Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Brannie, I'm in favor of this. It just burns my heart.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
I don't know how much that lotler is going to
cost till I get her in my cart.
Speaker 1 (00:16):
We're putting a lot lizard in your cart? Well maybe so,
because you know, maybe maybe he's doing it online. Maybe
maybe it's you know, searching for it online, or maybe
he's this guy or this woman. Sometimes this comes from Dragon.
(00:36):
Have you ever heard the phrase? I was let's see
where is it? I was today years old when I
figured this out. Have you heard that phrase before? Dragon?
Speaker 3 (00:45):
Say it one more time?
Speaker 1 (00:47):
I was today years old when I like figured something
out or discovered something. You've heard that phrase before?
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Yes, yes I have.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
So the very first time I heard it, I didn't
understand what it meant meant. And then over time, you know,
as all the young kids started teaching me on social
media what it meant. Then I found it kind of
interesting because there are times when and I hate this
about some of the social media platforms. Facebook is probably
(01:20):
the worst about. And there's this one voice I should
see if I could find one and play for you.
But if there's one AI voice that always talks about
if you're ever going to farge in an elevator. You
should remember to do this one thing, and there'll be
this little reels, these little videos, and they'll go on
now and it will give you start giving you advice,
(01:44):
or it will show you how to do something. And
it's just like so stupid, so obvious. It's like, why
did I waste my time doing that? Which is why
I think that Facebook is oftentimes such a time waster.
But then I think about those that are the I
was today, you're today years old when I figure this out,
(02:07):
and I wonder how many things there are that I,
for whatever reason, have never figured out myself. Now right now,
I can't think of anything, and the one that's in
this example is not one that I've never figured out.
And you know, I'm kind of OCD. When I go
(02:27):
to the filling station.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
I was gonna say, you're today years old when you
realize you don't have to buy a new car when
the one you have runs on a gas.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
You don't have to do that.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
No, I I just can't.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Maybe I'll think of something in a minute, But here's
one that just kind of I yeah, I also see
on Facebook, like, tell tell me how many of these
things you've used, or tell me how many things you
know what they are? And one will be like a
ary dial phone and you you put her rotary dial
(03:04):
phone in a twenty something in front of a twenty
something and they have they have no idea either what
it is or how to use it.
Speaker 4 (03:11):
I like it when you give them a a three
a quarter floppy, like, hey, somebody three D printed the
save icon.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
I've never heard that.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
Oh yeah, that one's good.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
Someone three D printed the save ke save icon. That
made me laugh. Expe little dike coke. Uh. It took
three plus decades, but TikToker Kate Steiner finally discovered how
useful that little clip on the gas nozzle could be,
(03:47):
and she decided to tell her viewers about it. She
posted her confession to her TikTok account on Saturday. The
video hat now has nearly a million views. In a
recent vide, Steiner reveals that the clip was new to her.
Steiner captured her video. Only took thirty four years to
(04:07):
figure this out. I was today years old and I
figured it out. She shows a gas pump. She then
pans over to the nozzle, which is fixed in the
open poor in the open position with the little hold
open clip. Apparently that was news to Steiner. I didn't
(04:27):
know that. However, I was today's old and I didn't
know this because I don't know that I've ever been
some I think maybe I've been someplace where they were illegal,
and I didn't realize they were illegal. I just thought
it was broken because there wasn't one. Did you know
that in some states it's illegal to have a hold
open clip.
Speaker 4 (04:46):
Dragon, No, it's some states it is illegal to pump
your own gas. Yeah, New Jersey and maybe what she's
referring to, Yeah, well New Jersey.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
I think it's still illegal. I think it used to
be either in Washington or Oregon. But I thought one
of those states revert, you know, got rid of those.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
I didn't think any of the triggers themselves were illegal
for being held open well.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
Uh, surprise, okay here. Surprisingly, this convenience has been forbidden
in some states until recently. Hawaii rescinded its stance against
Hans Free Fuelly in twenty twenty one. Disability advocates were
among the activist groups that overturned the anti hold open
(05:30):
clip policy. Similarly, Massachusetts began allowing the clips in twenty fourteen.
Despite outlawing the technology in the nineteen seventies, New York
has talked about allowing the clips. So apparently New York
does not. Thirty three million gas station phillips a day
in the United States hold open clips. Seem to have
(05:51):
demonstrated that they work. We believe they're safer, said Robert
ranki's general accounts at the Oklama based Patroleum Equipment Institute,
who told The Democrat and Chronicle in two thousand and
four team, so maybe maybe New York is one of
them that doesn't. So if you are someone who are
today's who are today old when you figured out something,
(06:11):
I want to know what it was, text me three
three one zero three, Michael, Michael, just tell me what
it was that you were today's old, when today years
old when you discovered that, Oh gosh, you can do this.
I didn't know that I would, but I know everything.
So there's there's nothing. There's nothing for me to to
to disclose.
Speaker 3 (06:31):
Real quick.
Speaker 4 (06:31):
Here there is a texta Smith saying the young kids
these days only know the pound sign as a hashtag.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Oh yeah, that's true, that's true.
Speaker 4 (06:40):
Really quick story about my oldest son. We were watching
a football game. And you know how they have the
signs that the people hold up the defense signs. Yes, yes,
my son, why is he holding a D number sign?
Because you know you used the hashtag. The pound sign
is a number sign as well, so he's why is
(07:00):
he holding D number signed?
Speaker 3 (07:02):
That doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 4 (07:04):
It's pretty good, at least at least he didn't say hashtag.
Speaker 3 (07:07):
Hashtags weren't really a thing.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
At that How did you how did you explain it
to him?
Speaker 4 (07:11):
Is it well, it's supposed to be a fence and
they only just have the two pickets in a fence.
And he goes, oh, dance.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
Yeah, yeah, now that's a good one.
Speaker 3 (07:29):
Let's see if the number sign.
Speaker 1 (07:31):
Let's see if he confessed anything yet? Yeah? They only kids,
don't man. Speaking of the phone, the roadary dial phone,
so we have one. When Tammer's dad built the undisclosed
location in nineteen sixty or nineteen sixty two, there was
a rocky mountain bell telephone mountain bell and the phone.
(08:00):
It was a party line for a long time. You
had a certain ring if it was for you, a
certain ring if it was for somebody else on the
party line. And I think there were two people on
the party line. Well, we've obviously have since gotten rid
of that, but we kept the phone because I've collected
a few old typewriters, like really old manual typewriters, and
(08:22):
so we have sitting on a buffet, We've got a
couple of old manual typewriters. And then next to one
of them, we have this black mountain bell phone rotary
dial has the original phone number on it, still the
phone number.
Speaker 3 (08:37):
And did it letters in it?
Speaker 1 (08:41):
No, it did not have but it did not have
the area code. It just had the prefixed in the
four digits. Even adults that had never seen it before
walk into the house and that immediately, I mean, instead
of seem like the the the Navajo and the Indian
(09:03):
rugs hanging on the wall, instead of seeing the Russian
black bear rug, instead of seeing you know, the vistas
out of the the big window pane glasses instead of glass,
instead of seeing any of that, what's the first thing?
They see the stupid phone, and of course it's not
connected at all, and they reach over and try to
pick it, try to pick the whole phone up. It's
(09:23):
like twenty five pounds. It's like picking up a small
bag of dog food and they're like, holy feces, Batman.
And then, of course what they do, even though it's
not contierous there's no line, they still set it down
in front of them, They put the pick up the receiver,
They pick up the receiver, put it to the then
they dial a number. I love watching I love watching
(09:46):
people do it. Uh that the we did little remodeling him.
And well when we got rid of the the landline, Uh,
there was no way I was getting rid of that
roadary dial phone. So you were this year, you were
years old? Oh you know what, some people are just
(10:08):
gigantic a holes zero four three three. That would include
you today. I was today's years old when I am
an idiot for listening to the Michael Brown Show every
day for the last five years. You just now realize
that you really are some kind of stupid dragon. And
I have known thatth for for decades. In the upside
(10:29):
down world of the Marxists, that kind of rule over
US government will not and should not restrict pornography in
public schools. I wonder if you still can you dragon?
You would know this, I wouldn't know it. Can you
still get on the computers? At the Denver Public Library
and log on to watch you know, porn hub or something.
Speaker 4 (10:51):
I do not specifically know this, but our good friend
and producer of The Martino Show Kelly just souted, yes,
yes you can.
Speaker 1 (10:57):
Oh you can't. So you can't still watch porn at
the Denver pub Library. That's fantastic.
Speaker 5 (11:02):
So there are no legal implications that deprive you of
being able to do that.
Speaker 6 (11:11):
It is freedom of speech.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
You mean making the porn or watching the porn? Yes, both,
I agree, But is there no are there no standards
of etiquette or just any standards at all of decency
that you wouldn't go into a public place where not
that any rug rats actually go to a library. I mean,
(11:34):
maybe rugrats don't know what a library is. They probably
don't even know what a library is. But there's no
like consideration that maybe you shouldn't watch porn in the
public place. Now, I watch porn here when i'm you know,
just rambling on about something, but nobody's back here watching
me watch the porn.
Speaker 5 (11:54):
Well, the only reason I know this is because my
son and his roommate, honest one, my first birthday went
to a library on the Arizona State campus and tested
the philosophy of you know, can we.
Speaker 4 (12:08):
Actually, well, there are much better things you can do
on your twenty first birthday than go to the.
Speaker 6 (12:12):
Library and watch porn.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
Particularly when I mean I as soon I assume that yours,
this was your son.
Speaker 6 (12:20):
Yeah, he had.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
Assume a smartphone.
Speaker 6 (12:23):
He had imbibed some adult beverages.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
On it, so he drunkenly went to correct the Arizona
State Library.
Speaker 6 (12:31):
Yes, go to the library.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
I really want let's go not to the bar, Let's
go to the library.
Speaker 6 (12:40):
Yep, and see if they can if you.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
Go to the library or the library.
Speaker 5 (12:45):
He went to the library that he was able to
serve porn.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
Now, how do you know this?
Speaker 6 (12:52):
Because he told me?
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Why would you? Hey, mom, guess what I did for
my twenty first birthday. Yeah, I went for the library.
I watched porn.
Speaker 6 (12:59):
Yeah, you lame, But you know, I'm so proud of him.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
I don't think it's lamee that he did it. I
think it's laye that he told you, mom, Yes, Mom.
Speaker 6 (13:10):
What we want he told other people.
Speaker 1 (13:15):
I mean, did he tell you directly or is this
something you heard from somebody?
Speaker 5 (13:20):
And he told you know, the couchaeras kind of have
a weird family dynamic.
Speaker 3 (13:25):
No, yeah, carefully, Michael, Yeah pretty close.
Speaker 6 (13:29):
You almost you almost did it.
Speaker 5 (13:33):
No, No, he did it kind of in a drunken stupor,
and I was like, dude, all right, you've had so
many tequila shots, go if you want to.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
I saw a photo of you yesterday. In fact, this
maybe when I was looking with some of those stupid
videos or something, but I saw a picture of you
or something, and I tried to block you all you
did Facebook, but I wasn't able to do it. I
don't know why. Okay, but now I'm fearful that since
I paused for a moment to like, because I wanted
(14:04):
to be nosy and like, like, see who your friends were, like,
if you really did have any friends, or were they
like weird looking people or whatever? So I paused for
you know, do what? Yeah, I know That's what I'm
fearful of. Yeah, and so now I have started strolling
past it real quickly, so the algorithm will take it away. Well,
I'll just block her again.
Speaker 6 (14:24):
We'll just block me at school.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
If you discovered that I had blocked you, I would
never hear the freaking end of it.
Speaker 5 (14:35):
Well, considering I go on Facebook, probably m once every
two months.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
Well, you were there just the other day, because this
showed up in my fiend.
Speaker 6 (14:44):
I don't know why I was there.
Speaker 5 (14:47):
If I liked something, it had to be something you posted.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
I never post on Facebook.
Speaker 6 (14:53):
See I don't either, so I don't know what happened.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
I'm just nosy, you know. I find Facebook be a
great place to lurk. Just go work and just see
what And you know, the one thing that is way off,
that's not off topic. Have you ever done this? Because
if you have, I wouldn't be surprised. Somebody's in the
hospital and they've had some horrible surgery, they've been intubated,
they've been beat up, bruised, battered, whatever, or they're on
(15:18):
their deathbed and people take photos and then post those
photos on If my family ever posts a photo of
me laying in a hospital bed, intubated or dying or whatever,
I'm gonna come back to life and I'm gonna just
scream at them. I don't know. I just find that weird.
Dragon Do you do.
Speaker 3 (15:39):
That post photos of dying people?
Speaker 1 (15:42):
Or like if missus Redbeard, God Forbid ends up in
the hospital for some reason, you know, let's say that
she's having a I don't know, she's having surgery of
some sort and she's intubated and she looks really just looked.
She just looks drawn, you know, she just looks really bad.
Speaker 3 (16:02):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
Are you gonna take a photo? Are you gonna take
a photograph?
Speaker 4 (16:05):
I would take tons of photos when my sister was
in the hospital recently, ever about a year or so ago. Yeah,
I took tons of photos in her. Did you put
them on Facebook?
Speaker 3 (16:13):
Well? Okay, so you just like it hold over and
be like ha ha ha.
Speaker 1 (16:17):
And you're not and you're not gonna do that to
missus Redbeard, because I'd like for you photos. I'd like
you to at least be here for the at least
the next two days after that, I really don't care,
but at least the next two days.
Speaker 5 (16:27):
We did take video of Haley coming out of her
wisdom teeth surgery, and she was totally out of it.
Speaker 1 (16:37):
Did you you put them on Facebook?
Speaker 6 (16:40):
I didn't put them on Facebook?
Speaker 1 (16:41):
Okable, then I don't care about that.
Speaker 6 (16:42):
Yeah, it wasn't.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Take all you want.
Speaker 6 (16:44):
I'll send them to you. I'll send to you.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
No, do not send me pop photos of your was
it your daughter.
Speaker 6 (16:50):
Who, yeah, video of my daughter.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
I don't want a video of your daughter.
Speaker 6 (16:54):
The wisdom teeth being hilarious. It's hilarious. She's like, Hi,
you hey, Michael.
Speaker 7 (17:06):
This whole Aurora apartment thing is out of control, and
you're right. They need to arrest these thugs and send
them right back to where they belong, their own little
blankety blank place in Venezuela. But what's really starting to
piss me off as an Aurora resident is that they
don't talk about how close this complex is to the
Denver Aurora city line.
Speaker 6 (17:26):
It's just over the line.
Speaker 7 (17:28):
So if Denver was in a sanctuary city, would this
have happened.
Speaker 1 (17:33):
No. When somebody sent me a text message that said, uh,
sixty four or fourteen, says Mike, what I don't understand
why this is such a big deal. TDA is here illegally.
They caught them, now just shift their asses back to Venezuela.
What an effing joke. Well, they haven't caught all of them, yep,
(17:55):
and they are here illegally.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
You think that fourteen was all that were here?
Speaker 1 (17:59):
Just fourteen They spread all across the country. Forty three
forty four rights, Mike, this is your boss's boss, mister Pittman.
That got my attention, right, Oh, please do not use
the phrase I was today years old when on your show.
I'm convinced people who use that are absolutely retarded. I'm
(18:20):
sure you'll continue to use it just to irk your listeners,
but we need you to keep your stellar ratings. After all,
there's not a slot here for everybody. Oh, and have
a merry Christmas.
Speaker 4 (18:29):
I was today years old that I found out that
our boss's boss, Bob Pittman has our number.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Except it to three H three area code. And I
don't think it sounds like him. I don't think it is. Yeah,
so back to the porn. We can't stop talking about porn.
In California, they've passed Assembly Bill eighteen twenty five, a
guy by the name of al Muruchi or something, a
Democrat from Torrance, jammed through, signed by the governor back
(18:59):
in September. He says, I'm introducing the California Freedom to
Read Act to fight book bands at public libraries. Unfortunately,
there is a growing movement to banned books across the country,
including in California. Book banning proponents are disproportionately targeting materials
containing the voices and the lived experiences. I hate that
phrase of LGBTQ. In communities of color, there is no
(19:21):
such movement, none at all. But here's why Democrats think
the bill is necessary. Because parents were so outraged that
the California State Board of Ed approved highly controversial changes
to the state's health and sex education framework, including teaching
children about bondage anal sex pederasty. I gotta look that
(19:45):
one up. I assume some sort of pedophilia, sex trafficking,
sexual orientation, and transgender and non conforming students. Back in
twenty nineteen, many ran for school boards across the state
to get a handle on the sexual garbage being peddled
to their kids. According to The Globe from Torrens, public
education in California has become I guess, kind of sinister.
(20:07):
So you can now you know, you want to watch
porn on the school library? Yeah, how about it? San Francisco,
speaking of California, here, here's why you want to keep
government away from your healthcare, because anything at touch has
becomes politicized. San Francisco, their Department of Health has appointed
(20:30):
a weight stigma Czar whose duty is to encourage obesity Virgietovar,
self described anti weight based discrimination expert put that in
your resume, describes herself as a prominent advocate for fat
positivity and body acceptance. Let me just say right up front,
(20:53):
I don't care whether you're fat or skinny. But if
you're fat, if you're if you're obese, that's a health problem.
It's it's a physical impediment to you living a long
and healthy and happy life. Now, I don't care if
you're fat, and maybe you've got a genetic problem, maybe
(21:16):
you've got, you know, an eating disorder or whatever. Same
is true if you're too skinny, if you're anorexic, or
believe me, you have a health issue. I don't care
if you're skinny. I don't care if you're fat. I
don't judge based on that. But to actually encourage people
to get fat, I kind of got a problem with it.
(21:39):
And that's what the that's what the fats are in
San Francisco is going to do.
Speaker 6 (21:47):
Hi, my name is Virgie Tovar, and I'm the author
of you have the right.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
Fat and you do have the right to remain fat.
I don't This is why I don't want government touching
anything I don't want government to denying this woman who
is obviously very obese. I don't want them denying her surgery,
you know, for you know, a heart replacement or whatever
it might be, because she has or she has fatty
liver disease or whatever. But I don't want people to
(22:13):
encourage people to get fat. I certainly don't want the
government does.
Speaker 8 (22:16):
All the few other books on fat positivity and body acceptance.
When I think about what people might be surprised by
what you would think of when you think of eating disorders,
I immediately think of being a kid. I was a
kid in a larger body, a teen and a larger body.
And also I'm an adult in a larger body, and
the message I always got from my doctor was shrink
(22:38):
your body by any means necessary.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
Now, why do you think the doctor, why do you
think her primary care physician would encourage her to lose
weight because he's fat shaming her. I seriously doubt that
because he is against body positivity. I kind of doubt that.
Maybe it's because, oh, let's see obesity. According to the NIH,
(23:04):
obesity entails serious health risks type two diabetes, high blood pressure,
high pretension, heart disease, stroke, metabolic syndrome, faty liver disease, cancers,
breathing problems, o arthritis, gap diseases of the gallbler and
the pancreas, kidney disease, pregnancy problems, fertility problems, sexual function problems,
(23:24):
mental health problems. It's almost as if she's like, Oh,
my doctors just did it because he doesn't like fat people.
Speaker 8 (23:33):
And it really felt like there was a sense of it.
Don't ask, don't tell so because I truly, truly, truly believed.
And this is where I think the surprise comes at.
I really believed that this was about the health.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
I'm just guessing here, but I'm guessing that's why the
doctor suggests she lose weight for her health. Anytime I
see somebody that extraordinarily skinny or extraordinarily obese, I don't
think about the fact that they may be really large
or really tall or really small or really short or
(24:09):
really thin or whatever. I think about how they're doing
health works. I mean I really do, because well, there's
fat people all around you, and there's skinny people all
around you, just like there are black and brown people
all around you. Who cares?
Speaker 3 (24:26):
Who cares?
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Yeah, their skin color has nothing to do with their health.
But I can guarante them to you that their weight
or lack thereof does.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
This.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
It's almost as if California truly does not care about
their citizens' wealth or health or well being. And I'm
not sure I want government to care about my health
or want might well being that ought to be doing that.
(25:05):
There are a bunch of dumbasses that are now getting
Beligi man own tattoos. They're getting tattoos of him on
their bodies after he shot United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson
in the back.
Speaker 3 (25:22):
They can get him right next to their t bow tattoo.
Yes there.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
I can't play it because of the language and because
there's music, and I'm not sure whether we could them
put it on the website or not anyway, so I'm
just not gonna play it. But they they put on
denied Defend the pose. There's one tattoo that actually shows
Theligi shooting Thomas Thompson in his back. There are others
(25:55):
that talk about, you know, they've got us backpack with
the optly money. Some that have the backpack with defend
denied to pose cas things underneath the backpack. I mean
it's really sick. One woman was inspired by the Pokemon
character bra Loom, which is on Mangeon's Twitter profile x profile.
(26:21):
The people that glorify him are really sick. People don't
believe me.
Speaker 3 (26:27):
Care shooting. Can you give us your thoughts about that
and what do you make Well?
Speaker 2 (26:34):
Yeah, yeah, I think it's a terrible thing. I think
it's really terrible that some people seem to admire him
like him, and I was happy to see that it
wasn't specific to this gentleman that was killed. It's just
an overall sickness as opposed to a specific sickness.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
That was a terrible thing.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
It was cold blooded, just a cold blooded, horrible killing.
And how people like this guy is, uh, that's a sickness. Actually,
that's really very bad, especially the way it was done.
It was so bad, right in the back and very bad,
very thing like that. You just you can't believe that
(27:15):
some people, and maybe it's fake news.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
It's hard to believe that that can even be thought of,
but it seems that there's a certain appetite for him.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
I don't get it.
Speaker 3 (27:26):
Yeah, please, health Care shooting.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
What did Trump not do in that sixty second clip
from his interview yesterday. He did not blame the gun.
He brought up a really good point, and that is
shooting someone in the back is one of the most
cowardly things you can do, and doing it because you
(27:49):
don't like the healthcare industry as opposed to you know,
targeting and an individual regardless. Uh, it's a sickness, It's
an absolute sickness.
Speaker 3 (27:59):
It wasn't a shooting, so it wasn't the gun's fault.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Oh oh see, I didn't realize that.
Speaker 3 (28:07):
Never mind, Mike.
Speaker 9 (28:09):
I was today years old when I realized that the
City of Aurora has cracked the code on dealing with
gang violence, being you ignore calls for help from people
who are experiencing the violence, and when it's in the
public spotlight, you then blame the people who asked for help.
(28:30):
Originally it's brilliant.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
That's utter brilliance, utter brilliance, and you keep denying the
reality of what's going on. According to a recent analysis
of federal job postings you can find online, apparently Biden
is recruiting more than twelve hundred staff for different departments
and cabinet departments and agencies to become diversity equity and
(28:57):
inclusion managers. They're advertised with an annual salary that reaches
up in a couple of cases three cases, I found
an annual salary of three hundred ten thousand dollars. Now,
if you add up all the salaries based on all
the postings, that amounts to one hundred and sixty million
(29:19):
dollars annually. Now, they're trying to rush the onboarding of
these federal employees before Trumps takes office in January. At
least thirty three DEI rolls have been advertised since Trump's election.
Now the application window is time to close before he
is set to be inaugurated as number forty seven. Now,
(29:42):
Trump has repeatedly promised to uproot the deep state, the
administrative state, and the fire federal employees who attempt to
undermine his policies. However, the hiring frenzy appears aimed at
stacking the government with these idea logs so that they
can reach just what he's doing. They never stop resisting.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
Now.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
Most notably, HHS announced the vacancy for a Deputy Assistant
Secretary for Minority Health back on November fifteen. Salary is
the top salary two hundred twenty one nine hundred dollars.
The purpose of that position to be this Deputy Assistant
(30:28):
Secretary to advance health equity. It closed applications or will close.
You know, it did close applications on November twenty nine,
and they're now reviewing the applicants. The FDIC they want
to fill positions with substantial remuneration. These are the ones
(30:49):
that had a Director of the Office of Minority in
Women Inclusion. I'm sorry, the Director of the Office of
Minority and Women Inclusion. That job is a telecommuting option.
You can work from home and make from your paycheck
(31:09):
three hundred and ten thousand dollars a year. Now the
job work from home for the FDIC and you develop
and execute DEI strategies across the entire FDIC offices all
across the country. The FAA, they have an application open
(31:31):
for an Affirmative Employment specialist, and the SEC is reviewing
candidates for a supplier for diversity officer positions. I think
what we ought to do is with the FAA that
we ought to have air traffic controllers hired on diversity
equity inclusion because I want to know when I'm you know,
getting ready to land somewhere that whoever's in the control tower. Yeah,
(31:55):
that they were a dei hire, not based on qualifications,
So much better knowing that they were, you know, not
qualified for the job.