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October 1, 2024 110 mins
Dock workers in US go on strike. Pete Rose dies at 83. Fmr. President Jimmy Carter celebrates his 100th birthday. Still many missing in the wake of Hurricane Helene. VP debate this evening. Israel launches ground offensive in southern Lebanon. Immigration and crime statistics. Julian Assange, WikiLeaks founder, speaks in his first appearance since his release from prison. 
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Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:15):
They're on strike. And what does it mean. It means
maybe higher prices. It means a backlog when it comes
to the supply chain. It means that you may not
get that stuff you want for Christmas. It means potentially
a little bit of inflation. Oh my lord, what are
you talking about, Chad. I'm talking about the strike. You're
not paying attention because it's not sexy. But the ports

(00:39):
went on strike last night. At midnight, Jill I.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Was like executive Kevin Ree, say, a strike lasting more
than a couple of weeks could force businesses like his
to raise prices for customers.

Speaker 4 (00:49):
If all the East Coast and the Gulf Coast ports
are closed, businesses will be bringing things in from the
West Coast, which will cause more congestion there and you
have to transport that all the way up across the country. Ultimately,
what that means is higher cost for consumer.

Speaker 3 (01:04):
Analysts say for every day the strike lasts, it could
take six days to clear the backlog.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Six days to clear the backlog. I want you guys
to soak that up six days. We talked about it yesterday.
They said three to five and now maybe six doesn't
mean you're not gonna get stuff, because some stuff will
come in. They'll just do it through the West coast.
But think about this, if you're anywhere that's not California,
it's gonna cost you a time. First of all, California
is going to figure out a way to make sure
that it's more expensive to leave there. And so because

(01:34):
of that, what's gonna happen, Well, it's gonna cost you
a little bit more because you're alread shipping it across
the country. Secondly, you never know what they may do
to support their brothers and arms, if that makes sense. Now,
what do they want that's a big question. What do they.

Speaker 5 (01:49):
Want to my forty six years i've been here, I've
never seen nothing like this. I've never seen them go
after management like they're going, this is a good country.

Speaker 6 (01:58):
Oh we watched.

Speaker 5 (01:59):
It appletes and everybody of all works get paid well
for their work.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
We just want our work.

Speaker 7 (02:05):
We want to give America what they need. There's all
these peters that come in here. Stuff it's for us,
it's for you, it's for America's for everyone. We don't
want us to go on, but we want to secure
our future. We want to secure our jobs for at
least another ten years.

Speaker 8 (02:20):
We can't go on like this.

Speaker 7 (02:21):
We can't have robots to our jobs.

Speaker 9 (02:23):
Automation of our nation's ports should be a concern for everyone.
The truth is robots do not pay taxes. They do
not spend money in their communities. The ISLA would continue
to fight until it's members receive the fair contract they deserve.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
So you heard the word automation AI. Automation. Robots can't
do our job. Robots can do some of the jobs,
and that is an issue. They want to protect themselves
from automation. Understandable. I mean, I think we can all
get it right. It's understandable. You want to do everything
you can to protect your job. They don't pay taxes,

(02:59):
not yet. You get a way to charge you know,
if you put a robot in the forget a way, Well,
we're gonna have to charge you a robot tax of
some sort because we can't not tax the robot. It's
not going anywhere, people, I'm here to tell you AI.
All this stuff not going anywhere. Top of that, they
want a seven year deal. Now of that seven years,
they want a raise every year of about five dollars

(03:20):
and essentially give them a seventy five dollars or a
seventy five percent raise over those several years of the contract.
This is a big deal because, well, we're in to
the holidays. It's the holidays season. I always say, this

(03:41):
is the time of year that especially small businesses, medium
sized businesses, especially in the retail world make hay. Okay,
some of them, this may be fifty percent of their year.
For some it may be up to seventy five percent.
Having some sort of issue where the supply chain breaks

(04:03):
and it costs them more to get stuff and there's
a delay in getting the stuff is going to be
passed on to the consumer, and it's also potentially going
to hurt the bottom line at a time when we're
also into yes, are you ready for it? Election season?
Is this the October surprise? I don't think it's the
October surprise. I don't even know what the October surprise

(04:23):
would be at this point in time. I have no idea.
This is the head of the union, by the way,
he is everything you would dream of when you're talking
about being the head of the union.

Speaker 10 (04:33):
These people today don't know what a shrike is when
my men hit the streets from Maine to Textas every
single poort a lockdown. You know what's going to happen.
First week, be all over the news, every nine boom boom.
Second week, guys who sell costs can't sell costs because
the cause ain't coming in off the ships.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
They get laid off.

Speaker 10 (04:52):
Third week, malls closing down. They can't get the goods
from China, they can't sell clothes, they can't do this.
Every in the United States comes on a ship. They
go out of business.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
If you think I think he knows somebody in the mob,
it's a possibility. His name is Harold J. Daggett. First week,
this is what happens. Nothing happens right like, and then
all of a sudden stuff happens. Stuff happens like, you know,
the guy down the stree d and needs somebody can't
get something right so because he can't get something, he's
getting pissed. And all of a sudden, the guy that
needs something from him, he can't get that thing he

(05:26):
needs from him. And the next thing you know, about
it being about the boom, things start to happen.

Speaker 10 (05:30):
Construction workers get laid off because the materials aren't coming in,
the steal's not coming in, the lumber's not coming in.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
They lose their job.

Speaker 10 (05:40):
Everybody's hating the long showman now because now they realize
how important our jobs are. Now, I have the President
screaming at me. I'm putting a taft Hartley on. You
go ahead, taf hollying means I have to go back
to work for ninety days after cooling off period. Do
you think when I go back for ninety days, those
going to go to work on that pi.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
That's a good question. We'll get to that in a second.
He continues. The star buddy Harold, I'm gonna call him Harry, right,
Big Harry, Big Harry. Tag who's gonna win here in
the long run.

Speaker 10 (06:11):
You're better off sitting down and let's get a contract,
and let's move on with this world. And could today's world.
I'll cripple you. I will cripple you. And you have
no idea what that means. Nobody does the cripple you.
I'm gonna cripple you. I may break your legs.

Speaker 2 (06:27):
You don't know. So they want job security, higher wage,
better working conditions. I know what that means. I mean,
that's what you throw that stuff. And at the end
of the day, what you want is you want more money,
and you want security that you're not going to be
bringing in AI and robots to take your jobs. That's
what you want. The better working conditions and stuff, you
just throw stuff. They want better benefits. They already have
amazing benefits by the way fair scheduling and working hours

(06:51):
and the resistant to privatization and deregulations in some cases,
in some cases, not all cases. And of course one
of the big things is the pay. They're being offered
two fifteen an hour for the next seven years and
they want five dollars an hour. Somewhere is there is
the happiness. But even if you give them that five

(07:12):
bucks an hour, the big thing for them is automation.
And it's not going anywhere. It is not going to
go anywhere. And that's the thing that I think people
are seeing. And you're gonna need longshorm and you're gonna
need these people. Are you gonna need as many that's
the question. Are you gonna need the amount of people

(07:36):
that you currently find on the docks who are really
doing a ton of stuff as opposed to maybe a
robot doing that job. Well, we don't need a rope,
I understand that. But a robot can do the job faster, better,

(07:56):
with less opportunity for injury, and doesn't need seven people.
That's something that would come and help the consumer. Everybody
wants the protection from this, and you know people will
say to me, well, Chad, which you know you imagine
if that was your job. I'm like, dude, I work
in radio. We were ahead of this game when it

(08:18):
came to this losing your job many many moons ago.
So when you talk about well, wait till it hits
your job, it's hit our job. You're listening to me
right now. I'm on one hundred stations. Thank God for that.
But when do you think about when you're one hundred stations,

(08:40):
that's a lot. Yeah it is a lot, but there's
one hundred jobs. These things have happened to us in
my industry for years. This industry wants to do everything
you can to protect itself, and I just don't think
it has. You can't fight what is coming. You're standing

(09:01):
on a railroad track and a freight trainment's coming. The
question is do you get on the freight train and
figure out how to make it work for you and
take you where you want to go, or do you
try to fight it and find out you're gonna lose.
But with all that going on, how does it affect
the average person? Higher prices three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chadbentton Show's your Twitter

(09:23):
tweet at as text the program. By the way, Biden said,
at least at this moment in time, he is not
going to get involved with the taft hardly, you know,
forcing them to go back to work at least at
this moment of time doesn't mean he won't maybe in
a little bit, especially if maybe the things start to
get a little hairy and potentially prices start to rise

(09:44):
and all of a sudden people start talking inflation again
and it could hurt his side of the ticket. If
you will, then maybe, But at this moment in time,
I don't think he's going to do that. Yesterday a
legend was lost, two of them actually to Kem Baman Tumba.
We'll talk about him later.

Speaker 11 (09:59):
And hustle.

Speaker 12 (10:02):
He levels about a couple of times, shall kicks and
he fires Rose Swayne.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
Yes, learn draft.

Speaker 12 (10:11):
Dead number forty one ninety two. He live drives, go
into left center piel a clean basin and in his pandemonium,
I'm here at remember for the stadium, the fire.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Works exploding over her head.

Speaker 12 (10:29):
The Cincinnati dugout has emptied Leah plus continues outdated brow.

Speaker 2 (10:36):
Yeah, Charlie Hustle not good at gambling. I'll tell you
that right now. So I tweeted last night notorious gambler
and baseball's all time hit leaders passed away. And he
was a manager and he had some success, but then
he bet on baseball and you can't do that. Now,

(10:57):
the question is going to be, now that he's gone,
because it was a lifetime ben his lifetime is over.
Should he be in the Hall of Fame. We're going
to talk a bit about that very flawed individual. There
is no doubt about that had serious issues, had tax problems,
ended up doing some time in jail, spent the last
several years talking betting and in Vegas signing anything that

(11:23):
you would give him, and he'd charged you twenty bucks,
thirty bucks, one hundred bucks for. But the fact that
the hit king himself is not in the Hall of Fame,
I think it's time that we move on from that.
We're going to talk about that in a little bit.
A lot of stuff to get to, including what's going
on with the hurricane and the response and the politics
of it. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four

(11:43):
to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, to Twitter, your Instagram,
all of the other stuff. Love hearing from all of you.
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is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 13 (13:09):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 14 (13:11):
Celebrations are happening today to mark the one hundredth birthday
of America's thirty ninth president in his hometown of Plains.
Family friend Jan Williams tells me.

Speaker 15 (13:19):
It's such a milestone that he wanted to reach in
one hundred years.

Speaker 14 (13:23):
Carter is set to spend the day at his home
there in Plains, where he's been in hospice care since
February of twenty twenty three. A military flyover is planned
in planes, as well as several other community events in Atlanta.
The Carter Library is charging only one hundred cents for admission.
A penny for every year of his life.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
Man, that's a long time. Imagine all the stuff that
guy's seen. He's almost old enough to be president now.
It's a swipe ed pide. Remember when he went into
hospice and we're like, oh, the end is near. But
he has said he wants to vote for Kamala Harris.
That's his goal. And I don't know when do they
start early voting in Georgia's it is. I'm sure it's
already happening. It's probably we've been going on for several

(14:01):
months now. So, but he's been in hospice for a
long time. Normally, when you go to hospice, you think, well,
the end is like here here. But he is holding
on for as long as he possibly can, and no
doubt about that. Yesterday, this is very interesting and you
know the politics of the hurricane, which shouldn't be but

(14:21):
you're going to take advantage of everything at this time
and people are pissed, as you should be. I mean,
Ashville is crushed. So here is an ms NBC news
anchor asking majorcas not about the border because we know
it's secure, no, but about cell phone coverage.

Speaker 16 (14:43):
I want to read to you something that the mayor
of Canton, North Carolina said talking about the frustration that
a lot of people feel about the lack of communication.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Here's what he said.

Speaker 16 (14:52):
It is unacceptable and disgusting that in our time of need,
cellular service for the entire region is blocked out. No
excuse for that. I mean, we knew the storm was coming.
I can't believe this is a normalcy. Is this a
systemic problem? Is this something that is going to be
more and more normal as we see more and more

(15:14):
devastating storms. What do you say to people who are
desperate to find out whether people they love are still alive?

Speaker 2 (15:22):
Now, what would majorcas say? Let's find out.

Speaker 17 (15:25):
I well understand the concerns expressed. These are people in
the midst of the tragic hurricane. That is precisely why
we and others have been deploying communications resources.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter tweet?

Speaker 5 (15:43):
At?

Speaker 2 (15:43):
Is texta program right here on the Chad Benson Show.
So if you're struggling with cell phone service, what could
you do?

Speaker 18 (15:53):
More?

Speaker 2 (15:53):
From the White House.

Speaker 19 (15:54):
We're also very focused on restoring communications capabilities. FEMA, the
FCC and private telecommunications providers are working together to help
restore temporary communications as quickly as possible by establishing temporary
cell sites and allowing for roaming where possible, where a
resident can connect to any network available, even if they

(16:17):
aren't subscribed to that network. Today, FEMA will install thirty
Starlink receivers in western North Carolina to provide immediate connectivity
for those in greatest need.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
Ooh you, so wait a minute here. I just want
to make sure you and Boeing had to go to
him to help get the folks out of the whole
space nightmare up there, and now you had to turn
to him to hook up this stuff. Now, I'm a
proponent of starlink. I tell you guys this right now.
Value the dirt people. We don't have great internet out there,

(16:50):
but starlink is kick ass. It's incredible. They don't pay
me to say that. I'm just letting you guys know
it is awesome and you'd take it anywhere with you.
And the new versions are much smaller. It's incredible. If
they had to turn to him and go, hey, is
there any way you can help out again again? All right,
I'll help out this time. But this is it all right?
Stop doing this three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,

(17:11):
twenty three at Chad Benson Show, to Twitter, your Instagram,
all of the other things. If you're miss any of
the show, shame on you. Grab the podcast. It is
the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
Sudden Chad Show, Independent, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
There are still plenty of people missing. We talk about
nature messing you up, and nature is dangerous. Nature moved
in throughout the southeast, dumped biblical proportions of rain in
places that we're really not prepared to handle that much
rain that fast, and in doing so, it caused not

(18:25):
just widespread flooding, biblical like flooding in areas. And there
are still plenty of people missing out there. This is
a sad story here about a fiance looking for his girl.

Speaker 8 (18:35):
One hundreds still unaccounted for, like Julie Laroux.

Speaker 11 (18:39):
If anybody's seen her or knows anything, please let somebody know.

Speaker 8 (18:44):
She and her fiance John Norwood shelter at a neighbor's
house when Helene hit, but a mutch like took out
the home.

Speaker 20 (18:51):
We looked outside and there was a thirty foot tall
wall of water and rocks and tree debris just coming
at us, and it just knocked out straight down with
all of us in it.

Speaker 2 (19:01):
We all got washedone.

Speaker 8 (19:02):
River, Johns legs crossed by ceiling rafters, rescuers using a
pulley to bring him to safety over rushing flood waters.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
Just horrific. And I'm out here in Tennessee right now,
and I will tell you this. We had several inches
of rain in Nashville's a matter of doing some work,
and they handled it pretty well. Other parts of the
eastern part was devastated, but nothing like what you saw
in places like South Carolina, North Carolina, which is having

(19:34):
serious issues. We talked about it earlier. The infrastructure there
is just completely destroyed. They are, especially places like Ashville.
They're looking for any help they can get, including the fact,
as we talked about, they had to go and bring in,
you know, the likes of Starlink. Just to get people
to have an opportunity to call the White House has

(19:55):
been a struggle. Bus There's no doubt about that. And
never let a situation like this go away. The governor's
doing a very good job.

Speaker 21 (20:01):
He's having a hard time getting the President on the phone.
I guess they're not. They're not being responsive. The federal
government does not being responsive, but they're having a very
hard time getting the getting the president does, the pony
will get on and of course the Vice president, she's
out someplace campaigning looking for money.

Speaker 10 (20:21):
So they got to be they have to.

Speaker 11 (20:23):
Be focused over here.

Speaker 22 (20:24):
It's still big.

Speaker 21 (20:25):
This is a really bad one, and the governor's doing
a good job.

Speaker 16 (20:29):
But he's having a hard time getting.

Speaker 11 (20:31):
The president on the phone and being very not responsive.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
You know what's interesting about getting somebody on the phone
or doing a good job, and he's out there talking
about camp and Georgia. Florida, by the way. You know,
the one thing about DeSantis, I've always said he couldn't
get the job, but he could do the job, maybe
better than everybody else that's out there right now, and
I'm talking about President Florida got absolutely probably the worst

(20:56):
of it when it came through. I mean North Carolina,
South Carolina suffered, but Florida just got the brunt of it.
Florida is rocking and rolling comparatively to the other states,
in fact, to the point where he is now sending
first responders from Florida to North Carolina to help. But
that is a good question. Where is the president now?
I will say this Biden, who still is president. We

(21:18):
have to remind him of that every once in a while.
We'll be there tomorrow. Is it too little, too late? Look,
I don't care if you show up at my state.
I know a lot of people want to see you. Right,
we all wear the FEMA jackets. I know that's important
to a lot of people. It's not important to me.
I need help. Send the help. You may be a distraction.
And that's not saying anything bad about you. If you

(21:38):
want to come days later, whatever and survey it, let
us get up and running first. But you do need
to be on the phone.

Speaker 23 (21:46):
Why weren't she and Vice President Harris Jared Washington commanding this,
I was kipping it.

Speaker 24 (21:51):
I was on the phone for at least two hours
yesterday and the day before as well.

Speaker 9 (21:56):
I commend it's.

Speaker 11 (21:56):
Called a telephone.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
It's called telephone. That was his answer. Wow, empathy, I.

Speaker 25 (22:02):
Did huge both of you of the ignoring the decision
is lying.

Speaker 24 (22:07):
And to get this straight, he's lying and the governor
told him he was lying. I've spoken to the governor,
spending time with him, and he told me, he's lying.
I don't know why he does this and the reason
I get so angry about it. I don't care about
what he says about me, if I care what he
communicates to people that are in need.

Speaker 11 (22:24):
He implies that.

Speaker 24 (22:25):
We're not doing everything possible.

Speaker 2 (22:27):
We are we are, So was that true? I think
it was. I think he did get the President on
the phone. Trump said, now he can't get him on
the phone. But did he Well, is he lying again?
It's politics. That's what sucks about this. It's politics. Trump. Look,
he's got plenty of flaws. We all know that. You

(22:49):
have a chance to go there and help do it.
You bring up he can't get a hold of Camp.
Camp said, yeah, I can get ahold of.

Speaker 10 (22:56):
It's a lot.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
And then it becomes a story, and the story be
about helping the people in Georgia, helping the people in
North Carolina, helping the people that need the help at
this moment in time, making sure they have everything, not
about you. But unfortunately, in a time like this, it's
all about everybody else because it's politics.

Speaker 26 (23:15):
People in western North Carolina were drowning in their houses
this weekend.

Speaker 11 (23:19):
Others were losing everything.

Speaker 26 (23:21):
President Biden's at his beach house and Vice President Harris
was hosting political fundraisers on the West coast.

Speaker 11 (23:27):
Is there a reason that they could not be here?

Speaker 15 (23:29):
The President did exactly what a president in this moment
needs to do, which is directing his team to take action.

Speaker 2 (23:37):
I'm going to say this. It's probably going to piss
some people off out there that live on the left.
Optics matter. Optics absolutely matter. You sitting on the beach
in Delaware, is it giving the look that needs to
be given? I get it. You're done. You're done with
this gig. It's about getting out there though and handling business.

(24:01):
This is a twenty four to seven three sixty five job.
You needed to be out there. You needed to be
out there not so much quote unquote in North Carolina,
in Florida, in South Carolina, in Georgia. You needed to
be though, looking like, Hey, we had to cut our

(24:21):
things short. We've got a real issue here. We need
to take care of it. It's what the American people need.
This is not about politics. It's about doing the right thing.
That's what needed to happen. You sunning yourself to look
like a raisin isn't a helper and it gives off
bad vibes. People are looking for leadership in a time

(24:45):
like this. The federal government drives me crazy, drives you crazy,
But we need them. This is one of those times
we need them. And the optic side of it, you
can say, well, optics shouldn't matter. All should matter is results.
I understand that, but we know that results no longer
matter the way they used to. We care about what's
the first thing said, what's the first rumor that happens,

(25:08):
what's the first look that's out there. Everything else nobody
cares about because we never find out what the results
actually are. Optics, unfortunately, matter, and it wasn't good optics.
It wasn't. Speaking of North.

Speaker 27 (25:23):
Carolina, I want to share with y'all some things who
may not know about what's happening in the North Carolina
Mountains in the aftermath of Helene. If you have friends
or family that are headed into the mountains or who
live there, the looting has picked up major steam. I
was advised yesterday by a county sheriff to make sure
that anybody out and about is carrying and in his words,

(25:43):
carrying with the safety off. There are very aggressive people
out there and it's not because they're necessarily awful. They're desperate.
Desperate people do desperate things, y'all. Because there's no water
in some of these communities. We have neighbors in North
Carolina with no water, and.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
I'm talking about desperation in certain areas, serious desperation. People
weren't prepared for this. They weren't And this is another
one of those things have become very political because here
in Tennessee there were several people that are here illegally
that were arrested in the eastern part for looting stores
and doing certain things. This is a desperate time. People

(26:20):
are looking around going, Okay, I need something. This we
shouldn't be this way. They can't even reach people on
the outside.

Speaker 27 (26:25):
And all I can say is this, the government ain't
coming to save you, not now, not ever, because they
don't care about you, the people anymore. It is the
citizens who are going to have to step it up.
If you will share this with somebody who doesn't know
what's happening in North Carolina, they need to know.

Speaker 14 (26:40):
They need to know.

Speaker 27 (26:41):
That there are entire towns gone. Chimney Rock is gone,
a beautiful town, Swana, Noah gone. They're towns damaged beyond repair.
That means our geography has changed, our culture is at risk,
but most importantly, our people, our generational people have lost
their generational homes. This ain't about your granite countertops anymore.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
Amen's sister, Amen. So how many people will end up
being officially listed as dead, we do not know. They're
still looking for plenty out there, and for some of
the parts of the Appalachian areas where you had people
that wanted A portion of the way it works out
is you've got this. You know, you've got the river,
and on one side you're pretty much okay. It may

(27:27):
have flooded a little bit, but nothing like on the
other side, which is Park Mountainous and the river overfloaded
there and doing that you got cut off. And the
cutoff is crazy. Like I said, they're airlifting stuff in
over the last couple of days. It's been that bad,
and I have a feeling it's it's we're probably gonna

(27:49):
get worse news before it gets better. But it will
get better. But this is one of the things the
federal government needs to be on top of. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three acts. You had
Mensa show, Sure, Twitter, your Instagram, all of the other things.
A lot of stuff still to get to. We talked
about Peter Rose dyeing yesterday a legend. Another legend has
passed away. We'll talk about that a little bit about
the debate tonight as well. Let's talk about Rough Greens,
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(28:33):
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(28:54):
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Well to think doctor. Yesterday, I was telling you guys earlier,
had issues yesterday with my jaw and a tooth and

(29:14):
my buddy's over at the tooth extraction clinic, not paying
me to say this. I jetted over there because it
was bad, and doctor Williams and everybody took care of
me big time. And if you guys heard me yesterday,
I was kind of a little longer I was. I
was a mess, I had fever. It was it was
pretty bad. Went over there. They handled business quick. The
only thing I could say about him is they were

(29:35):
playing Cool in the Gang and nobody knew who Cool
in the Gang was. And I felt like the oldest
person in the world. But they rocked yesterday, and I
really appreciated that because I feel a thousand times better
than I have in quite a while. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at she had
Benson Show's your Twitter tweet at as texta program? You
missing the show? Shame grab a podcast, Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 28 (30:02):
Welcome to chest No, not the country, the institution, the
chat fans, and chew Walls.

Speaker 29 (30:08):
Importantly, Walls isn't as comfortable in a debate setting, and
he's worried about letting Harris down. Doesn't want her to
think she made the wrong choice.

Speaker 30 (30:15):
Hey, buddy, we're not gonna win with that kind of attitude.
Mister bringing in, bringing in coach sounds like you need
one of your signature pregame talks.

Speaker 10 (30:23):
Look, look, buddy, I want you.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
To get out there.

Speaker 30 (30:26):
I want you to honker down, find that extra gear,
leave one hundred and ten percent of the pigskin on
the fourth and down, clear hearts, blue eyes, green clovers,
purple horseshoes, goatfish yatzi.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
Yeah, the debate tonight does it mean anything? I don't
think it does. I think one thing that maybe if
some people pay attention to this you're going to see
completely polar opposites when it comes to des get a
lot of feelings and aweshucks from Walls, and then the
other side, you're gonna get a lot of, you know,
very straightforward kind of answers from the likes of jd Vance.

(31:07):
Jd Vance is much more polished than Walls, and that's
what Walls's big worry is. I don't know if I
buy all of that, and I don't think the Trump
organization does either.

Speaker 31 (31:14):
In his debate prep, Tim Wallas has been facing off
against Transportation Secretary Pete Budaicech in an odd bit of
expectation setting. A source confirms Waltz told Kamala Harris before
she picked him that he's a bad debater. The Trump
camp pushes back on that notion, saying, after nearly twenty
years in elected office, Walts will appear to be very
well prepared. Jd Vance is expected to cast Walls as

(31:36):
too liberal and as someone who retired from the National Guard,
claiming that he'd earned a rank he didn't stay long
enough to keep.

Speaker 2 (31:43):
I think he's going to be fine. I do, I don't,
but I don't think any of these things matter. The
way that people think that they're going to matter, especially
when it comes to the vice presidential debate, it isn't
going to be that telling for the American people because
the people that are probably going to decide this aren't

(32:05):
paying attention to this tonight because they're the low information
voter who will pay a little bit more attention as
it gets closer. They're not going to watch this debate.
If there was another debate closer to election night, maybe
they watch it. Now. I'm not talking about the vice
presidential debate. I'm talking about the presidential debate. But as
much as some people are going to get excited about this,

(32:25):
the facts have always been these things just don't matter
the way that some people want them to matter. They
just don't. And I don't think this is going to
change that at all tonight. I just throwing it out there,
being one hundred percent honest. Yesterday we lost two legends,
Pete Rose and to Ken Bay Mtumbo.

Speaker 14 (32:44):
Weatherspoon gets it up press twenty fourth for the sixers.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
Is Clarence tried to jam his way. Kenny gets the
Tumbo and to Kembate.

Speaker 14 (32:52):
Says no Clarence and the Tumbo's no Tumbo.

Speaker 2 (32:56):
Should you had. Yes, he was amazing. It was incredible.
And if you guys don't know who de Cambe is,
over the last several years he's become kind of a
fixture in commercials and he had the finger waggle. Even
last night, I was watching the Dolphins Titans game and
one of the players blocked the pass and then he

(33:17):
did the finger wag, you know, as if kind of
paying homage to de Kembe. But more than that, this
is a guy who cared about a lot of different things,
and he was a humanitarian in major ways. This is
Stephen A. Smith talking about one of an amazing human being.
He was.

Speaker 32 (33:36):
But the Kemba mctumble, a four time Defensive Player of
the Year. Seven times he finished in the top three
for Defensive Player of the Year awards and obviously winning four.
Like I just said, no matter what you know about
him as a basketball player, he was an even better
human being. Always was about giving, always was about helping
that are a Dominican Republic of Congo. Along with being a

(33:58):
humanitarian for the humanitarian.

Speaker 33 (34:00):
For the world. His heart was just huge. It was big.

Speaker 32 (34:03):
One of the most beautiful, beautiful human beings I've ever
known is really really sad, you know that he went
through what he was going through and ultimately.

Speaker 2 (34:12):
And wait, yeah, and he was from not the Dominican
Republic of the Congo. He was from the Republic of
the Kamman. He died yesterday in Atlanta. He had cancer.
And this was a guy who gave back to his community,
talked about going back over there during the wars and stuff,

(34:34):
and it was you know, he just was one of
those people was that was infectious. He loved life. He
loved the ladies. By the way, if you know anything
about the Kembe he used to talk about, he'd walk
into a club and say, who wants the sex to
Kembe up tonight. But he was the guy that lived
life to his fullest and gave back big time.

Speaker 10 (34:56):
And the.

Speaker 2 (34:59):
This this is one of the first Africans that came
over here and really not only played basketball, but took
it and tried to grow it globally and then throughout Africa.
And a brilliant guy. By the way, he spoke English, French, Portuguese,

(35:20):
five Central African languages as well. Just a brilliant guy
and a humanitarian big time and a Hall of Famer
as well. Three two, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at ch Had Benson Show, To Twitter, your Instagram,
all of the other things right here in the Chad
Benson Show. A lot of stuff still to get to

(35:43):
in the second hour, including yes, more on the strike.
If you're not paying attention, they are on strike, they
bing the doc workers and what is the implications of
that for this election, but also for the economy, especially
this time of year as we headed towards the holiday seasons.
Because as we've said for the last several days, guess

(36:04):
what this is the time, especially small business when they
make hey, fifty sixty in some cases seventy seventy five
percent of what they're going to do is going to
take place over the next three months, and how will
this affect them? Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, To Twitter,
your Instagram, all of the other things. This is the
Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
This is the Chad Benson Show. Independent thoughts, independent life,

(36:54):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
It's the debates. Is it the great debate? It's just
a debate, all right, It's triple A. That's the way,
the best way. If you like baseball. We've been talking
about Charlie Osseol dialing yesterday, Pete Rose, it's triple A,
all right, these guys could be Reggie ready for the
major League soon, you know, if anything was to happen.
But the reality is, it's triple A, and we don't

(37:16):
pay much attention to triple A.

Speaker 34 (37:17):
Both candidates have work to do. A majority of voters
believe neither Walls nor Vance are qualified to service president
if needed, and disource with the Walls campaign says they're
not convinced anything tonight will move the needle when it
comes to November's election.

Speaker 2 (37:31):
I don't think so either. I mean if I mean,
I think people may look at JD. Vance in a
much different way because the reality is is Donald Trump
is old? Oh my god, how did you say that?
Because he's old? That's why I said it. We would
look at Kamala in a different way if she was
vice president, because the reality is, you know, according to statistics,

(37:56):
there is a chance that she would be president if
Biden ran again and won. That's just statistics, kids, same
thing with JD. Vans. Now Walls has come out and said,
ah sux, guys, I'm not really good at this, So well,
see what happens. The Trump Campaign's like, look, he's telling

(38:16):
everybody he sucks at this. So if he does, okay,
then you know maybe. But I've heard a lot of
people actually say we got to really lower the expectation
for Walls. He gets, you know, struggles. I'm like, well,
if you struggle at this, you shouldn't be president. I
said it earlier today, Ron de Santus, I think would
be a fine at actually governing and doing the things.

(38:38):
The meeting of the people, the selling the ideas, that's
an issue. I mean, for the most part, while you
set the tone for the country and for the party,
it's the greatest sales job in the world. You're out
there selling the world America. It's ideas, it's values, et cetera,
et cetera, battling for America where you have to. I

(38:59):
could see jdv Chan it's doing that in a better
way than Tim Walls. But does any of this matter now?
Probably not. Here's something interesting though, This is somebody who's
in an open letter to CBS about tonight's debate.

Speaker 35 (39:10):
CBS, you're not qualified to host the debate. That includes
somebody who has gone on records saying that they make
up stories. Who is campaigning on a ticket with somebody
who has lied thousands and thousands of times to the
American people. You are not qualified to host a debate

(39:33):
if you are going to knowingly spread false information. I
hope that is clear enough, CBS.

Speaker 2 (39:42):
Is it clear enough on CBS?

Speaker 35 (39:43):
You're not qualified said that to host the debate. You
are degrading the institution of journalism by doing this. Knowingly
going into a debate and making decisions knowing that that
is going to cause you to broadcast lies to the
American people severely discredits you.

Speaker 2 (40:08):
In the eyes of the public.

Speaker 35 (40:10):
If you do this, you will not recover from the
tarnish that you are going to bestow upon your image.

Speaker 11 (40:18):
CBS.

Speaker 2 (40:20):
Yeah, I don't really buy that. And by the way,
they told them today, you guys fact yesterday, you guys
fact check each other. We're not doing it. We're not
getting involved. We're not going to be ABC where we
only fact check one guy. We're not going to be
CNN where we don't really fact check anybody and let
anybody fact check. We're gonna let you guys fact check
each other and then you guys can go from there. Okay,

(40:41):
so has everybody got that if he says something you
think is a lie, you fact check him. If you
say something that you think is a lie, you fact
check him, and we'll go from there. That's all we're saying.
You guys, handle your own business. We're just here to
be the referee and to ask questions. We're not here
to do anything out than that. When not here to
rule on anything. That's what we're doing. Okay, fantastic. While

(41:06):
we were sleeping, the idf right rolling on into Lebanon.
It is go time.

Speaker 36 (41:14):
Israeli ground troops crossing into Lebanon to conduct what they've
described as limited localized raids against Hezbollah targets. Shortly after
the idea of saying they intercepted several missiles fired from Lebanon.
Ahead of these strikes, Depensacon, deploying several fighter squadrons and
a few thousand extra personnel. They joined an aircraft carrier
strike group, bolstering US forces in the region.

Speaker 2 (41:37):
Yeah, this is getting serious in a major way. In
a way that while we've seen what's happening in Gaza,
partial things in the West Bank, some stuff with the hooties,
this is a whole other level. And the way that
they're coming at it is, Hey, this isn't going to
be everywhere. We're focusing in certain areas, and we're going

(41:57):
to do this in a certain way. We're not coming
in to take over the entire country and to run
rough shot.

Speaker 6 (42:02):
These localized ground raids will target Ribada strongholds that threaten
Israeli towns, keep with seem in communities along our border.

Speaker 2 (42:12):
God, it just feels like it's about ready to just
go sideways, isn't it. I mean, it just does. I
think everybody recognized that. Yesterday. Nett Yaha, we touched on
at the end of the show, spoke directly to the
Iranian people, saying, all right, you guys, we know you're
not scumbags. We know you're not the people that your
leaders are. We get that, and you are living under

(42:33):
the same oppression that they would like everybody else to
live under, and we know that's not who you are.

Speaker 22 (42:39):
Every day their puppets are eliminated as muhammadev as Nonsuela,
there is nowhere in the Middle East Israel cannot reach.
There's nowhere we will not go to protect our people
and protect our country. The vast majority of Iranians know
their regime doesn't care a whit about them. If it
did care, if it cared about you, it will stop

(42:59):
waste billions of dollars on feudal wars across the Middle East.

Speaker 11 (43:04):
It would start improving your lives.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
He's spot on there, and there is a lot of
unrest with the Ayatola Homani, who, by the way, is
in absolute hiding right now. They have whisked him away
as of this weekend. Is there a bunker deep enough
to hide because he recognizes how serious this is. It's

(43:27):
no joke anymore. And of course we are at this
point in time not really doing much with Israel because
Israel is leaving us out of the loop because they
don't trust us. They don't trust what's going on with
the American because every time something happens, they tell Israel,
you shouldn't have done that. You're escalating this, you shouldn't
have done that. I think Israel is just to the
point where it's like, look, we're going to go straight

(43:49):
to the people. But we've had enough of this. We
can't live our lives in eternal battle with countries around
us that hate us. All the while those countries are
subjugating their people to our Hayk beliefs, abusing them and
getting them to hate the Jews.

Speaker 22 (44:04):
Every day you see a regime that subjugates, you make
fiery speeches about defending Lebanon, defending Gaza. Yet every day
that regime plunges our region deeper into darkness and deeper
into war.

Speaker 2 (44:21):
Not forget, they want to get a nuclear weapon, and
a nuclear armed Iran changes the entire Middle East because
if they get one, and Saudi Arabia wants one. Because
if you think that it's only Israel that Iran would
love to destroy, think again.

Speaker 22 (44:41):
There are tens of millions of good and decent people
with thousands of years of history behind them and a
brilliant future ahead of them. Don't let a small group
of fanatic thear Crofts crush you hopes in your dreams.

Speaker 2 (44:56):
If you know nothing about Iran, which is understandable, take
a look at what Iran was like pre the revolution.
Same thing with Beayrout. Europeans used to travel there. Iran
used to be hip. It used to be like going
to Monaco. It used to be one of those things.
Same thing with Beairut. It used to be the place

(45:17):
that the Europeans used to love and go. They go
and party, they enjoy their lives and all of this
stuff was I mean, they were fashioned forward and now
look at them now. Is their lives any better? Hell no?
And they only keep this by the tip of the spear.
I remind everybody that they keep what they have by
the tip of the spear.

Speaker 22 (45:38):
I know you don't support the rapists and murderers of
Hamas and Chris Bala, but your leaders do you deserve more?
The people of Iran should know as well stands with you.

Speaker 11 (45:51):
May we together know a future of prosperity and peace.

Speaker 2 (45:56):
We will find out. Everybody's looking around, going all right, Iran,
what the hell are you going to do? Because they
are not just calling you on the carpet. They are
taking out people. They're taking out your people. They're taking
out people in your home, even though they may not
be quote unquote your citizens, and they are calling you
to the carpet.

Speaker 37 (46:14):
We're also waiting for some kind of response from Hesbela
or Iran. We're expecting there to be some kind of response.
I will say Iran earlier today did say that Israel
and America would pay the consequences here and that no
Israeli action would go unpunished.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
Well, we're waiting for it. We're going to find out
if that happens, and we're also going to find out
what it looks like on the other side when in
if it does happen and Israel pushes farther in, are
you going to have people that break with the regimes
and Sarah, We've had enough of people running wild in
our country, threatening to kill everything in its path that

(46:55):
isn't Iran or Hesbelah or the hooties, and subjugating us
to awful things. It's time for us to take our
country back. We shall see three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chadbentton Show. Is your Twitter,
tweet at us text to program other things we're watching. Obviously,
the port strike, it is big. They went on strike

(47:16):
at midnight last night. What does that mean? Higher prices
potentially for us, especially this time of year as it
is the holiday season.

Speaker 9 (47:24):
Automation of our nation's ports should be a concern for everyone.
The truth is robots do not pay taxes, They do
not spend money in their communities. The ISLA would continue
to fight until its members receive the fair contract they deserve.

Speaker 2 (47:39):
This is potential to see the supply chain broken. So
what would have to happen is they would have to
start getting stuff shipped in in smaller ways through airplanes.
But on top of that getting stuff from across the
country and not in a timely manner, and that's going
to cost more money was passed on the consumer. So

(48:00):
this has the potential of being very nasty. And for
every day that they are on strike, anywhere between three
and six days is what they're saying to get it
back to where it was pre strike, So ten days
could be thirty to sixty days. It's October first, it's
the holiday season, Christmas creep three, two, three, five, three, eight,

(48:23):
twenty four to twenty three at you had Benson Show,
sho Twitter, your Instagram, Bullwark Capital, when you talk to
my buddies over there, Zach Abraham, chief investment officer at
Bullward Capital, Why is that? Because he's gonna help you.
What's he going to do you ask? He is going
to give you a free risk review. It's not gonna
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He's going to walk you through your entire portfolio show
you where maybe that you're in a situation where you're

(48:44):
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the volatility, low risk, lower costs, lower volatility. This is
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(49:04):
through active management. Call them today get a free risk review.
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nine risk. That's eight six six seven seven nine risks.
Or check out no Your Risk Radio dot com, k
n OW your Risk Radio dot com, Investment Advisor, Reservice Officer,
the Trick Financial LLC, and sec Register Investment Advisor. The
opinions expressing this program are for general informational purpose online
and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations

(49:25):
for any individual or specific security. Any reference to performances
of security so thought to be materially accurate and actual
performance may different investments involve risk. You are not guarantee
past performance is not guarantee future results. Truck two four
to three zero eight. It's the Jad Benson Show.

Speaker 13 (49:49):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 34 (49:51):
Nothing's gonna move without us.

Speaker 2 (49:55):
Head of the long Shoreman's Union, Harold Diggett to numbers.

Speaker 10 (49:58):
I want to tell you, Zoe, what you're doing right.

Speaker 31 (50:00):
Union wanted a seventy seven percent wage hike over six years.

Speaker 10 (50:04):
The Port's offered fifty percent plus the current limits on automation.

Speaker 2 (50:07):
Which is a big deal. That's the big thing they want,
the automation along with the other stuff. We want better
working conditions. But the automation thing scares them, as it
scares everybody in the world. Automation is here, and think
of it as AI but with machinery. Automation has been
around forever, but it's just gotten so much more sophisticated

(50:30):
by the way that guys just everything you want, right youse.
Guys want to do this, You don't. Okay, we's not
doing this. We's going on strike. He may be local whatever,
but the reality is is I have a feeling he
has met folks in the mom Now that being said,
there is something that the president could do, but he

(50:50):
is not going to.

Speaker 3 (50:52):
I have this strike moves forward, fourteen ports along the
East End Gulf Coast could basically be unable to load
or unload cargo from those containers ships That can affect
everything from fresh fruit to machinery, appliances, cars. President Biden
says he is not going to intervene. He could stop
the strike by invoking the Tapped Harley Act, Buttaia said

(51:12):
he will not do that.

Speaker 2 (51:13):
So he's not going to do that, which is he
wants them to have their opportunity. Here's the thing. If
this thing we talked about it yesterday, if the strike
goes on for a prolonged period of time, you're going
to see a massive jump in prices in certain areas
and in certain things. I mean, we're talking everything from
medicine to toys, electronics, you name it. This is going

(51:35):
to affect a lot of different things that we see
inside of grocery stores, inside of big box stores online.
And the reason because it is a supply chain, and
we know what happens when the supply chain goes a
little won key, right, We understand what takes place. So
you know, somebody said, yesterday, is this in October? Surprise? Well,

(51:57):
I said, think of it as a Christmas surprise because
you strike while the iron's hot, and for retailers, nothing
gets hotter than starting today. Moving on, which is Christmas time?
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter tweet at

(52:18):
us text the program. I love hearing from every single
one of you right here on the Chad Benson Show.
That Christmas creep is here. It's real. Yes it's October first,
but you're building now for what is going to be
your Christmas season, and you make hey when you can,

(52:38):
and so this is the perfect time. And then you
throw in an election and God only knows what can
happen from here, so understandable why they're doing it. We
move from that to Julian Assage today speaking out went
to Europe in parliament thing in Strausburg, which is in Francis,
was big and talking about what he went through.

Speaker 38 (53:00):
The experience of isolation for years in a small cell
is difficult to convey. It strips away one sense of self,
leaving only the raw essence of existence.

Speaker 2 (53:10):
Now, if you unfamiliar with Julian noisange, because it's been
a while. This was a guy who was hiding in
the Ecuadorian embassy for what seven years, and then eventually
they raided the embassy took him. He was in prison
for five years, and then they came to a deal
with time Serve. He pled guilty and there are certain
conditions of which he cannot basically come after the United
States for certain things and the way that he was treated,

(53:33):
and he pled guilty to a felony.

Speaker 38 (53:35):
I'm yet not fully equipped to speak about what I
have endured.

Speaker 2 (53:40):
One of the things I thought he said here today
was very interesting was about why he pled guilty and
what he pled guilty too.

Speaker 38 (53:47):
I am not free today because the system worked. I
am free today after years of incarceration because I pled
guilty to journalism.

Speaker 2 (53:56):
It's very interesting because he is a hero for some
and a pariah for others. We're going to get into
this a little bit more. We love it when we
hear from all of you. You can reach out to
us across all of our social media at Chad Benson Show.
It's your Twitter, your Instagram, all of the other things
including Facebook and YouTube as well. As we start to
get videos and everything up and running. We love hearing
from all of you. It is The Chad Benson.

Speaker 1 (54:17):
Show, Sun Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.

Speaker 13 (54:43):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (54:44):
The phrase is lies, damn lies and statistics. Now it's
credited to Mark Twain, but the reality is he said
Benjamin Disraeli came up with it, and nobody can find that.
And there was a guy named Lord Beaconsfield who supposedly
said it. No matter who said it, it's awesome and

(55:06):
it's true. And I'm going to show you that right now,
how you can take statistics, cherry pick them and give
them everything you want. Okay, are you guys ready for
a little lesson? Ah wait, fantastic, let's do it. Where
do we start? How about this Byron Donald's on CNN
talking about crime.

Speaker 23 (55:26):
You have to acknowledge the reality going on in every
city in America, not answering the question that is answering
the question that was the reality in America. Hold on, Keith.
The reality in America is that crime is massively up.

Speaker 2 (55:38):
Crime is not massive lie.

Speaker 23 (55:44):
Already know that there is. I just really started this
crime is going.

Speaker 6 (55:49):
Oh my god, why do you want heavy?

Speaker 30 (55:51):
Why do you let this man lie?

Speaker 23 (55:57):
Because you're lying to the American people. Now, I want
to be respectful of what you try to say.

Speaker 39 (56:01):
On a second, or you would just let me talk.
I will explain exactly what you want me to explain.
We have the data. The FBI literally put out data
today showing that crime is down this year for the
first six months of the year.

Speaker 13 (56:13):
But look at the trend line.

Speaker 39 (56:14):
Okay, crime is down in all these different categories, and
then there is a trend line that shows that crime
is going down.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
Okay, did it go up and it's now coming down. Yes,
we could talk about that. Here's though, one of the
things that nobody talks about as we look at this. Okay,
I want you guys to get this here again. This
is how you can run with data, play around with
the numbers, and make it look like something you want.

(56:46):
Guess what's missing from the FBI About thirty percent of
places that have not reported, including Los Angeles and New York. What, Yeah,
they have not reported. In twenty three of twenty seven

(57:06):
surveys conducted by Gallup since nineteen ninety three, at least
sixty percent of US adults have said they believe there
is more crime nationally than there was the year before.
It's a certain sense, why is that what you see
it on TV all the time, you see it on
the TikTok, so you get this sense that stuff is
going on, but the report says there's not a lot. Well,
it's hard to tell because not everybody reports. They change

(57:30):
the reporting I think in two thousand and nineteen, and
when they change the reporting, not everybody is up to
date with how you report to the FBI. Now, so
you have eighteen thousand opportunities for different you know, police, sheriffs, constables, whatever,

(57:50):
you have to report, right so your area and out
of those, a lot of big cities do not report,
have not. In fact, in the top twenty, more than
half have not reported the way that the FBI wants
you to report, So you leave them out. So do
I know if crime is up or down? I think

(58:11):
it really depends. It really depends. In some areas. It
may be down. In some areas, it may be through
the roof We know certain things are up, property crime,
hate crime, through the roofs in certain areas, but do
we know the real number. No, because we don't have
the actual figures to put everything together. So what we

(58:31):
do is we take something and say crime is down. Well,
if you're not reporting it right, It's like it's one
of the things we've talked about in Los Angeles. They
talk about crime being down all the time. Well, if
you've made everything essentially not a crime, of course crime
is down. If I told you today, hey, you could
steal anything under nine hundred bucks, you'll get a ticket.

(58:52):
We're not really going to report it. So I mean
crime is down. It just means that at this point
in time, we're just not going to count that as crime.
I mean it's on the books as crime. If you
stop calling the police because you're at the point where
you know they're not going to do anything. They're just
overworked and frustrated because even if they do catch somebody,

(59:15):
they know they're going to be out in the streets
in five minutes in a place like Los Angeles. Then
what do you do. So that's why you have to
go look at incident reports if you're serious about it,
because you're calling to get an incident report so you
can report whatever stuff happened to your car or your
house so you can get the insurance to cover. That's
the way you play with it. Then you've got what's

(59:35):
going on at the border, which is you know, the
numbers are always all over the place, and it's a
game that everybody plays because everybody wants to be right understandable.
This is the world we live in. Yesterday they asked
KJP about the stuff, right, the numbers, the numbers, and
the numbers are big. I'm gonna play this whole thing

(59:56):
for you. It's about a minute, fifteen minutes. I don't
want it to be taken out of context. I want
everybody to hear the whole thing between DOUC and KJP
based on the numbers. Immigration and the criminals that have
come into this country.

Speaker 26 (01:00:09):
Thank you great thirteen thousand people who have been convicted
of murder across the border illegally and are living among us.

Speaker 11 (01:00:17):
So how much danger are you as communities? And right now?

Speaker 15 (01:00:20):
So I'm assuming you're talking about the ice data. Yes,
So just a couple of things, and I think it's
important to correct the record here. First of all, the
false the false representation of the data I shared, So
that was what we were seeing, false representation. I got
to call that out. We got to call that out.

(01:00:41):
And it's been fact checked by some of your colleagues
here by multiple, multiple, multiple outlets. That has been debunked
on what has been falsely misrepresented. We're misrepresented here, so
we have to call that out.

Speaker 11 (01:00:56):
And so look, this is what the misrepresentation is.

Speaker 15 (01:01:01):
The numbers that is being put out about how many
people are out it's.

Speaker 2 (01:01:05):
Been falsely represented here.

Speaker 15 (01:01:08):
If you look at the total returns and removal of
the past year, that has been higher than every year
under the previous administration since twenty ten. If you look
at it, and if we're going to report something a
data that's out there, we got to do it in
the way that is not confusing the American people and

(01:01:30):
certainly not lying. And so there has been if this
has been fact checked, been fact checked, and so this
is the way that is being false falsely represented here
is just not okay, And they'll got to be really.

Speaker 2 (01:01:45):
Clear about that. Okay, So what's the truth? So ICE
data did not specify when the convicted folks came across
the border. So the illegal has come across the border,
they're convicted of crimes or wanted for crimes. They didn't specify.
And this goes back all the way potentially twenty sixteen.

(01:02:07):
So what does that mean. I have no idea when
they came here. The numbers may be absolutely correct, but
the timeframe may not work the way that the right
wants it to work. But regardless of how the right
wants it to work or the left wants to work,
the reality is that we have way too many people
here that've committed crimes. Just sheerly. Based on the numbers

(01:02:29):
of people coming here, you only have to go even
if only two percent have done something, wanted something, or
were convicted of something, you're looking potentially depending let's just
say it's ten million people that have come across the
border since they've taken over two hundred thousand people. If
you were just to do it that way, if you
do do a one percent to be one hundred thousand

(01:02:50):
people over that time, you can break it down and say,
well it's less than one percent. We'll say half a
one percent, it's fifty thousand people. I think we can
all agree those numbers are ridiculous. But it's the way
that you play with the numbers, and that's the thing
that matters. How can you manipulate the data to get
the thing you want? Because just like with the inflation rate,

(01:03:14):
well we're going to cut out this, this and this right.
So if you're buying tennis shoes and ramen soup. Inflation's
only up two point three percent. If you had to
have fuel rent things like that, well inflation's up five percent.
So we're going to take this stuff out. How you
play with the numbers matters. Here is Greg.

Speaker 18 (01:03:34):
Abban, Kareem John Pierre doesn't know what she's talking about.

Speaker 11 (01:03:37):
Let's be clear about something.

Speaker 18 (01:03:39):
What you said is exactly right, and that is there
had been thousands of dangerous criminals who were apprehended in
the border, processed by border patrol. Ice knows about them,
and then they were released by Kamala Harris into the
United States of America. This should be a disqualifying factor
for Kamala Hair to be president of the United States.

(01:04:02):
About more than five percent of the illegal immigrants that
the Biden Harris administration have allowed in are criminals. These
are people who are causing crimes in the United States.
You've seen what's happened in New York, We've seen what's
happened in Texas, and so this is the importation of
crime into our country by Kamala Harris. She cannot be

(01:04:22):
trusted in securing the border or protecting our country. This
should be disqualifying for her to be president of the
United States.

Speaker 2 (01:04:29):
Well, it's not disqualifying, and she'll have a chance to
be president the United States. And this is where you
have to get across your message that we can't have this.
But I mean he took it up to five percent.
I went to half a percent. I mean, it's hard
to argue even at a half a percent. I mean
you're still looking at a ton of people to come

(01:04:50):
across the border, and you've got to think about this.
Venezuela is a perfect example. How many people have come
from Venezuela. We have no relationship with Venezuela, no diplomatic relationship.
So the people that are coming here, we know nothing
about them. We know that the gang is here, Tanta
Agua is here. We know nothing about who these members are.

(01:05:12):
We know nothing about who these people say they are
because there is no relationship, so they're not giving us
any information and we're not getting any You can manipulate
the numbers, if data, if you want to. This goes
back to the thing we always talk about here. You
must be willing, if you're serious about this stuff that

(01:05:33):
you believe, to go and do a little digging, which sucks.
I'm going to be one hundred percent honest with you.
It sucks at times because unfortunately, we become so fragmented
that going and digging means you literally have to dig.
You have to go from point A to point B,
from point B to point C. You're over here at
this site, then you go to this site, then you

(01:05:54):
have to go quote these people, and you have to
find this thing. It's frustrating as hall at times. And
even at that point in time, we're also relying on
government data that may be also fragmented. It's not full.
As we were starting out, see the crime data, what's
the crime data say? Well, it says crime is down
and it's been coming down since twenty twenty one, twenty two.

(01:06:16):
But not everybody's reporting. Okay, so what do you mean
not everyvery's reporting. Well, there's eighteen thousand agencies and six
thousand of them haven't reported. So how can I tell
that that's not giving me the full picture? Imagine going
to see a movie. It's like, look, the movie's one
hundred and eighty minutes long, but we've cut sixty minutes
of it out, and it's pretty important that you have
those sixty minutes. Otherwise you're not going to know what
the story is all about. You guys, enjoy It doesn't

(01:06:39):
work that way. Three two three five, three eight, twenty
four to twenty three At Chadmnson Show, Is Your Twitter? Tweet?
At as texta program, we were talking about Julian Assange,
and I want to touch on that in a little
bit because I think it's important because he is a
lot of things. For some he's a hero, for others,
he's a pria. We talked about that god. I think
you've got to paint a picture of who this is,

(01:07:01):
what he's about, and maybe the difference between how we
got information when it comes to quote unquote being a
journalist as opposed to how other journalists have gotten information
in the past and their participation in getting some of
that information. Three two three five three eight twenty four
twenty three at Chat Benson Show, to Twitter, your Instagram,

(01:07:22):
all the other things, rough greens, vitamins, minerals, probiotics and
make a three six nine. You guys hear me talk
about rough greens all the time. You know, somebody asked
me the other day about Doodle. So if you guys
know anything about my older dog, Doodle. He passed away
about two three months ago. Doodle was amazing. Shouldn't have
lived as long as he did when we adopted him.
He was way older than they said he was and

(01:07:44):
he was really struggling after years, so we thought we
might have to put him down. We started giving him
rough Greens and it changed everything. It's got vitamins, minerals,
probiotics and make a three sixty nine. It's got things
like spinach which really reduced the inflammation and helped him
with his arthritic legs and joints, which was the life
saver for him. It was just awesome. He got tons
of energy and he lived an extra five years that
he wouldn't have had it not been for Roughgreens. They've

(01:08:06):
got Mealgreens now and it's helping our cat angus who
is big and not as fury as he should because
he's got allergies, and this has helped him big time
because he had the ConA shamoff off. It came, I
want you to try a bag of rough Greens or
Mealgreens for free. If you love your animals like I
love my animals, do this. They will love it and
you'll love what it does for him. Go to ruff

(01:08:28):
greens dot com slash chad. That's roughgreens dot com slash chad.
Remember brown, not good green it is That's what it
all is really all about. Dogfood is dead food, and
so is catfood. Roughgreens dot com slash Chad. You cover
the costs of shipping, they get you a Jumpstart trial
bag for free. Roughgreens dot com slash chad, Chad Benson show.

Speaker 28 (01:08:57):
Deep states no Deep, you don't eah the chats and sells.

Speaker 38 (01:09:04):
The experience of isolation for years in a small cell
is difficult to convey. It strips away one sense of self,
leaving only the raw essence of existence.

Speaker 2 (01:09:16):
That right, there is Julian Massage, who spoke today to
some sort of group of folks at like one of
the European Parliament kind of get togethers in Strausburg. I
don't know why I say in German, right it should
be Strasburg. And he's got a complicated situation. So we

(01:09:38):
don't know anything about Julian Nossage. The reality is as
he was, as he liked to say, held hostage inside
of the Ecuadorian embassy in Britain before they came in
and grabbed him the Brits, which they shouldn't have done
in theory, because it's you know, the Ecuadorian embassy is

(01:10:00):
sovereign land even though it's in Britain. So they snatched
him up, spent five years in prison.

Speaker 38 (01:10:06):
I am yet not fully equipped to speak about what
I have endured.

Speaker 2 (01:10:12):
And now that he's out, well, it pled guilty one
count felony count that essentially there was seventeen counts he
was charged with, but one count is all that he
ended up pleading guilty to. And as he likes to say,
he pled guilty to journalism.

Speaker 38 (01:10:28):
I am not free today because the system worked. I
am free today after years of incarceration because I pled
guilty to journalism.

Speaker 2 (01:10:38):
Now here's the issue. So if you guys don't remember
anything about him, Wikipedia, the co founders, does all of
this stuff, puts everything out there and brings a lot
of stuff to light when it comes to what was
going on globally with the United States, including what our
military was doing, the war crimes, secrets, government practices, all

(01:11:02):
of those kind of things. Now we said, hey, you
put people at you know, lives at risk, You shared
secrets you shouldn't have got, and this all had to
do with him getting secrets from Chelsea Manning, then Private Manning,
Chelsea Manning had a trans operation, became Chelsea Manning. Chelsea
ended up going to jail. As we all know, here's
the issue that became the issue should he have published

(01:11:25):
those things. Much like Edward Snowden, people are going to
look at him in a much different way. He let
us in on a bunch of different stuff that we
wouldn't have known about on the other side of it.
How you got it was important, and one of the
big things was we said, look, he got this by
trying to get Chelsea Manning to go get this and
even helping at times crack codes. Therefore not being a

(01:11:51):
journalist that was receiving something, but being an actual person
who was efforting to get these things by hacking. It
is a complicated situation. For some he will always be
a pariah. For others, he will always be a hero.
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty

(01:12:12):
three at Chad Benson Show's your Twitter tweet at us
text the program right here on The Chad Benson Show
coming up third hour. A lot of stuff still to
get to. More on what's going on at the ports.
The strike is on what could this mean for the election.
We'll touch a little bit on tonight's big debate. That's
not really a big debate, it's the little debate that's

(01:12:33):
for the big job, if you will, the second little job.
Vice President. Talk a bit about that as well. Charlie
Hussel passed away, Pete Rose flawed human being, absolutely, But
the question now is does he deserve to go in
the Hall of Fame. He was banned for a lifetime,
his lifetime is over. Do you think he should go
into the Hall of Fame. We'll talk about that a

(01:12:54):
lot of other stuff to get to reach out to
us across all of our social media at Chadminton Show,
Twitterchad Son, The Chad Benson Show.

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

(01:13:33):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 10 (01:13:35):
These people today don't know what the shrine is. When
my men hit the streets from Maine to Texas, every
single port will lockdown. You know what's gonna happen. First week,
be all over the news every nine boom boom. Second week,
Guys who sell casts can't sell costs because the cars
ain't coming in off the ships. They get laid off.
Third week malls are closing down. They can't get the

(01:13:57):
goods from China. They can't sell clothes, they can't do
it is everything in the United States comes on a ship.

Speaker 11 (01:14:04):
They go out of business.

Speaker 2 (01:14:08):
That right there is the dude who's leading the longshoreman.
He's everything you want. Man, if you went to Central
cash here like all right, here's the deal I want.
A big dude. Looks like he could intimidate the hell
out of you and snatch your life just from a stare.
He's got to have an accent too, What kind of

(01:14:29):
accent you know? Like, what's going on? It's me, Tony,
and that's him. It's mister Daggett there talking about them
going on strike, them being the long shoreman. The port's
a hooy strikes kids, strikes, I talk about. They are
on strike, and that is big news. And the reason

(01:14:49):
is simple. It's the time of the year where the
holidays are here and just in time four prices to
potentially go up. Why supply chain broke aw man, We
know what that's like. Supply chain breaks in any way,

(01:15:11):
shape or form. It's kind of like when there is
a delay on an airplane. So you're expecting your connecting
flight to get here. Say you're in Dallas, you're thinking
it's coming, you know, from Charlotte. But there is an
issue and it doesn't make it to Charlotte in time. Okay,
so what happens, Well, they don't have pilots when it

(01:15:32):
finally does. So now all of a sudden, you're missed
a fly. You're missing a flight, and then so are
several other people. And that flight was supposed to take
them somewhere else. And it's the domino effects. Same thing here,
you start missing weeks of stuff arriving on time, on schedule.
All of a sudden, oh Christmas is here. The domino

(01:15:55):
effects starts to happen. You've got people who want certain
things from you. You're having to get it from across
the country. Now that's costing you more money and more time.
Time and money. Maybe that's what it's about.

Speaker 3 (01:16:05):
Jailor was like executive Kevin Ree say, a strike lasting
more than a couple of weeks could force businesses like
his to raise prices for customers.

Speaker 4 (01:16:13):
If all the East Coast and the Gulf Coast ports
our clothes businesses will be bringing things in from the
West coast, which will cause more congestion there and you
have to transport that all the way across the country. Ultimately,
what that means is higher cost for consumer.

Speaker 3 (01:16:28):
Analysts say, for every day the strike lasts, it could
take six days to clear the.

Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
Backlog, and that's a big deal. Five billion a day
is what it could potentially cost. Let's just say it
costs four billion a day. That sucks, right, we all
agree that super sucks. Let's start adding the days together.
They say it is, you know, five days, six days.

(01:16:55):
Let's just say it's three days and it lasts twenty
days whole mother of god, that's sixty days. Kids, So
it takes three days to catch up rather than six.
Because if we were to do six and it's sixty days,
that you're done. I mean, your holiday season is expensive

(01:17:17):
and you're not going to have everything. And let's not
forget I say it all the time. They make Hey,
what does that mean they make? Hey? This is when
you make the money. You're a seasonal kind of business
where if you're a big retail business, you're planning on

(01:17:38):
this third quarter being the boom that may get you
through the tougher parts of the year. Then the things
will start to pick up again. You're planning on this
fourth quarter being your boom or bust time, and most
of the time it's a boom time, and all of
a sudden it's a bus time. Why not because you
can't get the stuff. You can't get it there. So

(01:17:58):
what do they want?

Speaker 5 (01:18:00):
Forty six years I've been here, I've never seen nothing
like this. I've never seen them go after management like
they're going. This is a good country. We've watched app
leads and everybody of all walks get paid well for
their work. We just want our work.

Speaker 7 (01:18:16):
We want to give America what they need. There's all
these want us that come in here. Suff it's for us,
it's for you, it's for America's for everyone. We don't
want us to go on, but we want to secure
our future. We want to secure our jobs for at
least another ten years.

Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
We can't go on like this.

Speaker 7 (01:18:31):
We can't have robots to our jobs.

Speaker 9 (01:18:33):
Automation of our nation's ports should be a concern for everyone.
The truth is robots do not pay taxes. They do
not spend money in their communities. The ISLA would continue
to fight until it's members receive the fair contract they deserve.

Speaker 2 (01:18:48):
And that fair contract. What do they want? Get rid
of automation as much as possible. Get rid of automation
as much as possible. Make it so we can collective
arg against certain groups, including potentially the government, but most
importantly automation, the robots, the robots their job. That's the fear,

(01:19:13):
that's the fear across many sectors. Why shouldn't be a
fear of theirs everybody. Here's the thing. Everybody wants to
believe they're indispensable. We're not. We're not indispensable. I'm not.
I know that. But everybody wants to believe. Okay, well,
if another person took your job, that's one thing, but

(01:19:35):
a robot taking your job again, we're not. We're not indispensable.
There are certain things we want to know are done
by humans. But let's be real for a second. Do
you care how your stuff gets off a ship? Probably not.

(01:19:57):
Do you care who operates on you if it's a
robot or a human. Are you ready to take a
flight with only a robot commanding it? Those are certain
things you've got to think about. But with something like this,
you're striking while the iron's hot, and much like with

(01:20:19):
the actors, right, they all go on strike. We're all
on strike because Rah whatever reason, and they won't. No
writers could be AI know this could be AI. By
the time that ink dried, it's done. AI had already
moved past that. And we're seeing that in Hollywood. There
is a guy right now, I'll see if I can
find it and post it. And if you wonder, I

(01:20:40):
haven't posted for the last couple days, I'll let you
guys in a little something here, in a little bit,
there is a guy who created an Indiana Jones scene
inside of his house by himself that looks like it
cost one hundred million dollars. AI had moved past that.

(01:21:02):
If you can get the stuff off ships safer, quicker,
companies are going to do it. And this is one
of the things where we don't care about how we
get our stuff. Like I said, a pilot, that's good.
One day. That's going to change. One day that's going

(01:21:22):
to change. People are gonna be fine with that. I mean,
we're still struggling at times getting in a car with
no driver. A pilot's going to be a different thing. Surgery, well,
surgery in some ways. I mean I had my eyes done,
Thank you, doctor Kane King lazy. It wasn't like he
was standing. He was in the room. Hes done it,
he got it all set up. But it's essentially you

(01:21:45):
know all of these machines now. But it's nice. No,
he's there heart surgery. You ready for that? How we
get stuff off the ships?

Speaker 31 (01:21:58):
Mm?

Speaker 2 (01:21:59):
I don't think people really care about that. Oh so
they also want essentially over the next six year about
a seventy five percent raise as well as bonuses things
of that nature. They understand that, not that the end
is nigh, because you're always gonna have to have people down there.
And that's the one thing that people need to understand.

(01:22:20):
It's not about eliminating humans. It's about taking the opportunity
to use this technology to better yourself, free you up
to do more things. So you're always gonna neat humans.
But for the most part, you're gonna strike while the
iron's hot. And this is the time of the year
that you do it. Speaking about striking while the iron
is hot.

Speaker 6 (01:22:38):
If the state of Lebanon and the world can push
kiz Balla away from our border, we have no choice
but to do it ourselves.

Speaker 2 (01:22:48):
Yeah, the idf rolling on into Lebanon just kind of
just the tip.

Speaker 6 (01:22:53):
These localized ground raids will target his Balla strongholds that
threaten Israel to keep it seem in communities along a border.

Speaker 2 (01:23:04):
Now, this is what we're hearing. And I just got
a text from one of our military guys who said
that Iran is readying missiles as we speak to hit
Israel and it is getting hot. Yesterday, Nett Yahu, we
touched on it towards the end of the show, addressed
the Iranian people directly saying, Hey, look, your regime is awful.

(01:23:28):
They treat you like crap. You want a peaceful life.
We want a peaceful life. There's no reason why we
can't coexist. But one thing you guys have to do
is you have to get rid of them, and it'll
make your life so much better. I mean, he addressed
them directly, saying, we know that you don't hate us
the way that they, you know, want you to believe

(01:23:50):
that we think you hate us. We know that you
don't support rapists and murderers of children and women, and
we know you don't support all the stuff they're doing
in other countries to fight against us and against the West.
But they don't like you. So it'll be interesting. But

(01:24:11):
they say they're reading missiles. Now this could be a
lot hotter than people realize, and it's how does this
is this the October surprise? Because if they fire missile
missiles because we know they fired stuff before, and it's
a little different, you know, because they Iran has always

(01:24:31):
been the we talk a good game, will fire some stuff,
will make it look like a certain thing, like we
made an effort. We'll celebrate because we blew up a
you know, an outhouse, and we'll say it was one
of your great installations and our people go, yeah, if
they go bigger, does this give Israel the impetus to
move on? In ooh regime? Changs three two, three, five, three, eight,

(01:24:55):
twenty four or twenty three at Chadbuds in the show Shore, Twitter,
your Instagram, all of the other things. A lot of
stuff to get to little what's trending? Straight ahead Bulwark
Capital to talk about Buddy's Aack Abraham chief investment officer
over there. He can do something for you in this
uncertain time. Are you protected in all way shape and form,
up down, sideways You need to be want to get
a second opinion from my Buddy's ac So what is

(01:25:16):
the second opinion. It's called a risk review. They go
through everything, where are you at risk? Where are you're
not using the money in your retirement the way you
should be, as far as investing to get you to
the place that you want to go. It's a second opinion.
There's nothing wrong with that. It doesn't cost you anything.
They want to show you what they're all about, lower risk,
lower cost or volatility, give you the most upside potential,
which is what it's really all about, because they want

(01:25:38):
to help you build the life that you want when
it comes to your retirement, and not everybody's retirement is
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eight six six seven seven nine risk. That's eight six
six seven seven nine risk. Or check out everything they
do by going to Know Your Risk Radio dot com,
Know Risk Radio dot com, Investment Advisor, Reservice Officer, the

(01:25:59):
Trick Financial LLC, and as you see, registered investment advices
or the opinions expressing this programmer for general informational purpose
only and are not intended to provide specific advice or
recommendations for any individual or specific security. Any reference to
performance and security so thought to be materially accurate and
natural performance may different investments involves. You are not guarantee
past performance, is not guarantee future results. Truck two four
three zero eight. What's trending? Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 13 (01:26:29):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:26:32):
Now it's time to find out what's trending? What's trending?

Speaker 40 (01:26:37):
Signed James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serena.

Speaker 8 (01:26:56):
What truth?

Speaker 2 (01:27:00):
It's finally what was trending in the old inner webs
on this beautiful Tuesday? Shall we baby? It's October first,
that's trending. It's the first of the month. Get up,
Get Up, Get up? Short over in Twitter. PlayStation was
down for five hours. It's everybody okay. Happy hundredth Jimmy

(01:27:21):
Carter turns one hundred years old. Good Tuesday, October first.
Pete Rose ken Page. You don't know the name, but
if you've ever seen a nightmare before Christmas, he was
mister Oogie Boogie. He's passed away at age seventy. Christ
Is King, followed by Leatherface only on Twitter, Lions Maine

(01:27:42):
de Taxis, Happy Spooky Month, Happy Halloween Unions, Pete Rose,
Julian Massage Dikembe, mud Tumble, Mutumbo, Charlie Hussele all trending
in the magical world of Twitter. Head over to Yahoooo
Donald Trump number one training thing, followed by the Lions

(01:28:03):
Port Strike, Russi, Ukraine War, Caitlin Clark Asheville, North Carolina.
Verizon also had an out of yesterday, Amor League Baseball
playoffser set, Prince Harry, and Hurricane Kirk So Hurricane Kirk
is a Kirk Cameron it is not. And finally over
to the Google Pete Rose number one training thing yesterday,

(01:28:25):
followed by to Kim Bate, Mutombo and Verizon and PlayStation
all tied. The Titans Gotta win, Seahawks got a lost
Port strikes big deal obviously, VP Debate time. We've got

(01:28:45):
that Oasis announcing that they are going to be touring
North America. Ken Page again passed away mister Oogie Boogie three, two, three, five, three,
twenty four to twenty three at Chat Benson Show. That's
your Twitter, your Instagram, all of the other things like
Facebook and everything else right here The Chat Benson Show

(01:29:10):
and Pete Rose again, Charlie Hustle and did Cambe Matumbo
trending everywhere when it comes to the interwebs. Yesterday's been
quite a few days of people passing away. If you
think about it. Pete Rose did pass away. They found
him yesterday. Man, what a life, both good and bad.

(01:29:36):
And fans still love him. I heard about p Rose.
I thought the greatest hitter that ever played the game
had passed away. Sorry to you that he's gone, and
he was a great baseball player.

Speaker 1 (01:29:47):
Will always been a hot for having any healing Phidy.

Speaker 41 (01:29:51):
I'm glad he came to Philadelphia, you can see for sure,
helped Larry Bowa and the Philadelphia Phillies win that World
Series in nineteen nine zero.

Speaker 2 (01:29:58):
He was a flawed individual, there was no doubt about that.
We talked about it earlier, the brilliance of him, but
also the madness of gambling on baseball, and he finally
admitted it. Now, can we put him in the Hall
of Fame? I think he should be in the Hall
of Fame, And I think that's that's a big debate.
Here's the problem. If baseball didn't play the gambling game,

(01:30:18):
then everybody plays. Now, Okay, where it is on TV
twenty four to seven, and it's brought to you by
ESPN bets and all of these other things. If it
was still a non betting kind of thing where they
haven't sold the rights to it, I would say, well,
if you want to keep him out, that's fine, But
now that you have, I think it's time to put
him in. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four

(01:30:39):
to twenty three at Chetbentson Show. That's your Twitter, your Instagram.
A lot of stuff still to get to. The port
strikes are massive. What does it mean? Could this be
a bit of an October surprise? Seeing it is October first,
it's possibility it could see prices rise rather fast. We'll
talk about that. A lot of other stuff to get
to it is The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
Chad Benson, Joe, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.

Speaker 13 (01:31:23):
This is Chad Benson.

Speaker 29 (01:31:25):
Walls report of the Walls isn't as comfortable in a
debate setting, and he's worried about letting Harris down. Doesn't
want her to think she made the wrong choice.

Speaker 30 (01:31:32):
Hey, buddy, we're not gonna win with that kind of attitude.
Mister bringing in bringing in coach sounds like you need
one of your signature pregame talks. Look, look, buddy, I
want you to get out there. I want you to
hunker down, find that extra gear, leave one hundred and
ten percent of the pigskin on the fourth and down.
Clear hearts, blue eyes, green clovers, purple horseshoes, GoFish yatzi.

Speaker 2 (01:31:57):
Yeah, tonight debate. I think jd Vance will. I think
if there's a win in this like jd Vance will
do it. I don't think Walls is going to do
that bad but no nobody. Look, jd Vance, out of
all of them, and that includes Trump, is way slicker.

(01:32:18):
He's going to come armed with all kinds of facts
and he's going to come at him. He'll frustrate him.
I'm sure he's nervous. And look, that's understandable. He has
not been on the big stage like this before, and
now he's got to go up against somebody who is
comfortable in front of a camera, right, who is comfortable

(01:32:39):
in a situation where you have to think quick on
your feet. And Walls isn't that guy, right, He's the
awe shucks guy, and do no harm is really the
ultimate goal here.

Speaker 11 (01:32:50):
It is yult mccold.

Speaker 33 (01:32:51):
And look, I do think Walls is probably nervous.

Speaker 23 (01:32:54):
I do think that that jd Vance is not nervous
and it is pretty confident.

Speaker 11 (01:33:00):
But I do think that he is the most of
the loose.

Speaker 33 (01:33:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:33:03):
The rule is do harm and do it on the
other guy. Yeah, that's the rule. It's like what was
the old thing from Patten. It's not to die for
your country, it's to make the other guy die for
his It's kind of the thing tonight. But does it
mean anything. I don't think it does. If any of
them have quote unquote more to lose, maybe jd Vance

(01:33:23):
because he in theory, if we were going by you know,
the actuaries and the data, maybe closer to the presidency,
should Trump win than say Walls, if Kamlo wins because
of the age factor. I know you guys don't want
to hear that, but that's just the reality of it.

(01:33:43):
So we'll see what happens. Speaking of Trump, Biden and
everybody where is Biden. It's a big question. Some people
are asking, as this giant it wasn't the hurricane. I'm
gonna tell you guys, this a game. It wasn't the
hurricane that did the damage. It was the torrential amount
of rain that did massive amounts of damage throughout North Carolina,

(01:34:07):
parts of South Carolina into Tennessee and Florida. People are asking, hey, Joe, Joe,
you're still president. Where were you?

Speaker 30 (01:34:15):
Why weren't she and Vice President Harris Jared Washington commanding this?

Speaker 11 (01:34:19):
I was committed.

Speaker 24 (01:34:20):
I was on the phone for at least two hours
yesterday in the day before as well.

Speaker 41 (01:34:24):
I commend it.

Speaker 11 (01:34:25):
Call the telephone.

Speaker 2 (01:34:26):
It's called the telephone. I was commanding the telephone. I
was there and I was telephoning, and I was commanding it.
Other people they don't command the telephone like I do.
I commanded the hell out of it. I was like, hey, telephone,
look at me, command you. What are you gonna do?
It's ridiculous, Okay, And I'll tell you why. Optics do
matter in a situation like this. Do you guys remember
when Ted Cruz bounced off to Cabo during that giant freeze.

(01:34:50):
Now he came back the next day. But optics matter,
doesn't matter what side of the aisle you're on. And
they were asked about this yesterday in the Old White House.

Speaker 26 (01:35:00):
People in western North Carolina were drowning in their houses
this weekend.

Speaker 11 (01:35:04):
Others were losing everything.

Speaker 26 (01:35:06):
President Biden was at his beach House and Vice President
Harris was hosting political fundraisers on the West Coast.

Speaker 11 (01:35:12):
Is there a reason that they could not be here?

Speaker 15 (01:35:14):
The President did exactly what a president in this moment
needs to do, which is directing his team to take action.

Speaker 2 (01:35:21):
Don't do it from the beach. Don't do it from
the beach. Cut your vacation short. That's what you do.
Don't do it from the beach. People are missing, a
lot of people are missing. People are struggling, And whether

(01:35:45):
you want to believe it or not, you may have
been commanding. But in today's world, it's not just how
you command in the sense of what you're doing on
the phone that people don't see. It's what they see
because they don't know what's going on behind closed doors,
which brought everybody to this magical moment.

Speaker 11 (01:36:06):
I have huge both of you of ignoring the decis
is lying. Let me get there straight.

Speaker 24 (01:36:12):
He's lying, and the governor told him he was lying.
I've spoken to the governor, spending time with him, and
he told me he's lying. I don't know why he
does this, and the reason I get so angry about it.
I don't care about what he says about me. I
care when he communicates to people that are in need,
he implies that we're not doing everything possible.

Speaker 23 (01:36:31):
We are, we are?

Speaker 2 (01:36:33):
Is he doing everything possible? Did he lie?

Speaker 27 (01:36:36):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:36:36):
He lied? He lied. Well, he can't reach him. He's
not doing this. This is this is back to back
Trump and then Kemp. We do need some help from
the federal government.

Speaker 42 (01:36:47):
They have to get together, ideally with the governor. That
governor needs to He's been trying to get them, and
I'm sure they're going to come through, but he's been
calling the President as a able to get him.

Speaker 20 (01:37:01):
I just spoke The President just called me yesterday afternoon.
I missed him and called him right back, and he
just said.

Speaker 11 (01:37:07):
Hey, what do you need? And I told him, you know,
we got what we need. We'll work through the federal process.

Speaker 20 (01:37:13):
He offered that if there's other things we need, just
to call him directly, which I appreciate.

Speaker 2 (01:37:18):
That so frustrating. You don't have to, I mean, the
optics were already bad enough. You didn't have to. And
maybe it didn't come as soon as you would want.
This goes back to the politics of a disaster. It
used to be a situation where the politics didn't matter.
And if I'm a governor, which I'm not the governor,

(01:37:40):
I don't care if you show up or not. I
care if you send the people that need to be
here with all of the stuff to show up, if
you want to show up days later to survey some
of the stuff, to get it so it's calmed down
a little bit and it's not all chaos. That's fine.
I as a governor, though, need to know. This is

(01:38:01):
one of the things the federal government is about the
disaster side of things. And Trump did say, in fairness
to him, look, they're gonna get it together, they're gonna
come through, but you didn't. There's no need for that,
There's no need. But it's it's the politics of a disaster.

Speaker 27 (01:38:19):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:38:19):
We no longer wait, right, It's like even something with
a gun violence, insanity, somebody goes and shoots up something,
it takes two minutes before people start talking about, well,
we need to take this and we need to do that.
We no longer allow the breathing room of a tragedy
of a crime to take place before politics gets involved.

(01:38:42):
And that is that's a shame. It is an absolute shame.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chadbentson shows your Twitter tweet as text to
program what will Iran do? White House is reporting they're
getting ready for a big launch.

Speaker 37 (01:38:57):
We're also waiting for some kind of response from hesde
Law or Iran. We're expecting there to be some kind
of response. I will say Iran earlier today did say
that Israel and America would pay the consequences here and
that no Israeli action would go unpunished.

Speaker 2 (01:39:14):
What does that look like, right, I mean that's the
big thing. What does that look like? What is their
response going to be? Because in the past their response
has been pretty half assed. Okay, it's been a few
rockets launched here there. We talked about it earlier, right,
they hit an outhouse and they claimed that there is
some great victory for Allah, and in reality it's just

(01:39:35):
you know, some sort of show of force.

Speaker 25 (01:39:37):
US officials as well as Israeli officials, who are saying
right now that Iran is preparing and is eminently going
to launch missiles at Israel.

Speaker 2 (01:39:49):
Here's my take, straightforward. I think Israel wants to goat
them into something ridiculous. I think Israel wants to goat
them into something where they have no choice but to
go in there and have a regime chain. I think
Israel wants to goat them into something that causes them
to react in such a way because they feel so
damn embarrassed by what has going on that they react.

(01:40:14):
In doing so, it gives Israel then the opportunity to
try to make a move on Homiani, who, by the way,
for those of you not keeping score, is hiding. Why
is that because come here, I'm gonna let you guys
in a little something. They, being the Israelis, don't f

(01:40:34):
around every day.

Speaker 22 (01:40:36):
Their puppets are eliminated. As muhammadev as no Sula. There
is nowhere in the Middle East Israel cannot reach. There's
nowhere we will not go to protect our people and
protect our country.

Speaker 2 (01:40:52):
So they've been hiding him since uh Israala was killed.
Where Homiani is I don't know. Apparently they've put him
in some Is that bunker big enough? Is it strong enough?
And one of the things that they're now hearing is
they have broken through not only hes Blah, but into

(01:41:13):
some of the higher reaches of the Iranian government with
their spies. Those spies have eyes. Those eyes have lips.
Those loose lips will sink those ships. Is about to
get warm up in there. I continue to think, brother,
they are trying to get them to react. They are

(01:41:36):
trying to get them to do something that causes them
to be drawn into something where they can go. You
know what, Screw hesblah, screw gods at this point in time,
Screw the West Bank and the hooties. Let's go get
these sobs. Let's just finish this thing here and now,
and let's set them back when it comes to their

(01:41:58):
nuclear program decades. That's just me. I'm throwing it out there.
What are we doing? The usual? Aw, everybody's calmed down, the.

Speaker 36 (01:42:08):
US pressing Israel to contain the scale of operations. On Monday,
President Biden again calling for peace.

Speaker 24 (01:42:14):
We should have a ceasefire now.

Speaker 36 (01:42:16):
Israel also attacking here in Benrutoveh. Nice parts of this
densely populated neighborhood in the city are starting to look
like Gaza, with civilian casualties and hundreds of thousands falls
from their homes.

Speaker 2 (01:42:28):
He reminds me Biden of Larry from the movie Jaws,
where everybody has seen the shark attack and he still
made everybody go in the water, and then the shark
attack came again. And now he's trying to figure out
how he can save August. You know what I mean.
That's that's what Biden reminds me of. He's still trying
to save something. At this point in time. I don't

(01:42:48):
think it'd be saved. Good luck to you, sir, three two, three, five, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is
your Twitter tweet at has taxed the program? Love hearing
from every single one. You talk a little baseball straight
ahead if you guys don't mind that, because there was
a legend loss yesterday and the big question is should
that legend be in the Hall of Fame or not
because of a little gambling he did back in the day.

(01:43:11):
Talk about that straight ahead. First, my pillow. My pillow
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(01:44:15):
order today. Visit my pelo dot com slash Benson for
sale price. Use that promo code Benson, talk a little
baseball and wrap it up straight ahead. This is the
Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 43 (01:44:34):
Serving up talk radio, medium, rare and dripping with irony.

Speaker 13 (01:44:39):
It's Chad Benson A levels about a couple of times.

Speaker 2 (01:44:42):
Shall kick Senny Fires Rose swing.

Speaker 12 (01:44:49):
Hid number forty one ninety two, Hey live drive saying
go into love center, Paila quan basin.

Speaker 43 (01:44:59):
Is hand the money.

Speaker 3 (01:45:00):
I'm here.

Speaker 2 (01:45:01):
I remember stadium that right there. Pete Rose the big
hit forty one ninety two. The hit makes him the
hit king, but not in the Hall of Fame. Of course.
You know why he gambled on baseball talk about that
in a little bit. People were upset yesterday because here's
the thing still be loved in a lot of places
like Cincinnati, like Philadelphia.

Speaker 11 (01:45:21):
I heard about pe Rose.

Speaker 2 (01:45:22):
I thought the greatest hitter that ever played the game
had passed away. Sorry to hear that he's gone. And
he was a great baseball player.

Speaker 38 (01:45:28):
Well, always being all for any heal in thirty.

Speaker 41 (01:45:32):
I'm glad he came to Philadelphia.

Speaker 2 (01:45:33):
He can see for sure.

Speaker 41 (01:45:35):
Helped Larry Bowa in the Philadelphia Phillies when that World
Series in nineteen eighty nine.

Speaker 2 (01:45:39):
Yeah, I remember that Charlie Hustle didn't have all of
the maybe talent that other players had. They called him
Charlie Hustle because he did everything was a sprint to
first base, even on a walk. The guy never stopped.
And of course we know what happened in the in
you know, we can talk about all the great stuff,
but a lot of people remember the All Star Game
when he ran over his pal and I heard him

(01:46:02):
it's an All Star game, for God's sakes, It's crazy,
But he bet on baseball.

Speaker 14 (01:46:07):
Did you bet on your own team?

Speaker 33 (01:46:09):
Yes? Did you ever believe in my team? I mean
I knew my team. Did you ever bet against you?

Speaker 2 (01:46:17):
No?

Speaker 33 (01:46:17):
No, that would be That'd be the last thing I'd
ever even even consider. You're now saying for the first
time publicly, Yes, I bet on baseball. I bet on
baseball in nineteen eighty seven, in nineteen eighty eight.

Speaker 2 (01:46:34):
That was him with Charlie Gibson. Going back, I think
it was two thousand and four when he did that
interview talking about betting on baseball and the first time
he admitted it, and the Doubt report, all that stuff
came out because he wanted to get back in baseball.
Baseball was his life and he deserved to go in
the Hall of Fame, and he was never going to
get in the Hall of Fame. Was a lifetime ban. Well,
the lifetime is over. Can I just say that? But

(01:46:58):
he wanted to get back because he felt he had
so much still to give to the game.

Speaker 44 (01:47:01):
I went baseball and Pete rose to be friends. That's
all I want for so I can say I'm not
an outsider looking in. There's two things I learned that
I could do. I could hit a baseball, and I
think I can learn or teach.

Speaker 33 (01:47:18):
A lot of people not to make the same mistakes
that I made. I worked hard at it. I got
down the reps the last several several several years, and.

Speaker 11 (01:47:29):
You know, I'm in control of my life right now.

Speaker 2 (01:47:33):
Spent the last several years living in Vegas selling his
autograph to anybody who would buy it in many different places.
Should be walking through like a mall, and he would
be there selling his autographs. It was a sad situation.
I mean, think about this. He's the hit king in
a sport that hits matter and he's not in the
Hall of fame, which brings us to this.

Speaker 9 (01:47:54):
And then I go and spoil it all my saying
something stupid.

Speaker 2 (01:47:58):
Well takes stupid pills this morning.

Speaker 31 (01:48:00):
It's the honest ones you want to watch out full
because you can never predict are they're going to do
something incredibly stupid.

Speaker 2 (01:48:08):
Now you're the fact stupid one with the big mouth
is stupid little last time.

Speaker 11 (01:48:14):
You should never underestimate the predictability of stupiditing.

Speaker 2 (01:48:18):
Now it's time fall stupid information. A lot of people,
men and yes, even a woman, have been suspended by
baseball for quite a long time, the likes of Marge Shott,
who owned the Cincinnati Reds, for bringing baseball into well disrespute.
But on top of that, even guys who weren't playing

(01:48:40):
anymore were suspended. How about this, Willie Mason Mickey Mantle,
both retired and both in no way were involved in
baseball anymore, were banned in nineteen eighty and nineteen eighty three,
three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweet at
his text the program right here on The Chad Benson Show,

(01:49:01):
Solid fun show today as always Tomorrow, we're definitely gonna
take a look and listen to the magic that will
be the vice presidential debate, which will be interesting, But
how much is it really going to change anything? I
don't think as much as maybe some people would like
to think, but at least we get to see two
campaigns going at it. And then, of course what will happen.
I think the biggest news of all between the ports

(01:49:23):
and what is happening in Israel and Iran potentially striking
them three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweet
at a texted program. You guys, have a blessed rest
of your Tuesday.

Speaker 27 (01:49:34):
I'm not really a fan of Tuesday's up.

Speaker 2 (01:49:36):
Go eat some tacos, night night Jack.

Speaker 13 (01:49:44):
This is the Chad Benson Show.
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