Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent life. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
This was awesome. Don't screw with Israel and the Jews,
otherwise you'll be.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
Paging emergency, emergency, pagon doctor beat.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
If this was a rap or dance battle, I think
you got served. First of all, you had a pager,
which is hilarious. Secondly, don't screw with him. This is
the answer that you got back. Sophisticated yet low tech,
(00:58):
and at the same time a cross Lebanon. People's balls
were blown off these pagers.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
They all exploded at the same time. Reports are that
there was a beeping sound and they heated up and
then they exploded. Of course there were people around as well,
probably and that is because so many many were wounded.
At least nine were killed, including a.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
Child, which is awful, an eight year old. But I
think it's up to eleven now. Of course, you know,
bookkeeping may not be that important over there, but come on,
they're gonna write about this crap for a long time.
How awesome was this? I don't think that's very nice.
Speaker 5 (01:40):
Jet.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
These are terrorists, that's what they are. Israel will get
your ass, you guys, remember Munich, All right, Black September,
You remember that, Remember how long it took them, But
they got everybody. They will find a way, they will,
and they did. And it was low tech sophistication and patients.
Speaker 6 (02:04):
Which seems to be a very sophisticated operation by the Israelis,
actually worked by using lower technology. The pagers that they
used to implant with explosives that would have detonated on
all of the HESBE law operators who are affected pagers.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
I'd explained to my kids last night what a pager was.
I was like, we're back in the eighties and parts
of the nineties, drug dealers and doctors and pagers. Some
of them were not super sophisticated. You had to actually
call somebody to get your message, your service. Some would
(02:43):
have a little writing on their text, Hey call so
and so. How did they do it? Though? That's what
people want to know. And again Israel's like, we're not
taking any credit, but we're pretty awesome.
Speaker 6 (02:54):
The Israelis likely saw an opportunity, bought up thousands of pagers,
took them apart, inserted it explosives, and then put them
back on the market to sell directly to HESPLOT and
then using the radio frequencies that normally bring data into
that pager. They simultaneously detonated all of the pagers.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
How awesome was it? So because there's videos everywhere if
you've not seen it, people just standing in line at
the market and.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
Just boom, Oh my god, Jim, you're on fire.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
Jim mccoude, you're on fire. Oh good god. But as
I and I've been researching the way that they have
done this, so one of the things they talk about, uh,
is this has five components as far as you know
(03:49):
what you need when it comes to an explosion, and
you know for the main components, so you need a container, battery,
a trigger device, detonator and an explosive charge. The pager
has three, says a ex Britain military bomb disposal guy.
And the rest of it was just put together simple
(04:13):
and then it was weight and then it happened and
it was I mean, it's freaking awesome. What about you
know what? These are bad dudes, right, The regular person
doesn't have a pager. They don't And a lot of
(04:36):
people thought, well, it's lithium battery and they did something
to it to heat it up and all of that stuff. No,
there was explosives in there.
Speaker 6 (04:44):
Hesbela members who have given up cell phones because they've
been told by the head of Hesbelah that the Israelis
are probably using those cell phones to track their whereabouts,
so that they think that they take a lower tech
solution to protect themselves, when what they really did was
create a bone ability that it seems is really have exploited.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
You think. And by the way, if your ass gets
a ten can and string, they will find a way
to blow that string tin can up.
Speaker 6 (05:14):
Likely anybody that had a pager with somebody that was
fairly important, maybe a mid level commander, all the way
up to the Iranian ambassad as.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
Syria just it was brilliant and one of the reasons
they also went pager. What I'm hearing is their worry.
First of all, their infrastructure isn't great, but the fact
is that they had a lot of power outages over
and over again, phones weren't getting charged, things of that nature,
So that was also one of the reasons they tried
(05:43):
to go low tech. And it was brilliant. So by
the sounds of it, there is a company in Taiwan
that produces these pagers. They didn't actually produce these, they
licensed the name to a company in Buda, Peshe and
Hungary who then produced these things, and probably some holy
owned subsidiary of somebody they set it up because they're
(06:06):
already spying and knowing what they're going to do. Then
they sell these things at a cheap, super discount. Probably
everybody's super excited, like we got a pager Azaza and
then boom. Here's what it does though, and this year
is a former CIA an FBiH her name is Tracy Walton,
(06:29):
talking about the psychology now of what this does.
Speaker 7 (06:34):
So the way that I actually equate that is to
when we begin in the armed drone program in Afghanistan,
the tollybone had no idea what we were doing, and
they all started to not trust each other because they
were all giving the location of each other. And I
think that's exactly what's going to happen here. Like you mentioned,
the reality is is someone from Hesbolah told someone at
the most Sade where they were going to be getting
(06:55):
this order of pagers from. Because that's when these devices
were injected with the that ultimately made them explode, and
so that is highly problematic. They have a massive trust
issue now within their organizations.
Speaker 2 (07:08):
And that's huge. You've breached their trust, and once that happens,
they'll turn on each other even more. And let's not
forget this is an answer, for the most part to
a bombing of an Arab camp in Israel that killed
(07:31):
a bunch of children playing soccer in Israel. Wanted to
send a message, and the message is simply this.
Speaker 8 (07:38):
I don't know who you are. I don't know what
you want. If you're looking for a ransom, I can
tell you I don't have money. But what I do
have are a very particular set of skills, skills I've
acquired over a very long career, skills that make me
a nightmare for people like you. If you let my
daughter go now, that'll be the end of it. I
(07:58):
will not look for you, I will not pursue you.
But if you don't, I will look for you. I
will find you, and I will kill you.
Speaker 2 (08:08):
And he means it. That's Shindler three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
Is your Twitter tweet at us text to program love
hearing from all of you. A lot of stuff to
get to today. I'm asking the question I want to
hear from you, guys. If you could take Trump out
of this race and JD vance. If you're a Democrat
right now, what are you running on? Right now? You're
(08:32):
running against Donald Trump? What are you running on? When
it comes to trying to convince the American people vote
for me right now? It's like you're never going to
vote again because he's going to be king and Project
twenty twenty five. Okay, take that away. What's your best
(08:53):
offense when it comes to your ideas that's not Trump
is bad? Vote for me two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson show's your Twitter,
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Speaker 9 (10:28):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 10 (10:30):
The rhetorics started getting very hot under nut Gingridge. The
disparagement of the other side started to escalate and very frankly,
and the tea party in twenty ten it wasn't even higher.
Then we had a campaign that said.
Speaker 2 (10:48):
Lock her up. That right there is Steny Hoyer going
back by the way to New Gingrids, because before New
Gingrich neither side ever criticized the other side or said anything.
But it started getting hot and it's only from that side.
Just want to let you guys know that, Madeline Dean,
I call upon.
Speaker 11 (11:05):
The candidates, mister Trump himself to tone down the rhetoric.
Mister jd Vance too, tone down the rhetoric. Don't be
pointing fingers at people and saying things that you have
no evidence for, only to make people fearful and hate others.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
What would And I asked this overnight because I was
up so early. I've been up since twelve thirty. I
don't know why don't ask what would the Democrats be
running on right now? Honestly for a listen for Donald Trump.
Let's say you take Donald Trump and Jade Vance, the firebrand,
the attack dog, out of the equation, and instead you've
(11:50):
got Nikki Hayley. What are you running on? Somebody said
earlier because I threw it on the old Twitter, gun
control and abortion and you know, loan forgiveness. I'm like,
(12:12):
that's not constitutional. And abortion it's a state's issue right now,
and gun control is always going to be there. They're
never going to let that go by the way, because
they saw what happened on the federal side once gun control,
once abortion went away, there was nothing they could run on.
In some cases that was all they were all running on.
(12:33):
In some cases just God, pro life, real choice, give
us money bath but realistically right, like take out Trump
and jd Vance. What are you running on? Inflation? No?
Probably not, geopolitical issues no, immigration, no, No, what are
(13:02):
you running on? Really, it's an interesting poll about who
they're going after, because, as we've talked about for the
last started with about five hundred thousand, maybe a million
in seven states. Then Biden dropped out, and that number
shrunk a little bit more. Then Harris was in, and
it shrunk a little bit more, And now we're at
(13:24):
a point where they're they're trying to find like that
one person that may sway the election.
Speaker 12 (13:32):
Four percent four percent in the average of polls, four
percent of voters say that they are undecided. That is
just half the level that we saw in twenty twenty,
well less than the ten percent we saw at this
point in twenty sixteen. So the bottom line is, in
this particular election, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are focusing
their attention on this tiny, tiny slipper, much lower than
(13:54):
we're used to. In fact, it's the lowest level of
undecideds that we've seen in pulling at this point, this
entire twenty first century.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Yeah, the lowest level of the twenty first century. Now,
it's interesting when they start to break down what people
are concerned about, because and who these people are, which,
god bless them, they're probably happy.
Speaker 12 (14:21):
What are their top issues? Not surprisingly, thirty percent say
the economy, inflation, that's number one, but number two they
actually don't have a top issue. Twenty eight percent say
there is no top issue, which perhaps isn't so surprising
given that they're probably not as tuned into politics. They
might care more about the characteristics of the candidates themselves
rather than the issues that they represent. That, of course,
(14:42):
makes it difficult for the campaigns to go after them,
because what exactly are you going to talk about to
the folks who say, wait a minute, we don't have
a top issue.
Speaker 5 (14:50):
That's a hard thing. But obviously the economy of the economy,
of the economy.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
Well, the economy is the top issue, but the other issue,
because they're both going to talk about the economy, it's
the other issue. Well what's the other issue? Well for
over here, maybe abortion, over here, maybe immigration, but you
need both of them, so you know, they don't obey attention. Again,
(15:14):
they're probably walking around with a smile on their face
because they're not sucked into this insanity of modern politics.
Speaker 12 (15:22):
Twenty twenty four is the most important election of my life.
Seventy two percent of Trunk backers say it is, seventy
percent of Harris backers say it is, but just twenty
four percent of undecided say it is. So the bottom
line is they don't actually think there's that much on
the line going on here, and that is I think
part of the reason why they're willing to stay back
and just say, you know what, I don't really necessarily
like either of these folks. I don't think this is
(15:42):
the most important election. So you know, I'm going to
continue to be undecided. Of course, there's just four percent
of them, but that four percent is going to make
all the difference in the world coming November.
Speaker 2 (15:52):
I like the fact that they think, hey, this isn't
the most important election of our life. To I'll say
this again, and I'll get pushed back from both sides.
Elections are very important. It's an honor and it is awesome,
it's incredible, and we're blessed. But if you think for
(16:14):
a moment Kamala Harris wins, you're never going to vote again,
and this is it, it's over, you're fooling yourself. And
if you are an idiot enough to think that if
Donald Trump wins, that he'll install himself as king and
never leave and then pass it on to his kids,
also an idiot. Four years from now, eight years from now,
(16:38):
twelve years from now, do you see where I'm going? Voting?
Voting voting three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benson's show, is your Twitter?
Tweet at us text the program? You know, I love
hearing from each and every one. You've got some of
your texts, some of your tweets as well. In fact,
are our buddy Brianna wo We've had her on the
(16:59):
program before.
Speaker 5 (17:00):
Or she.
Speaker 2 (17:03):
Tweeted something out yesterday and I found it very fascinating.
It's the replies that show you how vile some people are.
And there's plenty of vile people out there, as we
all know. Too many vile people We've got some woke
stuff coming up, a bunch of other things, including Instagram's
new jam. When it comes to what they're gonna do
(17:25):
with kids and how they're gonna try to protect them,
which you know, do I think it's gonna work? No,
Chad Benson, Chow Chad into Show.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 9 (18:00):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Who is it? P Diddy? Who is it that you're
racking your brain right now thinking who is selling me out?
Who's the one talking to the feds? Who is the
one that is taking me out? Well, first of all,
(18:24):
you took yourself out. Secondly, hell, yes, there are people
talking to the feds. By the way, he's the only
one named in this, but it's conspiracy, so there must
be more. And I have a feeling this is the
tip of the iceberg. The iceberg, you say, there's the iceberg.
Speaker 13 (18:48):
Our reporter who was in the courtroom today said that
he appeared to have a stunned expression on his face.
Was he surprised that he was arrested last night?
Speaker 5 (18:56):
No, he definitely was not.
Speaker 14 (18:58):
I told him myself in early sometimes you are going
to be arrested soon, and you're going to be charged
with racketeering and you can be charged with sex trafficking.
We knew this was coming, and in fact, we offered
that he would turn himself in.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
So that's why he moved to New York, sold a
lot of his stuff because he's trying to get cash.
Is it the runaway? Well, he's not out of jail.
I we're going to talk about that. But that being said,
he knew was coming. He did. He knew they're coming.
You know why, because you're a scumbag. That's why you're
(19:31):
saying that.
Speaker 13 (19:32):
You believe it's one victim in forty nine witnesses who
saw this behavior. That's pretty powerful, though, to have that
many people go to court and argue that they witnessed
this behavior by your client.
Speaker 14 (19:42):
It is not the slightest inkling, according to the interviews
that I've done, of anything that's coercive, non consensual. Nobody
was too drunk, nobody was too high. These were adults
in a relationship. This is a ten year relationship. We
can't forget that this is a ten year relationship and
it was adults and consensual, and everybody who was there
wanted to be there.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
Yeah, good luck trying to explain that We've seen it.
We know all of the stuff, the rumors have been
out there for years. You are done for and there
will be more. There will be more, And I would
not be surprised if there is more to the violence
(20:23):
and the potential of somebody no longer being with us.
I mean that has been something that has been out
there for a very long time. Is it true? Don't know,
But look at the lengths he's willing to go to
shut people up. This is David Gelman. He is a
former prosecutor, defense attorney talking about what he saw on
(20:44):
the you know, in the indictment.
Speaker 15 (20:45):
I've seen a lot of different things as a prosecutor
and a defense attorney, and I got to tell you,
did he He's going to have some issues here. You know,
this is very extensive, and it goes back to two
thousand and eight, you know, and there's a criminal enterprise here.
And so what I really was focusing on is that
there's nobody else mentioned in this. It was only P Diddy.
(21:06):
So I really have a feeling that this is a
tip of the iceberg, if you will, because there's co
conspirators when you have a racketeering charge, and when you
have co conspirators not mentioned. Either they're cooperating or they
just haven't been named yet and they haven't been charged.
So I think we just started this whole thing. I
think there's going to be a lot more that goes around.
(21:28):
And Diddy, he's probably going to be his own you know,
worst ending me or his own angel, if you will,
because he's going to have to either give up people
and give information or he's going to go out it alone.
And the Beds are going to have a plethora of
information to go after it.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
Yeah. Part of that information and the plethora that's in there,
it's all the videos, all of the stuff. And we
touched on it yesterday and then I heard Charlotteage the
God talk about it in a different way. There are
some famous people that are in serious trouble that are
(22:05):
butt puckering right now because they participated in stuff that
has got them in some serious It's the modern version
of Epstein, Oh Baby, serious issues.
Speaker 15 (22:28):
Defense attorneys are arguments that we have to muddy the waters.
That's what you have to do as a defense attorney
into a jury. It's going to be very difficult, though,
because you have allegedly up to fifty sixty one hundred
victims here. So everybody comes into the court and says
the same exact thing that they were coerced, they were threatened,
that they were bullied and literally beaten by Diddy and
(22:51):
his associates. You defense can muddy the waters all they want,
but at the end of the day, a lot of
people are going to say the same things. And that's
not going to be very good.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
No it's not. And here's something else too. A lot
of people signed NDAs and in this situation they're worthless.
Yesterday he was hoping to get bail. He was happening
to get bail. I don't know if he'll ever see
(23:21):
the light to day again. I don't. I think he's
going away for ever. That's just my take on it.
But I do think he is in some serre's trouble
and he's gonna go away for I mean, the conspiracy
and racketeering is life. Then you've got trafficking ten years, right, drugs,
(23:48):
all of these things are minimum ten years. Then you
start adding them up and then what else is out there?
And the thought of bail, I.
Speaker 15 (24:00):
Think I have a better chance of winning the lottery
than did he getting winning that appeal. Honestly, look, higher
courts give a lot of deference to the lower court decisions.
So unless this judge was totally wrong in her decision
with legal reasoning, and I don't think she was, there's
no way that the higher court is going to agree
(24:21):
and allow Diddy out with about the fifty million dollars
bond package that he has. And you made a very
good point, Marky, in the letter to the judge yesterday.
The US attorney said that did he knew that this
was coming down and what he did and his team did.
Wo're go after and talk to witnesses to try to
persuade them and force them to recan and say different things.
(24:42):
These are really bad things. You can't do that. It's
called witness tampering.
Speaker 2 (24:48):
Serious issues. When we talk about a little bit later,
some of the serious issues of the abuses that go
on and the people that know about these things, we
go back to Harvey Weinstein' the worst kept secret in Hollywood,
and Diddy was a really poorly kept secret in the
(25:13):
music industry, very poorly, Kip. I remember, God, I don't know,
it was probably two thousand twelve, maybe I don't know.
It was this a while ago in two thousand and
eight nine. It was right around there, actually, probably about there,
(25:33):
and I worked in Sacramento at a cluster of stations
and bad Boy Records came through, and so when they
do these listener parties, this was for an up and
coming artist. So she's there. They're bringing listeners in and
you know, they go in the big conference room and
(25:55):
you know there's a record label people there and all
that stuff, and what do they do They you know,
they have several listeners, but they bring lung. So my
buddy Hawk is love you lovey Anny. He comes, Hey,
jey jad Jed, you know, I know, some some ding
dogs deside of the conference room. But they brought food,
so let's go get some food. We're like, yeah, let's go.
You know it's radio, so we're like free food. That's
what we got in this business. So we wander over there,
(26:18):
and you know, there's like an entourage and there's some
you know, some smoking hot young woman and I'm standing
in the back in a couple of the bad Boy
you know, lower junior execs just traveling along with I say, flippingly, well,
I think we know how she got her record deal
or something like that. Just joking right, because she wasn't
(26:40):
really good at all. She was low and they looked
at me and go, oh, yeah, that's that's what you're thinking. Yeah,
and I thought, well, and we think you think of it.
We're like whatever it see but the worst kept secrets
And I'm telling you more's coming out three two, three, five,
three eight, four twenty three at Chad Benson, show your Twitter,
(27:03):
your Instagram. Speaking of Instagram, they're doing something new.
Speaker 16 (27:07):
Among the changes a new privacy setting, making all team
users accounts private by default. Users younger than sixteen will
need a parent's permission to change their account settings well.
Testifying at a Setate hearing in January, Meta CEO Mark
Zuckerberg publicly apologize to parents who say their children were
harmed due to social media.
Speaker 2 (27:28):
Do I think this is going to do anything? No,
you got to have some sort of parental control. Here's
the deal, parents, you should already have control all of this.
Speaker 17 (27:37):
Parents are going to be able to see to adjust.
Speaker 18 (27:42):
And you know earlier teams, so younger teams from thirteen
to sixteen are not going to be able to change these.
Speaker 19 (27:47):
Settings unless their parents approve.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
And that's key for this launch. That is key for
this launch, except for the fact that it starts today
with new users. Then everybody else is going to be
moved over. If you're between you know, if you're under sixteen,
you know you're supposed to be thirteen when you join,
but you know, but thirteen to sixteen, you'll be essentially
grandfathered in and moved over to this new one. But
(28:09):
does anybody believe this? No, they don't. And blaming Instagram
for a lot of this stuff. Okay, yeah, they've got
a part to play, there's no doubt about that. But
so do parents. And you've got to monitor your kids.
This is a parent who's not buying it.
Speaker 19 (28:28):
I don't trust the technology. I know that it changes
all the time, and they're you know, the restrictions that
maybe someone else has are not the same restrictions as
our family. I mean, I think the best thing for
parents and for us for sure, is less technology. It's
more face to face time, it's more being outside. I mean,
(28:51):
there are so many issues from the technology.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
And I throw this out there because you can't hamstring
your kids technology wise, because of the Internet and the
way that some of these things are. It's about monitoring
with them them and what's going on and having conversations
(29:14):
with them. There's a lot of it. They're gonna find
this stuff out. They can maneuver around it. They're way
better at this stuff than we are. That being said,
if you think that no technology is the answer, or
so much less technology, you are gonna make your kids struggle.
It's finding the happy medium of you know, okay, what's
(29:39):
the right balance. Obviously, as you get older, the balance
will grow. What are you watching? Right? Like Charlie, my
little one, she goes and she'll play roadblocks for a
little while, and then she bounces on her thing and
she runs around and plays games, and then she may
come back and she may watch, you know, a couple
cheesy shows that she likes to watch. That's not the
(29:59):
same as like the reels and all of these kind
of things that's on there. It's finding the balance of
technology and all of this stuff, because otherwise you're gonna
put your kids in it potentially behind the eight ball.
But a lot of this starts with mom and dad
three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson, what do you mean, Oh, I
(30:21):
can't say mom and dad can't say mom? And dad anymore. Now,
I let you use that. It's gonna hurt somebody's feelings.
It is womb haver and Wiener have her, unless, of
course you're part of hesblah. Then no more Wiener for you, ah.
Chad three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four twenty
three at Chadbinson Show's your Twitter tweeted is text the
program Roughgreens ruff greens dot com slash Chad. They've got
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(31:06):
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struggle was simply bad. Fur and skin allergies kicked his butt.
Our rescue cat was becoming very expensive. We love dankis.
He had the cone of shame on though because he
was losing his fur. His neck was awful. Lo and
behold cone comes off, Thank you very much, meogreens for
(31:29):
our dogs aches and pains and their joints, especially Doodle
as he got older. Lack of energy wasn't an issue,
but the skin and fur because of allergies was. And
on top of that, it's some tummy issues. Thanks to
rough Greens, it helped them. It'll help your dogger cat
get a complimentary bag of Roughgreens. All you have to
(31:49):
do is cover the cost of shipping. It's a jumpstart
trialback call eight eight eight ninety my Dog eight eight
eight ninety my dog, or go to Roughgreens dot com,
slash chat r uff greens dot com, slash Chad Chad Betsajo.
Speaker 9 (32:12):
Running with scissor sounds great compared to this.
Speaker 4 (32:15):
Say this cripples Hesbela in many ways. For a while
they are planning, they say revenge on Israel. Despite Israel
not commenting about this, but they have basically knocked out
not only the communication, but hundreds and thousands of Hesbela operators,
even if they're lightly wounded, for months and months.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
Israel's not commented, but when asked the question they did giggle. Chad,
you know there's issues right there with Israel. You got Hamas,
you got hesbela, you got the houtis of course you
got a ran. And yesterday the Vice President was asked,
(32:57):
was it the National Association of Black Journalists treated the
same way as Trump though, but we're but was asked questions,
so that should be you know, dangerous enough. But she
was asked like, how would you solve the issue? Her
answer spot on.
Speaker 20 (33:12):
But matter of fact, President, just to follow up really quickly,
is there a specific policy change that you, as my
as president of the United States, would say you would
do that would help this along? Because you know, you've
gotten a lot of credit for emphasizing the humanity of Palestinians.
But what I often hear from folks is that there's
no policy change that would that either you or the
(33:34):
President President Biden have gone and said they would do.
Is there a specific policy change as president that you
would do in our helping of Israel?
Speaker 21 (33:42):
We need to get this deal done, and we need
to get it done immediately. And that is my position,
and that is my policy. We need to get this
deal done.
Speaker 2 (33:50):
That is not a policy. What's for dinner we're going
to eat? Then answer the question that that, I mean,
listen to that. That is absolutely absurd. They were. They
pushed back by the way, a little flabbergasted by like, Okay,
that's that's that's not policy. That's like, we're getting a
(34:13):
deal done. Okay, that's what has to happen. That's no, No,
it's not policy. You're just saying the deal needs to
get done.
Speaker 20 (34:21):
But in the way that we send weapons, in the
way that we interact as their ally, are there specific
policy changes?
Speaker 21 (34:27):
Well, Eugene, for example, one of the things that we
have done that I am entirely supportive of is the
pause that we've put on the two thousand pound moms.
And so there is some leverage that we have had
and used. But ultimately, the thing that is going to
unlock everything else in that region is getting this deal done.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
Yeah, that's a solid policy. Three two three five three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson's show, is your Twitter?
We asked earlier and we've been asking throughout the day,
and I want to hear from you. You can text the program,
you can leave a voicemail for us at the three
two three number, and of course you can tweet at
us at Chad Benzon Jon Without Trump, what do the
(35:17):
Democrats have to run on without him, because the entire
campaign since he came down the escalator and they realized, okay,
he's going to be a force to be reckoned with
going back to twenty sixteen, then to twenty twenty and
now is Donald Trump is evil and bad. Take him
(35:40):
off the table and jad Vance say they've stepped aside
for whatever reason. They're going to go defend the cats
and dogs in Springfield. And then you running against Nicki
Haley okay and Vivek or whoever, what's your plan?
Speaker 22 (35:56):
Then?
Speaker 2 (35:58):
What are you running on? Because you're not run running on.
Democracy is gonna die if not for me saving it.
What are you running on? He's mean and evil and
he's a fascist. Let me know. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show's
your Twitter. If you missed the show, grab the podcast
Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life,
(36:46):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 18 (36:47):
What Israel just did in Beirut is like something out
of the Black Mirror episode. They blew up the pages
the devices of Hesbola members. They exploded whilst using them
and whilst in their pockets. They have the technology to
specifically target people and use their own devices as weapons
against them in their roots. Lebanon, a place that's going
(37:10):
through the worst financial crisis of human history. This is
so disgustingly sinister, even for Israel.
Speaker 2 (37:19):
Uh, they're mostly alive, Am I correct? So Israel could
have done a whole lot worse. But what they did
was send a message, Ah, but you're upset. Israel's a
meaning colonizers evil the oppressed first, the oppressor.
Speaker 18 (37:38):
That country is so heavily funded that they are able
to have some of the most, if not the most
advanced warfare in the world, that they're able to target
people by their devices. That is so dystopian and sick.
We have all been protesting, We've all been posted, we've
all been talking about this. Our governments need to place sanctions.
(38:00):
Need They should have done it a year ago. We
should never have supported Israel. They're terrorist with a lot
of money. That's why they can have this precise dystopian targeting.
Speaker 2 (38:10):
So disgusting, disgustingly awesome. Those people, by the way that
they blowed the hell up when given the opportunity, ma'am,
they would put you in a beekeeper outfit or kill you.
You're a useful idiot. You are. This is an uncomfortable
(38:34):
truth for some. They don't take any crap. They understand
what's around them. They play for keeps, and they don't
care about your feelings. They don't they understand what they're
up against, and you're whining about it because and this
is the thing, especially this younger generation, you do not
see democracy, freedom's LGBTQ plus right in places like Israel.
(39:02):
You see white people with some money hurting brown people
that you feel are oppressed, and in many cases, like
nine percent of the time, they're oppressed by their own
who say they're fighting for Well, yesterday they got sent
a message and the message is allowed and clear. We
can get your ass whenever we want. We just want
(39:23):
you to understand.
Speaker 23 (39:24):
That there's never been anything like this, and I mean
we can scale it. There was the Palestinian bomb maker
who the Israelis located and they managed to get a
cell phone to him and when he put it up
to his ear, it detonated and they killed him. The
terrorist organization that managed to get an audience with one
of their reformed members with crown prints in Saudi Arabia
(39:46):
and had a bomb go off on his phone, But
nobody has ever supplied the communications devices for an entire
organization that was their opponent, and then done what they
call a command detonation, sending a push message to all
of those devices just simultaneously.
Speaker 2 (40:04):
Which is just incredible. I mean, it's pagers first of all,
and they're they're trying to go low tech because they
understand what's going on that Israel is picking up all
the chatter, Israel's able to geolocate Israel's so we're going
to even go lower tech. Plus you've got issues with
power over there. That was another big thing that people
couldn't keep their phones on. The power was sporadic, so
(40:25):
that they were trying to do everything, and the question
is how did they do it. Somewhere along that supply
chain they had access to.
Speaker 23 (40:32):
These They either intercepted these and remember we're talking not
just a box load of devices. We're talking about hundreds
of them at least, and they had to turn each
one into an improvised explosive device. They had to make
sure that each one would be able to receive a
command that would set off a detonator, an initiator that
would set off the main charge. That's complicated when you're
(40:53):
operating in a tiny device to work all of that
into the space.
Speaker 2 (40:56):
And yet they did it. They did it, They figured
out a way to do it. They got into this
situation where they obviously have somebody on the inside, and
we'll get to that in a second. They knew exactly
what they needed to do because they knew that they
were moving over to pagers. So as you move over
(41:18):
to pagers, what do we have to do. We have
to get all the pagers? Who makes pages? Well, this
company does overhear, but they've only licensed their name, the
Taiwanese group. But there's a company that they've licensed it
to that are making these pagers. Will intercept that they're
in Buda Pesh. That shouldn't be a big deal, and
(41:38):
we go from there.
Speaker 23 (41:39):
Whether it was meant to kill everybody that the pager
blew up on or around, or whether it was meant
to injure them, it still sends this important message.
Speaker 5 (41:48):
If you're at the top of.
Speaker 23 (41:49):
Hezbelah, you have to say, Okay, the Israelis knew us
better than we thought, and our supply chain, our procurement process,
we have to consider all of that compromised. What else
are they into my autumn at a car starter, this
laptop in front of me? Do they control an explosive
in my phone? So their heads have to be spinning.
Speaker 2 (42:08):
Because psychologically, now they have sent a message they can
get you. They can get you.
Speaker 23 (42:14):
Every HESPULA operator who's living their normal life waiting for
a page that says you're going to be operationalized is
wondering do my bosses know what they're doing? Look at
how this was compromised. Am I safe? It's going to
make recruiting hard, It's going to make people paranoid. And
I think combination of this tactical operation matched with psy
ops is remarkable.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
Yeah, and the trust is broken because somewhere along the
line the information got out that they were going to pagers.
So you've already got people inside going okay, there's only
so many people who knew about it. So out of
all these people who know about it, who's not injured,
nobody trust each other. Psychologically, they're in it big time.
(43:00):
And it got me to thinking, you know, like all
the great spy novels, all the great spy books, all
the great things like this, there was a movie that
came out, Oh got ten twelve fourteen years a cald
law abiding citizens Rob Butler. He is awesome in the
movie Jamie Fox, Isn't it? And essentially his family gets
(43:20):
killed and he takes revenge on those people, and that
includes the people that didn't prosecute the way he wanted
it to, which was Jamie Fox and them the criminals
that they caught. But they're trying to figure out who
this guy is. Get didn't really have a record, and
they figure something out, and they go talk to a
guy who's supposed to be a spy.
Speaker 24 (43:38):
Spies are a diamond dozen. I'm a spy. Clyde is
a brain. He's a think pink type guy.
Speaker 5 (43:43):
His specialty was low impact kinetic operations.
Speaker 2 (43:46):
Just a hell of a fantasy way to say that.
Speaker 5 (43:47):
He kills people.
Speaker 25 (43:48):
We kill people.
Speaker 24 (43:49):
He figured out how to do it without ever.
Speaker 25 (43:51):
Being in the same room. It was his gift and
he was the best.
Speaker 5 (43:55):
One time.
Speaker 24 (43:56):
We're tasking this tricky target. I mean we're he's in
cruise missiles and editors and we even had a B
two bomber flatten this guy's villa with jadeam. All Right,
we're burning up millions in ornents and we're getting nowhere
with this guy. So we call Clyde and we ask
him to solve our problem. Clyde develops a kevlar thread
with a high tech ratchet made of carbon fiber put
(44:16):
in the necktie. Two days later, missus bad Guy comes home,
finds mister bad Guy Dad on the bathroom tile.
Speaker 5 (44:23):
Choked to death.
Speaker 2 (44:25):
That's what they did yesterday, psychologically blowing fingers off, wieners off,
turning you know men into castrados, making sure that you're
going to eat with your left hand for the rest
of your life. And oh, by the way, every time
you sit on a toilet, every time you turn on
(44:45):
a car, we're in your brain big time three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, shod Twitter,
your Instagram, all of the other things. Got a lot
of stuff to get to, some p diddy stuff Pee Didley.
By the way, if you have a chance to see
(45:06):
Law Binding Citizen.
Speaker 25 (45:07):
Great movie.
Speaker 2 (45:08):
Lot of fun, a lot of fun. It's a musical,
it's not a lot of violence. I just will let
you guys know that bar capital interest rates, all the
thing's going on, the market's ups down and sideways. People
are still trying to figure stuff out. You've got one
of the biggest investors in the world pulling all of
his money out of the United States stock market. Oh
my god, what does this all mean? Let my buddies
over at Bullwork help you with that. They're gonna give
you a free risk review when it comes to what
(45:29):
it is that you're doing in your retirement account. It's
like getting a second opinion. Who doesn't want that? Always
get a second opinion. Something goes wrong with your car?
You yeah, I maybe you want a second opinion?
Speaker 26 (45:40):
Right?
Speaker 2 (45:41):
Health, all of that stuff, why not the health of
your finances in your retirement call eight sixty six seven
seven nine Risks today. Talk everybody, Zach Abram chief investment
office over there and all of a staff. They'll take
care of you from top to bottom. They'll walk you
through everything, take a look at what's going on your account.
Their thing risk management, lower risk, lower cost, lower volatility,
and give you the most upside potential. That's what it's
(46:03):
all about with Bulwark Capital. Just takes a few minutes,
they go through it all. They're gonna help you get
to where you want to go. Even if you don't
work with them. They want to show you, Hey, this
is what's happening. These are the places you want to go.
This is probably how you're gonna get there. Call them today,
get a free risk review eight sixty six seven seven
nine risk or go to Know Your Risk Radio dot com,
(46:23):
k n WU Risk Radio dot com, Investment Advisor, Reservice Officer,
the Truck Financial LLC, and sec Register Investment Advisor. The
opinions expressing this program are for general informational purpose online
and are not intend to provide specific advice or recommendations
for any individual or specific security. Any reference to performance
and security so thought to being materially accurate and actual
performance may differ. Investments involve risk and are not guaranteed.
Past performance is not guarantee future results. Stritch two four
(46:44):
to three zero eight. It's the Chat Benson shure.
Speaker 9 (46:57):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 27 (46:59):
If you've been trying to convince your boomer and gen
x MAGA parents to vote for your basic human rights
but they just won't listen, maybe it's time to consider
maybe an involuntary seventy two hour cycled I personally would
apply around November third or fourth, but that's me. Also,
(47:20):
don't feel bad. They probably deserve it.
Speaker 2 (47:22):
Ah, because they believe something different. So in believing something different,
they've got to be crazy because yeah, oh kids, isn't
it fun? Isn't it? What are we forty seven days
away from this crap show not being over? By the way,
(47:45):
if you think it's over on that night, I would
be surprised. I'm not saying it's not possible, because anything
is possible in today's world. Hell, it is possible. I
put it at twenty five that one of these candidates
may not be the candidate. How wacky things are? Is
(48:07):
it really twenty five percent? Man? Maybe not, but still
would anybody be surprised? So but I just love that.
You know what, if you like Maggie, you need to
go in a home. What kind of home? Special psychome? Okay,
(48:28):
thank you very much for that. I deal with this
all day. I do. I get this all day, and
then I get it from the other side that I'm
some sort of traitor. So this is where we are
because nobody likes having real conversations about real issues because
it's more interesting to be sensational. I guess it really is,
(48:52):
and I just it fascinates me. Human beings fascinate me.
The thought process in how some people feel about just
like politically the tribal side of it. But it's not
even just tribes. I mean you can go around for
centuries and look at all kinds of stuff that town
over there, Like look at the tribal inness between Boston
(49:14):
and New York. It's crazy. I mean, so you know,
you throw politics in the mix and whoa three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
Is your Twitter tweet Edis texta program? Diddy? I think
Diddy's going to jail forever. To be honest with you,
(49:37):
you're a Diddy fan, probably not anymore. I think he's
going to jail forever. I don't think he's getting out now.
They've got another hearing today and they can appeal it
again if I just don't think he's getting out ever again.
The stuff in this is so bad, and the rumors
(50:05):
are and by the way these rumors have been, it's
like Weinstein. It was like the world's worst secret in Hollywood.
Hollywood's worst secret was everybody knew it. Harvey Weinstein was
all about everybody did that's why people were pissed when
some of these stars finally came Well, you know the
(50:25):
Matt David's in the world, everybody knew what he was about.
And it's the same thing for Diddy and I charlottege
the God I won't play it. But there are some
other people in here that are going to be in
serious trouble, and some of them may be stars who
(50:46):
were part of the chaos, the wackiness, the criminal activity.
There is no doubt in my mind that some of
these people are in serious, serious trouble.
Speaker 28 (51:04):
As alleged Combs use force, threats of force, and corrosion
to cause victims to engage in extended sexual performances with
male commercial sex workers, some of whom he transported or
caused to be transported over state lines. Combs allegedly planned
and controlled the sex performances, which he called freakoffs, and
(51:26):
he often electronically recorded them.
Speaker 2 (51:29):
And the freak offs, by the way, would go so
long as to the point where they had to be
given ivs. Let you think about that for a second.
They were giving him ivs and several other people. That's
how nutty it was. But he's going to jail I
(51:52):
think forever. And it goes back to this question of
how how did you end up here? We talked about
that yesterday. How did you go from all of the things,
the celebration of who you were, how you built something
up and then it was you just turned it into
a bigger criminal empire, rather than say, look at all
the stuff I've done, look how successful I am, Look
(52:14):
where I came from, and here I am, And instead
you just turned it into a bigger criminal enterprise.
Speaker 17 (52:22):
But it also makes you wonder how did someone escalate
to those heights after being lauded as an incredible entrepreneur
and self made businessman who really etched out his part
of the music industry to the point where he was
seen as an untouchable legend. So how did someone like that,
you know, who was on par with doctor Dre and
(52:44):
jay Z? How was he operating in this way and
being so sexually violent with people and threatening to kill
them and ruin their lives and ruin their careers.
Speaker 2 (52:56):
Simple, it's power. Power. He craved power and he wanted
to get it at all costs, and he did it
because he could until eventually somebody says you can't. And
(53:16):
that's what happened? But how did you get here like that?
To me is you had everything you wanted but it
was never enough. But to me it's the power side
of stuff. But what went wrong that you had to
(53:41):
put yourself in this position where you thought, well, I've
got to do everything I want whenever I want in
a hedonistic way, and I will get whatever I want
or else. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chad Benton show is your Twitter.
If you're miss any of the show, grab the podcast.
It is the Chad Benson shown.
Speaker 25 (54:09):
Chad Benson, Joe.
Speaker 1 (54:29):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (54:34):
I'm told, I hear, I've seen the first episode. But
Agatha is the gayest Marvel project yet? Do you agree
it better be? Because that's what I That's what I
signed up for. I think it is Aubrey Plaza talking
about Agatha along the Way, a spin off of WandaVision.
So it comes out today. It's Disney's latest I at
(54:57):
HALLOWEENI kind of thing and just what every kid and
everybody's clamoring for. So like, could you make something gayer,
not more entertaining, not spookier, gayer so I went online
to look at the reviews and a lot of one star,
(55:19):
and I mean a lot of one star sucks, stupid
woke bs. Whatever happened to just be entertaining. If a
character is gay, it doesn't matter, Like I always go
back to Modern Family. They're gay, that's not who they are.
(55:40):
That's just they're characters who are gay. That's it. Like
I watched the first two episodes of The English Teacher.
It's new I think it's on Fax or whatever, and
some of it is funny. The problem is the first
two episodes are about him being gay the star of
the show and drag queens, and I'm thinking, again, the
(56:09):
trailers and stuff you showed were funny, and then when
you get into it, it feels like you're being pushed
into a certain direction. Now, I'm gonna watch the third
episode because I did think some of it was funny,
and I'm going to give it a chance. But I'm
just like, can't we just make something entertaining? Is it
just not possible anymore? And it's funny that Disney continues
(56:34):
to fly the flag of bad ideas based on the
echo chamber that the people who work on these shows
and write these shows and produce these shows, live in
not realizing the most important thing is make it entertaining.
(56:55):
That's it, And people just go, man, I don't know
if we need that. Man, I don't know that's that
is that we don't need that. Let me tell you
my message. Speaking of messages, Vice President.
Speaker 20 (57:06):
Harris, the Springfield, Ohio. We've seen school closures, racist conspiracy
theories repeated by former President Trump and vice presidential. How
many JD events? Is this a situation which a federal
response could help this community?
Speaker 21 (57:20):
Hell, it's a crime.
Speaker 19 (57:21):
Shame.
Speaker 21 (57:22):
I mean, my heart breaks for this community. You know,
there were children, elementary school children who it was school
photo day. You remember what that's like going to school
on picture day, dressed up in their best got already
knew what they were going to wear the night before, and.
Speaker 2 (57:39):
Had to be evacuated.
Speaker 21 (57:40):
Children, a whole community put in fear.
Speaker 2 (57:46):
She's not done. She's phenomenal, whether she wants to be
a president. All the vibes, good vibes, good vibes, vibes.
You think when you finished his these, she's like nailed it.
When did she get into you know? What makes me proud?
Lawns lawn care.
Speaker 21 (57:59):
When when you are bestowed with a microphone that is
that big, there is a profound responsibility that comes with
that that is an extension of what should not be
lost in this moment, this concept of the public trust.
To then understand what the public trust means. It means
that you have been invested with trust.
Speaker 2 (58:20):
What I'm going to write that you let me go
over this again.
Speaker 21 (58:24):
When you are bestowed with a microphone that is that big,
there is a profound responsibility that comes with that that
is an extension of what should not be lost in
this moment, this concept of the public trust. Just to
then understand what the public trust means. It means that
you have been invested with trust.
Speaker 2 (58:47):
This is why, this is why they're like, don't let.
Speaker 21 (58:50):
Her talk, And so I go back to it's a
crying shame. Literally, what's happening to those families, those children.
Not to mention what is happening in terms of look,
you say you care about law enforcement, law enforcement resources
being put into this because of these serious threats that
are being issued against a community that is living a productive,
(59:14):
good life and spewing lines that are grounded in tropes
that are age old.
Speaker 2 (59:22):
Just ridiculous she is. I mean, wow, I don't even
know what to say. It's there's a reason they don't
let her get in front of the media. She's useless.
She's absolutely useless. I think they will write books about like, ah,
(59:46):
never will you see somebody with less skills go so far?
I just I mean, you're listening to like never before
have there been tropes that are so age old when
it comes to trust. And when we talk about trust,
we mean trust, not trust, but trust, and so there's that.
So that's that's the thing with the trusting and stuff.
(01:00:07):
So make sure long care what three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three act you hadventon? Sure
it's your Twitter, Instagram, all of the other things.
Speaker 20 (01:00:16):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:00:16):
It's interesting yesterday we were talking about several people chimed in,
you know, because I said, look, Trump and JD. Vance.
I call it the BS when I see it, the
ridiculousness of it at times, and it's it's frustrating. But
(01:00:38):
I said, you can't tell the world that Donald Trump
is Adolf Hitler and needs to be eliminated and he
needs you know, you can't say these things and not
expect some sort of reaction, and that you should be
free from any responsibility for you know, going after somebody
like that because you want to hold him to a
(01:00:59):
certain level that you don't want to be a part of.
And so we got you know, you know, back and
forth with several people, and you know, we started talking about,
look for all the stuff about tromp is all these things,
he's the one who's getting shot at. And then of
course the Dems tried to play it down the other day,
the media tried to play it down. Yeah, we wasn't
shot at. He wasn't, you know, I mean the first
(01:01:19):
time he was. But and you're just like, are you
kidding me here? And then somebody chimes in and says,
you know, Trump, uh, probably shouldn't golf or do outdoor
events anymore. And I'm like, why, Well, because it's it's
you know, it's kind of dangerous to art. I'm like,
that's the definition of terrorism, using violence to persuade people
(01:01:41):
to change what they're doing, especially in a political nature. No,
he should absolutely do him because if he is shut
down like that, well it makes it tough on the
Secret Service. Yeah, it probably does. But if you're able
to shut him down like that what are you gonna
do just have him stay indoors all the time? Well,
(01:02:02):
he could do it indoors, indoors, outdoors, He's going to
be in front of a lot of people. This is
what you get paid for to do your job, and
crazy can figure stuff out. I think we all understand that.
But if we're going to allow crazy people to dictate
(01:02:22):
what a potential president and former president can do, what
is going to happen in the future. People are going
to do dumber things so they can get their way.
And if you don't push back now, you'll be forever
doing what the idiots ask.
Speaker 5 (01:02:39):
And look, I hear what Trump is saying.
Speaker 29 (01:02:41):
Trump blames the Democrats and their attacks on him as
a threat to democracy for the violence directed toward him.
He then says that they are the real threats to democracy.
So if it's wrong that they're threatening him that way
by calling him that.
Speaker 5 (01:02:57):
Why would he call them that? We need better?
Speaker 29 (01:03:00):
And I keep seeing use of the word hate everywhere
in our politics. Trump hates Taylor Swift, Democrats hate him,
want him eliminated.
Speaker 2 (01:03:10):
He did tweet our truth. I hate Taylor Swift. I
saw meme last night. It was Ronald Reagan like you
had Ronald Reagan account it says, I hate wham.
Speaker 5 (01:03:22):
I didn't know what to say.
Speaker 29 (01:03:23):
I kept going through drafts and I just wasn't getting anywhere.
Speaker 5 (01:03:26):
It wasn't even landing right with me. So I called
former President Trump because.
Speaker 29 (01:03:30):
I am ashamed of how we are responding and not
responding to the threats on him.
Speaker 5 (01:03:35):
And I feel for his family.
Speaker 29 (01:03:37):
And I know you can roll your eyes and say,
oh yeah, he asked, right, listen, that's your choice, and
I think it's a wrong choice. We got to get
out of the judgment business unless it's judging ourselves, and
you got to start rewarding things that are better.
Speaker 2 (01:03:50):
Oh, I agree, And I mean there's so much there.
Like I said, if you can't hold your own accountable,
and we need to do that more in our politics.
We need to do that more where we look over
and say whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa who woah. That is no, no,
no no. But we all have the blind spot. They're
(01:04:15):
doing it to me, I'll do it to them, and
then the other side goes, well, they're doing it to me,
I'll do it to them. But the way I'm doing
it is way different. They're doing with malice and hate
in their heart. I'm doing it to defend myself, which
is a bunch of As the current president, I think
he still Joe Biden president. He is with Saim Malarkey.
Speaker 29 (01:04:35):
And I got to tell you, I don't know how
he stays in the race. I don't know how he
got up after being shot in the head. And you
people who try to mitigate that, you need to check
yourself for you around something is fist stays in the race,
barely even talks about it.
Speaker 5 (01:04:48):
Now.
Speaker 29 (01:04:48):
Look, I do believe he has wasted opportunities and he
has another one. Now, who better than Trump to say
we can do better. I can do better. I know
he keeps doubling down on his angry rhetoric.
Speaker 5 (01:05:03):
How can he not? It keeps working for him.
Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
Yeah, one hundred keeps working for He pushes back because
he feels like it's me versus them, and in many
cases they're proving it to be right. Like I said, Hey,
Trump loves a fight. He gives as good as he gets.
He does, he gives absolutely as good as he gets.
(01:05:26):
And I've said this frustrates time and time again. He
could pick a fight with his own shadow in a
dark room, which drives me crazy. But the Left wants
to act like they don't have any part to play
in this, and that you could go, well, you get
what you deserve. I got a ton of that the
(01:05:48):
other day. Well this is what you get. Could you
imagine saying by she got right, Well she got what
she deserved. Look at the outfit. She's oh my god, exactly, No,
that's not it. Look at who's being shot at. Enough
shouldn't be that hard, and you can still get your
(01:06:09):
point across by being snarky without being hateful.
Speaker 5 (01:06:13):
What is going on with us? I don't get it.
That's why I reached out to Trump.
Speaker 29 (01:06:18):
I wanted to just say, listen, I'm really sorry that
this is going on, and it's being dealt with this way.
Guy pointed an eight K forty seven at him while
he's playing golf, and we take solace in the fact
that the guy didn't get any rounds off.
Speaker 5 (01:06:30):
That does not work for me.
Speaker 29 (01:06:31):
If I had been through what that guy's been through
in the last two months, you would not know where
I am.
Speaker 5 (01:06:35):
You would never see me on TV again. I don't
know how he does.
Speaker 29 (01:06:38):
It has gotten too out of control, too far from
where we need to be and how we need to be,
and I don't know what to do about it.
Speaker 2 (01:06:48):
Here here, We'll said, Chris Cuomo, Will said here here,
it's just people are unhinged, and like we said, they
some people out there don't understand the theatrics of the politics.
It is an gnarly situation. And you know what, And
I say this about Trump because I always look at
(01:07:09):
Trump like a boxer. He understands the theater of it all.
He understands the show, which gets him in trouble at
times because he goes overboard. Boxers will say horrific things
to each other, they'll push each other, they may fight
(01:07:32):
each other before the fight, and ninety nine percent of
the time, the minute it's over, it's hugs, You're great,
that was awesome. Why is that because it's part of
the show and selling the show. I read yesterday that
both Biden and Harris called him, and He's like, I
wish they wouldn't have because they're very nice. And that
(01:07:54):
made me laugh. Three two, three, five, twenty four to
twenty three Act chpens a show Twitter, Why do that
make you laugh? Because in his heart he's got ah.
It's part of the show. Part of the show. And
I know they're democrats out there to feel the same
way because they screaming y out, but I know they
(01:08:15):
don't believe it in their heart. It's part of the show.
See other people that you need to worry about that
do believe it on both sides. But it's part of
selling the fight for pay per view. And if you
can't hate the person, in some cases you can't rile
yourself up. It's tough to get up for it, if
(01:08:37):
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Speaker 30 (01:09:32):
Joe serving up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.
Speaker 9 (01:09:46):
It's Chad Benson.
Speaker 4 (01:09:47):
So if you're asking me if the US was involved, No,
the US was not involved. If you're asking me if
we were aware of the operation, we were not aware
of this incident.
Speaker 2 (01:09:56):
That is not good. That's KJP, not her. What she
said there was fine. Normally I'd be like that was
pretty awful, But no, that was totally fine. The fact
that we didn't know about it means they don't trust us.
They don't trust this administration. Anthony Blincoln.
Speaker 22 (01:10:15):
The United States did not know about, nor was it
involved in these incidents. And we're still gathering the information
and gathering the.
Speaker 2 (01:10:23):
Facts yeah, you didn't know about it. We didn't know
about it. Why did we know about it? Because they
don't trust us. That is not a good place to
be right now. I mean, I know that we're going
to get a deal done. Per our Vice president, what
were you plan to stop all the chaos in the
Middle East? And policy is get a deal done. That's
(01:10:45):
not a policy, it's not.
Speaker 22 (01:10:46):
We remain very clear about the importance of all parties
avoiding any steps that could further escalate the conflict that
we're trying to resolve in Gaza to see it spread
to other fronts.
Speaker 2 (01:11:01):
You're the only one at this point trying to resolve
it in any good faith. You're it. The facts are simply,
everybody else wants this except the two people or groups
that can make it happen. That's that's it. And to
make it happen, one side's got to give up a
(01:11:24):
bunch according to the other side, and then the other
side says, no, we've got to give up a bunch
according to that other side, and neither are willing to
do it. So you're trying, and we get it, but
until both sides decide this is truly something we want
to do, it ain't happening, and both sides well, I mean, jed,
(01:11:47):
this is hesblah yeah, but hesbla through themselves in it again.
Go back to us in July twelfth when they bomb
that camp, killed those kids. Not to mention god knows
how many times over the last eighteen years they have
fired off rockets that have been shot down by the
Iron Dome, but nobody talks about it because nothing happened.
Hesb lah hamas, the Hooties, all of them proxies of Iran.
(01:12:15):
So we can sitder and pretend like, well, we're gonna
get a deal done. We're trying really hard, keep trying,
see how that goes. I mean, we wish you the best.
I would love to see it happen. Do I think
it's happening anytime soon? I don't. And we're almost a
year to the day it happened. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three. At Chad Benson Show is
(01:12:36):
your Twitter, we have more on this. We also have
more on pee did it Diddy? Diddy? Did I say
did it? Oh my god? There's a slip a bunch
of other stuff as well. Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:12:48):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Light.
Speaker 9 (01:13:18):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 31 (01:13:20):
There are people out there that don't want Americans to vote.
They don't want you to vote based on where you
live or what they perceive your beliefs might be, or
your age, or even the way you look or the
way you sound. And make no mistake, voter suppression, voter intimidation,
(01:13:48):
these are fundamentally Unamerican things to do. So please don't
wave my flag at me and tell me that you
are patriot if you want to keep your fellow Americans
from exercising their right to vote. So here's what you
(01:14:09):
could do. Okay, big election coming up? Yep, look at
the calendar.
Speaker 5 (01:14:13):
Okay, right, see what you're doing and make a plan.
Speaker 31 (01:14:16):
All right, get yourself an absent T ball and go online.
Make sure you're registered. Come on the oh te.
Speaker 2 (01:14:26):
Kevin Banky a grown up, Be a grown up. That's
not what it spells spells vote. All I could think
though in the background, is that is a haunting melody.
Speaker 26 (01:14:42):
You've heard his hauntingly beautiful music in movies, on radio
and TV. He's sold over twenty million records round the world.
His name is some fear Master of the panfut that
magical instrument.
Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
I can guarantee today I'm the only person playing some
sam fear. It was so distracting. He was out of
breath and some sort of pan flute was playing back there.
I say, I think he said something about voting. You
know what's interesting about like the latest groups of people
(01:15:21):
coming out and talking about voting and stuff. You get
some of like Kevin Bacon. It didn't tell you to
vote for it, just to go and vote. And I agree,
and we shouldn't be stopping anybody to vote. That being said,
it's not that hard to prove. Okay, here, I'm an American,
I have the right to vote. And we move on
from there. These things shouldn't be controversial, but they are.
(01:15:45):
I'm curious people say, why do you want people not
to vote with an ID. It's really like, this is
one of the the the this is part of the
bedrock of our society. This is super important. You should
have to show an ID. It's that important. I think
(01:16:07):
it's And again it's an ID. We're not saying, all right,
we need a blood sample. Uh, We're also gonna take
bit of your hair and then we're gonna need four references. No,
it's it's we're asking for an ID. It's not that hard.
And on the other side, when you get the people
out there and say, well, you know it's racist, you
(01:16:29):
you understand it's not racist. Like if if the same
person had this shoe, nobody says, yeah, I'd like one
ticket to Nashville. Please, do you have an ID? No,
and I'm not showing you one because that's racist. Nobody
(01:16:51):
says that we do with voting. One of them is
a fundamental right. The other one is privilege because Nashville
is awesome. More on that later. Speaking of awesome, imagine this.
You've been transported back to the eighties, closer to the
(01:17:12):
eighteen eighties. But let's say the nineteen eighties. Things are
popping off, rocking and rolling. Everybody's got their new pager.
It's three thirty boom. You're circumstised what you're now a castrado.
What you'll be eating left handed for the rest of
(01:17:32):
your life? O what yeah, pager.
Speaker 4 (01:17:36):
They're saying those twenty eight hundred people were wounded. Truly,
the majority of those are likely hesbel operatives.
Speaker 2 (01:17:44):
So you have all those.
Speaker 4 (01:17:45):
Wounded, you have at least a dozen deads so and
they are without communications in the normal way they do it.
So I do think this will slow Hesbola down, although
I'm sure their resolve is still there.
Speaker 2 (01:17:58):
How how did this happen? It was awesome, straight up.
It was just totally awesome the way they did this.
I mean, this is the stuff. This is lore they're
going to be talking about.
Speaker 5 (01:18:12):
Which seems to.
Speaker 6 (01:18:13):
Be a very sophisticated operation by the Israelis actually worked
by using lower technology. The pagers that they use to
implant with explosives that would have detonated on all of
the hesbelaw operators who are affected.
Speaker 2 (01:18:26):
And that's what they are See. This wasn't just random,
like three or four thousand pagers show up in the
country and they're handed out to individuals. Could you imagine
doing that in our country? Could you? I had explained
to my kids last night what a pager was. I'm like, well,
back in my day, which is so weird to say,
(01:18:47):
ryn ry day. I think kids look at our day
because I'm gen X, like, we used to look at
little house on the prairie. Those people suck. They don't
have a car, they're not television, they're not nine channels.
So I was explaining to him last night and I'm like,
(01:19:08):
all right, So back when I was growing up, two
people at pagers and they're like, yeah, I said, a doctor.
Doctor would be out playing tennis and riding at the club.
Where's me being a doctor? Or a dinner and and
you go to a phone which you didn't have unless
you were cool and to govern those giant brick phones
that weighed ninety three pounds, and you would call a
(01:19:31):
service and say, hey, this is doctor so and so
and they'd say, ye know, if it's called you need
it mega. Who is the other one? Drug dealers? So
those those were your choices. Different different Here.
Speaker 6 (01:19:46):
Has belaw members who have given up cell phones because
they've been told by the head of Hasbelah that these
Raelis are probably using those cell phones to track their
whereabouts so that they think that they take a lower
tech solution to protect themselves, when what they really did
was create a vulnerability that it seems the Israelis have
exploited very much.
Speaker 2 (01:20:05):
So they exploited it big time. And like I said,
the people that got these they weren't even like, you know,
they were like capos. Think of the mafia, right, right,
you've got the Godfather, then you got the capos, and
then you know, and then you've got you know, some
of the underlinks before you can get the soldiers. These
are this is mid management here, that's what you are.
(01:20:27):
You're right, you have middle management.
Speaker 6 (01:20:29):
Likely anybody that had a pager with somebody that was
fairly important, maybe a mid level commander, all the way
up to the Iranian ambassad to Syria.
Speaker 2 (01:20:38):
Not c sweet, but getting there. And now you're permanently
flipping people off, or you talk like this, it's not
very nice. Yet people died. Horrible people died who want
to kill the Jews. Yes, an eight year old girl
(01:20:58):
die and that's horrible, But they want to kill the Jews.
They don't want the Jews to leave, They don't want
them to go somewhere else. We wish you all the best.
They want them dead. I always go back to the
great line Dennis Millerson, comedian political pundit, said, you know
(01:21:21):
when the Muslims will care about the moon, when the
Jews go there. It's the way that goes three two, three, five,
three eight twenty four to twenty three ant tread Benson show.
It's your Twitter, your Instagram, will talk a little bit
about Instagram coming up, because uh, well they're trying something
that I don't know how successful it's going to be.
(01:21:43):
And I will continue to say this with all social
media parents. You need to be involved. That's all I'm saying. Raycon,
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dot Com slash Chat. What's trending? Chad Benson?
Speaker 9 (01:23:13):
Joe, you're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:23:27):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?
Speaker 32 (01:23:31):
Signed James Dean, Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Sera, what trapping?
Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
That's why I was trending on the old Internet, not
the new Internet, the old one. Pagers No, just kidding,
well kind of Donald Trump trending on Yahoo pager explode.
I'm talking about that throughout the day, just the fascination
(01:24:17):
of that story that has captivated the world because it's
so awesome they can do that. They can do that.
Don't screw with Israel and the Jews. You will pay
the price. Jd Vance Sean Diddy or didn't he do it?
I think he did it. Combs New York Yankees, McDonald's
(01:24:43):
all trending in the magical World. Oh Yahoo, head over
now to Google, Hesba Lah trending, Pagers trending, Real Madrid
Va b Stuttgat. That's a soccer game yesterday. It's pretty good.
Watch it, Diddy, Baby Oil, Dancing with the Stars, Pagers, explosions,
(01:25:15):
and some other stuff you can't mention. What's your hilarious?
Michael Jordan's mansion and Highland Park sold. He had that
on the market for what a decade plus? Finally somebody
bought it, and then finally over to the Magical World.
Oh Twitter, Diddy, number one trending thing has Belah Lebanon
(01:25:37):
Dancing with the Stars, Hillary Massad. Constitution Day was yesterday. Pagers.
Kids are probably going, what the hell's a pager? I
hear this is this pager thing you guys keep talking about. Well,
let's be real. We touched on it at the end
(01:25:59):
of the show yesterday because it was starting to happen,
and it just captivated everybody because the whole thought process
of how super spy sneaky it was was just incredible.
It was, and it's funny because everybody kind of feels
(01:26:26):
that way It's like, yes, an eight year old girl
died and that is awful, but so did what eleven
terrorist which will be martyred, and all them will have
been you know, if they were here just to teach
the blind. That's what it is. Just but the walkthrough
(01:26:48):
and how it took place, and we've talked about it
throughout the day. Just the meticulous planning how they did
it just incredible. And the company in Taiwan is Golden
or gold Apollo or whatever that makes. The pager said, look,
(01:27:09):
we didn't make these pages. We licensed our name because
they want to distance themselves because they're worried to ron
or somebody's going to come for him. And they said
it was actually done out of a out of Budapest.
So just brilliant, boo, brilliant. Yesterday, by the way, Instagram
(01:27:32):
trying something new that won't work well.
Speaker 16 (01:27:34):
Testifying at a Senate hearing in January, Meta CEO Mark
Zuckerberg publicly apologized to parents who say their children were
harmed due to social media. Earlier this year, the US
Surgeon General of the VEC Murphy calling for a warning
label for social media sites. Murphy citing research finding that
teams spend about three and a half hours a day
on social media, doubling the risk of depression and anxiety symptoms, which.
Speaker 2 (01:27:57):
We already knew, and hounitoring is important, But here comes
you know, so we know all of these things, what
are you doing about it?
Speaker 5 (01:28:04):
Is the question.
Speaker 16 (01:28:05):
Among the changes a new privacy setting, making all Team
users accounts private by default. Users younger than sixteen will
need a parent's permission to change their account settings.
Speaker 2 (01:28:16):
Everybody's looking to Meta and everybody else and do they
have to police some of the stuff on there? Understandable?
I think we all understand that they have a role
to play, there's no doubt about that. But we're always
looking towards Meta, Facebook, Twitter, TikTok, whatever the tool instrument
(01:28:42):
is and saying you need to be better when we
should also say, hey, maybe we have a role to
play in this as parents, as consumers of all of
this stuff. Maybe there's a role for us to play
that Mom and dad can go, you know what, two
(01:29:04):
hours a day, you know, maybe some you know at
school or whatever, and you know at evening if you
want to do something and you know, with your friends
or your watching the TikTok, being involved, that's important so
we're always looking for somebody to solve it because they
caused the crisis. Parenting. This is where parenting comes in.
(01:29:27):
This is where responsibility comes in personally too, because it's
not just about teenagers, you know, because some of this
is going back to win people. Now we're in their twenties,
we're teenage. I mean, personal responsibility plays a role in
this as well as well as parental responsibility. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three At Chad Benson's show, Sure Twitter,
tweet at is textappro we have a little woke stuff
(01:29:49):
coming up. More on the exploding nuts of Hesbalah, Oh
my lord, did you hear Kamala Harris's answer, Yes, the
asker about, hey, what's going on? The millase sucks and
you've been kind of like cool when it comes to
Palaes nine more sympathetic. What is your plan? It is
(01:30:10):
phenomenal play that a bunch of other things on the way.
If you're missing any of the show, shame on you. You
can grab the podcast. Check out all of our socials,
but don't overdo it. At Chad Benson show your Twitter,
your Instagram and Facebook Chat. Benson Jack.
Speaker 1 (01:30:41):
Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 9 (01:31:05):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 33 (01:31:06):
If you're voting for Trump and you realize someone's voting
for Kamala Harris, and this could just be me, but
it's not about who they're voting for. It's the personality
that comes with it. Who is voting for Kamala Harris.
And I really hate saying this because I truly want
all of us to get along, but I have noticed
way more times than not Democrat people are quite literally
(01:31:30):
the opposite of a safe space. I know that when
I'm hanging out with a Trump supporter, I can actually
make jokes and actually be myself.
Speaker 2 (01:31:39):
Can you now, can you make jokes and be yourself?
Can you feels like you're a Democrat?
Speaker 5 (01:31:45):
Though?
Speaker 2 (01:31:46):
Feels like you feel better around mega folk?
Speaker 33 (01:31:51):
I know that when I'm with someone who's voting for
Kamala Harris, I have to walk on eggshells and constantly
worry if I'm going to say something to offend them
or have a meeting with hr public. And people really
just want you to live your best life. They want
you to say the things you want to say. They
want you to be who you want to be. We
don't get offended. We don't need a trigger warning. It
(01:32:13):
is not my job to change my vocabulary to fit
your comfortability. It's up to you to change your reaction
to something when you know I'm not trying to offend you.
Speaker 2 (01:32:23):
It's always been that way over the last five or
ten years. We're gonna get that. We're gonna talk about
gen Z in the workplace and the struggles they're having,
But it is over the last five years it's been
that way's't always been that way, but over the last
five years it's been that way maybe ten years. Where
your feelings or your beliefs, your language, you have to
(01:32:44):
craft them around certain people because otherwise you're hurt their
feelings and because of that, it upsets them. And remember
what we've always talked about, it's not what you say,
it's how you say it. And people are looking to
(01:33:05):
be offended. They want to be in a protected group.
And I continue to ask, when is it no longer
my responsibility on how you feel about yourself? Interesting more?
Speaker 34 (01:33:20):
Believe why so many teenagers are non binary now or
you know, switching their gender.
Speaker 9 (01:33:26):
I think it's because they.
Speaker 34 (01:33:27):
Don't have any you know, point in the oppression meter,
and they want some, So non binary is a really
easy way to get some.
Speaker 2 (01:33:34):
You don't even need to change anything.
Speaker 34 (01:33:36):
You just have everybody call you some new pronouns and
now you're oppressed. Now you get to be part of
the club. And I always say that if this was
happening when I was a teenager, no doubt in my mind,
you guys would have to be calling me some pronoun
you've never.
Speaker 2 (01:33:49):
Heard of before.
Speaker 34 (01:33:50):
How I'd make it up every day. I would have
my teachers. I can control what my teachers call me
every day. Every day I can come in and say
I'm something else.
Speaker 2 (01:33:57):
Sure I would do it. I talk last hour about
the show English Teacher, which is on I think it's FX,
and the first two episodes it's about an English teacher
in Austin and he's gay, and the first two episodes
are about him being gay, and then this drag queens
(01:34:20):
and stuff. But it's the funny part at times is
the fact that he pokes fun over the fact that
the kids aren't woke, and they also recognize the kids
have the power. And his best buddy at school is
the exact opposite that he's an overweight gym teacher named
Marky who doesn't give two craps about anything and recognizes
(01:34:44):
sometimes in life you got to crush the little heads
here and there to get some stuff. But it's the
funny thing about the show is the fact that the
kids recognize that they're controlling everything, and just the mention
of something, we're like, you know, and you're gonna get
(01:35:05):
written up, you could lose something. It's it's nuts, it's crazy.
I say crazy. Last night, Trump sat down with Sarah
Huckaby Sanders. But this is interesting and I like this.
We talked about it last hour. How much stuff gets overblown,
and it does and then the sensationalized world that we
live in, and it's you've got to be louder and
(01:35:26):
crazier that I do believe. You know, a vast majority
of people say stuff that's ridiculous because it gets them noticed,
gets them likes, gets them clicks, people are paying attention
whatever it is. But I also know a lot of
these people Matt No talk to people that work with
(01:35:46):
them on a daily basis that there it's part of
Unfortunately the game, part of the show is that has
become our modern politics. And Trump is great at that.
Trump Trump doesn't care if you're talking good or bad
about him. I mean, you know, as long as you're
talking about it, long as the microphone's still there, long
as the camera's there, he is the fighter that is
(01:36:06):
selling the fight. And to sell a fight, and if
you know anything about fighters, they're gonna make up reasons
in their mind why they shouldn't like you. They're gonna
make up all kinds of reasons in their mind why
these things, and they'll say horrible things, and it's great
for selling the fight. Then when it's over, what happens,
everybody hugs, talk about how great each other was, et cetera,
(01:36:28):
et cetera. Last night, Trump talked about the phone calls
he got, and I have.
Speaker 35 (01:36:31):
To say that President Biden called me yesterday.
Speaker 2 (01:36:34):
It was very nice, with a very nice conversation. I
appreciated that he called about you know.
Speaker 26 (01:36:38):
What happened the other day and he's committed, committed.
Speaker 2 (01:36:48):
No.
Speaker 35 (01:36:48):
But and today a little while ago, I got a
very nice call from Kamala.
Speaker 25 (01:36:54):
No.
Speaker 2 (01:36:55):
It was very nice and he's like, hey, hey, hey,
was not come on. It was nice and even said
it's hard because they are nice. It's hard because you know,
because he the theater of it. All and it drives
me crazy because he said some stuff that's so ridiculous.
(01:37:17):
We do need to tampen down things. And I'm in
a place, so I'm gonna go back, right, so everybody
come with me. Give him the way Back when John
McCain ran against Barack Obama, a lot of people worried
about Barack Obama. A lot of people got fired up.
His middle name is Hussey. You know, all this stuff.
(01:37:41):
The way he handled this. Modern politics doesn't do this anymore.
One of the reasons that I think he struggled was
he told the truth, didn't sensationalize. I mean, there was
a different time and we didn't have the internet the
way and we had the internet, we didn't have what
we have now with social media. But I remember this
(01:38:02):
and I thought it's brilliant. I'm concerned about, you know,
someone that you know cohorts with domestic terrorists such as errors.
Speaker 35 (01:38:11):
I have to tell you he is a decent person
and a person that you do not have to be
scared as prised of the United States. Now, I just
I just now, now, look, I.
Speaker 2 (01:38:24):
Got to ask you a question. I do not believe in.
I can't trust Obama. I have read about him, and
he's not. He's not he's a he's an air. He
is not no no man, no man.
Speaker 35 (01:38:39):
He's a He's a He's a decent family man, citizen
that I just happen to have disagreements with on on
fundamental issues.
Speaker 2 (01:38:48):
And that's what this campaign is all about.
Speaker 5 (01:38:50):
He's not thank you, thank you.
Speaker 2 (01:38:53):
And what made me smile they clapped afterward. We don't
have that anymore. I don't hate any politician that's too
much energy given it anything. And while I don't like
things that the left does, there's times I don't like
things the right does. The reality is they don't hate anybody.
(01:39:15):
And I don't for a second believe that whoever wins
is going to destroy America. It's not going to happen
because you're giving so much power. And this is the
thing that I want to remind you. We, whether we
believe it or maybe even understand it, have the power.
(01:39:38):
We need to recognize that us exhausted majority, there's more
of us than them. Kamala Harris would not destroy America.
Donald Trump isn't the fourth Reich who's going to name
(01:40:01):
himself king and then hand is thrown off to Baron
he's not giving it to down Junior or Eric, he'd
give it to Baron. I think we all recognize that
we need to take a deep breath because what would
(01:40:23):
put us in a situation that wouldn't destroy the country,
but would tear at us in a way that would
last for a while. Is if some of this rhetoric
did cause somebody to actually get a shot off and
kill a politician, president, vice president, hopeful president. That's what
(01:40:53):
we need to think about. What would that do to
our country? Oh, it would still be here, but the
subsequent weeks and months through the election would be ugly?
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show, is your Twitter tweet out as
(01:41:14):
text the program speaking of ugly? Sean did it? Did he?
Speaker 35 (01:41:20):
Did?
Speaker 2 (01:41:20):
He?
Speaker 19 (01:41:20):
Did?
Speaker 2 (01:41:21):
I say? Did it again? Good God? Sean did it? Combs?
Will he get out of jail?
Speaker 36 (01:41:25):
Typically, when you talk about bail, it's presumed, meaning someone's
presumed innocent, So you're presumed that you get bail. Not
in this kind of crime. In this kind of crime,
bail is not presumed. Furthermore, you've got the problem that
he's accused of intimidating witnesses of trying to interfere with
the investigation. None of that helps him in his argument
(01:41:47):
that he should get bail.
Speaker 2 (01:41:49):
That is definitely not a helper at all. How about
this one. Does he have a defense because these is
a lot of judges.
Speaker 36 (01:42:02):
One of the strongest parts case is going to be
that there isn't just one witness. They're going to be
multiple witnesses who are going to be testifying. The defense
is trying to portray this as, oh, there's going to
be one witness.
Speaker 5 (01:42:12):
No, no, no, there's going to be.
Speaker 36 (01:42:13):
A lot of witnesses who are going to come forward.
The defense is going to be that there was no
coercion here. This is a crime about coercing people to
engage in sex trafficking and other conduct, and you're going
to have to be able to prove that coercion. The
defense is going to say, you can't prove it.
Speaker 2 (01:42:31):
And we've heard what sixty to maybe one hundred people witnesses.
There are people on tapes, by the way. There are
people who are famous, whose names we all know, whose music,
movies or TV shows we have seen, who are sweating
bullets now calling their attorneys saying, all right, let me,
(01:42:53):
tell you get me a deal. That's the other thing.
Conspiracy means you're conspiring with others. He's the only one
named in this. There will be more, and he's got
to be thinking to himself, who is out there flipping
on me? Oh? What other charges are coming? I have
(01:43:16):
a feeling there's going to be some other charges. I
heard Judge Genie say, don't be surprised if there is
murder or something like that. I don't know Tupac, but
that's what I heard. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three hat Chad Benson share, Oh
is your Twitter? Tweet at his text to program? You
(01:43:37):
know what did it? Can't get? Oh you mean Shawn comes? Yes,
am I pillow six piece towel set. He don't need that.
I'll tell you that right now where he's going. But
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What's it come with, chat, Well, let's talk about the
six piece towel set. First of all, long staples. Sure
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Speaker 1 (01:44:46):
Deep States No Deep Doo doo e the Chat Benson Show.
Speaker 23 (01:44:53):
There's never been anything like this, and I mean we
can scale it. There was the Palestinian bomb who the
Israelis located and they managed to get a cell phone
to him and when he put it up to his ear,
it detonated and they killed him. The terrorist organization that
managed to get an audience with one of their reformed
members with crown prints in Saudi Arabia and had a
(01:45:16):
bomb go off on his phone, But nobody has ever
supplied the communications devices for an entire organization that was
their opponent, and then done what they call a command
detonation by sending a push message to all of those
devices just simultaneously.
Speaker 2 (01:45:33):
Fantastic blew off their grundles, their fingers, all of the stuff.
It was amazing and it was done low tech, high precision, patience, brilliance, brains.
It was the masade. Everybody knows who did this. I
mean though, like Israel's like, we didn't really have anything
to do it. Yeah, you did. Somewhere along that supply
(01:45:53):
chain they had access to these.
Speaker 23 (01:45:55):
They either intercepted these and remember we're talking not just
a box load of devices, We're talking about hundreds of
them at least, and they had to turn each one
into an improvised explosive device. They had to make sure
that each one would be able to receive a command
that would set off a detonator, an initiator that would
set off the main charge. That's complicated when you're operating
(01:46:15):
in a tiny device. To work all of that into
the space.
Speaker 2 (01:46:19):
Very complicated, but they did it, and yesterday three point
thirty boom across the country. In Lebanon, hes blaws, shorts
were being blown out of the water. They were getting
grundle kicked if you will, Fingers falling off people in
the hospital, oh my, but most important psychological damage.
Speaker 23 (01:46:39):
Every HESBELA operator who's living their normal life waiting for
a page that says you're going to be operationalized, is wondering.
Do my bosses know what they're doing? Look at how
this was compromised. Am I safe? It's going to make
recruiting hard. It's going to make people paranoid. And I
think combination of this tactical operation matched with pyops is.
Speaker 2 (01:46:58):
Remarkable, remarkable indeed, which brings us too.
Speaker 5 (01:47:03):
And then I go and spoil it all.
Speaker 30 (01:47:05):
I say something stupid.
Speaker 2 (01:47:07):
It will take stupid bills this morning.
Speaker 6 (01:47:09):
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 2 (01:47:17):
Now you're the fact stupid one with the big mouth
is stupid.
Speaker 9 (01:47:20):
Little last time, you.
Speaker 2 (01:47:23):
Should never underestimize the predictability of stupiditing. Now it's time
for stupid information. Arguably the greatest spy group of all
time is the Massad. They were created way back in
the day Itscember thirteenth, nineteen forty nine, as the Central
(01:47:43):
Institute of Coordination by Prime Minister David Ben Gurion. And
boy have they done some stuff, and they have done
a lot of things. They caught at all fiightmen. One
of the masters of the Final Solution, but arguably their
greatest ever mission was avenging the Munich massacre with Operation
Wrath of God. So September fifth and sixth, nineteen seventy two,
(01:48:08):
eleven Israeli athletes were killed during the Munich Olympics by
terrorists belonging to the Black September terror group. In response,
the government tasked the Masad with finding people both directly
and indirectly responsible. Every person targeted by the Massad operation
was okayed by a secret committee headed by the Israeli
Prime Minister and the Defense Minister. The Massad team, code
(01:48:30):
name Bayonet, targeted high profile members of Black September, FATA
and the PLO organization that was based in Europe, and
they went at it. They did make a mistake in
seventy three when they accidentally killed a waiter that they
mistook for one of their targets, but they reactivated the
operation in nineteen seventy nine and killed Ali Hassan Slaima
(01:48:52):
in Beirut. Nicknamed the Red Prince, he was the chief
of operations for Black September Now he you know, solid
fun show Today is always you guys. It've been awesome.
Should go have a blessed rest of your Wednesday. Reach
out to us whenever you want. At Chad Benson Show
is your Twitter, your Instagram, and your Facebook, and you
(01:49:12):
can always text the program three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three, have a good one. Got you
over the hump night, night Jack.
Speaker 9 (01:49:22):
This is the Chad Benson Show.