, dead, just dead.

Speaker 37 (01:18:57):
To hear that she's just been sitting at the desk
like that would make me feel like sick, and that
nobody did anything.

Speaker 7 (01:19:06):
That was how she spent her last moments.

Speaker 37 (01:19:08):
I'm just wondering why they didn't formally address employees about
it when this does affect everybody in the building to
the family. Yeah, I am very very sorry for their loss.
I like I said, I can just I feel it
because I'm thinking about my mom, my mother in lawfe
that had happened to them.

Speaker 2 (01:19:29):
I mean, there's so many things here right it's with cops, firemen, loggers, fishermen.
You think of the what if scenario and in life,
you know, you know, your husband or your wife, maybe

(01:19:50):
sometimes it just happens. They could be as healthy as
an ox, and it can happen, and they could be
you know, but the fact that you were there at
your desk and kind of nobody knows, and you've heard stories,
I don't know if you guys heard stories in the
past of people dying on the stock exchange back in
the day when they're all around each other and stuff,

(01:20:12):
and that person just being suffocated and just ended up,
you know, and had a heart attack or whatever, and
they're all smashed in there and nobody knew until everybody moved.

Speaker 8 (01:20:19):
But the loneliness and just.

Speaker 2 (01:20:25):
Creepiness of that person just being dead and then like,
wells Fargo didn't really still like just just so bizarre
three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show's your Twitter tweet at his
text the program. Parenting issues, according to a new report

(01:20:47):
that I'm not quite sure we needed but we got,
thank to the Surgeon in General.

Speaker 8 (01:20:53):
Uh never been more stressful than ever.

Speaker 15 (01:20:56):
Parenting is always a journey, but a newly released advisory
from the Surgeon General revealing just how stressful it can
be and the impact that is having on mental health.
New data showing forty eight percent of parents say most
days their stress is completely overwhelming, compared to twenty six
percent among other adults without kids.

Speaker 8 (01:21:18):
Is that true, because.

Speaker 2 (01:21:21):
I'm we have gotten way weaker in this country, and
look at there's a lot more things out there that
can stress you out about your kids, right, The one
pill can kill. I worry about that with my kids.
I do because kids are stupid and they're going to
try things. You expect that that's part of leaving the nest.

(01:21:42):
But in a time when kids buy stupid things off
the internet and think it's this and it's feneral, that
is a worry.

Speaker 8 (01:21:48):
Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
I think about a lot of things when it comes
to my kids, but the stress side of it and
the way they portray this is doctor Murphy and the
surgeon General. They come out with all of his you
know things about how it's never been more stressful, and
I'm thinking, I'm watching a TV well, a movie called Horizons.

Speaker 8 (01:22:06):
I got through the first one.

Speaker 2 (01:22:07):
That's new Kevin Costner movie, and it's got a lot
to do with parenting, among other things. They had ten
kids because most of them are gonna die. I mean,
it's it's pretty damn stressful, and we're at the point
it's like, yes, there are other things that we deal
with that they that they didn't deal with. But there's
a part in the movie and I don't want to

(01:22:28):
give it away because I think it's a really good movie.
I think it would have been better as a history channel,
like three part you know event. But the kids, like
the boys like thirteen or even younger, younger than Jack
and his mom and sister go down below as the
the natives attack the house and this little town that

(01:22:51):
everybody's kind of run into this guy's house and he says,
I'm gonna stay with dad and fight with dad.

Speaker 8 (01:22:59):
And he's like twelve, But that happened.

Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
We're stressed out about a lot of stuff, and yes,
there are a lot of stressors out.

Speaker 6 (01:23:09):
There Surgeon General VIVEC.

Speaker 15 (01:23:10):
Murphy's report, citing common parental stressors like financial strain, worries
about children's health and safety, technology and social media, and
time demands, saying all of these combined are contributing to
the nationwide epidemic of loneliness and isolation.

Speaker 2 (01:23:27):
And this is about not the kids but the parents.
Parenting has always been stressful. And you know what else
is stressful? And they point out in this people who
are single are stressed about a lot of the same
things people who are married or together and their kids
have left, they're empty nesters. They're stressed about a lot
of different things. Life can be stressful, and no matter

(01:23:49):
what happens, you're going to find stresses. It's nuts, though,
that we're at this like, oh, and there's all these
suggestions that we need to do this and we need,
you know, to have some laws and we need some
and I'm just like, no, we don't. I think it's
time we just nut up and go. Who's with me?
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty

(01:24:10):
three at Chad Benson Show's your Twitter tweet at his
text to program. And when I say like, nut up
and go I'm not saying that we don't need some
alone time with other adults. I'm not saying we don't
need that time that we get help from people, But
I don't think we need it legislated into our lives.

(01:24:32):
That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 8 (01:24:33):
Love hearing from you. Got a little what's trending straight ahead?

Speaker 2 (01:24:36):
We just talked to our buddy, Zach Abram, chief investment
officer Bullard Capital.

Speaker 8 (01:24:40):
Let me tell you something about Boer Capital. They they
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advice or recommendations for any individual or specific security. Any
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are not guaranteed past performance, is not guarantee future results.
Two four three zero. Wait, let's find out what's trending.
Tread ahead Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 14 (01:26:14):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:26:17):
Now it's time to find out what's trending.

Speaker 8 (01:26:20):
What's trending?

Speaker 38 (01:26:22):
Signed James Dean, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serena.

Speaker 13 (01:26:38):
Cheese can't jump?

Speaker 37 (01:26:41):
What try?

Speaker 2 (01:26:46):
Let's find out what's trending on this Wednesday? We start
how about to Yahoo today? Russia, Ukraine War, Paralympics kickoff today,
Ceedee lamb got paid, Iago Cubbs, Donald Trump, Lizzo losing weight,
losing weight, Lizzo? What Pevel Doroff, CEO of Telegraph, Questions

(01:27:13):
about what the hell's going on there? And free speech
and did we play a part in that as well?
Cheryl Hines, the actress and wife of RFK Junior, the
alleged beheader of a whale sit insane. Every time you
turn around something new with that guy. But Bradley Whitford,

(01:27:35):
who was on West Wing, tore into her basically said
horrible things about her. But it's okay because as long
as you're on the left, you can say horrible things
about anybody and get away with it. Apparently, head over
to Google. Paralympics. Kadarius Tony was cut by the Chiefs.

(01:27:56):
Wade Wilson. If you don't know who that is, called
the Deadpool Killer. He killed two women. He's been sentenced
to death. He is a monster and if you see him,
you're like, oh my god. He has his parents pleaded
for mercy and just like the women he killed, there

(01:28:18):
will be no mercy.

Speaker 8 (01:28:21):
In that sloth fever. Oh my god. Every time we
turn around, something new.

Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
Zep Bound, which is a weight loss drug that is
now going to be sold wrecked to the public, which
is going to save people a lot of money. Dana
Bash got the big interview with the two of them,
which is still amazing. Finally, over to the magical world
of Twitter, Jack Smith, Zuckerberg, Oasis, Tulci Gabbert, Dana Bash, Afghanistan.

Speaker 8 (01:28:49):
California given one hundred and fifty grand away.

Speaker 17 (01:28:52):
Nice.

Speaker 2 (01:28:52):
Oh, but you can't be a citizen. So Oregon's given
away thirty Californis Giveawa one hundred fifty thousand. Can't be
a US citizen And I don't even know again what
these rules look like. But whatever California is doing, you're
just insane. Just continue to do what you're doing. Carry on,
my friends, Mitt Romney, Taliban all trending in the Magical

(01:29:17):
world of Twitter three two, three, five, three eight twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. That is
your Twitter slash acts right here on the Chad Benson Show.
So you giving away one hundred and fifty grand to
non citizens because Organ's like, we're gonna have away thirty grand,
and they've already apologized by the way. Organ said, yeah,

(01:29:38):
that maybe wasn't the best idea, but we're going to
talk a little bit more about this, because it is
insane that people are struggling.

Speaker 8 (01:29:48):
To get money for a down.

Speaker 2 (01:29:51):
People are frustrated, especially younger couples, and you're deciding, hey,
to get non citizens homes. Why don't we help them out.
So Oregon's like, here's thirty grand and the group and
is tax payer money. They've come out and said, yeah,
maybe that wasn't a good idea. We're apologize, we're gonna
talk a bit more about this. And then you've got
California passing a bill saying, hey, you know what, we'll

(01:30:15):
see Organ's crazy, and we'll make sure that it's not
even a nonprofit. We'll see if we can get involved.
We've got a lot of other stuff coming.

Speaker 8 (01:30:21):
Up, including Wednesday stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:30:24):
Well do you know what that means? We're gonna get woke.
We've got some woke stuff coming up, because who doesn't
want to get woke. We've got some stupid information you
would like to know. We've got all kinds of things
coming up, and yes, more on the big interview. I
am still fascinated by the fact that she wants to
be president of the United States, yet she can't do
an interview alone.

Speaker 8 (01:30:44):
That is fascinating.

Speaker 2 (01:30:46):
So are you gonna bring your training wheels with you
when you discuss big things with Kim Jung u or
with the likes of Putin?

Speaker 8 (01:30:55):
Just asking for everybody.

Speaker 18 (01:30:57):
It's the Chad Benson joke, the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:31:20):
Independent Thoughts, Independent life. This is Chad Benson, California Crazy.

Speaker 33 (01:31:29):
What did they do?

Speaker 2 (01:31:29):
One hundred and fifty thousand non citizens?

Speaker 31 (01:31:32):
What?

Speaker 39 (01:31:33):
The bill just passed the state Senate and now goes
back to the Assembly, where Democrats have a super majority
and aids tell me it is likely to pass. The
bill makes illegal migrants eligible for one hundred and fifty
thousand dollars to buy a new home. Lawmakers create the
program so citizens and legal residents could afford to live here,
but last week Democrats changed the law to say.

Speaker 3 (01:31:55):
This the social and economic benefits of home ownership should
be accessible to everyone, regardless of immigration status.

Speaker 2 (01:32:04):
Okay, affing insane? By the way, can I just point
that out. We expect that from California.

Speaker 8 (01:32:11):
I'm looking at you.

Speaker 2 (01:32:15):
So Oregon did this with a nonprofit and they're like,
oh my god, it was taxpayer money and they were
gonna give away thirty thousand. And they've since come out like,
we're sorry, was it citizens non citizens but who were
legal to be here. But let's change it.

Speaker 8 (01:32:34):
We'll just make it for anybody. In fact, let's just
make it for people who have come here illegally.

Speaker 39 (01:32:39):
So the program provides first time buyers with a zero
interest loan up to twenty percent of the homes purchase price,
So that's up to one hundred and fifty thousand dollars
cash upfront for a down payment and closing costs. This year,
this two hundred and fifty five million dollar program sold
out in eleven hours, requiring a lottery. Eighteen thousand applied,

(01:33:00):
two thousand got loans, and when a home sells, the
state is repaid with a small percentage of any appreciation.
The bill is sponsored by a prominent Latino rights group
with close ties to Vice President Harris.

Speaker 8 (01:33:11):
Oh that's always nice again, crazy, chaotic, insane.

Speaker 2 (01:33:15):
What are you doing? Honestly, how would you feel if
you're in California, you're trying to be a first time
home buyer. You're a citizen, you're born and raised, or
maybe you came here, you did everything legally, you're not
quite a citizen, but you're legal to be here, and
you're looking over there going this person's getting what I

(01:33:36):
would be pissed. Yes, you should be. Well.

Speaker 39 (01:33:39):
This bill does have a lot of democratic support. The
question is does Governor Newsom sign it if it passes.
Smart Money in Sacramento tells me he does.

Speaker 31 (01:33:47):
What the rest of America needs to be worried about
is the Kamala Harris Waltz administration taking these crazy California
ideas and nationalizing them and.

Speaker 13 (01:33:57):
Taking to the rest of the country. The country can't
have to buy illegal immigrants homes.

Speaker 2 (01:34:03):
No, they can't, and they shouldn't be You're not here legally,
so you shouldn't get any money, let alone money to
purchase a home. That's reality. That's exactly what that is,
the fact that they would even think about this, but

(01:34:24):
it shows you what a California. Crazy is all about
and be buying the future votes to keep you in power.
Buying future votes to keep you in power. That is
what a lot of this is about. Screw twenty five grand,

(01:34:46):
how about one hundred and fifty?

Speaker 8 (01:34:48):
Oh good god? And again, who pays for it?

Speaker 2 (01:34:52):
Again? Just want to go over that. Everybody who pays
for it? Taxpayers do.

Speaker 8 (01:34:56):
Free college, free stuff, free everything. That's all.

Speaker 2 (01:35:00):
Everybody likes price controls, of course they do until it
bites them in the ass and there's no more stuff. Hey,
it would be a dollar, but nobody produces it anymore.
So if you're gonna buy it on the black market,
it's going to cost you a five. But the good
news is that government's kept it a dollar inside this market,
but nobody makes it anymore. Offer free goodies, get people

(01:35:22):
to vote for you. You think she'll answer any of
those questions on her big interview tomorrow night with Tim Walls.

Speaker 8 (01:35:29):
I'm surprised they're not interviewing each other.

Speaker 12 (01:35:31):
I think it's incredibly weak, weak sauce wait to show up.

Speaker 13 (01:35:34):
With your running mate.

Speaker 12 (01:35:35):
The fact that they don't have enough confidence in her
to let her sit herself. The actual top of the
ticket and do a single interview. In fact, I think
the hand ringing and the gyrations over this over the
last month show a troubling lack of confidence in her
political ability, which also makes you wonder, as a voter, well,
what kind of president would you be if this kind
of a small time decision?

Speaker 13 (01:35:55):
Can we do an interview or not?

Speaker 12 (01:35:57):
What does that look like for your decision making process?
So on se Yes, Republicans are going to think it's
pretty weak to show up with effectively someone to take
up half the time.

Speaker 8 (01:36:04):
I agree one hundred percent. Well, of course you agree
one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (01:36:11):
If you don't want to vote for Trump because you
can't stand him, I got no problems with that. Vote
for whoever the hell you want. That's what you should
be doing. If you're voting because of joy and happiness,
not because of policy, Well chat her policy. Her policy
is what tell me what her policy is? I would

(01:36:34):
love to know, because her policy is gone from one
area to another. It's gone from over here to over there.
It's gone from this, it's gone to that. It's gone
over here. It was like this, and then it was
like that.

Speaker 8 (01:36:49):
How about fracking.

Speaker 7 (01:36:50):
There's no question I'm in favor of banning fracking.

Speaker 8 (01:36:52):
So whoa, but now she's not in favor of banning fracking.

Speaker 2 (01:36:56):
Oh wait, wait what but you just said she was.
Of course she said she was. And again, I'm an
action person all of these things. Maybe she's changed her mind,
but I wouldn't know because she doesn't answer any questions.
And Tomorrow night with Dana Bash and Tim Walls, what
kind of questions do you think she's gonna get it?

Speaker 8 (01:37:16):
What about this?

Speaker 2 (01:37:16):
Jake Tapper asked her about health insurance member. Health insurances
are going to get red felt insurance.

Speaker 13 (01:37:20):
I believe it will totally eliminate private insurance.

Speaker 36 (01:37:24):
So for people out there who like their insurance, they
don't get to keep it.

Speaker 7 (01:37:28):
Well, listen, the idea is that everyone gets access to
medical care and you don't have to go through the
process of going through an insurance company, having them give
you approval, going through the paperwork, all of the delay
that may require. Who of us has not had that
situation where you've got to wait for approval and the
doctor says, well, I don't know if your insurance company
is going to cover this. Let's eliminate all of that.

Speaker 2 (01:37:49):
Let's move on, let's do it, Let's eliminate all of it,
let's move on, let's get it right. But so now
you're not in favor of that, and of course the wall.

Speaker 7 (01:37:56):
He is now holding the American people hostage over a
vanity project that he calls a wall around, a vanity
project called a wall. The president's medieval vanity project is
not going to stop them. This issue is about a
vanity project for this president.

Speaker 9 (01:38:14):
Right.

Speaker 2 (01:38:16):
Yeah, well, I mean you know she's for the wall. Now,
remember you just heard it's all vanity products, all bad
and would you've ever voted for the wall.

Speaker 7 (01:38:23):
Let me be very clear, I'm not going to vote
for a wall under any circumstances so so far.

Speaker 2 (01:38:29):
Not in demanding fracking, that's what we hear now, not
into getting rid of things like private health insurance.

Speaker 8 (01:38:38):
Let's now, you're fine keeping the wall. You've changed your tune.

Speaker 2 (01:38:46):
We can go on and on now.

Speaker 8 (01:38:50):
Unlike other people in my industry, I'm willing to listen
to what you have to say.

Speaker 2 (01:38:57):
Because I do believe when you get into an area
where you look around and you say, okay, wow, yeah,
the things I wanted to do, they're just not feasibly possible.
Not saying we can't get there. But to do them
the way that I want to do them would blow
everything up. It would go sideways or what. You can

(01:39:18):
change your minds based on seeing the data, seeing how
real world application. But you have to answer those questions.
And she has it, she said, the other people do it,
and you have a chance to set the record straight
on all of these things. And rather than you do
it by yourself, you brought your training will with you.

(01:39:42):
You brought Tim Walls. Oh, he's coming with He's gonna
answer the questions. That's why for Donald Trump, the debate
to me is absolutely it. He has to do it.
And not only is he has to do it for him,
I think win. He's got to absolutely knock it out

(01:40:05):
of the park because he may be the only person
that will ask real questions to her without people in
her ear or Tim Walls next to her.

Speaker 13 (01:40:13):
Look.

Speaker 12 (01:40:13):
I think having a debate is good for Trump because
if he doesn't pin Kamala Harris down on her record
and what she's done as vice president and her previous
statements when she ran for president before, I.

Speaker 13 (01:40:23):
Don't think anyone else is going to do it for him.
So he needs this debate.

Speaker 12 (01:40:26):
So from a Republican's perspective, it's good that it's happening.
The CNN rules work for him. Before it seemed to
be fine, and so if this is the agreement and
this is how how they got it done, then good
for Team Trump. I've never been all that interested in
the minutia of the rules. I just wanted to make
sure they had a debate because I think the American
people deserve to see one.

Speaker 13 (01:40:44):
And so if we're gonna have that on the tip,
that's a good thing.

Speaker 8 (01:40:46):
Yeah, it is a good thing. And like I said,
he has to do it.

Speaker 2 (01:40:49):
It is a must, must, must, because I think they'll
last some weak sauce questions, as our good friend Jennings says,
weak sauce, the last some questions. It'll be somewhat softball.
They'll laugh a little bit. She'll answer a few questions,
and it's pre taped, so if it goes sideways. If
it went sideways and she went on a word salad buffet,

(01:41:11):
you think that's ever seen the light of day. But journalism,
remember a lot of these people, and I'm talking about
journalists beating.

Speaker 8 (01:41:19):
The path down journalists.

Speaker 2 (01:41:20):
I'm talking about the people out there who feel that
they're a part of stopping Trump, of which I think
you could point to see an n saying yeah, you
guys been kind of a part of that.

Speaker 8 (01:41:33):
Do you think they're going to let that see the
light of day? Do you think that Tim Wallas is
going to let her do that.

Speaker 2 (01:41:37):
No, they've got, you know, bumpers on her, like when
you go bowling and they put the bumpers up so
you can't throw a strike. That's what they've got. She's
become the this is the bumper election. They got the
bumpers up, and for Trump, they put bumpers up during
this debate.

Speaker 3 (01:41:57):
I think Trump actually benefits from having the the MIC's
muted because he's prone to outbursts and with the mics off,
you're less likely to hear them. It's one way to
keep him somewhat controlled. So I think that's a victory
for Trump that they've muted those mics. Probably better for him.
I see why Harris wanted the mics on. She thought
she could, you know, she could probably trigger Trump to

(01:42:18):
say something pretty outrageous and pick it up on the mic.

Speaker 4 (01:42:22):
So that's a victory for the Trump team.

Speaker 2 (01:42:24):
It is a victory for the Trump team and Carvel
puts it right, We all like a train wreck. That's
one of the reasons why we were going to watch
this because the facts are with Trump, he's undisciplined, and
that undisciplined got him a long way.

Speaker 8 (01:42:38):
It did, it got him to the presidency.

Speaker 2 (01:42:41):
But not having the mic muted in the first debate
with Biden last time was a disaster. His undisciplinedness is
what they're counting on. They would love it if the
mics were open, because they're counting on him saying something
so outrageous, so outlandish that it turned earns the undecided

(01:43:01):
voter off completely.

Speaker 9 (01:43:03):
And Trump needs this to pay. He had to take
it all right, and he instinctively knows that. And uh,
it's going to get an enormous rating. Why because there's
nothing more than America likes than a train wreck, and
they saw one on June twenty seventh, So they go
tune in and hope to see another train wreck.

Speaker 10 (01:43:23):
People just love train racks.

Speaker 9 (01:43:24):
They'll line up out and you know the last one
this all was one, maybe the biggest ever. And they'll
be watching anticipation. Come September tenth, we shall see.

Speaker 2 (01:43:35):
It's going to be very interesting. Indeed, And I can't
wait for that super tough interview tomorrow. It's going me
like tough indeed. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three At you d Benson Show's your Twitter tweet
at his text to program. I wonder what Walls thinks
he's sitting there, you know, because he's America's coach.

Speaker 8 (01:43:56):
Uh, and he's sitting there. And if she goes off
on her word salad and starts in.

Speaker 7 (01:44:00):
Every election cycle we talk about this is the most
election of our lifetime, this one is.

Speaker 2 (01:44:07):
And do you think he sits there and goes, what
the hell are you talking about?

Speaker 33 (01:44:11):
Like?

Speaker 2 (01:44:11):
What the most election of our life cycle? What do
you think he sits there and goes, really of all,
like why aren't I running for president?

Speaker 8 (01:44:21):
Because your coach? That's why coach.

Speaker 2 (01:44:24):
Saw somebody call him a sitcom dad the other day
because he's kind of neat. But he's kind of a buffoon,
just the way we like men. My pillow right now,
he's deep discounts on all kinds of stuff, like the
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a whale of a tail and we'll wrap up the show,

(01:45:33):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 6 (01:45:34):
Joe running with scissors sounds great compared to this.

Speaker 27 (01:45:47):
Say over there, she knows a million whale watchers come
to New England each year. But it was a dead
whale that brought Robert F. Kennedy Junior running in the
nineteen nine to chainsaw off its head and strap that
massive cranium to his van. According to his daughter Kick

(01:46:08):
just six when it happened, every time we accelerated on
the highway, whale juice would pour into the windows of
the car, and it was the rankest thing on the planet.

Speaker 2 (01:46:18):
You think that's right, kids, if you thought the bear
thing was crazy. So you guys remember the bear story.
He goes and he sees a bear that's been killed,
that's little and was taking home skin. It didn't have
time to go do that because he went out to dinner,
partied with his friends, realized he had to fly somewhere,
and so he decided to put the bear in Central
Park as a joke.

Speaker 8 (01:46:36):
Now it's cutting the heads off whales.

Speaker 27 (01:46:38):
RFK Junior's menagerie of animal companions could be called eccentric.

Speaker 20 (01:46:43):
Tragic discovery in New York Central Park, Beer Cup found.

Speaker 27 (01:46:46):
Dead, but other tales about his antics with animals have
also popped up.

Speaker 17 (01:46:50):
Said, let's go buy the Central Park from.

Speaker 27 (01:46:54):
The ravens in his backyard.

Speaker 17 (01:46:56):
Join me for meditations every morning on my balcony.

Speaker 27 (01:47:00):
To the sea lion he once had in his pool.
To the regular lion he took on walks until he
says it slaughtered a deer to the pet emu with
his wife, actress Cheryl Hines.

Speaker 2 (01:47:11):
Petty EMUs are great facts. He's got a lion. Hey right,
well solid there. Fact that you had some sort of
sealed in your backyard again interesting. But you cut the
head of a whale off. Hey, look, kids, there's a
Kennedy cut the head off a whale.

Speaker 27 (01:47:28):
Still, those stories pale alongside matters like the persistent claim
RFK junior ate a roasted dog over seas something like that,
and the parasitic worm he says, doctors found in his brain.

Speaker 26 (01:47:43):
I've lived a very I would say vivid life.

Speaker 8 (01:47:47):
I would say you absolutely have lived very vivid life.
And the fact that you you cut a whale's head
off brings us to this.

Speaker 7 (01:47:54):
And then I go and spoil it all by saying
something stupid.

Speaker 10 (01:47:58):
It will take stupid pills this morning.

Speaker 37 (01:48:00):
It's the honest ones you want to watch out for,
because you can never predict they're going to do something
incredibly stupid.

Speaker 14 (01:48:07):
Now you're the fat, stupid one with the big mouth.
Is stupid, little time.

Speaker 2 (01:48:13):
You should never underestimize the predictability of stupidity.

Speaker 17 (01:48:17):
Now it's time for.

Speaker 10 (01:48:21):
Stupid information.

Speaker 2 (01:48:24):
Oh yeah, you know he had ravens right, and he
go in the backyard and hang out with the ravens.
How smarter ravens. This is how smart ravens are. Their
intelligence is compared to great apes, even humans, especially some
we know dolphins and many others. They're that smart. And yes,
they can learn to talk. Now, you know a little
something that you didn't. My wife wants a raven crow.

Speaker 8 (01:48:47):
Have you ever gone somewhere where the ravens or crows
around a lot?

Speaker 2 (01:48:51):
If you do something nice for them, you give them food,
you do something nice, you don't shoot them and meat,
enter met to them. They will remember that because of
their memory, and they will be nice. Maybe next time
they'll poop on your friend. You lose your keys. It's
happened before where ravens have brought keys back to people
who've lost their keys.

Speaker 8 (01:49:09):
They're that smart. Ravens and crows so cool.

Speaker 2 (01:49:13):
Oh man, solid fun show today three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Is
your Twitter tweet at us text the program what you
guys have a safe an enjoyable weekend.

Speaker 8 (01:49:26):
Labor Day coming up. I know it's Wednesday.

Speaker 2 (01:49:28):
We are going to be off Thursday and Friday, and
of course Monday for Labor Day. Taking a deep breath
because it is a sprint to the finish line when
it comes to this election. You guys have a blessed
good time this weekend. Don't be too crazy night night Jack.

Speaker 14 (01:49:43):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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