Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Mike.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
If you want to know what kind of worker you
get for five dollars an hour, just look.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
On the other side of the glass in the studio.
Speaker 3 (00:06):
Oh trust me, I'm looking on the other side of
the glass.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
One of us makes five, the yellow one makes five
fifty pretty much what I couldn't do with that extra
fifty cents. Let's talk about you know, when I got
back from last week, we talked about TSA extensively. Now
(00:33):
I want to talk about real ID. Do you know
what real id is?
Speaker 3 (00:36):
A little star that's on your license right.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
It solves everything.
Speaker 4 (00:42):
News Nation and former pilot Kit Darby. Kit, welcome back
to the show. Thank you for being with me again.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
Good morning, Thanks for having me.
Speaker 4 (00:50):
You can't help but think about the millions of people
flying for holidays these last couple weeks of the year.
What do you tell nervous flyers on the heels of
these horrific aviation stories.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
Kit, Well, you have.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
To put it in perspective. I mean, this is a
huge industry, thirty million flights a year, So if something
happened one in a million times, it would happen thirty
times a year. So that is a huge opportunity for
things to go wrong, and you know, flying we're going
along at six hundred miles an hour, at thirty thirty
five thousand feet. It's a little more challenging than going
(01:24):
down the highway with four wheels on the ground going
sixty miles an hour. So it's an amazingly safe twenty
times safer than driving yourself to the airport.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
Yeah, I was going to say, statistics still show that
flying is one of the safest ways to travel. Four
hundred people did die in plane crashes this year, but
you know, kit think about to the last week. I
mean all these crashes you have, the one in Halifax,
the deadly crash in South Korea, the one in Kazakhstan.
None of these are US based airlines. Do we operate
differently or better than feign airlines do.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Well?
Speaker 2 (01:57):
We do a lot of it, and then of course
that makes us it at it well lots of practice.
We do have some procedures, experience, requirements and things that
the rest of the world doesn't enjoy.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
Some of them consider it an impediment. When you get to.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
Talking about safety, it has whatever we're doing, we're doing
something right. It's produced a marvelous safety record here in
the US also.
Speaker 4 (02:20):
Talk to me about bird strikes. Kit because with the
Azerbaijan plane crash, Russia early on suggested a bird strike
was to blame. How many people casting doubt on that,
but South Korea that tower had issued a bird strike
warning shortly before those pilots declared may day. How common
is a bird strike and does it usually end in
devastation like this that we've.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Seen, Well, it certainly doesn't normally end like this. Bird
strikes are very common. I would equate it to driving
down the highway and hitting a bug. You know, in
most cases we don't even know we have bird strikes.
The birds are small, unless they group into flocks or
the bird is very large, we don't even know that
it's happened.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
So they reported.
Speaker 2 (02:59):
You know, there's a thousands, tens of thousands of bird
strikes reported, many more that are not reported. In most cases,
the bird gets the bad end of this deal. Airplanes
much larger, faster, or stronger, but occasionally, with lots of
small birds or a very big bird, it can cause damage.
If it goes into an engine. It would be very
rare for it to affect both engines. These airplanes can
(03:21):
fly safely on one engine. There have been in case
the miracle on the Hudson was a case of birds
taking both engines and ending up in the water. So
it is possible, but again, thirty million opportunities a year
extremely rare.
Speaker 4 (03:35):
Yeah, and talk to me now. We have three different,
very intense investigations into these crashes in the last week.
How long does it typically take to get concrete answers
as to what went wrong?
Speaker 2 (03:48):
Well, it really varies with the information available. The flight
recorders oyster recorder and the aircraft systems recording have been
available on both of these most recent accidents. Speed the
information and we'll know what happened. The voice recorder will
tell us what the pilots were doing, what they were thinking,
and the aircraft recorder will tell us what the airplane
(04:09):
was doing. It'll take a week or two at the
most to read that and certainly enlighten the investigation. But
the final investigation could easily take months or even years.
Speaker 4 (04:20):
Yeah, and you just think about those families who have
to wait that long to figure out what went wrong.
Kit Darby, As always, thank you so much for hopping
on with me. I appreciate your time.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
Thinking about everything that you just heard about airline safety.
Was there anything in there at all about driver's licenses?
Was there anything in there at all about you know,
the passengers themselves that makes airlines safe? Nothing, nothing at all.
(04:55):
But if you're planning a trip in the spring, you
have I don't know, four or five months left to
replace your driver's license. Every driver's license and any other
identification card that's the government issued ID must be updated
to real ID standards by May seven of this year,
(05:19):
twenty twenty five, in order to pass through TSA, to
pass through the checkpoints, and to fly on federally regulated
commercial airlines. So real IDs are issued by real ID
compliance states. They have, as Dragon said, that little.
Speaker 3 (05:38):
Star on those we are one. And if you have
happen to have a Colorado ID, chances are in the
upper right hand corner you've got a little star.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
You're a compliant and that makes you safe because you see,
federal agencies like the TSA and Homeland Security will only
accept that type of identification in order for you to
access certain federal facilities or a nuclear power plant in
addition to airports, So you have to have this new
(06:10):
special you know, designation on your driver's license or your
government issued ID if you want to go into I'm
assuming a federal courthouse, or you want to go into
a nuclear power plant, or obviously an airport. So it's
just an updated driver's license. It's an updated ID card
(06:33):
marked the gold star. We finally reached the limit. This
law was passed in two thousand and five. It established
minimum security standards for state issued IDs, and it prohibits
federal agencies, almost all federal agencies from accepting an ID
from a state that does not meet those standards. And
(06:55):
May seven is the deadline to get one, not even
extending it since like two thousand and nine. For the
past they've been extending it for the past sixteen years.
It has nothing to do with safety, nothing at all.
(07:18):
But now that we have it, can we make something
of it? Can we do something with it? In an
age where you cannot walk through an airport, well you
can walk through an airport, but you can't walk through
a security checkpoint. You can't even buy certain cold medicines.
(07:39):
So why was an Arizona I got the Arizona crud
just you know, the allergies, so I had I'm trying
to think maybe first, I don't know maybe a few
weeks before Christmas, I'd gone to the local Walgreens or
were by my house, and I bought some of the
real suit of that that has of fenineph for whatever
(08:02):
the crap is in it, the stuff that really works,
you know, the stuff that us meth heads used to
make meth. So I bought it, and I had to
swipe my driver's license, which just pisses me off, in
order to buy a decongestion. So I forgot to take
it with me to Arizona. So I go to a
(08:24):
just happens to be a Walgreens not far from my
daughter's house to buy some more pseudo faed and I
had her go with me because I knew I was
buying more than it was allowed by Colorado, and they
had to swiped my driver's license. And I didn't know
if I was gonna have to swipe my driver's license
and be denied buy more pseudo fad because clearly I
(08:44):
look like a meth head and I'm just trying to
make meth near the Droom golf Course in Scottsdale, which
you know is just splattered everywhere with meth heads. And
sure enough, they took my driver's license swiped it and
it went through, and we just laugh because it's like,
you know, what a joke. You know, if if you
(09:05):
live in Trinidad, just go to Trinidad by your pseudo
FED and if you're trying to make meth and go
to raft Home buy some more and then come back
and go somewhere, you know, go maybe a Wallsenburg and
buy some and then go back down to Vegas and
buy some and just call it back and forth in person.
You got all the suit of FED you need. It's stupid.
It is something of a marvel. It's something of not marvel.
(09:31):
That's not the right word. It's something of a conundrum
to me that requiring the same kind of voter ID
is such a polarizing proposition. Why is it that in
order to make you feel safe, because a real ID
(09:52):
does nothing. I mean, we're letting illegal aliens on airplanes
with no ID, just a piece of paper from department
the Department ome Man Security that says, hey put them
on the airplane. Okay. Sure, if I could find like
a clean copy of those, I could just make it
into a PDF and just print it out and just
(10:13):
you know, I'd love to do this and just try
to walk up to a TSA agent and just say
when they ask for your ID, instead of offering them
my real ID, like my Global entry or my passport,
just hand them a you know, a piece of paper,
eight half by eleven sheet of paper that says DHS says,
I can go through. Oh you can. You know, if
(10:34):
you know how to work a PDF, you can make
a really nice PDF. You know, put in you know,
some name or whatever. What are they gonna do? What
are they gonna do? Our founders believed in a system
that was built upon rational debate, the rule of law,
and actually trust in the in the in our elections.
But today it seems easier to you know, just go
(10:56):
buy a plane ticket than to persuade the average citizen.
Our elections are secure as the local bank's vault. You know,
you hear all the stories about stolen elections, fraud fills
the air, and a lot of conservatives point to a
straightforward remedy verify the identity of every person who exercises
the sacred right to vote. And now we have am
(11:19):
using their quotes here, we now have real I d Yeah.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
Now did we have to go through a special background check?
Or fill out extra forms or anything so that we
can make sure that we are safe for everybody that
has a real ID, because it seems if it's if
it's we need it for you know, travel and getting
on these planes, and we're doing this for safety that
we may want to endure, you know, a background check
(11:45):
and a prostate screening, and.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
Off, crap you yesterday, you're starting to kick in.
Speaker 3 (11:51):
I'm just curious because I mean, if it's supposed to
be for our own safety that we must do an
extra step in order to get this real ID.
Speaker 1 (11:59):
No, well, I think I got my real ID just
by renewing it online.
Speaker 3 (12:03):
Yes, I'm here.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
Yeah, yeah, But if I dare suggest that we now
use the real ID in order to vote, I might
be a racist. I might be a homophobe and islamophobe
just whatever, phobe. I just might be a phobe. It
(12:33):
just verify the identity of every person who exercises the
sacred right to vote. And now couple it with the
idea that after you know, twenty years, we now really
have a deadline, a real deadline. At least today it's
a real deadline. Who knows what's going to happen come
May seven. But we get to May, and let's say
(12:54):
we really do all have to have the real ID?
Why not? Why not? Why not use that as a
requirement to vote? Now, they'll argue, assuming the firewall shielding
democracy from a mountdown of suspicion, lawfare, and kind of
(13:16):
just a creeping sense that our republic might be turning
to sam beneath our feet, why not do it? Just
why not do it? But while I'm trying to give
you a rational reason, because the government has told me
that this real ID is going to make me safer,
and the real ID really tells that tsa goober who
I am, and allows me to get on the airplane,
(13:38):
or I shouldn't say that, it allows me to go
through the checkpoint with a real ID. Why not use
it to vote? Democrat activists wave the banner of disenfranchisement
and the dreaded specter of you know, Jim Crow laws.
I just don't get it.
Speaker 3 (13:59):
So if hey, how's that Jim Crow two point zero
working down in Georgia. Now it's working great, Okay.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
It's going it's going well, it's just going fantastic.
Speaker 3 (14:07):
Those a lots of people that we don't like aren't
allowed to vote anymore.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
I mean we in fact, it's not just black people.
We need to We need a new term for Jim
Crow two point zero because we're only allowing people to
vote that we want to vote more.
Speaker 3 (14:21):
People have voted in ever in Georgia. Just just saying that, yeah, yeah, so.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
You must have all gotten real IDs. Good, great voter
ID might feel like a I don't know, maybe to
you a trifle it does to me a trifling administrative detail,
just another box to check on our civic life. But elections. Now, Remember,
the real ID is necessary to walk into a federal building.
(14:48):
A real ID is necessary to you know, to to
go buy my pseudo fad. The real ID is necessary
to go through a checkpoint at an airport. Why can't
we have a Why can't we use that I am
real ID and say you must have you must show
a real ID and the name must match all we
have on the voter roll. Oh, I'm sorry. Uh, we
(15:10):
vote by mail in Colorado. Okay, but how about this,
I have to go too if I want to start
getting mail in ballots. Let's just say we're going to
start a new so starting this November, if we if
we have an election, whatever the next election is. If
I want to mail in ballot, I have to go
register ANEW to vote and show my real ID. Yes,
(15:34):
not the passport. Forget the passport, forget my Global Entry form,
forget my birth certificate, the real I D consider how
you're asked, indeed required, to verify your identity for virtually everything.
(15:55):
So you check into a hotel, maybe see your I
D please the pseudo fan running a car doing cigarettes.
I got cart at a restaurant over the holidays.
Speaker 2 (16:10):
Me.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
Now, I know that I'm young and virile, and I
look like I'm about seventeen years old, so I wasn't
surprised by it. So I gave a startled look to
the to the white staff, and I didn't say anything
because I knew that. I mean, she had the look
of the stern teacher. I need to see your ID.
(16:32):
And I wanted to argue, but I just didn't. So
I just pulled it out. But I didn't pull it
out of my wallet. I flashed it like I was
an FBI agent. I just flashed my ID and let
her look at it. She took her finger and she looked,
and she saw the birthdate. She saw the year, and
was like, Okay, you can have that shot at tequila.
(16:54):
So here we are. Let's preserve the most sacred thing
other than just you know, you're old enough to have
a drink real id since, since it's now real, have
it to vote to.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
It's not Jim Crow two point out.
Speaker 1 (17:16):
Darn it, it's Jim Eagle. I don't I don't get it.
Speaker 3 (17:23):
Eagles are way cooler than crows.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
Okay, or counting crows, or greater than eagles. I think
one of the most alarming aspects of Biden's anility, and
I've seen this in other dementia people that I've known
throughout my life, are these really weird outbursts of anger
(17:50):
just you know, talking along and also well that's been
remarked on since the very beginning of his president you know,
I think back on I never saw it with Biden
when I was in d C. But I saw with
people like John McCain who just had horrible tempers. Now
(18:12):
I think this, I think Biden's anger is temper tantrums
are not because he's he has anger issues. I think
it's because of dementia. John McCain's, on the other hand,
was because he was just nahel Biden snapped at reporters
yesterday because they asked him a simple question. Do you
(18:32):
still believe that President Trump is a threat to democracy? Now?
We've been told since he was elected in twenty sixteen
he's a threat to democracy, and throughout the campaign threat
to democracy, threat to democracy.
Speaker 3 (18:51):
If Trump and Hitler were holding hands skipping down the street.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
That's right, the old singing Mary Poppin's tunes, the absolutely
So why does that question aggravate Democrats, particularly Biden, so much?
I think it's because of Trump's decisive victory in a
democratically held election. It gives lie to the to the
(19:16):
histronics of their of their rhetoric. Biden asserted preposterously that
illegal immigration, which he treasonously allowed to spiral into the
largest invasion in human history. He asserted that illegal, immorate
(19:36):
illegal immigration, actually went down during his administration. He claimed
that this when I became president, the numbers came way down,
referring to illegals coming across the border. Then came this.
Biden then really in a weird way, raged at the reporters. Now,
(20:02):
the topic of his age has set off his profane
tantrums for years, but the liberal establishment so hates America
that to put this guy in the White House, and
they did it on purpose, because I think that while
his temper tantrums currently are sometimes maybe sometimes not a
(20:25):
part of the dementia, the stories that I've heard about
Biden throughout his career is that he was a John
McCain and that he always had these temper tantrums. And
this one, it's only six seconds. Safe to listen closely,
but listen to the anger. Might be the oldest present.
(20:46):
I know more world leaders than anyone maybe the oldest president.
I know more world leaders than any of you ever
met in your whole GD life.
Speaker 3 (20:55):
Oh really, yeah, with the two of them, can Yeah,
those two words together that'll piss some people off. One
word separate, the other words separate. Yeah, we are more
than happy to say God all we want, and then
later on we're more than welcome to say Damn all
(21:18):
we want.
Speaker 1 (21:19):
But I didn't think that. I didn't think that. I know,
the two of them together will offend some people. Yeah,
but I didn't think the two of them together was.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
It's unfortunately one of those ones that I would err
on the side of caution and dump it, to which
I did. Oh I know it's not one of the
seven Deadly words, but you know, g du, I know,
(21:50):
I know.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
I never I never used the phrase. It's just that
I don't use.
Speaker 3 (21:54):
It's similar to where we can say ass and we
can talk about somebody digging a hole in the ground,
but when you put those two together, you can't.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
Well, what if we put the word Biden, freedom and
sorrows together?
Speaker 3 (22:14):
Careful Cheney, what poopo?
Speaker 1 (22:22):
So let's do that story instead. Although can you put
that on the website?
Speaker 3 (22:29):
Yeah, the internet's totally different.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
We can do a little bit because because that's that's
an official White House. Uh yeah, Okay, you can go
watch it at Michael says, go here dot com. Gee,
I know, if we hadn't spent all of our pre
show production meeting looking at naked photos of you instead
(22:52):
of going through my rundown.
Speaker 3 (22:55):
We have a rundown.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
No, I have tabs. I just have tabs.
Speaker 3 (23:00):
Somebody puts thought into this show.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
And I'm on the I'm under the second browser of
tabs at this point. So we would have we would
have never gotten to it anyway, true, never gotten to
it anyway. So George Soros's got the presidential Medal of Freedom.
Yet don't forget he also gave it last November to
the former president of Planned parenthoods to Seal Richards. So
(23:26):
I think the unsettled point was to honor industrial scale abortion.
And the gesture is particularly kind of disgusting because Biden
proclaims himself to be Catholic, and I think I'm not Catholic,
so I can't say that this is sure that I
can't say this for certain, but I think many Catholics
probably consider it blasphemous that he even takes Holy Communion.
(23:51):
So he just flipped the finger to Minny and Bergens,
who oppose abortion, and specifically to Catholicism, which holds that
the soul enters the body at the moment of consent option.
According to Biden's professed faith, Richards oversaw the murder of
at least three point eight million innocent children, and that's
what she got the medal for. And then he gives
(24:14):
it to George Soros, and he gives it to Tim Gill.
Now I had seen the list of people that were
getting the medal, but I haven't seen any coverage of
Tim Gill getting it. Tim Gill, watch her name Striker
(24:36):
and Jared Polis infamous for the Blueprint. They're well conceived,
highly well executed plan to turn Colorado into a Democrat
controlled Marxist utopia. When you look around, I mean, it's
(24:58):
exactly what we are. So Tim Gill gets a medal
along with Hillary Clinton. So you too, can you know,
hide your government email on a private server. You can
destroy the server, you can destroy phones, you can do
all sorts of things to hide your conversations that are
(25:20):
public conversations, government conversations, and you can get the Presidential
Medal of Freedom in that fantastic This is a great country, right.
We talked about economies earlier, but we didn't talk about
this economy. Under a new ruling by the outgoing President
(25:45):
Joe Biden in a new non can Under this new ruling,
new non condensing natural gas fired water heaters would be
prohibited for sale starting in twenty twenty nine because it
concerns about carbon dioxide emissions. This is all according to
(26:06):
the New York Post. Now, if the policy takes effect
as it's slated to on March eleven, a little less
than forty percent of the tankless water heaters currently on
the market would be banned. According to Neestama from the
impliant standard of the Wareness Project. The new rules published
by the Department of Energy also stipulate that new tankless
(26:28):
guess water heaters must rely on thirteen percent less energy
than the least efficient comparable market model that's on the
market today. Now, why is he doing this to reduce
carbon dioxide emissions which climate change out if it gets
in Biden say cause global warming?
Speaker 3 (26:44):
Really?
Speaker 1 (26:46):
Now, that's all you really need to know. Natural gas
water heaters ban going not going forward, but eventually the
ruling three hundred and sixty one pages. All that does
is set energy conservation standards for consumer gas fired instantaneous
(27:08):
water heaters. Now what I find I find two things
amazing about this ruling. First and foremost is that they
knew that to go after just plain old natural gas
water heaters might be a little stretch too far. There
might be, I don't know, an insurrection against that. So
(27:32):
let's do the tankless water heaters first, and let's go
after them, and let's spend three hundred and sixty one
pages to do so. So they have to use thirteen percent.
Let's see, there was a there was a part where
(27:53):
did I find it there was there was a here.
It is the Department of Energy dragging. You love these numbers.
The Department of Energy estimated the cost saved over the
long run by the new rules would be about one
hundred and twelve dollars. What do you think the time
(28:13):
period is? How about twenty year stretch? So earlier I
got the old iPhone calculator out and that comes to
forty six cents a month, three hundred and sixty one
(28:35):
pages of rules. So you can't buy an instantaneous, thankless
natural guess water eater. And the good news is it'll
save you one hundred and twelve dollars over a twenty
year stretch. Comes out to about forty six cents a month.
Speaker 3 (28:52):
Now I can buy that pizza that I bought yesterday.
Speaker 1 (28:55):
Whew, I know one hundred and twelve dollars. Just capitalize
that he needs to add over a twenty year period,
and you can buy all the pizzas you want to.
I'll be right back.
Speaker 5 (29:05):
There's one good thing about you guys being on vacation.
The entire time, My smoke alarms didn't go off. Twitter,
no chirps, no nothing, and even last week they're still fixed.
So I guess they fixed themselves.
Speaker 1 (29:17):
Yeah, they're self.
Speaker 3 (29:20):
They self resolve, the batteries will recharge on their own.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
They will, they absolutely do. So I love it when
I piss off a listener.
Speaker 3 (29:30):
And today is Monday. Can gituations right?
Speaker 1 (29:32):
Exactly? So Greg is the one that left the talk
back about Uh, it wasn't Jim Crow two point oh,
come on, it's Jim Eagle.
Speaker 3 (29:42):
Thanks.
Speaker 1 (29:43):
And I made fun of that because I have no
context for that. So I get an email for better context. Guys,
he writes, come on, don't make me look stupid. I
got a rep reputation to protect. And here's the story.
So I click on the story. It doesn't tell me anything.
It says let's see. The headline is Biden says, Republican
(30:06):
state voting legislation makes quote makes Jim Crow look like
Jim Eagle. President was subhed. President was asked about Republican
lawmakers and battleground states are pushing to titan voter restrictions.
So now let me do a word search within the
article for the word Eagle. It appears three times in
(30:29):
the headline and then in the first paragraph. President Biden
said Republican state voting legislation makes Jim Crow look like
Jim Eagle during his first formal press conference on Thursday.
So that's match number two, match number three. I'm quote
from Biden. I'm convinced that we'll be able to stop
(30:51):
this because it is the most pernicious thing. This makes
Jim Crow look this makes Jim Crow look like Jim Eagle,
and thus in the matches of the word Eagle in
the story. So I still don't have any idea. So
I thought, well, let's don't use ductut go, Let's don't
use being Let's use the Google machine. So I just
(31:14):
googled Jim Eagle. The storyteller Jim Eagle. This is on
Amazon lives in the Shadows of Black Mountain, located in
an old western mining town north of Phoenix, Arizona, called
Cave Creek. There's a really good Mexican place in Cave
Creek too, or Mantle Realty. Who Who's Jim Eagle and
(31:36):
what is the Jim Eagle law wants to know the
difference between Jim Eagle and Jim Crow. Let us give
you background on Jim Eagle. This is from a realty site.
Jim has been selling real estate for forty one years
that's just a little long. That's just a little longer
than how long Joe Biden was in congressah blah blah blah.
(31:59):
So apparently there's a real who decided that he would
take on the Jim Eagle mantle for himself. I mean,
that's his name, so why not put it on his website.
Then there is Jim Eagle, the senior vice president of
JLL fort Worth. He's an invaluable member of the JLL team,
bringing with him a remarkable breadth of experience and a
(32:20):
track record spanning in impressing forty six years. I don't
think that's who he's referring to. Then there's mean Green Sports.
Jim Eagle was a standout in football at North Texas.
He played in two bowl games, the nineteen forty six
Optimist Bowl in the nineteen forty seven Salad Bowl. He
was voted an All lone Star player. That's according to
(32:42):
mean Green Sports. And then we get to this, Oh,
there's also a Jim Eagle that joins a law firm
in Fort Worth. Two On Amazon Dragon, you can buy
this will be for You, a black T shirt that
says in white lettering, this makes Jim Crow look like
(33:05):
Jim Eagle dash Joe Biden. You can get this T shirt. Select,
Let me select for you. Do you want extra large?
Speaker 3 (33:16):
I'm good with large, large, just large?
Speaker 1 (33:18):
Are you sure? Yeah? Okay? Well wait a minute. It
won't get me a price. I'm not buying anything without
a price. Um, let's see if I can add it
to my cart see all buying options. Oh, ship's new
(33:39):
for delivery between January seventeen and February fourth meets. Somebody's
got to make it somewhere for nineteen ninety nine, you're
not getting it. That's almost four times my wage. I can't.
I can't spend four days, four hours of work just
to buy you a stupid T shirt. So here we are,
and we still have no freaking clue who Jim Eagle is.
Speaker 3 (34:00):
Biden said it.
Speaker 1 (34:01):
But Biden said it, And so I would say to you,
mister Greg, for better context. You've provided us none, none whatsoever.
Hm hmm. What do you think we should do with
the Does he have a goober number?
Speaker 3 (34:18):
I mean he did, he's in Missouri.
Speaker 1 (34:20):
I mean people in Missouri don't know squad.
Speaker 3 (34:23):
He did say Biden said it that one time, about
that one thing that that's not good enough.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
No, I want I want to know who the hell
Jim Eagle is.
Speaker 3 (34:31):
Who did Biden think he was referring to?
Speaker 1 (34:33):
I see. I think that's the point. I don't think
Biden had a clue who he was referring to.