Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
People are terrified of change. They don't like it, even
if it benefits them, they don't like it. The Democrats
are doing everything they can to make sure that everybody
knows this change that's happening is evil. It's bad, it's awful.
(00:35):
It's going to destroy their world, it's going to destroy America.
There are evil people doing this. We're the rescuers. You
are the victim.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
Trump is part of the evil. And of course Elon
right now is enemy number one. And it was interesting
because I came across doctor Drue of the Love Lines
Fame a lot of other stuff. That's where I originally
heard doctor Drew when I was a youngster talking about
this Last Night on with Handed. He talking about the
(01:15):
victim side of stuff, but talks about it's change, And
trust me, I get it. Not everybody's a big change person.
Most people aren't. They want their comfort food. And government
is supposed to be slow. Government supposed to be really
(01:35):
a thing that's kind of like molasses in the cold
weather just didn't move very fast. And all of a sudden,
here comes Trump and here comes Elon, and Trump changed
the game, made a lot of people uncomfortable, got a
lot of people out of their comfort zone. Then you
bring Elon in, and wholy.
Speaker 4 (01:53):
Moly, the reality is that people probably are suffering.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
Humans do.
Speaker 4 (02:00):
I don't like change, that's just something about human beings.
And the change right now is coming at as fast
and furiously, and even people who like the quality of
the change are going to be a little bit uncomfortable
with this.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
And that's saying something that I don't think people understand
out there. So for some people who want that, let's
tear the whole system, downt destroy everything, there's a lot
of people out there, even on the conservative side, little
uncomfortable with the speed of stuff. Little undercomfortable with a
guy named big Balls in areas. That's not really his name,
but you know that's, oh my god. It's a little
(02:36):
uncomfortable with Elon and some of his peeps in areas
they feel like we didn't bring you in to do that.
Little uncomfortable. In a lot of places, they want change
and they want it to happen, but this just feels
like it's going a little too fast. So it's not
just the Democrats that are freaked out. There are some
(02:58):
people out there that are a little nervous on the
right side of the How can that be? Trust me,
I know because I hear from you every single day.
Speaker 4 (03:05):
But I've been thinking lately that, you know, when you
put that quote up there, it's feelings of helplessness that
people are describing and grief. They're grieving a lost sense
of themselves and their world, and that previous sense of
themselves I really believe was a sense of themselves as victim.
(03:26):
I think people have been sort of falling into this
victim posture and they've entered into something that's called the
drama triangle or the Carpman triangle, which people are are
in the victim role and everyone else has to either
be a rescuer or a victimizer, and they have cast
to the rest of the world as victimizers.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Yeah, cat no, not Carmen carp Carpmen, Cartman k R
P M A N. So what is that? So it's
a triangle, think upside down triangle. You got a rescuer,
you got a persecutor, and you got the victim. The
(04:08):
persecutor is Elon Musk, Donald Trump and all the all
all of the trimmings that come with the Trump presidency.
The victim is America. You the little person, and the
rescuer are the Democrats. And they're writing in to save
(04:31):
the day. They're writing in to tell everybody we're here
to fight for you.
Speaker 5 (04:38):
Every time you hear doge the Department of Government Efficiency,
you just remember it is the Department of Government Evil.
Speaker 2 (04:49):
Over, the Department of Government Evil. What. Yeah, they're there
to protect you, They're there to save the day. They're
there to be your rescuer.
Speaker 6 (05:01):
On the campaign trail and he was asked Canada, Trump said,
what's that.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
I've got nothing to do with that. But he just.
Speaker 6 (05:08):
Installed He just installed Russell Vote, who's the architect of
twenty twenty five at the Office of Management and Budget.
The Office of Management Budget is the command and control
center for the budgets of all the federal agencies.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
Oh my god. So that must mean he's there to
take everything over. Oh jeez, thank god. We have people
like you.
Speaker 6 (05:36):
First you get rid of the igs, then you bring
in you fire merit based federal employees, and you bring
in political cronies. So the way I see it, this
is not a recipe for government efficiency. This is a
recipe for corruption.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
It's a recipe for corruption and there's only one person
that can say today, there's only one person who can
ride in on the shiniest of horses, and that's me,
the Democrat. That's me, the person who wants you always
(06:15):
to be the victim, always looks at you as said victim.
And anything that goes against the narrative that's out there
is evil and bad and that's why you need me.
And it's been this way forever in politics, so much easier.
It's like, could we reason them?
Speaker 7 (06:33):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (06:33):
Should we show them dad in facts? We could? Should
we try to explain to them this is how this works,
this is what's going to happen, and then let them
make their own decision. We could, or we could scare
them but Jesus out of them and tell them we're
(06:55):
here to rescue them. Which one's easier? The second one, Well,
let's do that one.
Speaker 6 (06:59):
Then next stop, after the Department of Education, where they've been,
after Noah, after CMS Medicare, is going to be the
Social Security Administration.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
And we say no, we say no, no, no. That
right there is Chris van Holland. He's a Democrat from
Maryland who's saying no, So what did he put in there?
(07:35):
Project twenty twenty five coming for social security, starting to
go after even merit based things, putting all of the
things that you can put into something all in one area.
And then you have people who are sitting around who
(07:56):
feel like they have no power and what happened? Oh jeez,
you are here to save us, aren't you? Softfully nice
to you? Thank you so much? It's insane and don't
buy it. Are there some serious questions that need to
(08:18):
be asked about Elon's role where he's going? Oh yeah,
you bet you? And I am going to ask those
questions because I'm not thrilled by some of the areas
that maybe he's landed himself on. But I am also
going to, while paying attention, allow him to expose stuff
and do his thing. Does it mean that it's going
(08:41):
to be perfect?
Speaker 6 (08:42):
No?
Speaker 2 (08:43):
Is he going to make mistakes? Yes? Are they eventually
going to clash? Oh you bet you, Candy asked, they will?
That being said, you're not a victim. The world's not
coming to an end, and they're not taking away any
of the services. Social Security, Medicare and everything that you've
paid into isn't happening. It doesn't mean down the road
it won't happen on its own, but the thought process
(09:08):
that it's all coming to an end because these people
want your data and information. It's all they wanted for,
so they can put you into a crypto scam. That's
what I heard yesterday. By the way, when they talk
about data and information, I want to mind everybody a
couple quick things here. They've been hacked on numerous occasions. Okay,
(09:34):
twenty twenty four last year, massive breach by the Chinese Party,
on top of that twenty twenty cyber attack Russians. So
we can go on and on about how many agencies
have been hacked. And your stuff's already out there. So
everybody needs to settle down, is what I'm saying. Yes,
(09:55):
it can be uncomfortable at times, especially the speed of
which things are going. That being said, if you hear
people saying the world's coming to an end because of
these people, no, they're not trying to win your vote.
They're trying to scare you into supporting them. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson
(10:16):
shows your Twitter, tweet, at US text the program. I
love hearing from every single one of you on this
beautiful day. I found this really interesting. So Bear had
on Trump the other day, Red Bear and they were
talking about because of the Super Bowl, because all the
stuff that happened, you know, a lot of it just
kind of went by the wayside. But he was asked
(10:36):
about JD. Vance and is he the future of the party,
his successor.
Speaker 7 (10:41):
Do you view Vice President JD.
Speaker 8 (10:43):
Vance as your successor the Republican nominee in twenty twenty eight.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
No, but he's very capable, you know. I think you
have a lot of very capable people.
Speaker 7 (10:52):
So far.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
I think he's doing a fantastic job.
Speaker 7 (10:54):
It's too early. We're just starting. Well.
Speaker 9 (10:56):
By the time you get to the midterms, he's going
to be looking for an endorsement.
Speaker 7 (10:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (11:00):
People have said that this has been the greatest opening
almost three weeks in the history of the president.
Speaker 9 (11:05):
That's only been the fastest and the most stuff I've
done so much so fast.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
I was just fascinating. That's early. We'll find out if
he is or isn't. We'll see how much he plays ball.
I'm not saying no, but right now, no, I don't
see him as that very interesting, very interesting, indeed, three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show
is your Twitter tweet at us text the program. A
lot of stuff to get to today, including a new
(11:33):
segment about America and the wackiness that goes on here.
That's fun, and we're gonna talk pennies and peanuts, a
bunch of other stuff as well. But first, the Big
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Speaker 1 (13:09):
Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
Eric Adams a misfit mayor will he get a chance
to work with Donald Trump? Or will he go to jail? Wait?
Speaker 10 (13:21):
What?
Speaker 11 (13:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (13:22):
Yesterday Trump kind of advised the age. Hey, let's get
this case with Eric, who's an ally when it comes
to immigration. Let's get this thing put to the side.
Let's just let's put it over here, Okay, And at
(13:44):
least for now, we'll see if he can help us
with immigration. We need it. New York City's a pretty
big city.
Speaker 12 (13:50):
The Justice Department, now under the new Trump administration, dismisses
the case against him, but says, we don't know whether
he's guilty or not, but we want him to fight crime.
I mean this is what happens in authoritarian.
Speaker 6 (14:02):
Is essentially they essentially were saying that this fighting these
charges takes away from his ability to pursue help the
Trump administration with immigration.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
Correct, Wait, what so they're not going to pursue him,
not now, But maybe they left it out there that
after Eric leaves office whenever that is, that they could
go back and re open said case. That is a possibility,
(14:37):
But for now, we need to fight crime, and Eric
fights crime, especially when it comes to immigration.
Speaker 12 (14:46):
And this is what happens in authoritarian countries that you know,
the rule of law is not applied equally. It's only
applied to how the leader wants it applied. And Eric
Adams has ingratiated himself with the Trump administration, and now.
Speaker 6 (15:01):
He gets he went to moor A Lago, he went
down to the inauguration.
Speaker 12 (15:05):
Right, And that's not how the legal system is supposed
to work, especially when the Justice Department acknowledges that the
case may well be legitimate.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
Yeah, and that's the other thing. What do you mean
well be legitimate? Even his Justice department, even his Department
of Justice, goes there's a good chance some of this
stuff is real. Now three two three five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson's show, is your
ex your Instagram? Check out the Facebook as well, and
(15:37):
don't forget we have a YouTube. Go to Chad Benson
Show TV like and subscribe there for that. We appreciate
that right here in the Chad Benson Show. But for now,
he's more important to us to fight crime than to
(15:57):
stand trial for whether or not he got free trips
and luxury gifts, et cetera, et cetera. That is not
a good look. I'm telling you guys that right from
Mayor to eggs egg apocalypse going on, people are trying
to figure out what do we do? We need eggs,
(16:18):
we need eggs. I can guarantee you a vast majority
of the people out there who are buying so many
eggs don't need eggs, and if they do, it is
once in a while, not to the tune of five dozen.
It's this fear that there isn't going to be enough,
(16:40):
and because.
Speaker 13 (16:41):
Of that, we're losing our blank in mind with social
media lighting up showing some people over buying eggs and
grabbing up everything a store has to offer, kind of
like toilet paper. During the pandemic. Now, stores including Trader
Joe's are implementing limits. Trader Joe's telling ABC News it
will limit customers to one carton of eggs per day,
no more building up a shopping card with eggs. Costco
(17:02):
stores are also beginning to limit egg purchases as more
Costco customers are complaining eggs are sold out within a
few minutes of a store opening because you've got this
fear in your mind that they're gonna go away and
there's never gonna be a chicken again, and there's never
gonna be an egg again, and so you're doing everything
you can to make sure that you're covered, and you're
(17:23):
gonna sit here in six weeks.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
When everything's kind of back to normal, going, wow, I
still have a thousand eggs left three two, three, five, three,
twenty four to twenty three At Chad Benson Shows your Twitter,
It's a Chad Benson.
Speaker 14 (17:35):
Show, Son, Chad Benson Shoe.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
The Chad Benson Show's.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
Down time for our latest segments. Think you guys are
going to enjoy this. Ladies and gentlemen. Now it's time
for the what is wrong with you people in America?
Is it only America? No?
Speaker 10 (18:18):
But I'm talking about what's going on in America and
the insanity of what's going on in America, because there's
a lot of insane things going on in America.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
Let's start first with the Super Bowl. Commercials were entertaining,
except there was one commercial guy by the name of
Kanye West, and boy, oh boy.
Speaker 7 (18:41):
What.
Speaker 9 (18:43):
So what's up?
Speaker 7 (18:43):
Guys? I spent.
Speaker 9 (18:48):
Like all the money for a commercial.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
On these new teeth, So once again I had to
shoot it on the eye.
Speaker 9 (19:08):
Go to easy dot com.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Okay, so he's in a dental chair and as he's
in the dental chair leaning back, he's filming on his iPhone.
I spent all the money on by my blah blah blah.
You know, so go to easy dot com. When you
go to easy dot com, you're like, and if you
(19:31):
don't know what easy is, it is a it's his
media and clothing company, and Yeasy's work quite the thing
for a while. When you go to Yasy dot com, Now,
(19:51):
are you going to find any of those cool Yeasy
shoes the kids like, any of that easyhoodie apparel? No,
but you will find t shirt of a swastika and
that's it. That's all you can buy. I'm not making
it up. People, What in God's name are you doing?
(20:13):
He has lost his mind. Between the crazy manic episodes
he goes into that becomes anti Semitic manic episodes, to
the bizarre relationship with his lookalike Kim Kardashian wife that
he essentially controls, makes her does weird stuff. I don't
(20:40):
even I don't know. I don't know. He's just lost
his ever loving mind. We go from there too. Oh
my god, that's bad. How about this? Remember the killer
of the insurance executive Luigi.
Speaker 15 (20:59):
Yeah, it's a story that captivated much of the country,
and now legal defense donations are once again pouring in
for Luigi Manngioni. He's the man accused of murdering the
United Healthcare CEO. Donations are now at nearly three hundred
thousand dollars. The initial goal was two hundred thousand, but
that has since been raised two half a million.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
Emangioni is charged with killing.
Speaker 15 (21:21):
Brian Thompson on the streets of New York City back
in December. He could get the death penalty if he
is convicted.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
So if you guys don't remember that you had the
CEO right and He's just walking down the street, and
there was cameras there because their cameras everywhere in New York.
And he walked up cowardly behind him and shot him
in the back, and then when he fell to the ground,
stood over him and shot him again, killing it. Then
(21:51):
he went on the lamb. And he had planned this out.
Everything was planned from top to bottom. But of course,
because it's the healthcare industry and he's evil and bad
and assists white hetero male, which as we know, is
the worst thing on earth, he was applauded by many,
(22:11):
and so people are giving money for his defense. I
want you to understand, people are giving him money to
defend his cowardly pos act. What the f is wrong
with you?
Speaker 16 (22:27):
He will have to accept these donations in order to
use them. That is something that would be done through
his attorney, Karen Friedman Agnifilo. She would coordinate with the
organizers of the fundraisers. There were a bunch set up
initially when he was arrested, and we know he has
multiple court cases pending at this point. But one such fundraiser,
the December fourth Legal Committee, tells News Nation that they
(22:49):
have received individual donations from more than ten thousand donors
individual people, so more than ten thousand people donating, and
I've raised nearly three hundred thousand dollars for his legal
defense fund.
Speaker 2 (23:04):
And he's wealthy, all of the things that those people hate.
He is. But because he shot cowardly. I bring this up.
The cowardly thing because in the old Western days, even
if you killed an outlaw that was the fastest gun around,
(23:26):
that was wanted for all kinds of stuff, you shot
him in the back, Well, that was cowardly, and this
was extra cowardly. And people are like, we should probably
give him some money because he's fighting the good fight.
Speaker 16 (23:38):
Now, according to this specific fundraiser, they say that Karen
Friedman Agniffolo, his defense attorney, has reached out to them
and confirmed that he will in fact use that two
hundred and ninety thousand dollars to defend himself in these
three legal cases. Now, we reached out to Agnifolo to
confirm that, but haven't heard back. But in a statement
from the committ the December fourth Legal committee that actually
(23:59):
had a quote for her, saying that he is aware
of the donations, is pleased at this public support he's
getting and will use them to therefore defend himself. You know,
this is really just going to show the kind of
novel public support that a murder suspect is getting in
this incredibly high profile case. He was mentioned over the
weekend Nicole in FNL during Weekend Update, and the host
(24:23):
Colin Jost was visibly kind of surprised when people in
the crowd erupted in cheers single because.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
Most people draw the line at murder, right. I mean,
I want you to think about this. Okay, I get it.
You don't like insurance companies and they've got serious issues.
We can all agree with a lot of that stuff.
But this just feels like you are effing insane to
(24:53):
think about doing. But yeah, why not? You know now
it is give send go, not go fund me, because
remember go fund me, they don't want any part of
this kind of stuff. And a lot of people are
making out, well they stop that from Rittenhouse and they
wouldn't let Rittenhouse do it. And I'm like, okay, I
(25:14):
get that, but I said, this isn't go fund me.
This is give send go that is allowing this to happen.
So he's going to need the money.
Speaker 7 (25:26):
People.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
Again, I find it weird that you're going to allow
that on your platform. Would you do the same for others?
Where do you draw the line? But this guy is
going to need the money because he's going to be
busy when it comes to court.
Speaker 16 (25:43):
There's three of them. Remember, the next hearing that he's
going to have in his court cases is February twenty first,
that's going to be in Manhattan, and that's for his
New York state cases. He is accused of killing Brian Thompson,
the United Healthcare CEO, in a very reason attack. I've
seen all of the footage that was allegedly him gunning
him down in the middle of the street in the
(26:05):
morning in Manhattan. Now the state case will be adjudicated first.
Then he also faces murder and stalking charges in federal court,
as well as weapon chart weapons charges over in Altoona, Pennsylvania,
where he was arrested. Arguably the most severe of the
cases is that federal case because the death penalty is
on the table. However, the DOJ has not said whether
(26:26):
or not they're actually going to seek the death penalty. However,
his attorneys have hired a very high profile death penalty
expert to help them should.
Speaker 2 (26:35):
That happen, should it happen? How much money you think
of raise if they seek the death penalty? Just what
the f is wrong with you people, America? What three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Bets'
show is your Twitter? Tweet ats, text the program Love
(26:56):
hearing from all of you. Birch Gold. Wait to text
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They're going to send you out a investor kit, but
on top of that, they're also going to send you
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(27:17):
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Text Benson to ninety eight, ninety eight, ninety eight. Now
for Birch Gold coming up, we're gonna talk peanuts and pennies.
(28:06):
We'll do that straight ahead. It is the Chad Medson Show.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
Deep stinks, No deep doo doo. Yeah, the chat Vincent Show.
Speaker 17 (28:23):
Okay, by the numbers, So President Trump's ordered the tradeshut
of Apartment to stop minting pennies. Enough with the pennies,
So look at the numbers on this US Mint report
says there are two hundred and forty billion pennies in
circulation today, right, who knew? Three point two billion?
Speaker 7 (28:39):
There it is.
Speaker 17 (28:40):
We're minted just last year alone. And now here's the problem.
As the President has pointed out over and over. You know,
a penny is a penny, but it costs far more
than a penny to make three point seven cents to
make a penny. How does that possibly make sense? It's
actually gone up. It's up twenty percent, you know, percentage
wise from twenty twenty three. Pennies are more to make.
So the President may maybe onto something here.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
Yeah, it's ridiculous. I think we recognize that, and of
course just became big news to the penny. I'm gonna
jump on yet another bandwagon. Well I'm the only one
on her right now. Let's get rid of the nickel too.
Wait what I'm gonna tell you? Why in a second?
A cost effective kind of character. If it's worth it,
let's do it. If it's not worth it, let's not
(29:25):
waste the money. And it's a penny. Do we really
need pennies? What if they're from heaven? It's a different story.
Speaker 17 (29:31):
Penny exceeded its face value for the nineteenth straight years.
This has been an issue, if you will, for years
and years. Means the US lost more than eighty five
million dollars just making pennies last year. I mean, think
about it, We've lost eighty five million dollars by making pennies. Now,
other countries have done something similar years ago. Count of
this stopped making its penny. That was twenty twelve. Australia
(29:55):
got rid of the one and the two cent coins
they had way back in nineteen ninety t two. So
we're kind of just catching up in all of this.
There is a question as to whether the president has
the power to eliminate the penny or if you would
need Congress. But this actually might be something where he
would have bipartisan support. Right, we can all agree pennies
are stupid, right.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
Yes, yes, I think we can all agree on that. Now,
I'm a big believer that we do things in a
smart way. Pennies are silly. How about nickels? Do we
need those? Well, let's go over the dollars and cents
of it. See what I did that dollars and cents.
So a penny costs way more than a penny to
make a penny. How about a nickel five cents cost
(30:36):
fourteen cents three times or so the face value? What
the hell are we doing? It's ridiculous, all right, Jaed?
Tell us what it costs to make a dime five
cents a quarter? Eleven? Cost effective? Right there? Cost effective?
Other countries have done it. Now, what about paper money?
(31:01):
One to two dollars bills five cents, five dollar bill
eleven cents, ten dollar bill eleven point seven cents, twenty
dollars bill a little cheaper ten point eight fifty dollars
bill twelve point nine cents. By the way, one hundred
dollars bill thirteen point two cents. And the reason it's
higher at thirteen point two is because I have to
have more security. So I think what we're trying to
(31:25):
say here in a very real way, is this is stupid.
Let's get rid of it. It's a smart thing to do,
thank you very much. That's just being well smart, fiscally responsible.
Keeping with the letter P Peanut butter yum allergies bad.
Speaker 3 (31:43):
Researchers say every child in the group that was gradually
given doses of peanut butter became desensitized, with one hundred
percent able to tolerate nine grams of peanut protein compared
to twenty one percent in the group that avoided peanuts,
And even after the study, sixty eight percent were able
to sustain their tolerance compared to eight percent in the
(32:03):
other group.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
We've talked about this for years. Why aren't we trying
to see kids and help them build up a resistance
to peanut allergies? A little here, a little there, You
build up a resistance, and eventually your body will learn
to cope with it, learn to basically just live with it,
(32:27):
and then learn to eventually just that it doesn't even
bother because peanut allergies. When I was a kid, Like
I said, you know, going to school in the eighties.
Timmy over there has got a peanut allergy. We all
have peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. Timmy sits in the
corner with the teachers, and then we all got to recessing.
Come hang out with us. But right now we've got
(32:49):
I got a peanut butter cup, I got a peanut
butter and jelly sandwich. He's sitting over there. Now, it's
like one person has it. Nobody can have a peanut
butter and jelly sandwich. You're like, what, it's ridiculous. It is,
but this massive amount of allergies when it comes to
food that we never saw, and a lot of that
has to do with the chemicals and all these kind
of stuff. Okay, yeah, yeah, there's some of that, but
(33:10):
also it's just the whole thing's kind of weird. So
how do we get here?
Speaker 18 (33:13):
In one group, they gave these kids a small, increasing
amount of peanut products over the course of eighteen months,
and they found that those kids were actually able to
tolerate peanut products at the end of the trial.
Speaker 2 (33:26):
Slowly but surely introducing them at a younger age two peanuts,
so they build up a response that's like an immunity
to it where they don't have to freak out and
carry around an epipan everywhere they go.
Speaker 18 (33:42):
Telling us that it is possible, and these kids were
able to tolerate a small amount of peanuts that they
can essentially train their bodies to not be triggered by peanuts.
Speaker 2 (33:52):
If only we could train some liberals not to be
triggered by the doge. Oh, Chad.
Speaker 18 (33:56):
Millions of people are living today with food allergies, which
is very limiting and some situations dangerous. This is offering
us a great glimpse of hope for a lot of
people out there, not just when it comes to peanuts,
but a lot of other food allergies, a lot of.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
Other food allergies. It's a little bit introduced, a little
bit introduced, a little bit introduced. I remember watching a
one of the great snake folk out there, it's a
little reptile talk here on the Chad Benson Show, and
he had the I think it was the Serpentarium in Florida.
His name was Bill Host, and his theory was he
(34:36):
would eject a little bit of venom introduced to his
body on a daily basis, and he built up a
tolerance to snake venom. He was able to donate blood
that saves lives to snake bite victims, and it was
really interesting. He died, by the way, at a hundred.
He said, part of the reason he thought he lives
(34:57):
along is because of the venom. And he was fit
and nimble way until his nineties, and the because he
introduced eightsy bitsy pieces of this stuff and his body
built up a tolerance, including almost on a daily basis,
giving himself cobra venom for sixty years. I'm not saying
you should do that with peanuts. I'm just saying, if
(35:20):
you introduce certain things to somebody who's allergic, slowly but surely,
you watch what the body and how amazing it is
and what it can do. 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 coming up hour two. More
(35:42):
on the Doge. Ugh, the Doge. People losing their mind
over the Doge. It's kind of fun to watch, and
it's also kind of sad watching people lose their mind collectively.
It's like this mass hysteria. And as I was talking
to produce, it's anthony. Even when it comes to you know,
(36:03):
the Democrats, it's just it's almost sad. It's like the
island of sad misfit toys who are trying to fight
something that they can't fight, mostly because they just look sad.
Com mentioning a show, God the podcast. It is the
Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (36:23):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (36:53):
Panic, panic, and more panic, hyperbole everywhere. Stop me if
you've heard this before. Yesterday, yet another agency was put
on pause, which one. Now, originally I thought the cf
(37:16):
PB was that the college football playoffs. Come to find out,
it was not the college football playoffs. It was indeed,
the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau there to protect you. Put
together after two thousand and eight with the banking fiasco
of everybody gets a house no matter what your income is,
(37:40):
remember that. Yeah, so this was born out of that,
and so because it was born out of that, you
need to have people in there protecting it. No, Chad,
they're there to protect us. No. No, by the sounds
they're there to protect the agency itself. You want to
(38:01):
take away more government.
Speaker 19 (38:03):
Are you ready to fight the billionaires who are trying
to take over this country?
Speaker 2 (38:10):
Do you know who that is? That's right, folcahonas I
can translate, she says, are you ready to take on
the billionaires of this country?
Speaker 19 (38:24):
Okay, we are fighting back and understand this. There is
power in fighting back, real power.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
Oh, thank you very much. Right there. Oh you didn't
understand that. She said, white man, bad power. They try
to take who it's loss in translations sometimes right, so
uh from princess always a victim Maxine.
Speaker 20 (38:59):
Wow, wow, wow, look at this crowd elon Musk. Where
are you bring your ass of my hair? So you
can say who's here and what we're doing.
Speaker 2 (39:15):
We're not afraid of you.
Speaker 20 (39:17):
We know that you are the co president now of
the United States of America.
Speaker 2 (39:24):
A mercer co president. No, we're not afraid of you.
What do you think he's gonna do? Come over and
punch you guys. It's gonna eat their souls yet, continue maxing.
Speaker 20 (39:36):
First of all, we're here at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau?
Speaker 2 (39:41):
What is it? She was probably asking that because she's like,
what what is this? What is this thing?
Speaker 3 (39:48):
What does it do?
Speaker 2 (39:51):
I need to know because I'm angry, but I need
to know why I'm angry.
Speaker 20 (39:55):
First of all, we're here at the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.
Speaker 2 (40:01):
What is it? This is so important? Prior to this.
Speaker 20 (40:06):
Being organized in the did Frank reforms, consumers didn't have
any place to really foul complaints. They didn't have anywhere
to go when the biggest banks in America was ripping
them off, the student loans were being undermined. They didn't
have any place to go. But guess what, the Consumer
(40:29):
Financial Protection Bureau was organized in a way to deal
with people who were the victims of fraud by the
biggest corporations in America.
Speaker 2 (40:43):
Elon, what do you think go to yourself? Well, I
don't think that was very called for. Definitely not Christian.
Now let's go through some of the stuff that she
talked about there, Okay, shall we? Because Maxine Waters throughout
a lot of stuff of which you had no recourse
until the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau Act thing he came about,
(41:09):
All right, you had no recourse whatsoever. Let's make sure
that's true. So Maxine said, there was nowhere for people
to go for any kind of recourse for being screwed
over by big business, et cetera, et cetera. Now when
they put the Consumer Financial Protective Bureau into play, if
(41:31):
you will, what it's supposed to do is safeguard consumers
from predatory lending on fair fees, deceptive financial practices in
areas such as mortgages, credit cards, payday loans, etc. It
deals with enforcement and accountability, transparency, and education regulation of
(41:52):
non bank financial institutions. So that's what it was there for,
and there was no place else you could go. Let's
take a look over here. The Federal Trade Commission protects
consumers from deceptive and unfair business practices, including financial fraud,
(42:16):
forces truth and advertising, consumer protection laws related to loans,
credit reports, and identity theft. The Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, which is get that on a card?
Who ladies settle down, regulates and supervises national banks to
(42:37):
ensure compliance with consumer protection laws. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
You hear that the FDIC protects bank customers from insuring
deposits up to two hundred fifty thousand dollars and overseeing
bank practices. Enforces consumer protection laws. First State Chartered banks.
(43:01):
The Federal Reserve Board regulates bank holding companies and some
financial consumer protection laws, Truth and Lending Act, things of
that nature. The National Credit Union Administration NCUA supervisors credit unions,
the state level consumer protection agencies. Many states have their
(43:23):
own version of this that will help enforce laws to
protect the consumers against many different things. Now, while there's
differing aspects in each one of these, all of them,
if you put it together, is this agency but it's different. No,
(43:48):
it's not just another government agency. That's all this is.
So when I hear people freaking, oh my god, chet dodge,
chet dodge, it's not about getting rid of all of
these things. It's just saying, do we really need seven
agencies that kind of all do the same thing? Do
(44:09):
we really need one agent? Well, this one agency does everything,
it's one encompassing agency. Well why do we have all
these other agencies who do something very similar but they're
a little different. Well, again we're getting into why do
we need nine agencies, eight agencies whatever it is that
(44:29):
kind of all do something similar but not the same.
Why don't we just have one encompassing agency or just
let all the other agencies do their thing? And if
you have an issue, you go to set agency that
you need to go to. This is the thing that
frustrates people. These are the things that piss people off,
(44:50):
and rightly so you know a lot of people think, well,
you just don't want government. No, we need government. We
need actual, real government that is there to serve the people,
not the other way around. That is competent, that uses
the taxes they collect from the people, not the revenue.
(45:12):
You produce nothing in a way that you would think, Eh,
as a fiduciary, you should be watching our money in
a better way. Oh yeah. So so much of my
frustration and that I was excited about with the DOGE
came out had zero to do with let's just eliminate
all because we're not getting rid of foreign aid, but
(45:34):
we're getting rid of dumb things, things that are ridiculous.
We're not going to get rid of protecting consumers, but
we don't need twelve agencies that do about the same thing.
It's about the overlap, the waste. This is the stuff
that when people here go, well why are we doing that?
Because that's what government does. Government loves to create agencies
(45:57):
and things. Rarely does it love to actually get rid
of those things. If they're not working, and if there
are multiples of these, well we'll just give each one
of them their own little thing. We'll create more jobs,
will create more bureaucracy. But are we creating a better
way to govern? That's important three two, three, five, three, eight,
(46:20):
twenty four, twenty three at Shead Benson's show, it's your Twitter,
your Instagram, all of the other things. A little tear
of talk, you know, just the way I look at
the tariff thing. We'll see what it looks like when
it happens, because we don't know what it's going to
look like. We don't know how it's going to affect us,
(46:41):
we don't know when it's going to hit, where it's
going to hit. We don't know any of those things.
Because everything is always based on the headline. Nothing is
based anymore in the reality. Could tariffs be the worst
thing in history? Dun I don't know. I don't think
(47:04):
they're gonna be the worst thing in history, but could
they be uncomfortable for a while. Depends on the industry
that's being affected. Could the short term pain get long
term gain for us in some of our industries. That's
a possibility. It's never talked about. Could the short term
pain turn out to be long term pain that turns
(47:25):
out to be nothing but a nightmare? Also a possibility.
All of these things are in play, but it's hard
to react to something that isn't actually quite happening yet.
But I know we live in a world where all
that matters is the reaction, not the reality of it.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four twenty three
(47:46):
at Chad Benson Show to Twitter, your Instagram and all
of the stuff and the junk and the whatnot and
the who's the what? Make sure you go to Chad
Benson's show TV that is on the YouTube like and
subscribe or doing more and more there all the time.
We're gonna have a separate thirty minute daily thing that
we're gonna do there as we get everything up and
running in a very cool way. And you've seen the
(48:10):
studio right now, we're still doing some finishing touches on that.
We'd like it if you go check that out. Yo
yo dieting is not good for you. In fact, it's awful.
Don't do it. So it's yo yo dieting. No, it's
not a diet where you just eat a yoyo. That's silly.
It's where you lose weight, right, So you drop thirty
pounds and you put on thirty four. Then you drop
thirty seven and you put on forty and you're like ah,
(48:33):
and there's danger in that. There's dangers in a big way.
Type two diabetes, stroke, heart attack, other serious conditions come
from the breaks in the cycle, the ups and the downs.
That's not good for your body. That's why kids comes
losing weight. I trust Lean, that's right. Doctors created Lean
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and downs, and they yos. It's a supplement, it's not
(48:54):
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(49:17):
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Benson twenty at take lean dot com. Benson twenty at
take lean dot com. It is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (49:49):
Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (49:50):
Trump's gonna beat with the King of Jordan to figure
out how they divvy up Gaza. This is gonna be interesting.
Jordan's like, we're not taking the beeble. Trump's like, yeah,
you are, We're not, but you are. Egypt's like we're not,
and he goes, you probably are. We're not gonna do it, Donald, No, No,
(50:11):
you are. You are. Hey, guys, I'm gonna get you
guys the opportunity to have front row parcels and the
new Trump Master Community, the Master Planned Community.
Speaker 7 (50:27):
Oh geez.
Speaker 2 (50:29):
Yeah. So he's still trying, and you know, God bless
him for that. I mean, thinking outside the box. Bbe
said last week. I that's a good thing. But this
whole thought of this, I'm trying to figure out how
that this is gonna go. And he is serious about it.
Speaker 7 (50:45):
He is.
Speaker 2 (50:46):
And now, of course there's a delay in the hostage release.
And if you didn't see the hostages released over the weekend,
they look like they were stranded on an island with
nothing to eat, but like coconut and whatever seagull they
could catch. They didn't even look anything like themselves. They
(51:07):
lost so much weight. Their appearance was gaunt. I mean
it is changed. And they said, hey, good luck trying
to get the rest of those hostages back. And so
now already they're accusing of each other of breaking the
seasfire agreement, and you know it's here we go, I mean,
here we go.
Speaker 21 (51:25):
A Hamas spokesperson gave an interview with the Katari Ali
Rabi channel and they said Trump's talk about his plan
to uproot our people from the Gaza strip, the American
administration shares the responsibility for disrupting the agreement that was reached,
adding that we oppose the scenario of expelling the Palestinians.
So that does give an indication that there is some
(51:46):
kind of link between this delay and Trump's controversial comment.
Speaker 2 (51:52):
It's very controversial again, thinking outside the box. I don't
know how it's going to get done. He could look
at Egypt and Jordan all you want, and they're like, no,
that's funny. I just love Trump though with that. When
not taking them, you are, but we're not. You probably will.
Ukraine and Russia easier to deal with because both of
(52:17):
them kind of want to put this thing to bed.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four twenty three
at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweeted is texted program?
Right here in the Chad Benson Show. They're both looking
to get as much as they possibly can where they
can go home as heroes. So that's a little bit
easier than this. This is going to be a lot tougher.
(52:39):
It is absolutely a lot tougher because this is centuries
of fighting and it ain't gonna end even if you
put up big glass buildings facing the Mediterranean. Meanwhile, yet
another incident when it comes to aircrafts, what this time
Arizona lear Jet, one of the those fancy jets. It
(53:02):
seems like every time you turn around, there's something new
happening that's not good when it comes to air travel.
Speaker 13 (53:07):
When the lear Jet thirty five A landed in Scottsdale
from Austin, the airport says a plane veered off the
runway and slammed into a parked gulf Stream two one hundred.
Initial reports are the lear Jets left main landing gear
failed as a plane touchdown, causing the plane to swerve
off the runway. One person on board was killed. It
took time for another person to be cut out of
(53:28):
the wreckage by firefighters. Three were injured and another refused
medical treatment.
Speaker 2 (53:33):
So the plane that crashed into the parked plane was
owned by Vince Neil, who's the lead singer of the
band Motley Crew. And I know what you're thinking, he
can afford it lear jet. He can't. It's how rich
he is. His girlfriend Rain smoke Knot was on the
plane and her friend Ashley also on the plane. Rain
broke five ribs. There were some dogs as well. They're
(53:55):
all fine. And the video you see the plane obviously
sliding and then smashing into a parked plane, could have
been a lot worse. Could have been absolutely a lot worse.
Three two, three, five, twenty four, twenty three at chadventson
show is your Twitter. If you miss any of the show,
shame on you. Grab the podcast. It is the Chad Benson.
Speaker 14 (54:17):
Show, then Chad Benson Joe.
Speaker 1 (54:40):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (54:43):
For all the talk of Doge, for all the talk
of Trump and immigration and all the evil that he
supposedly brings, Let's be honest, there are other things going
on at in the world that are far more pressing.
Case in point, the city killer asteroid that is heading
towards the globe the world, our Earth. That's right, I
(55:07):
said city killer, not a tiny, little, itty bitty speck.
We're talking about evaporating a city gone.
Speaker 8 (55:16):
So every day we have objects from space entering the
year's atmosphere. Most of it burns up, but some big
pieces come down, and every now and then, like several
years ago, we had the big explosion over at cheliy
Evinsk I believe in Russia, you know, near a city,
and broke windows and things like that.
Speaker 9 (55:34):
And of course sixty six million years ago we.
Speaker 8 (55:37):
Had the big impact and I guess what is now
the Gulf of America that wiped out the dinosaurs.
Speaker 9 (55:42):
So there are two ways to look at it.
Speaker 2 (55:44):
That.
Speaker 8 (55:44):
Okay, we're getting impacted all the time, and every now
and then we're going to get a real big one
that could threaten life on Earth. It's been sixty six
million years. Has it happened very very rarely? Or are
we due to do for another one?
Speaker 2 (55:57):
Oh my god, that's a nassa nerve word. Don't tell
me that. But he did a city Killer.
Speaker 9 (56:06):
So we do track these these objects.
Speaker 8 (56:08):
Astronomers are making observations and they refine their estimates of
how close these different objects are going to come to
the Earth. So it's not a surprise that this asteroid
and many others there are obviously these astronomers are looking
at them and making adjustments and estimates. It's not a
completely precise science because of course, any object that's out
(56:32):
there orbiting or flying close to the Earth in our
Solar system, it's going to be influenced by other objects
out there, other planets, exoplanets, stars, things like that that
they fly close to.
Speaker 9 (56:44):
So it's not an absolutely precise science.
Speaker 2 (56:49):
Well it needs to be precise because this thing is big.
In fact, James Webb's telescope, the telescope of scopes, the
one that has its own merch, is now going to
focus on the city killer. That was very dramatic. I
(57:15):
wanted to be that way. So how big is this
bad dog coming towards us? And we're talking about killing
a city, not like a tiny, eighty bitty town. We're
talking about question a setting, just city gone. It's pretty big,
so measuring it one hundred and eighty feet cross, So
(57:39):
think about it as twice the size of the Leaning
Tower of Pisa is tall. An impact from such a
rock wouldn't trigger a mass extinction, or so they say,
but an asteroid of that size would wreak havoc regionally.
Think about this. There was one that hit in nineteen
(57:59):
oh eight. It flattened eighty million trees. Now imagine if
there were homes and people living there. Oh goodness, terrifying.
Speaker 9 (58:10):
Yeah, it's not really that simple, you know.
Speaker 8 (58:12):
Man, Then if you have this object coming and you think, well,
let's blow it up, and then you know you use
some kind of a device to do that, Well, now
you've created smaller fragments and perhaps increase the chances that
one of those fragments, some of which might be large,
would have a better chance of hitting us.
Speaker 9 (58:28):
Right.
Speaker 8 (58:29):
So, there's an old adage in spaceflight and in flying,
you know, pilots, where think about what you're gonna do,
about to do, because you could make the problem worse.
Speaker 2 (58:38):
NASA Nerd knows, because he's NASA nerd. Nerd, he's got
a big brain. We've got to figure this out. This
thing's coming towards us. Oh my god, what will we do?
How shall we repair? What? Kind of toilet paper do
we need? How many eggs do we need to buy?
Should the city killer come here? It will not destroy
(59:00):
the planet, but something this size regionally, So think about this.
Let's say it hits in the upper midwest parts of
Canada and all that stuff gone southwest, right like hits Phoenix.
Gott I hope it does it. It probably looked the
same afterwards, just all the houses and everything will be gone.
Like that's how big this bad dog is. And you're thinking,
(59:21):
it's really not that big. It's like the leaning tower
piece of it's big enough at the speed that it's moving,
what it could do?
Speaker 8 (59:30):
These things are out there moving at well, think about
this way. The orbital speed of a spacecraft is around
seventeen thou five hundred miles an hour. The a vehicle
coming back from the Moon is traveling somewhere around twenty
five thousand or a little bit.
Speaker 9 (59:43):
Higher miles an hour.
Speaker 8 (59:45):
So it could be you know, it could be tens
of tens of thousands of miles an hour or even
even faster.
Speaker 9 (59:51):
There are a lot of objects out there.
Speaker 2 (59:53):
Oh my goodness. Luckily we've turned to a crack group
of people that are going to ensure our safety. Willing
to sacrifice them themselves. We're very fortunate to go inside
and to have a listen as a just in case
(01:00:14):
things get a little out of control, to find out
how they're going to approach this.
Speaker 7 (01:00:18):
So here's the flight plan. Let's keep the laughter to
a minimum. I know this is not to scale.
Speaker 22 (01:00:22):
Both shuttles will take off Tuesday at six.
Speaker 7 (01:00:25):
Point thirty PM.
Speaker 22 (01:00:27):
Sixty seven minutes later, you're going to dock with the
Russian space station to meet cosmonaut and drop off who
will refuel the shuttles with liquid O two that's your fuel.
Then you'll release and take a sixty hour trip toward
the Moon. Now we only have one shot of landing
on this rock, and that's precisely when the asteroid passes
(01:00:48):
by the Moon. You'll then use lunar gravity and burn
your thrusters sling shot in you around the Moon, coming
up behind the asteroid. You'll be moving at twenty two
thousand and five miles per hour coming around behind the asteroid,
where we're hoping that the tail debris will be cleared
by the Moon's gravity and you'll land right here.
Speaker 2 (01:01:08):
That's it, NASA NOS let's get a little bit more
insight of what it's going to be like. When do
they finally land on the ginormous city killer.
Speaker 9 (01:01:20):
Let's say that we actually do land on this what's
it going.
Speaker 1 (01:01:23):
To be like up there?
Speaker 22 (01:01:24):
Two hundred degrees in sunlight minus two hundred and the
shade canyons of razor, sharp rock, unpredictable gravitational conditions, unexpected eruptions,
things like that.
Speaker 9 (01:01:35):
Okay, so the skirts environment imaginable. Thanks, that's all you
gotta say.
Speaker 2 (01:01:39):
Scares environment imaginable.
Speaker 22 (01:01:41):
Okay, So you drill, you drop the nuke, and you leave.
Now here's the key. You're going to remote detonate the
bomb before the asteroid passes this plane zero barrier. You
do that and the remaining pieces of rock should be
deflected enough to pass right by us.
Speaker 9 (01:02:00):
Now, if the bomb explodes after a zero barrier.
Speaker 7 (01:02:05):
Game's over.
Speaker 2 (01:02:06):
Oh my god. Hey wait a minute, Chad, that felt
like some famous people. Maybe that was arm Again, I'm
not sure. Maybe it wasn't. But there is a rock
giant one coming and the chances of it hitting, and
(01:02:27):
there is a chance one in forty three. But if
it was to hit, it would destroy an entire region.
So let's say it hit DC gone not a bad thing,
but I'm just letting you know. I mean, that's how
big eighty million trees that thing wiped out. This thing's
bigger than that, and that was nineteen oh eight, and
(01:02:48):
we got stuff now. So it also could land in
the ocean, and I don't know what that would look like.
What it caused a giant tsunami, yes, but it depends
how far away it is. I guess I don't know. Well,
we just need to make sure that we are protected.
Oddly enough, when they were talking to the nerd from NASA,
(01:03:09):
the NASA nerd with your smarty pants and your patches
and whatnot, it was kind of like they said in
the movie. And you're not gonna shoot anything at it,
and you're gonna have to try to, you know, do
something else because it's not gonna really do anything. And
if it does break some stuff apart, it's just gonna
make it worse. And you don't want that. We already
have enough stuff getting made worse. Three two, three, five,
(01:03:31):
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show,
is your Twitter tweet at us text to program roughgreensruff
greens dot com go there now, use code Chat when
you do, and get yourself a free Jumpstar trialbag of
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so they have melt Greens, which is awesome. This is
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after thirty days during the ninety day challenge shinier, coat
a little bit more energy by day sixty, hips, right,
joints feeling better, more mobility, coat full, shiny, incredible by
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day ninety, healthier than they've been in a long time.
More energy, mobility, just incredible. No aches and pains virtually
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a half six years, healthier than happier than he could
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Com use code Chad. Crocs band what Chad Benson.
Speaker 23 (01:04:59):
Jell Welcome to chest No, not the country, the institution,
the chat beans and show.
Speaker 2 (01:05:13):
You guys might know my love of crocodiles. Here's something
you probably don't know. Crocs are not crocodiles. They're shoes,
and kids and adults wear them. But now kids across
America may be finding out that school will not be
at place you wear your Crooks o'deal shoes. Crocks just crocks,
(01:05:37):
just crocks, just Crocs.
Speaker 24 (01:05:39):
They're the perforated foam footwear with a ferocious name. Crocs
so popular the company says about one hundred and fifty
million pairs are sold every year.
Speaker 9 (01:05:48):
I'm gonna be living in me.
Speaker 24 (01:05:50):
But those crocs are also at times a trip. Some
schools now taking action banning them outright. That's the case
at one Alabama public high school, where Principal Stony Pritchett
is taking enforcements seriously.
Speaker 25 (01:06:03):
The actually safety hazard might take a twist, twist and
knees to twist.
Speaker 9 (01:06:07):
The ankles, anything like that. So you won't have tennis
shoes on all the time.
Speaker 24 (01:06:09):
You're at Bestmer City High School wearing these will land
you here in school suspension, not exactly where you want
to be landing, just for shoes.
Speaker 2 (01:06:19):
Yeah, because that's stupid. I'm trying to figure out. Okay,
so you're gonna ban crocs. My question is why are
you banning them? Why are you banning a shoe? Are
they dangerous? See, that's what it is. There's danger in them.
They're crocodiles.
Speaker 24 (01:06:35):
The schools had crocs folded into its no open toe
policy for years, as other schools commonly have with flip
flops and slides, but this is the first school year
it's enforcing the policy. Junior Mackenzie Lawson was told to
swap on the spot when they told you that, what
was your first thought?
Speaker 1 (01:06:50):
Are serious?
Speaker 24 (01:06:51):
Mario?
Speaker 2 (01:06:51):
Mahea got caught too.
Speaker 24 (01:06:53):
Like you just walked in and immediately someone sniffedy out.
Speaker 9 (01:06:55):
Well at first, he's really really noticing.
Speaker 2 (01:06:57):
But when I was walking on duration and administrator had.
Speaker 9 (01:07:00):
Noticed, and he told he walked me through the school detention.
Speaker 24 (01:07:03):
Maya Moss got in school suspension and at home, how'd
you deal with it?
Speaker 12 (01:07:07):
I took the phone, I took the computer.
Speaker 2 (01:07:10):
For how long?
Speaker 7 (01:07:11):
For two weeks?
Speaker 24 (01:07:12):
Maya arguing that crocs are not a safety issue.
Speaker 26 (01:07:15):
If it's the emergency, we can still with our cross
because we can put them in sports mode and we.
Speaker 1 (01:07:19):
Get Really what was to say, they're gonna keep them
in sports mode?
Speaker 7 (01:07:21):
It's really easy.
Speaker 26 (01:07:22):
Just get your feet, take them out, slip your and
put your feet back.
Speaker 7 (01:07:26):
Kids.
Speaker 2 (01:07:26):
Oh my god, First of all, what I know what
sport mode is? I have kids. But I will tell
you this right now. I find this to be totally ridiculous. Now,
if it was a situation where there were hundreds and
thousands of kids being injured every single day because of crocs,
(01:07:50):
I would say we've got to do something. This is
just ridiculous. These kids are getting hurt on a daily
basis because of crocs. We can't have that. It's a
rubber shoe, that's comfortable, that's it. No, no, no, you
don't understand the chances of you getting hurt. What if
there's an emergency? What kind of emergency is there gonna be?
What if there's a shooter? Are you really gonna go there?
(01:08:15):
What if What if the guy is like, I'm coming
for the people that got crocs. What if that happens?
I don't know.
Speaker 25 (01:08:21):
You can't go on a basketball court and you'll side
to side ladder zumpled.
Speaker 7 (01:08:25):
Now?
Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
Why would you go in a basketball court with crocs on?
Oh man, I was getting ready to play this game,
but all I got was my crocs. So nah, I'm
gonna do it because these things give me. I got
great leaves to my crocs, coach, but I can't go
side side. Sorry.
Speaker 25 (01:08:42):
You can't go on a basketball court and you'll side
to side laddern's umpled now, and with crocs on, it's
a hallway. Kids are moving, things are happening. It's a
safety hazard.
Speaker 24 (01:08:50):
Some pediatrists say crocs and open toe shoes like flip
flops are fine to wear in moderation, but do pose risks.
Speaker 16 (01:08:57):
Crocs can easily get caught in that it meant causing
the child to fall or into their foot or rip
atonia off things I leave in the office.
Speaker 24 (01:09:06):
On a daily basis, we counted dozens of schools in
at least twenty states explicitly banning crocs in their dress codes,
often as part of their open toe shoe policies. A
Croc spokesperson saying, the classic clog is a comfortable, casual
shoe that is appropriate for every day wear. We are not,
nor do we market ourselves as a specialty or performance brand.
(01:09:27):
The spokesperson calling the schools bands unfortunate, adding they haven't
affected sales.
Speaker 2 (01:09:33):
No, And it's silly. My god, Well, what if you trip?
What if you trip on tennis shoe? We're gonna ban
those next. Everyone's gotta come school barefoot. I go to schoolbearfoot.
What could we wear that will not hurt us? What
could we wear that will not potentially bring us damage?
And ched used to understand about crocs. I've had crocs before,
(01:09:56):
Croc light things. I slide my feet in because you know,
after playing soccer, hockey or or pickleball or whatever. It
was nice. But I got flip flops. Well I couldn't
wear those. I wear flip flops all the time. I
was telling the guys today here, I said, Hey, when
summer rolls around, just know that my shoes disappear. I
(01:10:18):
don't know where they go. Think this a ferry that
comes takes them off, you know, changes the oil and
everything in them gets them nice and ready and then
appears flip flops, slides, whatever you want to call them.
That's all I wear. It's my time in Arizona. You know,
hundreds of degrees outside, flip flops were my go to.
(01:10:40):
But what if you trip? When do we accept responsibility
and tell kids they must accept responsibility? What if the
kids running down the hall and his backpack gets a
little out of whack and it twists him and he
falls down. Oh my god, we gotta get rid of backpacks.
Speaker 24 (01:10:54):
The brand, hated or love it has been a fashion
statement for more than twenty years, Crocs arding its sales
more than triples since twenty nineteen. The clunky clogs with
the custom charms, building a cult following, celebs rocking them,
and big names like Bieber even collaborating with them. Crocs
of every color and flavor, from chips to chicken. It's
(01:11:16):
no wonder there's a Croc community.
Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
I'm constantly hunting down new pairs.
Speaker 24 (01:11:20):
While Crocs may have won over celebrities and fanatics alike,
principal britches isn't budgeting.
Speaker 7 (01:11:26):
It's a safety has.
Speaker 25 (01:11:27):
I mean, things happen if they break out?
Speaker 7 (01:11:28):
What something happen?
Speaker 25 (01:11:29):
They have your high heels on and ship and fall the.
Speaker 24 (01:11:32):
School is a lovable Maya says she won't wear them
to school again, but with six pairs in her closet,
the krocaholic will have to sport them somewhere else.
Speaker 15 (01:11:40):
Only she got school suspension and how suspended on my No,
those are house shoes.
Speaker 2 (01:11:46):
Now, no sucks because they're so comfortable. They are comfortable.
I don't wear them, but I understand why people would.
My son loves to wear them after he gets out
of hockey. His feet are all mangled and everything because
he gets smaller skates so his feet gets on me.
He wants those. I'm fine with that, but apparently it's dangerous,
(01:12:07):
which I was unaware of. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show. That's your Twitter,
your Instagram, all the other things right here on the
Chad Benson Show. Coming up our three of the program.
More on Yes Kids, the Doge, the insanity of the Doge,
(01:12:31):
the fear of said Doge, plus tariffs those are always fun.
Little what's trending? And Yes, more asteroid talk. Is the
City Killer on the way here to kill a city
in America? What are you talking about? Chat there's a
two point two percent chance of a ginormous asteroid coming
(01:12:56):
to kill a city. You will discuss that among other
things to be missing show, Sherrymon, you grabbed the podcast.
It is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
This is the Chad Benson Show. The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:13:32):
Are we still doing immigration? And are we still doing that?
Are we just all focused on elon? Immigration? Is a nightmare?
Still see previous folk and how they allow this to
be out of control? And one of the things I
was trying to tell my friend over the weekend, who
(01:13:54):
is like, I don't think that any cities or state
officials should help us. I'm like, okay, I said, so,
if you've got somebody in jail who has a order
to be removed, who is a criminal who's been either
(01:14:19):
convicted of something or being held for something, but has
the order to be removed, and ICE says, hey, can
you hold them for us? You think they should ignore
it and let them out? And they said yeah, And
I said, okay, so what do you think is going
to happen? Do you think ICE is gonna be like, well,
they're just gonna let them out. So we're not going
to go anywhere, or do you think they're just going
(01:14:40):
to go into the cities. They're gonna go to the
work sites, They're gonna go to all the places they
need to go to get the people that they're after.
Do you think it's gonna make it easier or harder?
Do you think instead of getting the person that they're wanting,
that they may pick up others who are quote unquote
the collaterals. Oh, I never thought of it that way.
(01:15:01):
Nobody ever does the law of unintended consequences?
Speaker 7 (01:15:05):
Well, Sanctuary of Cities.
Speaker 27 (01:15:06):
No, they're putting up every roadblock possible and all right
and the rest of I think the bad guy incount
of jail takes one agent arrested bad guy when they
gets arrested and putting the county jail. We got to
sign a whole team to the neighborhoods. So it's going
to be it's very difficult Sanksurius Cities, but we're going
to keep coming. What are we doing about Sanksurus Cities?
I want to double amnd part in those Sanksurius Cities
Sanctuary cities. And we can't get him in their home,
they'll get him a place for employment. We're will have
(01:15:27):
large scale of work site enforcement operation.
Speaker 2 (01:15:31):
Who do you think that hurts? Who do you think
that puts in a tough situation? First of all, it
makes it more dangerous for the ice officer. Secondly, people
that are the ones that everybody's like, well, they're just
(01:15:53):
here to make a better life for themselves. They're just here.
You're putting them in a situation where they're going to
get swept up in something. They're looking for somebody else,
and all of a sudden, now you're upset because, well,
somebody who's just here for a better life got caught
up in this and that's not very fair. But you
(01:16:14):
didn't want them to hand that person over. You wanted
to to to go out there and to go, oh,
this can't happen right, and to be that person where
you're virtue signaling and in doing so, others will pay
those consequences, the unintended consequences. And even if they're released,
(01:16:34):
because as we all know, there's not enough beds, even
if they're released, now they're on the radar where before
they weren't.
Speaker 27 (01:16:42):
So we're gonna send more resource. We're not gonna stop,
We're gonna keep coming. We're gonna keep coming more. We're
going to increase the tarting in those cities. We're gonna
give bulls team ahead on sanctuary cities. Sanctuarious cities have
become in the priority why because of protection they're protecting
public safty to trust and national security threats. So we're
going to double mnpower. We're gonna double operations, we're gonna
(01:17:04):
double targeting. We're coming full bore and they're not gonna stop.
Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
Us full bore to I'm home in there again. He's
the grandpa that scares the kids and at the same time,
well he's gruff. It's got a heart of gold.
Speaker 7 (01:17:19):
I'm taking this seriously.
Speaker 27 (01:17:20):
I don't see well at night because I'm afraid of
the people are walking the streets here every day because
sanctuary cities to protect them. Sanctuary cities are sanctuary for
criminals bottom line.
Speaker 7 (01:17:31):
So we're gonna we're gonna.
Speaker 27 (01:17:32):
Do everything we kind of find them, regardless of what
it takes. We got a strong president of White Houses
given us all the authority we need.
Speaker 7 (01:17:38):
We're coming.
Speaker 2 (01:17:39):
They're coming. Tom's coming. One of the other things he
talked about yesterday is are there leaks coming from within
government to sanctuary cities and areas that an ICE raid
may happen. And I want to remind everybody, these ice
rays they were going on long before Trump got back
(01:18:03):
into office. And they will tell you that these things
were planned long before. They've been looking long before, They've
been doing this long before. It's only now that Trump's
in office has it become a situation where it has
become very political. But if you are in government and
you are tipping off wanted members of gangs in particular
(01:18:27):
and wanted individuals, ah, there's going to be some splaining
to do.
Speaker 7 (01:18:33):
Information leading to that.
Speaker 27 (01:18:36):
Again, I'll let the Department of Justice do their own investigation.
But again I talked to the Deputy Atorney General this
week and they've opened up a criminal investigation. He thinks
the information is coming from there also, So we'll let
an invigation investigation play out.
Speaker 7 (01:18:50):
But some of the leads point that way.
Speaker 2 (01:18:52):
Some of the leads point to the fact that they
believe that, yes, there is a situation within the FBI
that they are tipping off and I don't know what
groups they are. It's Trente Agua, it's this that I
don't know, because like anything in the world of politics.
You can only believe so much because so many people
(01:19:14):
are full of crap, and so many people are trying
to make a name, and they're pushing stuff out there.
But could I believe that some of this stuff is
pushed out there?
Speaker 7 (01:19:28):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:19:28):
Absolutely I could. Could I believe that people are being
tipped off? Oh? Do I think it is coming from
the FBI? That I don't know? Would I be surprised
to find out that there have been tips? Maybe not
directly to individuals or gangs, because I don't think I
(01:19:53):
would be so disappointed if the FBI was telling MS
thirteen or Agua or any of them directly, Hey, they're
coming to get you. I would be so disappointed. But
could I see a scenario where somebody within the agency
who's got a relationship with you know, a padre if
(01:20:15):
you will, or an NGO that there may be something
happening that I could see. But if it went directly
to them, Oh god, yes. Criminal investigations one under the
hell are you doing? Three? Two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at you Edminson Show? Is
your Twitter? Tweet at us text the program? Love hearing
(01:20:36):
from all of you Later today, Trump's gonna sit down
with the King of Jordan. It's a new favorite thing
he's doing. How can you laugh at a time like this.
He's so evil because you think he's evil. You think
everybody's evil that doesn't believe what you believe. I do
not believe that way, and I think, well, what I've
(01:21:00):
said about Gaza forever in a day is you're never
going to fix a problem by continuing the same thing
over and over again that got you into that problem.
So him saying that the Palestinians have to go and
all that stuff, I mean this welcome to the world
of Trump. This is what he does. But he's right about,
(01:21:24):
we're never fixing this thing unless we do something different,
and we're going to be back here. They're already threatening
now to kill the Seasfire because they released three three
hostages who look like they were in Castaway the movie
(01:21:46):
at the part where he's on the you know, the
raft with Wilson where he's lost like eighty pounds, and
those people said, yeah, you're never getting back the rest
of these people. And then they're like, oh, well, you
know what, now that you said stuff about getting rid
of us, we're gonna stop doing. It's just it's a
giant cluster hump, so outside the box is important. The
(01:22:11):
part that makes me laugh is he's meeting with the
King of Jordan today, and I think we know how
that conversation is gonna go.
Speaker 26 (01:22:18):
The President is calling for Egypt and Jordan to take
in Palestinians, a suggestion that they have both fiercely rejected,
and now President Trump is upping the pressure, suggesting that
he may cut off aid to them if they don't agree.
All of this will likely be discussed here at the
White House today when President Trump meets with the King
of Jordan.
Speaker 2 (01:22:37):
How do you think that's gonna go? King, you need
to take a bunch of these people. We don't want to,
but you're gonna. No, we're not. I think you are.
We're not going to, but you probably will. We won't.
I'm thinking you're gonna because that's what he's gonna say.
You want the money, because we give them a b
(01:23:00):
out a billion and a half a year in aid.
A lot of that came from US AID, and a
lot of that's to cover, you know, the conflict in
Syria and all the refugees that have come over the
border there so there's a lot of aid that goes
to them, and they're already struggling because that aid has
(01:23:20):
been stopped as of this moment. But you know he's
gonna say, how many are you gonna take? None? Funny
three million? We're not taking any? Yeah, y are? No,
we're not, but I think you are. You get the
same thing to Egypt. How many do you want? We
(01:23:41):
want none? One and a half million, that's your final offer.
I take it. I understand. How about two million? Because
it's Trump, We're not taking any? Yeah, y are? Oh
goodness me, so very nice, Chad. Those are people, I
get it. I'm not trying to be Richard. I'm just
being honest because he has the one thing that will
(01:24:04):
get people to do things. He has the power of America,
and that is the purse. That is the Dollar Bills show.
And as we all know, with dollar bills comes movement.
Oh yeah, three, two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four
to twenty three. At Chet Bedson's show, it's your Twitter.
(01:24:25):
You know, he's gonna be like, look, you got all
this land over here, nobody lives there, it's crappy land.
We'll give it to him. Put up some some houses
here right, a bunch of double wides or maybe some
of those manufactured homes. They'll be living fine, better than
where they are now. Then we can get down to
doing some real stuff. Have you guys ever been on
(01:24:46):
a jet ski? You take a million and a half,
we're gonna get you your own jet ski. Oh geez bo,
we're capital. Speaking of money right now, Bulwark's got some
for you. It's a risk review twenty twenty five is here.
You guys know Zach, he's our guy right when we
talk about the financial world, he's the guy. He wants
(01:25:06):
to sit down with you and give you a free
risk review. It's gonna go over everything inside of your account,
your retirem account, your I or whatever it is you have.
Show you, hey, look, don't settle for people who want
to put you in a cookie cutter position. Be with
people who want to actively manage your account, who are
also invested with you. When it comes to how you
get to your retirement. He's gonna go over everything. It's
(01:25:29):
gonna give you back a plan that's it simple and easy,
worst case scenarios. You're part of friends, but you're gonna
learn something lower risk, lower cost, lower volatility. That is
what they are all about at boord call eight sixty
six seven seven nine Risk Today. That's eight sixty six
seven to seven nine Risk or go to Know Your
Risk Radio dot com. Sign up for a free risk
(01:25:50):
review or as I like to call it, a second opinion.
Not gonna cost you anything, just a little bit of time.
Head over now to Know your Riskradio dot Com knw
your Risk Radio dot com eight six six seven seven
to nine Risk Today. For Bulwark Capital Management Investment Advisory
services offer the Treck Financial LLC and sec Register Investment
Advisor investments of all risk and are not a guarantee
(01:26:12):
past performance, not guarantee future results. Trek two five one
zero three. What's trending straight at Chad Benson.
Speaker 14 (01:26:17):
Joe.
Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (01:26:31):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?
Signed James de.
Speaker 28 (01:26:44):
Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serlad.
Speaker 2 (01:26:51):
Cheese up.
Speaker 1 (01:26:55):
What truping?
Speaker 2 (01:27:01):
Let's find out what's trending on the old interwebs on
this Tuesday? Shall we we shout chet show. We will
start with yehoo Taylor Swift. People still reacting the fact
she got booed at the game. Oh my god. No,
Bill Belichick and his girlfriend and I say girlfriend her
(01:27:22):
his child friend? Was she twenty four? They were had
a cameo in that dunkin Donuts commercial. Scottsdale plane crash.
A jet owned by Motley Cruz. Vince Neil involved in
a fatal plane crash. But it was on the runway,
but still it was One person has died. It's horrible.
(01:27:46):
It's no doubt. I know what you're thinking. Vince Neil
can afford a plane. Yeah, so we'll find out more
about that again. Top of mind right now, jets, plane
crashes everywhere. Donald Trump, more news on him and Tom Cruise.
A people are asking questions, what's wrong with Tom? Did
Tom have surgery? Interesting? Right, because when I saw him
(01:28:10):
in this ad, the first thing I thought of, Man,
that looks like a guy playing Tom Cruise. That makes
sense them more treading thing yesterday and still going on
in the magical world of Twitter. Super Bowl. Kendrick Lamar,
Drake Mahomes, Kanye We'll talk about that in a second.
Taylor Swift, the Gulf of Mexico. Wait, nope, no, it's
(01:28:33):
the Gulf of America. FEMA, Uncle Sam, all things trending
Supreme Court. Finally over to the Google numbre trading thing
over the last twenty four hours his Google Maps and
Jazz versus the Lakers, Lakers Luca obviously debut fourteen points
(01:28:55):
twenty four minutes. Lakers went in a route three two three, five,
three eight twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
Is your Twitter tweet at us text the program right
here on the Chad Benson Show. Vince Neil, Google Maps
it made its debut, the Gulf of America and easy Store.
(01:29:20):
We'll talk about the insanity of yeasy here at a minute.
One of the other things trending Trader Jos Costco the eggs.
You know, we were the only show I can remember
last week doing a rent a chicken segment, and maybe
(01:29:40):
you should think about it because people are going and
doing everything they can to get the egg.
Speaker 29 (01:29:47):
Trader Joe's saying in a statement, we are currently limiting
egg purchases to one dozen per customer per day. Costco
is also setting purchase limits. Eggs are now so valuable
they have become a target for thief eves.
Speaker 1 (01:30:00):
All of it.
Speaker 29 (01:30:01):
Because bird flu has impacted tens of millions of farm
chickens sending egg prices up sixty five percent in the
last year.
Speaker 2 (01:30:09):
That's nothing to balk at Chad. That was very punny.
See what I'm doing?
Speaker 29 (01:30:14):
There many shoppers now fucking to farmers' markets. In California,
cars were lined up down the street outside a local farm.
Speaker 2 (01:30:22):
The hell are we doing? What do you think is
gonna happen? We're not gonna have any more eggs. I
can almost guarantee that people are buying eggs who don't
eat that many eggs, But there is this fear that
there isn't going to be eggs anymore, and so they're like, hey,
did you hear there's going to be a shortage of eggs?
And they're like, well, I haven't had an omelet or
an egg and I don't know five years. I should
(01:30:44):
go buy ten dozen eggs. The hell is wrong with
you people? This is why we can't tell you anything.
If you're missing the show. We had the podcast Chat Benson.
Speaker 14 (01:30:53):
Shop Chat At Benson.
Speaker 1 (01:31:00):
Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:31:22):
What can Trump do? What can't he do? He's not
a god king, right, He's not in Syxes. He was
a god king back in the day three hundred you
saw that he is not a regular old king. He's
not a dictator. Who is a dictator said she could
be on one day, one to one. Jee's gonna be
(01:31:43):
a dictator. It's none of those things. But he is
going to test the courts and in cases where I
think he thinks he can win, he's goin to do
everything to test the courts to try to get whatever
he's doing up to the Supreme Court. And there's been
a debate about that, and even people say, oh, let
should go on and peat some of these federal judges
(01:32:04):
rowdy blardi blar. And that's the battle that is going
on right now. Where does Trump stand when it comes
to his executive powers compared to where does some of
these laws stand when it comes to these judges and
what they can tell the president he can or can't do.
(01:32:28):
And it's getting contentious out there. People. Lonely Scott, Let's
understand where you stand.
Speaker 16 (01:32:34):
If a district court judge rules in a way that
the president dislikes, should the president listen or should the
president defy?
Speaker 11 (01:32:41):
If a district court judge tries to usurp the authority
of the chief executive this country, he should absolutely defy it.
There's a difference between broad policy decisions and discrete disputes
between parties.
Speaker 2 (01:32:53):
That's the difference.
Speaker 11 (01:32:53):
If I want to policy decided, I'll take it to.
Speaker 2 (01:32:55):
What about checks and balances here of a district court judge.
Speaker 30 (01:33:00):
The thing I can't get with is you talking in
these bizarre broad generalities. Every single one of these cases
deals with a discrete issue. Okay, it deals with funding,
it deals with with certain constitutionally or statutorily appointed roles.
Every single one of these things is a distinct thing,
and they're all being dealt with it by different judges.
(01:33:21):
So it's not broad swaths of policy here.
Speaker 2 (01:33:25):
No, it's not broad swaths a policy. There's some forty
different lawsuits already out there against Doge and against Trump
that was always coming. There was a ton of lawsuits
against Biden. I mean, you know, so let's that's what
they do, right, So you're the attorney generals and Geo's
all of them. They're all suing all the time because
(01:33:45):
they think something's unconstitutional and whatnot. What he's trying to say,
and I'll break it down for you is, look, if
this was in is in his wheelhouse, his purview, you
don't have the right to tell the executive branch how
they can do their job, even though you're a judge,
(01:34:07):
because you're you're you're you're talking about a job. In
many cases, you're not talking about the constitutionality of something.
Speaker 30 (01:34:13):
When the court says, Congress, you know, appropriated this money,
you must unfreeze it while we litigate this, why can't
Trump comply with that?
Speaker 11 (01:34:23):
So he So you're saying that a judge should decide
how and when money is. A judge is saying for
years and not the president of the United.
Speaker 30 (01:34:31):
Scott's let me explain the you're a little bit more.
Let me explain it a little bit more slowly. A
judge is saying, you don't have to talk to me
like Congress, I have a position on this, and you
have an opinion.
Speaker 2 (01:34:39):
We can do.
Speaker 30 (01:34:39):
But I'm saying you listen to me, because you're not
listening and you're making claims that are not connected to
the facts. The judge is saying, maybe you, Congress appropriated
a certain amount of money. We need to litigate this.
While we litigate this, we're going to put a hold
on the actions that you took that might be unconstitutional.
Speaker 11 (01:34:56):
While we litigate judge, I'm in charge of executive branch,
and you're not forget it.
Speaker 2 (01:35:01):
I totally yeah, I understand what he's saying there, because
there are things that he is allowed to do that
including with the money. So yes, he must unfreeze the money.
Here's a catch though, because he can't take once it's
been appropriated by Congress. He can't stop it, but he
(01:35:25):
can tell him when they can spend it. So yeah,
it's unfrozen when you get it. Eh, we'll see. By
the way, Joe Biden tweeted this out or somebody did,
the Supreme Court tried to block me from a relieving
student debt, but they didn't stop me. Okay, everybody's gonna
(01:35:51):
pick and choose their area of which they can say,
look at what they're doing to me, look at this.
And they're going to file as many cases as they
possibly can in areas where they think they're going to
have the opportunity with judges that look at the Constitution
the way that they do to get the victories they need,
because ultimately they're hoping that one or two of these
(01:36:13):
cases ends up where the Supreme Court, because then that
will put it in a situation where once that thing
is ruled on, there may be twelve of those cases,
and you're all vying for the same thing. And unless
there's some different thing inside some of those cases, they're
(01:36:33):
going to rule on a case, and then that will
be the precedent for that case, if indeed they take
it up.
Speaker 11 (01:36:40):
You want individual federal judges who hate Donald Trump, I
don't to tie him up for four years.
Speaker 2 (01:36:45):
I don't.
Speaker 11 (01:36:46):
If you want a big policy questions decided, let the
Supreme Court do it. But in the interim, the executive
has to be allowed to.
Speaker 30 (01:36:52):
Go, Well, how do we get to the Supreme Court?
Speaker 7 (01:36:56):
Time?
Speaker 2 (01:36:56):
Let me get to the Supreme Court? Time?
Speaker 30 (01:36:58):
Let me get to the Supreme Court by the judges
ruling things, going to appeal.
Speaker 2 (01:37:03):
And then it goes in the meantime.
Speaker 30 (01:37:04):
What happens in the meantime. You're supposed to comply with
the Court's rulings. Am I wrong about that?
Speaker 14 (01:37:10):
Well, you're supposed to comply.
Speaker 11 (01:37:12):
But Scott's absolutely right in that the court cannot say
you have to spend these dollars today.
Speaker 2 (01:37:17):
That right. There was Governor Snunu saying he's right, you
don't have to spend those dollars today. So I can
unfreeze the money, but it doesn't mean you're getting it.
I will decide when it goes Now that's it within parameters. So,
like I said, the anything that's already been decided, So
(01:37:39):
you've given money to this state or to this thing
that was the last Congress, they've already appropriated that money,
said that it's going to happen. You can't pull that back.
But within the certain parameters, you can decide when that
money gets released.
Speaker 28 (01:37:58):
Jonathan Turley, judge, however, have gone too far. I think
that they are really butting up against Article two, the
inherent powers of the presidency, and the argument that you're
going to shut down the government coming from Democratic members
because of these policies is curious. I mean, the Democrats
are threatening people that want less government with shutting down
(01:38:23):
the government. That's like threatening a vegan that you're going
to impose a beef ban.
Speaker 2 (01:38:28):
It's kind of funny there. I just when it comes
to now, if he defies the Supreme Court, all bets
are off on him. Sorry, if it ever gets that point.
And just because by the way, there are federal decisions,
doesn't mean that they're going to take up everything that
(01:38:49):
goes through there, they could kick it back down and
just go with the ruling from the Feds. This automatic
assumption that everything thing that is out there that Trump
is a part of automatically will end up and the
Supreme Court and that that's his private court is also foolish.
(01:39:12):
That's just ridiculous. That's not gonna happen, but some will.
And some of those cases are cases where he knows
he's not going to win, but he needs a ruling,
so then he could go all right, we got to
change our tactic. But if he defies the Supreme Court,
all bets are off. No, dude, sorry, sorry, sorry, No,
(01:39:37):
that's not happening. We have three coequal branches of government.
And while Congress for the most part, has decided to
give up most of its powers because they thack, the
reality of the other two is they're strong, and they
need to remain strong, and we need to have checks
and balances. But let's let it get there first. I'm
(01:39:57):
a big believer in letting the process play its way out.
John Kennedy.
Speaker 31 (01:40:04):
When you have a law seat, somebody wins and somebody loses,
and then I support the process and I support the
legitimacy of the federal judiciary. If you disagree, and many
people I've disagreed with opinions before.
Speaker 9 (01:40:19):
That's why God made Court of Appeal.
Speaker 31 (01:40:21):
And that's why God made the US Supreme Court.
Speaker 9 (01:40:24):
But you're never going to hear me.
Speaker 31 (01:40:28):
Attack the legitimacy of the Federal judiciary.
Speaker 2 (01:40:33):
And nor should we we let it play itself out.
That's what it's there for. When and if it gets
to that time that it gets to Supreme Court and
then there's a ruling, then you pivot and go, Okay,
well that went against me. What can we do to
get us something similar to that through these change rights here.
We'll find out if that's going to happen sooner out
(01:40:55):
and later with some of these cases, because I do
believe it's going to dig a while some of these
cases to work their way through. I do not think
it's a snap of the fingers, and like, oh, President's
calling us to take up one of his cases, so
let's just do it. 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
in the Chad Benson Show. Meanwhile, in Tennessee. I prefer
(01:41:20):
my reverence a little less. I don't know violet sounding.
And in this.
Speaker 5 (01:41:25):
Nation, I'm worried that we are on the verge of bloodshed.
I pray that the peace of God will win out
and overcome the madness that is a tipting to take
over this nation. No one likes violence, but sometimes violence
is necessary. When Elon Musk forces his way into the
United States treasure and threatens to steal your personal information
(01:41:46):
and your Social Security.
Speaker 2 (01:41:47):
Check, there is the possibility of violence.
Speaker 5 (01:41:50):
Sometimes the devil will act so ugly that you have
no other choice but to get violent and fight.
Speaker 2 (01:41:58):
Well, Reverend called La think that's a little bit much
out here in Tennessee. I think that's a little bit
much to talk about. He's not still in the soul,
but he's still in his security number. Really say what
he's doing. So what he's doing is do it what
I hear yesterday from O'Malley, those wackad do Congress people.
(01:42:19):
It's like he's gonna do take your identity and do bitcoin.
He's gonna do bit dollars. Reverend, So you believe because
you think he is doing something evil and well, quite frankly, criminal,
(01:42:42):
because you think he's what writing down everybody's social security.
I'm putting it on the thought floppy disk.
Speaker 5 (01:42:47):
Well, someone might say, now, reverend, you know you shouldn't
be talking about violence. This is the Christian thing to do. Well,
I will say, why not talk this way? Because Jesus did.
Jesus said, in this Kingdom of Heaven suffers what violence?
The violent take it by force. The Kingdom of God
(01:43:09):
is a war zone. It is a battlefield. You did
know this, right, Yeah, that's not the way it was meant.
It's meant metaphorically, spiritually.
Speaker 2 (01:43:22):
There is a battle that goes on, opposition challenges, not
actual go out and punch somebody. I don't remember that one.
And Jesus said in one Timothy knock the crap out
of him. I don't remember that one. Oh he does,
Chad like you know. Oh yeah, how about this Psalms
(01:43:45):
eleven five. The Lord examines the righteous, but the wicked,
those who love violence he hates with a passion Psalms
seventy two fourteen. He will rescue them from oppression and violence,
for precious is their blood in sight. So metaphorically he
talked about the battlefield, not actually a battlefield, and there's
(01:44:11):
plenty of that in the Bible. Don't get me wrong,
but I think you're you just want an excuse to
punch elon. What's your pastor like? He's good, he's entertaining
a little violent for my taste. But you know, what
are you gonna do? Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show to
Twitter your Instagram will wrap it up straight ahead on
this Tuesday. But first give your dog the gift of health?
(01:44:33):
Are you ready to take the ninety day challenge from
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Pet food is dead food. They're putting their money where
their mouth is. You cover the costs of shipping, they
get it out to you today. It's that simple. Try
it now. Go to Roughgreens dot com, use Cochad take
the ninety day challenge right now, Roughgreens dot com use
promo Cochad, Roughgreens dot com promocode Chad. We will wrap
(01:45:38):
it up straight at Chad Benson Joe.
Speaker 23 (01:45:50):
A sashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help. I'm
trapped in a hashtag factory and I can't get out.
Speaker 1 (01:45:58):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 32 (01:46:00):
Preliminary data from niels And finds that one hundred and
twenty six million people tuned in, logged on, or streamed
to see Philadelphia Trounce Kansas City forty to twenty two,
or did they tune in to see Kendrick Lamar's halftime
show or a glimpse of Taylor Swift or President Trump,
both of whom were at the game. Regardless, the fifty
ninth edition was the most watched super Bowl in NFL history.
Speaker 2 (01:46:20):
What no way the most watched. I thought nobody was
gonna watch it because they hate the Chiefs and they
hate the NFL, and they hate Taylor Swift and they
hate and they hate and they hate. But yet there
they were. What a shocker. Maybe they did want to
listen to Kendrick. How did he do? Was the worst
halftime show ever? Settle Down, Settle Down, say not like us.
Speaker 33 (01:46:44):
Kendrick Lamar is enjoying that post Super Bowl halftime show
streaming Bump the Rappers saw his overall Spotify streams jump
nearly one hundred and seventy five percent in the first
few hours following his performance. Sunday Night, Still Too Little
Buddy Budwiser's ad first featuring a Clydesdale full delivering a
single keg of beer one USA Today's annual ad Meter
(01:47:06):
ranking of Super Bowl ad.
Speaker 2 (01:47:09):
I thought Mima was the best, the one with the
little alien. It gets crushed so thick chat. I do
go there at times, and I don't know what that's about.
It's weird. I think when you grow up in a
world of tough, nasty, unsavory kind of childhood that makes
(01:47:35):
sense not so much you, but others around you and
the whole I think when you grow up in that
kind of tough environment that things you kind of have
that little morbid sense of humor. And that's why when
I saw the alien get crushed in because it was funny.
It's like the other day, my uncle and I have
(01:47:55):
a conversation, and so would be great if et was
like the baddest alien of them all. Like you go
over to his house and he's got the heads of
all of the aliens throughout all of the galaxy, Like
on his wall, he's got the Predator head up there
with the spine dangling down firm harm. It's like, how'd
(01:48:19):
you get that? I'll tell the dolls a bitch still
crowd in front of his cloods. Oh jeez, man, you're
ruining my child, that am I? Come on now, you
know it's funny. Three two, three, five, three eight twenty
four twenty three at Chad Benson Show, I'm your Twitter
(01:48:42):
slash ax. I want to get to right elon still
Shadow bands so bizarre, I don't know why. Check out
the Instagram as well Facebook, and make sure you go
to Chad Benson Show TV on the YouTube. Like and subscribe.
It helps out The Chad Benson Show. Solid fun show
(01:49:02):
as always, Man, do we cover a lot of stuff today.
We got the Dojin that was always nice, a little
bit of the super Bowl wackiness. Mangione, the alleged killer
of the CEO. We got him in Kanye losing his
blank in mind. We got that in Crocs being banned,
the killer asteroid, immigration, the Middle East conflict. We can
(01:49:27):
go on and on, kids, I mean, this is what
we do here. Others do one thing, we do others.
It's what makes us better than everybody else. I'd like
to think you guys have a bless and amazing rest
of your Tuesday.
Speaker 9 (01:49:39):
I'm not really a fan of Tuesdays.
Speaker 2 (01:49:41):
Go get some tacos as always, Night Niger.
Speaker 1 (01:49:43):
This is the Chad Benson Show.