Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chat Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
What a shop party? People who's ready for a terrific
week of shows? See what I did there? I threw
tariffs in there as like terrific. But the reality is
tariffs are not exciting. You know that, And I know
that all that matters is price in the economy. Baby
period case closed. Everything else is well, it just doesn't matter,
(00:38):
doesn't nothing else matters. We could sit here and pretend like, well,
he fixes this and he does that. What about this
the big beautiful bill? What about immigration? What about Ukraine?
And what's going on all the Middle East? All that
stuff means nothing. What matters is price economy. If you're
feeling good and you're doing good, good Republicans win. If
(01:02):
you're feeling bad and you're not doing good, Republicans lose.
Because we're talking about twenty twenty six. We're not talking
about twenty twenty eight, which we know Trump may run
or may not. He's not gonna run. But it's funny
when he says that. But now we got a new
tariff because they're not going as fast as he wants
them to go, so he comes after the Euros.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
Holy well, I think this is no There is no tariff,
because what they'll do is they'll send their companies into
the US and build their plant. You know, we have
I guess, over twelve trillion dollars practically committed. You look
at other presidents, they haven't had a trillion dollars for
a year, for two years, for three years.
Speaker 4 (01:46):
We have numbers. Nobody's ever seen numbers like we have.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
And if they build their plant here, then they have
no tariff at all.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
If they do, if they build it here, there's no
tariffs at all. So fifty percent is no big deal.
The goal is just come over here and build all
your stuff here.
Speaker 3 (02:01):
I'm looking forward to I'm not looking for a deal.
I mean, we've set the deal. It's at fifty percent.
But again, there is no tariff if they build their
plan to here.
Speaker 4 (02:11):
Now, somebody comes in and.
Speaker 3 (02:13):
Wants to build a plan here, I can talk to
them about a little bit of a delay. But you know,
while they're building their plant, which is something I think
that would be appropriate, maybe we'll determine that.
Speaker 5 (02:24):
Is there anything I don't know.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
We're going to see what happens. But right now it's
going on in June first, and that's the way. There's
no they haven't treated us properly. They haven't treated our
country properly.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
Nobody's treated our country properly. I'm here to make sure
that everybody treats it properly. It's going to be the
greatest of all the greatest things. So tariff's go away.
Hold on a second. Wait, we're just getting news in
a delay.
Speaker 5 (02:47):
One other big issue.
Speaker 6 (02:48):
Over the holiday weekend, President Trump postponed a fifty percent
tariff on goods from the European Union, and response stock
futures were up sharply overnight.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Oh god, whip, it's what we're gonna have. I don't
know what's gonna happen. I don't so when people ask me,
because I get this a lot when I go places,
people are like, hey, you follow the news, I'm like, yeah,
I guess I do. And they're like, what do you
think's gonna happen? And I'm like, I don't know. What
do you think is gonna happen? Well, I think he's
(03:20):
gonna do something. That's probably it. What does it look like?
I couldn't tell. You could be a tariff. Tariff today,
gone tomorrow. I don't know. All that matters is price.
That's what I tell everybody. Let me tell you when
this will matter to you when you go to the
store and the goods you normally purchase. And we're not
(03:42):
talking about like eggs, because we understand what's going on there.
We're not talking about certain things that will have a
bit of a maneuver, but things that you were kind
of consistently count upon that really, you know, we don't
produce here, you know does it's the throwaway things. It's
stuff on Amazon, the stuff here and there. When you
start feeling that in your pocketbook is when it affects you.
(04:04):
Otherwise you won't pay attention.
Speaker 7 (04:06):
To mid President Trump's tariffs. Consumers are already seeing higher
prices on some items. The Department of Labor reports prices
for furniture and betting rows more than seven times faster
than overall prices in April. Some major retailers bracing for
tough times. Earlier this month, Walmart announced it will raise
prices due to higher costs caused by tariffs as it
prepares to lay off some fifteen hundred employees. Nike says
(04:28):
it's planning on price increases starting next week. Target says
it's hoping it won't have to raise prices, but has
already slashed its annual outlook due to the unexpected impact
of tariffs and heightened uncertainty.
Speaker 2 (04:40):
And that's a lot of what it is too. You know,
take away the the tariffs for a second. If there's certainty,
you're fine. Put the tariffs on. Okay, we're leaving them
on so we know where things are. There's a certainty
to that, okay, on off on off yes, no, maybe yes, yes, no, no,
(05:02):
on off on. That's not what business owners or people
want to hear. Consistency and a certain amount of certainty. Now,
it doesn't have to be certainty forever because we know
that can happen. But knowing that, you know, nine days
out of ten it's kind of going to be the same.
(05:24):
It's that tenth day that you're like, okay, well stuff happens.
It's the exact opposite here. It's nine out of the
ten days you have no idea what's happening, and on
the tenth day, well another surprise. So alas, here we are,
and this is where we're going to be for a bit.
(05:44):
We'll see. I know they keep the and the thing
I watched Lutnik and these guys like, yes, we're telling them,
you guys got to eat the problem. That's not gonna happen.
You're not going to raise tariffs on companies who are
purchasing goods to sell to us and tell them they
have to eat that. That's just never gonna happen. Okay,
(06:07):
you recognize that, right, like, yeah, five percent, maybe ten okay,
if there's enough profit margin in it. But if you're
telling somebody, hey, you keep it at three bucks even
though it costs you three dollars and ten cents to
bring in, and you make no profit but take a loss,
and you think a company's gonna do that, you're fooling yourself.
(06:30):
But we'll see, we'll see what happens. It'll affect you
when you feel it in your bank account. And for
some people out there, they may not feel it that much,
it doesn't affect them that much. For other people out there,
it's gonna affect them a lot more. And the people
living closer to the edges, it potentially has a huge
effect on their lives. Speaking on something that has no
(06:51):
effect on anybody, but it's always fun to watch the
big beautiful bill. Now, what do you mean, Chadda has
no effect on it because it doesn't not at this
moment in time. And the reason is simple getting it
out of the House, and then you get getting it
through Senate looking like what it got out of the house, right,
So he gets out of the house, passed out of
the House, goes to the Senate, and if you think
it's coming back looking the exact same, you're fooling yourself.
(07:13):
That's just not going to happen. It isn't Rand Paul.
Speaker 5 (07:16):
I support spending cuts.
Speaker 8 (07:18):
I think the cuts currently in the bill are whimpy
and anema. But I still would support the bill even
with whimpy and anema cuts if they weren't going to
explode the debt. The problem is the math doesn't add up.
They're going to explode. The debt by the House is
four trillion. The Senate's actually been talking about exploding the
debt five trillion this year. In September, when our fiscal
year ends, the deficit will be about two point two trillion. Now,
(07:42):
people used to always say, the Republicans say, what's biden nomics,
So that's Biden's spending levels. When March, every Republican, virtually
every Republican other than me, voted to continue the Biden
spending levels which are going to give us a two
point two trillion dollar deficit.
Speaker 2 (07:56):
Amen. Amen. If you would have said, look, we're half
a trillion, okay, count that in as inflation, we're not
getting back to the spending levels we had pre COVID.
And even if we did, if you add in inflation
and certain things along the way, cost a good services
x Y, and see, hey, okay, I get that we
(08:17):
could have a little bit of that. You're talking about
another five trillion. And to anybody who tells me on
the right that the math maths correctly, you're fooling yourself.
It's like, if everything goes perfect, and everything we think
will happen happens in the way that we think happens,
in the best projected way in the history of ways
(08:39):
that these things have happened before, then yes, the math maths,
But as we all know, the math isn't going to
math that way.
Speaker 8 (08:47):
Now, if you increase the debt ceiling four to five
trillion dollars, that means they're planning on two trillion this
year and more than two trillion next year. That's just
not conservative. So I've told them if they strip out
the debt ceiling. I'll consider, even with the imperfections, voting
for the rest of the bill, But I can't vote
to raise the debt sealing five trailing. There's got to
be someone left in Washington who thinks debt is wrong
(09:08):
and deficits are wrong and wants to go in the
other direction.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
Now, they all like spending. They all like to spend.
It's how they like to spend and where they want
to spend that matters. And then you've got the question
of well, what about Medicare and snap and what about
all these things Medicaid and what about this, that and
(09:32):
the other? Are they going to really pull it? Are
they not going to pull it? Are we going to
actually see cuts? What about waste, fraud and abuse? I'm
still waiting for a lot of those receipts.
Speaker 9 (09:40):
We are not cutting Medicaid in this package. There's a
lot of misinformation out there about this, Jake. The numbers
of Americans who are affected are those that are entwined
in our work to eliminate fraud, waste, and abuse. What
do I mean by that? You got more than one
point four million illegal aliens on medicaid. Medicaid is not
intended non US citizens. It's intended for the most vulnerable
(10:02):
populations of Americans, which is pregnant women and young, single mothers,
the disabled, the elderly. They are protected in what we're
doing because we're preserving the resources for those who need
it most.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
And that's good. That's Mike Johnson, not a real name.
That's what you want. That's what it was there for
the most vulnerable, the people who are most at risk.
Not healthy twenty seven year old dudes who don't want
to get a job and they're on it because they
twisted their ankle. I don't know whatever. You know that
they think they need to get it for.
Speaker 9 (10:35):
You're talking about four point eight million able bodied workers,
young men, for example, who are on Medicaid and not working.
They are choosing not to work when they can. That
is called fraud. They are cheating the system. When you
root out those kinds of abuses, you save the resources
that are so desperately needed by the people who deserve
it and need it most. That's what we're doing. We
(10:56):
are not cutting medicaid in this package.
Speaker 2 (11:00):
You better not, because, as we all know, if you do,
and it starts to drop that single mom that was
in a lot of trouble the disabled person, and that
gets out there. The Democrats are gonna run with it,
and they're gonna win with it. Nobody feels sorry if
a twenty five year old dude doesn't want to get
a job but he's Alimadican and they cut him, they
(11:24):
will feel very pissed off if somebody who is disabled
gets cut off that and that becomes a story that
they know they can run with. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three act Chad Benson Show,
It's your exche ins in all the other things. Hello, everybody,
Happy Tuesday. I want to think Craig feeling for me.
(11:46):
Appreciate it that he did that last couple of days.
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Speaker 1 (12:58):
Chow, Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
We traveled the hell out of it this weekend, no
doubt about that.
Speaker 10 (13:14):
Triple A estimating more than thirty nine million people traveling
by cars this weekend, but even more just traveling within
that fifty mile radius. But a bit of good news
for those that are driving. The national average for a
gallon of gas is now sitting at three dollars and
eighteen cents, and that is the lowest since twenty twenty one.
Speaker 2 (13:33):
That's huge, huge a lot of people on airplanes as well.
Some people got a little bit of a freight on
some of the airplanes because of the weather, you know, lightning.
Speaker 11 (13:43):
The Lord Southwest flight one sixty eight was landing in
Denver from Tampa when the pilot with interference on the radio,
told air traffic control the Boeing seven thirty seven had
just been hit by lightning.
Speaker 12 (13:55):
We got a lightning strike.
Speaker 11 (13:56):
The audio from Live ATC. Lightning strikes are not uncommon
in for airliners, but just to be careful. Emergency crews
met the plane when it landed in Denver. One passenger
telling ABC News right before touching down, there was a
big bang and a flash of light. They could feel
electricity and it smelled like metal.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
That's not a good thing. Luckily they weren't. They were descending,
so it's always a good thing. Doesn't matter even even descending,
it's the could be five to seven minutes on the
way down if things were going crazy but at least
close to the ground, do you think maybe we got
a chance that went wrong. Luckily nothing went wrong. Doesn't mean, though,
that crazy wasn't on airplanes. So between the weather delays
(14:37):
and the lightning strikes, you also have crazy.
Speaker 13 (14:39):
Passengers wrestling an unruly man who authorities they tried to
open the plane doors mid flight. The flight from Tokyo
to Houston diverted to Seattle, passengers and crew using a
zip tie to restrain the passenger. The airline all nip
on Airways confirming the incident and saying a second passenger
became unruly while on the tarmac and see and that
(15:01):
both were removed from the flight by Port of Seattle police.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
Hell's wrong with people? Honest to God, some happened when
the pandemic came, and it made people absolutely wackadoo when
it comes to air travel. Now. I don't know if
this was prevalent pre COVID right were we aware of this?
(15:25):
Is just now phones are so available to live stream
all the time that this took place. I don't know,
But what I do know is wackadoo's on airplanes seems
to be quite a popular thing, no doubt about that.
You learned a little something right here on the Chad
(15:46):
Benson Show. Forty five point one million plus people. That's
a fifty mile radius that people traveled, thirty nine point
four million by car, which was a record number, three
two point sixty one million by airplane. Speaking of vacations,
(16:09):
a lot of folks seem to be getting out of jail.
Speaker 14 (16:11):
A former law enforcement officer serving decades behind bars has
escaped from a high security prison. Grant Harden once served
as a police chief in a small town nearby. He
admitted in twenty sixteen to killing a town water department employee.
DNA later linked Hard into a separate rape case. Authorities
say the fifty six year old was seen disguising himself
in a law enforcement uniform Sunday, slipping past prison security
(16:34):
pushing a cart.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
Yet another escape in the South. Speaking of that, those
Louisiana inmates, how they do it?
Speaker 14 (16:41):
Investigators recaptured more inmates who escaped from this New Orleans
detention facility this month, finding two in Texas yesterday and
one in Baton Rouge. Eight of the ten inmates who
escaped May sixteenth, they're now back in custody. Many have
faced murder charges and were labeled high risk offenders high.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
Risk they get out.
Speaker 14 (17:00):
Authorities say they crawled through a hole behind a toilet,
reportedly using electric hair trimmers to cut through the cell wall.
At least nine people have been arrested for allegedly helping them,
including a jail maintenance worker accused of shutting off water
to the toilet, another inmate accused of providing a blanket
to help them climb over razor wire, and family members
and friends accused of giving them rides, food and money.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
Don't worry, they'll get them back. Why none of them
have disappeared out of America? That's beyond me. Who stays
in Baton Rouge after you've escaped not too far from
Baton Rouge?
Speaker 5 (17:33):
Curious?
Speaker 2 (17:33):
Indeed you've been sing any choke on the podcast It
is the Chad Benson.
Speaker 15 (17:37):
Shown Chad Benson Joe.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
Russia doing Russia things, meaning the pooter are doing Pewter things.
And he's got apparently a message to everybody, including Trump.
Speaker 16 (18:11):
The Russian President's response is f off. Basically, he's humiliating Trump,
He's embarrassing Trump's so called peace process. He's showing through
fire and steel that he has absolutely no interest in
stopping the war, either temporarily or permanently. I mean, the
Russian goal has been from day one, the complete conquest
of Ukraine. What they can't capture through military means, they
(18:33):
seek to capture through political means.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
And we're going to get into it a little deeper
next hour. But there's no doubt Trump is frustrated, he's pissed,
he's angry. Thought this was going to get done. Thought
the Pooter was his pal. Guess what, Pooter's nobody's pal.
The question is what's your next move? The world is
(18:56):
awaiting your next move. Is it going to be hardcore
sanctions on anybody who does business with you and US?
Is it going to be more military funding for Ukraine?
I doubt that. Is it going to be wash your
(19:17):
hands of it? I I ego wise, I don't think
he could wash his hands of it, because he's promised
right day one, day one, I'm gonna have this thing done,
and he's gone further than Biden did. There's no doubt
about that. That being said, Putin recognizes right now, Trump
has already said, I'm not gonna really do anything to you.
(19:40):
So I'm gonna do whatever I can until I decide
I can't. How long is this gonna last until it can't? Oh? Oh,
well that's understandable. Is it really understandable, Chad? I don't know.
Here's something that's understandable. Liberal woman upset and and in
(20:00):
a couple of these I agree with her, not the
way she went about it, because, as you know, unhinged
does unhinge things.
Speaker 17 (20:08):
The United States is kind of trash, doesn't treat its people. Well,
you know, how so do you want to have a conversation.
Speaker 18 (20:16):
Well, that's why I'm asking you.
Speaker 2 (20:17):
How so what do you mean?
Speaker 18 (20:19):
You said the United States treats its people like trash?
So I was just asking how.
Speaker 17 (20:23):
I mean right now, how many people are suffering because
they can't afford healthcare.
Speaker 2 (20:30):
Let's start with Eric.
Speaker 5 (20:31):
How about well Trump.
Speaker 18 (20:33):
Just slash prescription drug prices.
Speaker 17 (20:37):
So that a drug sellers can raise their prices.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
I mean, he's just working for capitalism. What we do
like capitalism and the prescription drug thing. It's an executive order,
can be undone, it will lose in court. So he
didn't really he made the effort. There are things he
can do, but will he I don't know. Oh, well,
it's not very nice ched but this was interesting.
Speaker 18 (21:04):
Well, he actually isn't taking a salary, and he's also
lost a billion dollars in his net worth from the
first administration when he for the first time he ran.
Speaker 17 (21:13):
Taking money from literally anyone who who will pay for
his stupid coin, his his uh what is it?
Speaker 18 (21:23):
Trump coincy doa'ge coin? I don't know. There's a lot
of cryptocurrencies that people make money off of. It's that
with it making money.
Speaker 2 (21:31):
You can't do. Okay, So that went a little sideways,
as you expect. He's worth more now than he was
in twenty sixteen. Half of his net worth is those
meme coins. Over the weekend he hung out with a
bunch of people who had his crypto party. It's just
again fascinating heard the food sucked. And that's not because
(21:51):
oh you hear Trump. No, I don't again, I like
a lot of what Trump does, but I do have
some issues with his kids. I do have some issues
the way this thing's going when it comes to money.
This was Joe Biden and he was selling a Biden coin.
Everybody losing their gd mind, as they should be right.
If Hunter's out there selling the hunt coin and everybody's
buying it, people are like, oh my god, right, how
(22:12):
mad everybody? When he sold a painting for five hundred
grand that wasn't worth five hundred thousand, but you know
what beauty is in the eye of beholder. But that
was one painting. So two hundred and twenty crypto folks
got to go and hang out with Trump. Out of that,
about twenty five of them got to hang out with him,
(22:34):
including a guy that was being investigated for crypto stuff
and is now not being investigated for crypto stuff. Wow,
it's magic how that happened. But Chad, it's it's it's
he's above board, right, Like this is all you got
nothing to worry about. This is a perfect example of insanity.
Speaker 19 (22:50):
On the dinner tonight, you mentioned this is not a
White House dinner, but the president is and the Trump
family is making money off of this. So can you
just explain how is this not the president using the
office to Richmond Soon.
Speaker 20 (23:01):
All of the president's assets are in a blind trust
which is managed by his children, and I would argue
one of the many reasons that the American people re
elected this president back to this office is because he
was a very successful businessman before giving it up to
publicly serve our country.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
Okay, thanks a lot, Carolyn. Uh. The blind trust run
by his children not very blind. It's not run by
It's not like they they they called Zach a bullwork
and said, hey, we want you to run this trust.
Nobody can know it's for the president. You know, obviously
(23:39):
do your best, but no, no, nobody, nobody can know
any of that stuff. Right like this new new it's
run by his kids. Half of his net worth are
these damn meme coins? And Don Junior is making a mint. Again.
If this was Biden and Hunter, you should being up
(23:59):
an arms about it, and yet not many people are.
And trust me, I get yelled at all the time.
How dare you talk about Trump? Now? I'm being honest
with you, guys. Here's the reality. It's a much crap.
Selling access is crap. You know it and I know it.
And when you bring it up to people, they lose
their mind. But the reason is it's us versus them.
(24:22):
That's the way people look at it. People aren't interested
in the truth. I came across this a while back,
but I think this is a perfect time to bring
this up. It's a guy talking about uh Nietzsche and
the theory that he had about truth and kind of tribes.
Speaker 21 (24:39):
According to Nietzsche, a few people actually care about the truth.
A few people care about facts. Instead, most people are
concerned with looking good and feeling good. Most people care
only about comfort, security, and power. From this observation, the
philosopher Joseph Sheieber coined the expression the Nietzsche thesis, where
he argued that the goal of most conversations is not
about seeking the truth but about self preservation. In other words,
(25:03):
most people would accept or reject the facts based upon
calculation rather than any concern for the truth. As nats
You put it, we would accept and look for truth
only when it has pleasant, life preserving consequences. Conversely, we
are resistant to potentially harmful or destructive truths. We do
not have any meaningful concern for the truth, but only
our well being.
Speaker 2 (25:24):
Truth right there. If it is pleasant to us, then
if it's the truth, that's great. If it's not pleasant
to us, well, then we don't want to know anything
about it, And or we say vague news, and or
we look not everything is black and white. We understand
there's some gray areas in life because human beings are involved,
then because you're never gonna get the entire story of something,
(25:46):
or because people could lie to you about the numbers
and this, that and the other. But when it comes
to the truth, for the most part, we care about
how our side perceives us. If our tribe likes us,
and if we recognize the truth as being the truth
and it helps us, that's a when and if we
recognize that that may go against us, and because we've
(26:07):
wrapped our identity around politics, well then we reject.
Speaker 21 (26:11):
There is one observation about the modern world which might
lend support to the nature thesis, and that's the popularity
of conspiracy theories and echo chamber monologues. Because if people
really did concern for the truth, they would be fact
checking wild and distorted claims all of the time. But
people do not. When a charismatic or compelling speaker delivers
a statement, it's easy to accept it based much more
(26:32):
on self serving lines. People will nod along if others
are nodding along too. They will accept it if it
preserves their social status. The nature thesis reminds us of
an important point and that's in our interactions with other people.
What we hear, see and read often has very little
to do with truth. People are very bad at facts,
but if Nietzsche is right, people don't even care about
(26:53):
them either.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
What sucks. I like the facts, which hinders me in
many ways because is just lying and saying crazy inflammatory things.
Telling a portion of the story is way easier and
it's less time consuming when it comes to searching things.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
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It's gonna make your dog healthier, happier, give them more energy.
It's incredible. So don't change your dog's food, change their health.
Do it with rough Greens once scoop a day, watch
what happens. Go to roughgreens dot com slash Chad. Use
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That's roughgreens dot com. Use the promo code Chad to
get that. You cover the cost of ship and get
(28:20):
that bag for free. It is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (28:32):
Irreverence, Like, yeah, so what it's the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
I guess I'm the problem.
Speaker 11 (28:41):
Morgan Wallan now has the biggest album in the country.
New Data out from Illuminate finds Wallin's thirty seven song
collection called I'm the Problem, takes a number one spot
away from Rapper of the Weekend. On the Problem is
also the most streamed album online since Taylor Swift's Torture
Poets Department last year.
Speaker 2 (28:58):
Kind of interesting. Remember when he was canceled and then
he wasn't but then nobody could be seen with him,
and then he was okay to be seen with, and
then everybody moved on with their life because he got
drunk and said something stupid late one night. How do
you know that's not how he feels, because we're not
idiots people, We're not idiots. Some of you might think
everybody's an idiot, but we're not. And man, is he
(29:24):
Like again, it's an interesting situation. It was the first one.
I mean, he was the biggest star on the planet
at that moment in time in music outside of Taylor Swift,
who still is the biggest star. No matter what Donald
Trump says, I've destroyed her. Okay, I'm sure she's just
freaking out about it. She'll have her moment and then
(29:46):
come down. Michael Jackson did right like he had his moment,
and you're never going to be as hot as you
are at that moment in time. Ever again, in history,
this isn't going to happen because eventually people move on,
as we all know. But it's very interesting because Morgan Wallen,
like that was. Remember he was like disinvited to everything
(30:08):
out there you could think of, and he already had
a black mark against him, if you will, a check
mark of evil when he went to a club during
COVID or a party, remember that, and they had a
picture taking him and he was supposed to be hosting
Saturda Night Live, and they're like, well, we can't have
him do that now because he went out and did
(30:29):
the whole thing where you know, he wasn't twice three
times four times vaccinated and didn't wear a mask, and
so that was already against him, and then he said
this and he was that, and next thing you know,
he's back on Saturday Night Live and he's back at
the Music Awards and he's still being streamed. And it's interest.
(30:51):
I always find that stuff interesting because he was supposed
to be gone for good. Speaking of gone for good,
I thought the music world was gone for good, obviously
is not. What about theaters thought they were going to
be gone for good as well. Not so fast.
Speaker 22 (31:06):
It's been a record breaking Memorial Day weekend at the
box office. He took the Red one, Lee Low and Stitch,
the live action remake of the animated Disney film, took
the top spot, raking in over one hundred and forty
five million dollars our.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
People on every side, close to Paniccat.
Speaker 22 (31:21):
That was enough to beat out the other big debut
mission Impossible, the Final Reckoning, which are in sixty three million,
combined with holdovers like Thunderbolts, Sinners and Final Destination Bloodlines
on track to be the best Memorial Day weekend for
moviegoing on record on record.
Speaker 2 (31:37):
So now, total movie receipts this weekend from US and
Canada about three hundred and thirty million. When all is
said and done they tally everything up, it's going to
be more than just a nice weekend. Indeed, not the
greatest weekend ever, but damn near up there. And this
(31:59):
year they've had a couple big movies out. You had
the Minecraft movie, You've had Sinners that were both big,
and by the way, the number one movie in the
world is none of those. This is the weirdest thing
you want to know what the number one movie in
the world is as far as making money this year,
(32:21):
this is a trip. Number one movie this year is
Nisa two. So minecraft total nine hundred and forty million dollars,
Nisa IWO total one point nine billion dollars and rolling.
(32:42):
So this is Niza two as opposed to Nisa one,
which I didn't see, and I didn't see two either.
By the way, a vast majority of this, I'm gonna
let you guys know is money made in China and
the surrounding territories. So if you want to know what
this movies about, there's a great catastrophe. That's what it
(33:04):
says here. I didn't see the trailer. The souls of
Nisa and a buying.
Speaker 5 (33:12):
A being.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
Are saved. I'm not quite sure if it's a being
or a boying. They're saved, but their body's face ruined.
To give them new life, Tayi Senren turns to the
mystical seven colored Lotus in a daring bid to rebuild
them and change their fate. Wow, it's just like a
movie trailer in a world. Not really, it's not a
(33:41):
good in a world that's that would be the great
And I do mean the great Don la Fontaine. By
the way, speaking of trailers, here's something funny. Here's some
silly news that I will throw at you guys. You
know why they call them trailers caused to be at
the end of the movie. And the way they used
to do it is they would set up because the
movie's remorts like Sopoper's back, then the next one, and
(34:05):
after the movies you got newsreels, cartoons and eventually the trailers.
And so rather than the beginning of them, they trailed
the movie. And it was very interesting because it became
such an art form that the directors wanted to handle
(34:26):
their trailers. So somebody like Hitchcock, he did his trailer
for Psycho, made about six and a half minutes long.
Woo crazy. Right, it's an art form unto themselves. I'll
tell you that right now, kids, I'll tell you that.
By the way, movie theaters and movie companies now judge
(34:48):
trailers and how they're previewed on things like YouTube and
how many times they're viewed to what they think maybe
the coming box office failure success. So Ventures had almost
three hundred million views in the first twenty four hours.
Ooh three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to
twenty three at Chad Benson Show, and it's your ext
(35:10):
your Insta that is also your YouTube, like and subscribe there.
We're going to be going live tonight right around eight
o'clock Eastern, give or take a few minutes. So if
you have a chance to join us tonight, we appreciate
it when you do that. And if you miss any
of the show, we always say the shame on you,
because shame on you.
Speaker 4 (35:28):
Damn it.
Speaker 2 (35:29):
You should be grabbing the show because we have a
lot of fun. We appreciate it when you do grab it.
It helps us out right here on the Chad Benson Show.
Coming up, hour number two of the program. More on Trump, obviously,
big beautiful Bill. We've got a lot of stuff going
on with that, the big incredible fun weekend of kazillionaires
(35:53):
hanging out with Trump because nothing to see here. Also Ukraine,
what is happening with that? Talk a little bit about
that as well, because there's lots happening and yet nothing
happening when it comes to the p side of it.
Talk a bit about that bunch of other stuff. Make
sure you check us out across all of our social media.
Of course you can always text the program three two
(36:14):
three five three eight twenty four twenty three three two three,
five three eight twenty four twenty three grabs the podcast
We're bes seeing the show. It's the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (36:23):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
What kind of animal or Democrats? What New York Times
asked the question kind of animal or Democrats? It's pretty funny.
Speaker 23 (37:01):
Are friends over the New York Times are doing a
series periodically looking into the Democratic Party and the challenges
facing the Democrats as you try to run into the
next election with some kind of momentum. Shane Goldmacher, among others,
is doing this research and he talks about in an
article over the weekend, a focus group led by a
longtime Democratic researcher who asks some two hundred and fifty
(37:24):
people to describe or compare each party to an animal.
And I want to read you what this found. Republicans
are seen as apex predators like lions, tigers and sharks,
beasts that take what they want when they want it.
Democrats are typically tagged as tortoises, slugs or sloths, slow plotting, passive,
(37:47):
and then a little bit later there was a respond
to you who said the Democrats are like a deer
in headlights. How is it that you think that the
Democratic Party has.
Speaker 2 (37:56):
Earned these descriptions? It's simple, who's going to talk to
Debbie Wasserman shouts, We'll get to her answer in a minute.
Uh yeah, apex predators. But see how I would flip
this if I was running stuff is not how she
(38:16):
does it. But what they were trying to say is
they're strong. They come across with confidence and strength. They're
the kind of people that you think, okay, well this
person seems to have it going on, right, loudest person
in the room, strongest person in the room. Doesn't mean
(38:38):
they're the best, But I'm telling you they're coming across
this way. They ask. This wasn't something that they said, Okay,
you're in a room full of people who are Democrats
asking them just throw something out about them, and they
come up with this, even though that's the way that
(39:00):
that she spins it. No, they were saying, look what
kind of animals right? If you're looking at stuff, because
we're looking at nature, one is looked at as an
apex predator. The other one is looked at like a sloth.
And we like sloths as a pet. But what they're
trying to say is they're slow moving. They don't really
(39:21):
do anything when you go to a zoo. And I
was at a zoo on Thursday, Nashville Zoo. Amazing, credible time.
What were the coolest animals I saw? Gotta be honest
with you, The tiger was awesome. The ostrich and the
(39:44):
sloth need to look at great to have as a pet.
But one only has to be in a cage where
you've got hundreds of people around it taking a look
at it as you do when you go out in nature.
Have you ever seen any of those people going on
those nature rides? Right, they're ill stopping a look a sloth.
(40:07):
Let's all just see and everybody say, no, let's get
rout of a tree. There's a sloth. No. But you
know what they do do They all slow down when
they see that apex predator. There's something about that. DeBie
Vossaman shouts.
Speaker 24 (40:20):
John, I'm not focused on the animals that some New
York Times reporter compares to political parties. To my constituents
are human beings, and the human beings that I represent
are facing devastating healthcare cuts, the most significant healthcare cuts
that have been ever ever handed down by any administration.
(40:44):
Almost fourteen million people will lose their Medicaid coverage, many many,
hundreds of thousands more when you add the cuts to
the Affordable Care Act. I represent the state that has
the largest affordable care acts. That's every single year. These
are folks who they can get their health care insurance
(41:05):
because of the Affordable Care Act, because of Medicaid. And
as someone who knows that when you don't have your health,
you don't have anything, I know how vital that is.
So I'm focused on the humans I represent, not you know,
animal comparisons.
Speaker 2 (41:18):
Well I get that, because you don't. They don't vote,
but if they did, you know, as know, you'd be
all over it. Which animal has the most votes? That's
the one we're going to victimize by calling the victims saying,
these apex predators over here just coming to destroy you.
They're coming to get you. Is she right about some
of that stuff? Yeah, some of it's true. Trust me.
Let me tell you something. Behind closed doors, the Democrats
(41:41):
are praying that the big beautiful bill adds to the
debt and absolutely kicks people off Medicaid, absolutely makes it
so life becomes far more expensive for them and they
get into a bad situation. They are praying for that,
(42:04):
they're saying in public, Oh, that'd be horrible. According to
the CBO, about thirteen point seven million would lose their
health consurance by twenty thirty four. So it's not like
we're there to doing nine years. Yep, nine years for
now you may lose your health care everige, okay, settled up.
Some of that would be about eight million would be
(42:24):
the work requirements, which I have yet to find even
people on the left that goes well, because it's not
really a bad idea of court, it's a great idea.
Speaker 4 (42:34):
It is.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
Let's not forget who originally threw this out there, go
back to Clinton talking about work requirements. Remember that. Oh yeah,
all the way back in the day, all the way
back in the day, all the way back in the day.
So we'll see, we'll see, we'll see what it looks like.
(42:57):
And again, the CBO is rarely right. And I don't
mean to the right side of the aisle, I mean
just right across the board. So the CBO short term
is pretty good, but long term and we're talking nine
years out for a lot of this stuff. They haven't
been very good. They get it wrong more often than
(43:18):
they get it right. That being said, I say this again,
there is no doubt in my mind. They're hoping and
praying that people get kicked off sooner rather than later.
They're hoping and praying that the tarors fall apart and
(43:38):
that prices go sky heighth. They're hoping and praying for
a slow down because you see, their job is safe,
and in fact, the more that Trump fails, the better
opportunity for them to get back into power. Which is
sad when you think about it, because the reality is,
(44:02):
you have nothing to say. You have nothing to say,
You have nothing at all to offer people other than
I hope the Orange guy sucks because he's bad. You
have nobody on your side of the aisle that inspires.
You have nobody on your side of the aisle that
actually has a take that has common sense involved into it.
(44:27):
You fail, and it's not that hard. It's funny. You
just sit there and go, shouldn't be this hard. You
guys make the easy look hard. You do you do?
Speaker 4 (44:36):
Well?
Speaker 2 (44:36):
What about Trump? He's not very popular. His poll numbers
are falling, Yeah, are they?
Speaker 5 (44:41):
Yeah?
Speaker 25 (44:42):
I think it's time for a bit of a reality check.
Donald Trump's approval ratings seem to be falling.
Speaker 5 (44:46):
He seemed to.
Speaker 25 (44:47):
Be audios amigos. People are writing his political obituary. He
is rising from the deadlight Mathuselah. Look at this, hello,
Trump's not approval rating among voters. This is the Reuters
Episodes polling.
Speaker 2 (44:58):
Look at this.
Speaker 25 (44:58):
In late April, he was eight points underwater. But look
at where he was in the most recent poem. Among voters.
He's up seven points to a minus one point net
favorability rating.
Speaker 2 (45:08):
This is not the picture that.
Speaker 25 (45:09):
I think a lot of people were thinking that we
would be painting in late April.
Speaker 2 (45:13):
I think a lot of people.
Speaker 25 (45:14):
Expected, as a proper rate, to keep dropping, but at
least a coiner royeship.
Speaker 2 (45:17):
So it's in fact rising like a phoenix from the
ashes for now, but a fe're the Democrats, and your
entire political platform is at this moment in time. He sucks,
he's bad, he's awful, he's evil. Look at the bad
things he's doing. He's awful, he's evil, he sucks, he's orange,
(45:39):
he's a thief, he's an apex breeditor, he's all of
the things when that is your entire platform and you
have nothing else and your hope is well, maybe maybe
everything goes to hell and it doesn't work out, You're
not going anywhere, and by the way, you don't deserve
(46:01):
to be in power.
Speaker 25 (46:02):
Look at this, He's nearly ten points better than he
was back in May sixteenth of twenty seventeen in his
first term. So we see as Donald Trump's not just
doing better than he was doing in late April of
twenty twenty five, He's doing considerably better than he was
doing at this point in term number one.
Speaker 23 (46:17):
But in Trumpian terms, you know, against himself is actually
a pretty good position for him to be in politically
compared to.
Speaker 25 (46:23):
Himself exactly right, This is considerably higher than he has traditionally.
Speaker 2 (46:26):
Been, higher than normal. You may not like him, but
if you look and you go, well, he's got a platform.
His platform is America. First. We're gonna get everybody out here.
We're going to fight the Democrats at every opportunity we
possibly can for their insanity. And if we find common ground, great,
If not, we're going to do our thing because we
(46:49):
are the apex predators. We come we do. We need
to do period case clothes. They are the prey. There
are food, and we'll have to do whatever it is
that we need to do to get what we need
to get. You may not like it, but is it understandable. Yeah, absolutely,
(47:13):
it's one hundred percent understandable. And that's why his numbers
are up. Doesn't mean they're always going to be up.
And if everything goes to hell in a handbasket, no
matter how much you love Trump and you start paying
a lot more for stuff and you start struggling, trust me,
you will think and go, h maybe this isn't the
place we should be going. But Democrats, your hope of
him failing is not a platform.
Speaker 5 (47:33):
This is a big question.
Speaker 25 (47:34):
Here is why okay, why, Well, take a look at
the chance of a recession.
Speaker 5 (47:38):
It's actually falling.
Speaker 25 (47:39):
The chance of recession is falling. In late April it
was sixty percent of corn to JPMorgan. Look at where
it is now, it's less than fifty percent. How about
Goldman Sex You see the same thing. Forty five percent
now falling the thirty five percent. The bottom line is
it is the economy. The economy. The economy is the
chance of a recession is falling as the trade warris
have kind of collapsed a little at least with China
(48:01):
Trump trying to make a deal.
Speaker 2 (48:02):
We do see that.
Speaker 25 (48:03):
I do think that the voters are responding to this,
and therefore we're seeing Trump's approval rating going on.
Speaker 23 (48:07):
The terroiffts were really hurting him and he backed off,
and it may be helping him politically now.
Speaker 25 (48:13):
Sometimes Donald Trump has some pretty good political instincts.
Speaker 2 (48:16):
He does, and if it hurts him, he'll step away.
If it helps him, he'll put his foot down, just
like it's an accelerator on the gas. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson's
show is Your ex Insta, YouTube and Facebook, like and subscribe.
Birch Gold. Meirch Gold right now wants to help you Gold.
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This is the Chad Benson, Joe Chad Benson, the pooter
(49:50):
doing pooter things. And that doesn't seem to be ending
anytime soon.
Speaker 6 (49:54):
President Trump also turning his frustration towards Vladimir Putin, saying
the Russian president has, oh, it's gone crazy. Over the weekend,
Russia unleashed its biggest bombardment in Ukraine since the start
of the war.
Speaker 2 (50:06):
I'm not happy with what Putin's doing.
Speaker 26 (50:08):
He's killing a lot of people, and I don't know
what the hell happened to Putin. I've known him a
long time, always gotten along with him, but he's sending
rockets into cities and killing people, and I don't like
it at all.
Speaker 6 (50:19):
The Kremlin pushing back, suggesting Trump's comments might be due
to emotional overload.
Speaker 2 (50:24):
Is that what it is? Emotional overload? No, it's because
he realizes the booter's going to do whatever the booter
wants to do at this point in time, and we're
going to bring everybody together and solve this immediately and
going to happen. It isn't.
Speaker 27 (50:39):
Yeah, and this was quite significant, the President voicing perhaps
the strongest frustration to date at what Putin has been
doing in Ukraine. And you'll remember, just over this weekend,
Russia launching more than three hundred drones and missiles on
dozens of Ukrainian cities, including the capital Kiev. The President
really voicing frustration direct at Putin, suggesting that the Russian
(51:02):
leader had changed.
Speaker 2 (51:04):
And changed he is who he's always been. He's going
to go as far as he possibly can before he
realizes I can't go any farther, And every once in
a while he will cross that line and wait to
see if somebody slaps him back, and if they don't, well,
then he'll keep going forward.
Speaker 27 (51:19):
It's only a week ago tomorrow that the President and
Putin spoke by telephone. Afterwards, President Trump said that he
thought that Putin was serious about trying to reach a
peace deal. He said that Ukraine and Russia would start
to direct negotiations to try and come up with the ceasefire,
essentially saying that the US would back away from immediating role.
(51:39):
He also told European leaders on that day that he
would not go along, at least for now, a new
sanctions on Russia. But the President saying something very different
this evening. When he was asked whether new sanctions were possible,
he said absolutely. And so the President clearly very frustrated
that the pace of these ceasefire talks is not a
preceding per perhaps as quickly as he would.
Speaker 2 (52:01):
Like, and they're not going to until you do something
to hurt him in the pocketbook, because what you're doing
now isn't working. So how do you hurt him in
the pocketbook, whoever's buying stuff from him, who's ever continuing
to supply him with anything. You go after them sanctions
wise three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty
three at Chad Benson's show. That's your ex and your
(52:24):
Instagram right here in the Chad Benson Show. So you're
not going to hurt him directly. You're going to hurt
him by hurting others around him, making it tougher on
them to do business with either them or us. That's
how you're gonna have to go at him this time. Ah, yeah,
(52:47):
what do you think. I don't think he's stopping anytime soon.
He's going to push it for as long as he
possibly can because that's what he does. And right now
he's looking around realizing I don't have to worry just yet.
I'm not at that point just yet. The question becomes
(53:08):
for the rest of the world. It can't just be
all about us. Despite Trump's big talk. What are the
others going to do? Are they going to continue to
fund them when it comes to arms, because you know,
we're probably not doing that. And if he boks at
all of this stuff, then what is the recourse for us?
(53:33):
Do we just step away. Well, that's exactly what he wants,
because at that point in time, if we step away,
why not continue to push and push and push? Oh yeah,
then it becomes if he decides to go in and
ramshackle everything he possibly can, just just destroy it, like
(53:55):
I'm full in a China store. Will he make a
move to another place? And at that point in time
is it a place that we may have to get involved.
It's not a good situation and no doubt about that.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show. Is your ex your Insta If
you miss any show, please grab the podcast. It really
helps us out right here on The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (54:18):
Son Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (54:43):
Premier League Football. I love it. Liverpool champions celebrating you
know nothing about Liverpool the pool best team in English history?
Absolutely twenty titles. Are they the biggest?
Speaker 28 (55:03):
No?
Speaker 2 (55:03):
Manchester United still the biggest globally, but Liverpool just won
their twentieth league title. Right, great atmosphere, celebrations abound. Whoa gode.
Speaker 12 (55:21):
We Ill.
Speaker 2 (55:30):
Oh brings chills. But as that happened, the celebration last
week they celebrated yesterday by taking to the streets because
last time they couldn't because of COVID and the first
(55:52):
time they had won a league championship in twenty years
and they couldn't take to the streets because of COVID,
And so this was the time to enjoy the parade
and low and behold tragedy.
Speaker 29 (56:05):
Firstly, my thoughts with all those injured in tonight's horrific incident,
their family and friends, and all of those affected by
the terrible tragedy that has taken place today.
Speaker 12 (56:16):
This had been a.
Speaker 29 (56:17):
Joyous day in Liverpool, with hundreds of thousands of people
lining the streets to celebrate Liverpool Football Club's victory parade. Sadly,
at six o'clock this evening, as the parade was drawing
to a close, we received reports that a car had
been in a collision with a number of pedestrians on
Water Street in Liverpool City center. A number of people
(56:38):
have been injured and were taken to hospital.
Speaker 2 (56:41):
It was horrible, It was It was absolutely horrible. As
we're finding out more and more about this person, and
not about this person. One thing we know the color
of a skin.
Speaker 29 (56:52):
The car stopped at the scene and a fifty three
year old white British Man from the Liverpool area was arrested.
We believe leave him to be the driver of the vehicle.
Extensive inquiries ongoing to establish the circumstances leading up to
the collision.
Speaker 2 (57:08):
Why is the big thing? Why? Why? Why? So some
people think that he tailgated through there, you know, and
because there was an ambulance coming through and he was
tailgating through there. There was forty seven people hurt, including
four children. And the reason it's important for the color
(57:31):
of the skin is Britain's having some issues with a
lot of things going on over there when it comes
to immigration, in particular the growth of Islam and some
terrorist attacks that have taken place not only there but
throughout Europe. And that's why they got it out immediately
(57:54):
that it was a white dude.
Speaker 30 (57:56):
They pointedly referred to him as a white British and
they later said again at this press conference he was
from the Liverpool area, and that of course is to
try and dampen down speculation that this person could have
been a certain background, that perhaps it was a terrorist
attack along the lines of the you know, other attacks
(58:17):
that we've seen at other public gatherings, certainly on continental Europe,
in Spain, in France, Germany, this seemed to be an
attempt to try and deal with that.
Speaker 2 (58:27):
And I don't know why, and we'll find out. Could
the guy have had a medical emergency? Could he you know,
should he not have been driving at all? Was he
angry and pissed off that Liverpool won? I don't know.
I have no idea. I mean, it could have been
a thousand different things. Could it be a white supremacist.
Could he have had a medical it's you all things
(58:48):
will find out in the coming days. And it didn't
matter because you know, again, this is one of those
situations where the story's going to change depending on how
you want to fit a narrative. And it's a shame
because of what took place. You know, it's about a
million people, they said on the streets. But they wanted
(59:10):
to come out immediately and make everybody aware that it
was a white dude, because if it wasn't a white dude,
they would have thought terrorism because of you know, as
he said, all the other things that have happened on
the continent as well as in Britain. And they have
a problem, and they have a very serious problem in
Britain right now with free speech. They have a serious
(59:33):
problem when it comes to Islam and the way that
Islam and certain cultures in particular are battling British culture.
It is not a pretty situation in Britain as of
this moment. And this is bizarre right here. I want
(59:54):
you guys to listen to. This is the weirdest thing
when it comes to just how how pissed people are
about Britain and feeling like there's a two tiered system
where you had a woman last week who had her
sentence upheld for a tweet did she put out after
an attack that took place? And you guys met remember
(01:00:18):
the attack. There was a little dance studio and what
happened as a guy went in and he stabbed a
bunch of little girls. It was like a Taylor Swift
party killed some She's the wife of an MP, right
so that's a member of Parliament. She puts out a tweet,
gets about three hundred thousand views, thinks it's bad, takes
it down, thinks, oh, I shouldn't have done that. That
(01:00:38):
was out of anger, frustration. Nothing. What she said was
like go out and kill a whole bunch of people.
She had thirty months in jail. For that thirty months
in jail, so there's a heightened sense of it's a
two tiered system. You had these rape gangs, you have
all of these people who are being putting jail over
(01:00:58):
tweets and stuff like this, and you've even gotten to
the point now we're inside of the prisons. I want
you to understand this. Inside of the prisons right now,
there is a situation where if you're a Muslim and
(01:01:19):
they think you may have drugs, they can't bring a
dog over to sniff because of how they feel about animals.
Speaker 4 (01:01:27):
I cannot believe this is actually happening.
Speaker 3 (01:01:30):
Sniff Are dogs there for a purpose to sniff out crime,
to sniff out of terrorist except if there Islamic.
Speaker 12 (01:01:37):
Well, this is one example of stuff being overruled and
prisoner's being a piece simply because they complain. And it
doesn't matter what your religious beliefs are. They should never
ever override security, particularly in a separation center which houses
some of the most dangerous criminals that are in the system.
Speaker 2 (01:01:57):
Yeah, and that's why people feel like, hey, there's two
tiered system over here, and they were quit to come
out yesterday and say that was a white dude, and
they were like, whew, thank god, right, like, thank god
it was a white guy. Who because if it wasn't, man,
oh goodness me. If it wasn't, this could have been awful.
(01:02:22):
And do I understand how it could have been awful, totally,
But the fact that you're relieved that it's a white guy,
and the fact that you're sitting here listening to somebody
going to jail for a tweet and we're like what, no, yes,
And her sentence was upheld. She had thirty months, almost
(01:02:46):
three years away from her family. Well that's the way
they do it there. Well, we used to look up
to the BRIT's way back in the day before we
kicked their ass as we should have. But still, I
tell my wife this all time, because we've talked about it.
She would love to go over there, and I would
(01:03:07):
love to go there. Do I feel like it's a
place I want to go right now? No, I don't.
It was my second home for over a decade plus, really,
from my late teens into my almost you know, thirty plus.
I spent so much time there. I lived there, I've
made a living there. I it was my second home.
(01:03:28):
But it's not what I recognize anymore. It's just not
And that's a sad sad state. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
That is your Insta, your ex, your YouTube, and all
the other things right here in the Chad Benson Show.
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dot Com slash Chad by Raycon dot Com slash Chad.
It is the Chad Benson show.
Speaker 1 (01:05:08):
Running with Scissor sounds great.
Speaker 5 (01:05:10):
Can go to this same.
Speaker 2 (01:05:14):
If you guys remember Oceangate. That's that doom sub that
went down to see the Titanic and then never really
came back if you know what I mean. Well, the
BBC has got a new documentary about it, including a
portion of the trailer snapshot of some of what's on
(01:05:35):
it that came out this weekend, then includes the founder's
wife go on what was that?
Speaker 31 (01:05:43):
It was a trip that turned to tragedy. A submersible
heading to the Titanic threey eight hundred meters down, but
Ocean Gates titan sub suffered a catastrophic failure, killing all
five people on board. They were British expres or a
Hamish harding Sulimon Darwood and his father, British Pakistani businessman
(01:06:04):
Shazada Darwood, French diver pH nausea and Stockton Rush Oceangate CEO.
The US Coast Guard's Marine Board of Investigation is looking
into the disaster. Footage they recently discovered from Titan support
ship has been submitted as evidence for their investigation.
Speaker 27 (01:06:20):
You will hear a noise that is external to the ship,
more external to the room, I should say.
Speaker 4 (01:06:25):
And you'll see their reaction to the noise.
Speaker 31 (01:06:28):
Stockton Rush's wife, Wendy is waiting for messages from the
sub as it nears the seafloor.
Speaker 2 (01:06:33):
So it goes right to that point. And then so
I'm going to play this for you, and they played
a couple times. You have to hear what sounds like,
as they say, a door slamming. So his wife is there, right,
because she's there, she's on the support ship. And remember
remember that that young kid, the Pakistani billionaire's kid who
(01:06:56):
didn't want to go on the trip. It was terror.
Remember his his mom and his sister said he was terrified.
He didn't want to go down, but he didn't want to,
you know, upset his dad and think that less of
him for not going. So he he he nutted up
and went and that cost him his life. I mean,
it's the whole thing is a nightmare. And this guy,
(01:07:18):
there's also a documentary out about Ocean on Netflix, and
this guy was he was a cowboy. He just they
talked about. All he wanted was fame. That's all he wanted.
He wanted to be famous. He wanted to be the guy,
swashbuckling Indiana Jones type character. And instead he's dead.
Speaker 20 (01:07:35):
I go, if there was.
Speaker 4 (01:07:39):
That right?
Speaker 2 (01:07:40):
So at that point you said, what was that ban?
Speaker 5 (01:07:42):
What was that bank? I'm gonna back up and play
a one more time. It sounds like a door slamming.
Speaker 4 (01:07:48):
I go, if there was a serving?
Speaker 5 (01:07:50):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:07:52):
Is that right?
Speaker 31 (01:07:54):
The noise is a sound of Titan imploding. But moments later,
Wendy Rush gets a message from the sub.
Speaker 2 (01:08:00):
Dropped to weeds tight dropped two weeds.
Speaker 31 (01:08:05):
She mistaken me. Seems to think everything's okay, but in fact,
it's taken longer the message to arrive than the sound
of the implosion. Everyone on board is dead.
Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
Yeah, dead, and we know how horrible that was, and
the question is how did it happen. Well, they're now
figuring out how it happened, and the people that took
the ride previous to this, they were very lucky.
Speaker 31 (01:08:31):
The US Coast Guard says it has also now identified
the moment the subs started to fail. At the front,
there's a titanium dome with a viewport, and at the
rear is another dome covered by a tale cone. The
passengers were in this middle section the whole. It's made
from carbon fiber, a material that's highly unpredictable at depth.
The whole is five inches thirteen centimeters thick, and it's
(01:08:53):
made up of multiple layers, but these layers can come apart,
a known problem called delaminade. The sub was fitted with
multiple sensors, and in twenty twenty two, during Titan's eightieth dive,
they picked up a loud bang. Stockton Rush said the
noise was probably the sub shifting in its frame, but
analysis of the data now shows this was the layers
(01:09:15):
of carbon fiber breaking apart. Every dive after this one
was a disaster waiting to happen.
Speaker 6 (01:09:21):
Their system said, there has been a fundamental change in
the material of your carbon fiber, and it was no
longer structurally sound.
Speaker 5 (01:09:28):
Delamination at Diviti was.
Speaker 13 (01:09:29):
The beginning of the end, and everyone that stepped on
board the titan after divet was risking their life.
Speaker 2 (01:09:36):
Think about that, and remember when we first got a
look at this thing. How first of all, we all
thought it was kind of ridiculous when we started to
figure out this guy was operating this thing with like
a you know, an Xbox controller. I mean, this was
very rudimentary. And it goes back to look, we human
(01:09:57):
beings want to test ourselves. I get that, but this
guy wanted to test himself in such a way where
it wasn't safe for anybody, and he took people with him.
And I get that people want to test people in
(01:10:19):
life and the boundaries of humans. I get that this guy, though,
he wanted to do far more than that. He wanted
to be Crocodile Dundee meets Indiana Jones, and he wanted
to be this great adventure with a little bit of
(01:10:40):
you know, Cameron, James Cameron, because you know, always dealing
with the Titanic and going down below. Except you know what,
he didn't have billions of dollars when it came to
what James Cameron had access to. Instead, it was like
stuff that he was operating on a shoestring budget, trying
to be a renegade and one of these people that
(01:11:02):
the hey look at me, I was. I thought outside
the box. I did all yeah, that's great. But you
took other people's lives in your hand and you ended
up killing them. You were an evil canieval right? Evil?
Knievel didn't have somebody ride, take somebody from the audience
and have them ride on the back of his bike
(01:11:22):
or his rocket ship when he tried to go across
it was it snake River or whatever. That didn't happen.
You did, and that costs people their lives. Right. Pride
cometh Before the Fall three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three At Chad Benson Show, is your
ex your Insta, your Facebook and YouTube? Tonight We're gonna
(01:11:46):
be going live tweet seven and eight tonight and my
uncle's going to join me. We're gonna talk a lot
about AI, and we've touched on it earlier. We're gonna
go more in depth tonight about this crazy story of
what took place with AI and the simulation slash test
they ran on it. That was terrifying and what it
(01:12:09):
tried to do when it thought it's its existence was
coming under threat. Talk about that. So we'll make sure
you join us tonight right here on the Chad Benson Show.
Coming up, our number three off the program, gotta be good.
Talk a little bit more about that.
Speaker 5 (01:12:26):
AI.
Speaker 2 (01:12:26):
We got a little what's trending as well. We've got
some entertainment news. We've got a bunch of stuff coming
up that's fun. That's very semi semi I say semi
serious because I don't get too serious. It can't right.
You know, you gotta be able to take a deep
breath and go. Look, we could talk about this stuff,
but we can't be overly invested into the point where
(01:12:47):
it consumes us, if that makes sense, because I see
too much of that going on in the world and
we need to take a deep breath and laugh a
little bit. You can reach out to us across all
of our social media at Chad Benson Show, xd, Insta, YouTube,
and Facebook. If you're missing any show makes you. We
had the podcast our number three of the show, straight
Ahead Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:13:03):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:13:35):
Do you guys see that Macron thing? That's the President
of France, And depending on who you're talking to, that's
his wife slash father slash trans husband slash whatever. The
video of the show quickly going viral.
Speaker 21 (01:13:55):
President's team initially called it a fake, but later Macron
acknowledged it was real, down playing the incident, saying he
and his wife were bickering and joking.
Speaker 2 (01:14:04):
That's right. What did the foreign press think of it?
That's what they thought of it. That's not very nice.
Uh stop, what's going on? I don't know what it was,
but you can see her hand come in and man,
she makes a gesture and knocks on his face. Next
thing you know. It's a cheap fake, deep fake, not
(01:14:26):
real fake funny ha ha. Yeah, there was issues now.
Speaker 30 (01:14:29):
MANCRL has said he wants people to focus on his
trip around Asia, where he's been striking security and trade deals,
but it's really hard for a video like this not
to overshadow the trip.
Speaker 2 (01:14:38):
The mon's kind of funny. Not gonna spend all day
on it, but it was because when you see it,
and if you haven't seen it's everywhere you can kind
of see him as the door opens, and then you
see the hand come hid his face, and his face
like turns because he's standing kind of at the where
(01:14:59):
the you know when you walk into an airplane and
just right to the left as the cockpit, and you
see this slan. His head turns to the left, and
then he realizes the doors open, and he's like, right away,
Oh hi, hi, everybody, Oh no, that didn't happen. Oh buddy,
did my friend buddy deed? Meanwhile, back here in the
(01:15:25):
United States of America, will there won't there be tariffs?
Could it happen? Could it not happen? Will there be
certainty or uncertainty? Those are the tails of the days
of our tariff life.
Speaker 7 (01:15:38):
The mid President Trump's tariffs, consumers are already seeing higher
prices on some items. The Department of Labor reports prices
for furniture and betting rows more than seven times faster
than overall prices in April. Some major retailers bracing for
tough times. Earlier this month, Walmart announced it will raise
prices due to higher costs caused by tariffs as it
prepares to lay off some fifteen hundred employees. Nike says
(01:16:00):
it's planning on price increases starting next week. Target says
it's hoping it won't have to raise prices, but has
already slashed its annual outlook due to the unexpected impact
of tariffs and heightened uncertainty.
Speaker 2 (01:16:11):
Oh my god, we like certainty, we do. Now there's
supposed to be a fifty percent tariff on the Euros.
What what are you talking about? I thought it was
just ten per down. Now now wait what.
Speaker 4 (01:16:25):
Hoping to.
Speaker 26 (01:16:28):
Well?
Speaker 3 (01:16:28):
I think this is there is no tariff because what
they'll do is they'll send their companies into the US
and build their planet. You know, we have I guess,
over twelve trillion dollars practically committed.
Speaker 4 (01:16:41):
You look at other presidents.
Speaker 3 (01:16:42):
They haven't had a trillion dollars serve for a year,
for two years, for three years.
Speaker 4 (01:16:47):
We have numbers. Nobody's ever seen numbers like we have.
Speaker 3 (01:16:50):
And if they build their plant here, then they have
no tariff at all.
Speaker 2 (01:16:54):
That's it. We've never had numbers. It's just the greatest
numbers in the history of numbers. In fact, math is
mathing like never for I'm looking for a deal.
Speaker 4 (01:17:02):
I'm not looking for a deal. I mean we've set
the deal.
Speaker 3 (01:17:04):
It's at fifty percent, but again, there is no tariff
if they build their plant here. Now, somebody comes in
and wants to build a plan here, I can talk
to them about a little bit of a delay. But
you know, while they're building their plant, which is something
I think they would be appropriate, maybe.
Speaker 4 (01:17:20):
We'll determined that. Is there anything I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:17:24):
We're going to see what happens. But right now it's
going on in June first, and that's the way it's. No,
they haven't treated us properly. They haven't treated our country properly.
Speaker 2 (01:17:34):
Who are they? In out of curiosity, just trying to
figure this out, they haven't treated our country well, okay,
but who are they? And why? Just just fifty percent
just kind of feels like a number. Man, it's up,
it's down, it's sideways, it's happening, it's not happening. Isn't happening?
Jet because we know how these things go.
Speaker 32 (01:17:51):
Well, the President is now relenting, just for now. He
is delaying that threat of a fifty percent tariff against
the European Union, one of our largest trading partners. These
massive tariffs were supposed to go into effect at the
end of this week on June first, but instead he's
now postponing them until July ninth, following a phone call
with the head of the European Commission.
Speaker 2 (01:18:12):
And the reason well, he's got a plan right.
Speaker 32 (01:18:15):
Both sides this morning are promising to quickly ramp up
these talks, but it's still not clear exactly what President
Trump is looking for. Asked on Friday if there was
anything that the EU could do to avoid these tariffs,
the President said, quote, I don't know. We're going to
have to see what happens.
Speaker 2 (01:18:31):
I have no idea. I have no idea. I don't
because certainty matters to the stock market, and by certainty,
I'm not talking about up down, volatile. I'm just talking about,
you know, tomorrow INDs and a why things may happen,
(01:18:52):
But we know tomorrow ins and a why they want
that kind of certainty of This is what it's like.
This is uncertainty because today there may be ten percent,
tomorrow could be thirty. Some things may have thirty percent,
others may have five percent, some may have fifty percent,
some may have none. I don't know. It's crazy. There's
(01:19:16):
no certainty in that. If you go all right, everybody
gets ten percent across the board. Okay, I can deal
with that. Twenty percent. I can deal with that. Say
there's twenty percent today, none tomorrow, fifty percent a month
from now, and then when it gets there, it's none,
and then the next day it's seventy five percent. We
don't know, and that doesn't make business feel great, just
(01:19:39):
doesn't just being honest. Luckily, they're going to get that big,
beautiful bill through and everybody's thrilled by it.
Speaker 8 (01:19:47):
Rand Paul, I support spending cuts. I think the cuts
currently in the bill are wimpy and anema. But I
still would support the bill even with wimpy and anema
cuts if they weren't going to explode the debt.
Speaker 5 (01:19:58):
The problem is the doesn't add up. They're going to explode.
Speaker 8 (01:20:01):
The debt by the House is four trillion. The Senate's
actually been talking about exploding the debt five trillion this year.
In September, when our fiscal year ends, the deficit will
be about two point two trillion. Now, people used to
always say the Republicans say, what's biden nomic?
Speaker 5 (01:20:16):
So that's Biden's spending levels.
Speaker 8 (01:20:18):
When March, every Republican, virtually every Republican other than me.
Voted to continue the Biden spending levels, which are going
to give us a two point two trillion dollar deficit.
Speaker 2 (01:20:28):
The math is not mathing, is what he's saying. Uh,
I could see if they said, look, we got five
hundred billion, is what we're going to have to raise this.
She's like, okay, you know what you throw in inflation,
you're throwing a few other things. Fact that government still
grows because we grow as the nation, et cetera, et cetera. Okay,
(01:20:49):
that's okay. We're talking about five trillion, five trillion American
dollars over the next two years. That's a lot of
dollars as we now are raising potentially. And I say
this as potential because what you see in the House
bill doesn't mean that's what return to them. But if
(01:21:13):
you're talking about raising the debt ceiling, I got news
for you kids, that's a lot. I'm with Rand and
these cuts aren't big. Everybody likes cuts as long as
it's not cuts to the things they like.
Speaker 8 (01:21:26):
Now, if you increase the debt ceiling four to five
trillion dollars, that means they're planning on two trillion this
year and more than two trillion next year.
Speaker 5 (01:21:34):
That's just not conservative.
Speaker 8 (01:21:36):
So I've told them, if they strip out the debt ceiling,
I'll consider, even with the imperfections, voting for the.
Speaker 5 (01:21:41):
Rest of the bill.
Speaker 8 (01:21:42):
But I can't vote to raise the debt ceiling five trillion.
There's got to be someone left in Washington who thinks
debt is wrong and deficits are wrong and wants to
go in the other direction.
Speaker 2 (01:21:52):
I don't think that person exists. There are a few
out there, but not many, not many. There is one person, though,
pretty sure Anthony got me this. It's the person who's
not happy about the big beautiful bill. He is a
liberal and he's going to scream because well, yeah, there's dreams.
Speaker 5 (01:22:11):
Does they give us?
Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
Get you die?
Speaker 33 (01:22:13):
Sa Masters in the house? Just master, big beautiful bill
and the fluff cuts the Medicare, Medicaid and staff. That
means poor people, sick people, disabled people, hockey families. Apparently
your survivals jus Vincent?
Speaker 2 (01:22:31):
Okay, sir, oh you want to go on? Are you sure?
Speaker 33 (01:22:35):
Christin Ones revoked corritability to enroll in international students, not
just new ones. Existing international students are being forced to
trans route. They shout of drunk their hasses to get
out of here, sacrifice everything, crossed oceans, carry dreams and
their fast targeted racist nationalistic.
Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
By the way, the whole thing with the foreign students
to say they work so hard, thank got here. They
pay full rate plus ten percent essentially, so these aren't
broke ass kids. It's like I came here with no
a vast majority. Especially these big ivy Ley schools. They're
(01:23:18):
paying full rate to go to school, big time. A
lot of them are wealthy. Are there some out there
that across the og yes, yes, but for the most part,
both of them are doing. Okay. How about one more
for you? Got another one for me? You do okay?
Speaker 33 (01:23:36):
They just told them you to turn it down on Trump?
Are you for getting me turn it down? All the
country's on fire. No, we don't don't down. We scream,
We shut the truth in their faces. We call Trump
exactly what he is, a fascist, a criminal alive.
Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
Ti reshod for Jake mobiles, Nation minds. It's a a
poltic cuts you. That's a humanity emergency. We rise. I
do not stop. I believe he needs a throat lozenge
after that insanity. I'm not that invested. I have to
(01:24:21):
be honest with you, I'm not. When I was younger,
I might have been invested in some things where I
might have screamed like that. Usually it was a personal issue.
But when it comes to politics, man, that's tough to
get that invested in someth where you're screaming and yell
like that. Chad, you should be that investor. It's hard.
It's hard because so much of it's theatrics. Although I
(01:24:43):
do believe this person is having some severe issues where
he may need to see a professional, you know what
that professional is gonna tell him, You need to calm
the down three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four,
twenty three Chad Benson Show is your extra insign all
the other things you love hearing from all of you
(01:25:04):
right here on the Chad Benson Show. Rough Greens. Are
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Roughgreens dot Com slash Chad, use code Chad. Coming up
a little what's trending right here on the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:26:28):
Chad Benson, No, it's time to find out what's trending.
Speaker 2 (01:26:33):
What's trending James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serene.
Speaker 4 (01:26:51):
Jump boot.
Speaker 1 (01:26:54):
What trupping?
Speaker 2 (01:26:58):
That's why I was trending in the webs on this
beautiful Tuesday day after Memorial Day. Nub one training thing
aunt Twitter Memorial Day AMAS, that's the American Music Awards
once again. Didn't win a thing? Thought I did? I didn't.
The pooter George Floyd, Ukraine Macron got slapped. You got slapped.
Speaker 15 (01:27:22):
My friend.
Speaker 2 (01:27:25):
The Knicks, Jordan Peterson RuSHA Harvard Bill Robertson Duck dynasty
fame passed away age seventy nine. Liverpool Liverpool. You know
Liverpool is football club. But yesterday during their parade after
(01:27:46):
winning the Premier League, some nutjob drove through the crowd.
The question is why we talked a bit about that
throughout the day. We do know he's a white male.
Gonna make sure that everybody knows that after all the
stuff going on over there. When everybody know that he's
a white male. If he wasn't a white male, we
wouldn't know about it. Head over to Google. Bridget Macrome.
(01:28:12):
This slap heard around the world. Taylor Swift Jenna Jackson,
Rod Stewart, Liverpool Parade, AMA, Jennifer Lopez, Mary lou Retten
apparently got got a little crazy in West Virginia, AH
America Sweetheart. She got charged with dui but apparently she
was out of control and finally over the Yahoo AMA.
(01:28:38):
South Carolina shooting. Ten people shot following an altercation in
South Carolina, boat gathering Liverpool, Donald Trump tariffs three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson's show
that is your Insta, your ex YouTube as well as Facebook.
(01:29:01):
Love it when you guys connect with us right here
on the chat at Benson Show, King Charles heading over
to Canada as well, also trending FBI and the box
(01:29:22):
office which was massive, massive box office this weekend, record
setting ish.
Speaker 5 (01:29:30):
Say the least.
Speaker 2 (01:29:32):
Yeah, the shooting, it's interesting, right because it's one of
the things we've talked about before. So ten people shot
following an altercation in South Carolina. So is that a
boat gathering neary A word? Really like you would be
if it was anything, you know, if somebody goes into
a school or somebody does into a mall. It was
a shooting at a boat gathering that's all you get,
(01:29:55):
kind of right, ten people shot, at least one other
person was injured. And why isn't it being talked about
out of curiosity? Does anybody know why it's not being
talked about. Chances are it's because it wasn't a white
guy with a scary gun. It was people who had
beef with one another. That's what. Welcome to the world
(01:30:18):
of politics. What do you mean somebody had beef, Well,
they were angry. Somebody probably said something to somebody on
the dock or on a boat, back and forth, right
as they do all this investigation, next thing you know,
there's an altercation and people start shooting. And what you
don't get is the politics of it all, because well,
(01:30:39):
it's a mass shooting. It's not the kind of mass
shooting that drives politics. Yeah, three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Shell not a
share acts cher, instant all the other things. If you
listened to the shows shame I do you've read the
podcast It is the Chad.
Speaker 15 (01:30:56):
Benson Show, Sudden Chad Benson.
Speaker 1 (01:30:59):
Show, The Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:31:22):
Let's take a listen to not one, not too but
three commencement speeches given by well known folk gentlemen. Donald Trump,
I went.
Speaker 26 (01:31:33):
Through more investigations than Alfonse Capone and now I'm talking
to you as president.
Speaker 18 (01:31:38):
Can you believe this?
Speaker 34 (01:31:39):
I must tell you a lot of trophy wives does
it work out?
Speaker 4 (01:31:43):
And he had nothing to do.
Speaker 34 (01:31:44):
He ended up getting a divorce, found a new wife.
Could you say a trophy wife. I guess we can
say a trophy wife. It didn't work out too well.
And that doesn't work out too well. I must tell
you a lot of trophy wives.
Speaker 4 (01:31:55):
Does it work out?
Speaker 34 (01:31:56):
But it made him happy for a little while at least.
Speaker 4 (01:31:59):
But he and a new wife. He sold his little
boat and you got a big yacht.
Speaker 34 (01:32:04):
He had one of the biggest yachts anywhere in the world.
Speaker 2 (01:32:07):
I have no idea what he's talking about. I'm going
a trophy wife made him happy, but not always happy.
Big wife, little wife, little trophy wife, big wife. Lots
of wives. I tell you what, not always happy, could
be happy. So avoid those trophy wives.
Speaker 18 (01:32:23):
You're like, what are you talking about?
Speaker 2 (01:32:26):
Then you've got Scott Pelly over sixty minutes.
Speaker 35 (01:32:29):
But in this moment, this moment, this morning, our sacred
rule of law is under attack. Journalism is underattack, Universities
are underattack, freedom of speech is underattack. And insidious fear
is reaching through our schools, our businesses.
Speaker 5 (01:32:53):
Our homes, and into our private thoughts. The fear to
speak in a Marria.
Speaker 2 (01:33:02):
Oh okay, man, that sounded serious. The other guy was
talking about trophy wives. You're talking about the fear to
speak in America.
Speaker 35 (01:33:12):
Power can rewrite history with grotesque, false narratives. They can
make criminals heroes and heroes criminals. Power can change the
definition of the words we use to describe reality. Diversity
is now described as illegal. Equity is to be shunned.
(01:33:35):
Inclusion is a dirty word.
Speaker 4 (01:33:38):
This is an old.
Speaker 5 (01:33:39):
Playbook, my friends, there's nothing new in this.
Speaker 2 (01:33:44):
Man, Scott, you sound very serious. What about Kermit the Frog.
Speaker 11 (01:33:49):
It's important to stay connected to your loved ones, stay connected.
Speaker 36 (01:33:53):
To your friends, and most of all, stay connected to
your dreams.
Speaker 2 (01:33:58):
Okay, is that crazy? What if you like, if you
go the West Point? You're like, yeah, okay, the president right, like,
we're all about that. He's talking trophy wives, he's all over,
he's riffing. Scott, Pelly's super serious, Like, couldn't get any
more serious and then you got Kermit the frog merca. Yeah,
(01:34:21):
how did your commencement speech? A frog gave it? Excuse me, yeah,
puppet frog gave the commencement speech. Told me to stay
connected to my dreams because being green ain't easy. Baby.
Speaking of college, Starbucks was holding a job fare from
recent college graduates. Let's hear what they majored in to
(01:34:43):
get their barista jobs.
Speaker 28 (01:34:44):
My name is em and my concentration is narrating the anthropiscene, nature, disposability,
and necropolitics.
Speaker 2 (01:34:50):
Hi.
Speaker 28 (01:34:50):
My name is Chuck and my concentration is called Embody
of Transiands.
Speaker 18 (01:34:54):
My name is Arnaud and my concentration is improvisation.
Speaker 24 (01:34:58):
My name is Anna and my constant is media and
the collective identity.
Speaker 18 (01:35:02):
My name is Pashetov and my concentration was in sight, sound, Screens,
and social.
Speaker 2 (01:35:06):
Identity in the digital era, with a focus on Jewish
and queer masculinities.
Speaker 28 (01:35:11):
My name is Christina and my concentration is decolonizing technology,
nature and archives.
Speaker 2 (01:35:18):
Oh my god, and I'll be taking your order today.
I think that should be the thing that they have
to do.
Speaker 34 (01:35:28):
They have to.
Speaker 2 (01:35:31):
Talk about what their college degree is in before you
give them your order. Would that be great if you
go up to me to say hello, this is so
and so right, how can I help you? Okay, that's fine. Yeah,
(01:35:52):
I would like this, this, and this, or would you
rab and say this.
Speaker 28 (01:35:54):
My name is em and my concentration is narrating the anthroposcene, nature, disposability,
and necropolit fantastic.
Speaker 2 (01:36:01):
I would like a large unsweetened ice tea please. Yeah,
that's why Democrats struggle. Don't take it from me, take
the Rob Schneider.
Speaker 36 (01:36:15):
Democrats still seemed confused as to why they lost this election.
They want to think it has something to do with
misogyny or racism. Well let me clear it up for
those still bewildered Democrats. You lost because you tried to
tell the American people that the economy was great when
they couldn't afford to buy groceries. You lost because you
(01:36:38):
ran a moron in place of a president you knew
was a corpse attached to a car battery.
Speaker 2 (01:36:45):
Oh continue, sir, Democrats. You lost because you tried.
Speaker 36 (01:36:50):
To convince the American people that it was racisty to
close the border and not let people come in illegally
to rob and murder them. You lost because nobody gives
a fuck about the term LATINX.
Speaker 2 (01:37:03):
You lost because your Justice.
Speaker 36 (01:37:05):
Department called parents who showed up at school board meetings
terrorists just for not wanting pornography in their children's classrooms.
Speaker 2 (01:37:14):
He's not wrong, he's not wrong. It's simple and easy.
And the Democrats swing and miss every single day. Every
day they swing and missy. I continue to say this,
if you give them the worst idea out of ten ideas,
they will choose that more often than not. Then they
(01:37:34):
will run at it with all the verver of a
fat kid running at a cake that he wants while
he's hungry and nobody's around to stop him.
Speaker 36 (01:37:45):
Democrats, you lost because you lied about January sixth, calling
it worse than Pearl Harbor or nine to eleven instead
of what January six really was, the FBI guided tour
of the Capitol Building. You lost because men can't have babies.
Women don't have even if they play in the WNBA.
(01:38:05):
And free speech isn't a privilege like a driver's license.
It's a god given right guaranteed by our constitution.
Speaker 2 (01:38:14):
Here here, I don't know about the FBI thing. We
could debate that may see it a little bit different
that being said, the rest of us spot on. You
could tell me all day that that chick over there
has a wiener, and I'm going to continue to tell
you that ain't a chick.
Speaker 36 (01:38:28):
I'm glad nobody listened to Kamala Harris because she never
really said what she stood for, because at the end
of the day, just like her party, she stood for nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
The Democrats had no policy this year.
Speaker 5 (01:38:40):
Their only hope.
Speaker 36 (01:38:41):
Besides calling Trump hitler every chance they had. Their hope
was that Americans would hate Donald Trump more than they
love their country. And they've failed miserably because Americans love
their country.
Speaker 2 (01:38:53):
Here here, it's that simple. If your platform is simply,
we're not him. He's the worst thing ever. We're not him.
That's your platform. What do you stand on. We're not him,
that's not a platform. That's not That's a failure at
a time when the opportunity is in front of you.
(01:39:15):
That is a failure at a time when you should
easily be able to come out and lay your platform
out for everybody to see, with common sense involved in it.
You have failed, and you continue to do such, and
you will continue to do this over and over again
because you don't know any better, not anymore. You've been
(01:39:37):
so far up each other's butts all day with your
crazy insanity of woke this and wacky this, and what
are we? We stand for this, but we stand for that.
And if anybody comes out and says, hey, you know
what common sense says, you know, hey, I can empathize
with you having an issue with your identification and your
gender insanity, whatever you want to call it, I can empathize.
(01:40:00):
I could say, all right, you're going through something, you're confused,
but you're not going to play in women's sports and
you're not going to be in my daughter's locker room.
That's just not going to happen. Like I've said before,
you go to full Monty, knock yourself out. But no,
and yes, at some point in time, us being humans
(01:40:24):
with our own independent thought, we would like to ask you,
person who's struggling, where does my responsibility for how you feel?
And well, according to the Democrats, never, and that's their problem.
It's everybody else's responsibility to make sure that everybody else
feels good about themselves, and they do it in such
(01:40:44):
a piss poor way that they will continue to fail
over and over again by making sure that everybody's a
victim and abandoning common sense. And when you do that,
you fail. When you continue to do that, you fail
over and over again. And when the only platform is
he's a meanie, he's Nazi's, he's Hitler's, he's a Mussolini's,
(01:41:05):
he's all the things. If that's the only thing you have,
you deserve to lose.
Speaker 37 (01:41:11):
And so what I hear rom enormous respect for rom
Manuel is accomplished a lot. I said this literally on
the show last week. Alyssa Slockett is another person who's
been saying the same sort of thing, we can woke.
That phrase is a phrase that various people who want
to moderate the party.
Speaker 5 (01:41:29):
Have been throwing around. What I think is important here
is that is not the question of what.
Speaker 37 (01:41:36):
The party's image is, but is what does the party
stand for. If the party takes positions on issues that
are weekend woke, it will seem we can woke if it.
If it takes positions that are strong and not woke,
that is the way to go forward.
Speaker 5 (01:41:53):
It's not about language.
Speaker 37 (01:41:54):
It's about where are you going to deviate from what
has become democratic ideological conformity.
Speaker 2 (01:42:02):
It is about language. To them, it's about feelings. It's
not about facts. It's about abandoning reality for the safety
of not hurting someone's feelings or telling them the truth.
And both sides have this issue with truth. Both sides
always want to protect their tribe. Okay, that's understandable. The
(01:42:22):
difference between the Left the Democrats now, though, is they
victimize everybody. Tellverybody's their victim. Right, you've been a victim
of this, You've been a victim of that, You've been
a victim of this, You're a victim, victim, victim. We're
here to help you. And by the way, we're going
to uphold all of your beliefs. We're going to hold
them up, and we're going to cheer them on even
(01:42:43):
if it is absolutely insane. We're going to focus on
things that don't matter while abandoning reality. You can't win
that way, and they've got a man problem again.
Speaker 37 (01:43:01):
I'm sure rom has examples. Alista Slocke probably has examples.
But that's the conversation, that's the debate. That's the work
the Democrats have to do right now is not thinking
about their language. The language will follow the positions, the
language will follow the substance, and what I am not
hearing so far in this first six months after November sixth,
(01:43:21):
after the big loss last year, is that kind of work,
the kind of reform work that goes to what does
this party want to believe in that will lure working
class voters of all races back to it.
Speaker 2 (01:43:35):
Jonathan Ailman from MSNBC Today. Because they don't know what
to talk about. Their only thing is we're not him.
We're not him, and that is not a platform that
is going to be successful in any way, shape or form.
We're not him doesn't get it across the line. And
(01:43:58):
even though there's opportunities out there, the reality is you
have no leader. And without a leader, they are going
to wag the dog, meaning the micro aggressions and the
little injustices and the people screaming about all of the
(01:44:20):
things that are wrong and everything else. They're going to
be the ones that take you to where you're going
to find the big loss. Keep doing what you're doing,
You're going to keep getting what you get. People want leaders,
and they will follow. They are being led by the
(01:44:42):
people who all have a thousand ideas and in many
case juxtaposed each other, and that person is trying to
appease everybody, and what do they say, try to make
everybody happy. You'll make nobody happy. That includes winning elections
three to two th twenty four to twenty three at
Chadbentson Show, That's your ex that is your Insta, Facebook
(01:45:07):
and YouTube, Bullwork Capitol. Once you talk to my buddies
over Board Capital, you know what I'm talking about. Zach
Abrahmchiefvestment Officer borg He wants to talk to you about
well awesome stuff like getting yourself a free and I
mean free second opinion on what's going on in your portfolio.
I call it a second opinion because it is a
(01:45:29):
second opinion. They're gonna go through all of the stuff
that's happening in there. They're gonna uncover things like hidden
cost right, that's inside your portfolio. You may not even
know what's happening.
Speaker 20 (01:45:41):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:45:41):
They want to show you how they lower risk, lower costs,
and lower volatility and give you the most upside potential.
You get one retirement, one shot at this, make it
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(01:46:04):
Or call eight six six seven seven nine Risks today
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Investments of all risk not a guarantee pass enformance, not
guarantee future results check two five two one seven. We're
(01:46:24):
gonna wrap it up straight ahead. Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:46:34):
Welcome to cheshe No, not the Country, the Institution, The
Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 22 (01:46:40):
It's been a record breaking Memorial Day weekend at the
box office.
Speaker 2 (01:46:44):
He took the red one.
Speaker 22 (01:46:45):
Wel and Stitch, the live action remake of the animated
Disney film, took the top spot, raking in over one
hundred and forty five million dot.
Speaker 2 (01:46:53):
People on every side of Close to paniccing.
Speaker 22 (01:46:55):
That was enough to beat out the other big debut
mission Impossible, The Final Reckoning You're In sixty three million,
combined with holdovers like Thunderbolts, Sinners and Final Destination Bloodlines
on track to be the best Memorial Day weekend for
movie going on record.
Speaker 2 (01:47:10):
Ew that there's a lot of dollars, if you know
what I mean. It was a lot of dollars taken
in over the weekend. It's pretty good. Question is will
there be another mission? Impossible because money talks. And when
all is said and done and they finished counting up
later today and they bring in some other stuff, what's
to end up doing? And but you gotta look at
(01:47:31):
the budget, right the budget three hundy million. That was
a lot of dollars. You know what's funny about Lee
Loan and Stitch though, on the other side of it,
not woke, not wacky, just Lee Loo and Stitch. So
you spent all that money on live action snow white,
made it woke, wacky crazy. That ended up not being
(01:47:53):
that because you ended up having to go back and
cut all that stuff out, the stuff that you were
thinking about doing and all that stuff Lee Loo and
Stitch one hundred million dollar budget, you're already three hundred
and fifty million into the good hmmm, see where we're
going with this. Make stuff that entertains people, Okay, make
(01:48:14):
it so it's intortaining and you win if you don't
make things that are entertaining. You lose aim. Big hit,
big aim, small miss small, Split it out there. Three
two three, five three eight, twenty four twenty three at
(01:48:35):
Chad Benson's Show. That is your ex, your Insta, your
YouTube as well as your Facebook. We're gonna go in
live tonight on YouTube right around seven thirty or eight
Eastern time. So if you have a chance, make sure
you join the program and grab the podcast if you
miss out on that as well. Right here on the
(01:48:55):
Chad Benson Show. Solid fun show today. Nice way to
start off the short week right. A lot of stuff
we got to a lot of stuff I didn't get to,
including something tomorrow that we are absolutely gonna have some
fun with even though it's not a funny thing for
the family going through it though it shows the hypocrisy
(01:49:18):
of the Democrats and their lunacy. Three two three, five
three eight, twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson Show.
Is your ex, your Insta, your YouTube and Facebook, And
again we're gonna go live tonight. We make sure you
join the program. Have a great Tuesday.
Speaker 5 (01:49:33):
I'm not really a fan of Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (01:49:35):
We'll get yourself some tacos you've earned those today, We'll
see it's tonight on the old YouTube. As always, not
not Jack.
Speaker 1 (01:49:42):
This is the Chad Benson Show.