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February 5, 2025 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It is very interesting to be sitting here as a
taxpayer watching the people who were robbing us blind now
being upset at us and others like elon in Doge
that they were caught. No, doesn't mad that they robbed us,
but they're mad that they were caught. Interesting dragging skills

(00:26):
the waffle house.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
After the show, the sewing price of eggs is forced.
This comes to us from CNN. The sewing price of
eggs is forced. Waffle House to out of temporary search
yards on customers orders. I'm confused. Does waffle House use
real eggs? They must? Huh, I should change my I've

(00:51):
been to waffle House and but I think since I
left FEMA Online Security.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
I've never been to a house.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
They no waffle House Chimney Christmas, no wonder. You're so weird.
You gotta get some waffle House gook in you gook Yeah,
you gotta get that gook in you. And you have
to have an encounter. It's a good way to learn
to socialize. You go into the waffle house and there's
the you know, the waitress, you know you got cigarette
hanging down out of her mouth and got the hair

(01:22):
up in a bun of some.

Speaker 3 (01:23):
Sort of when she your waffles, the ash from the
cigarette falls onto the waffles.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Yeah, and she just says, you know, that's just added
that spice. Just you know, let's see, it's a it's
a you know, it's a it's a nicotine waffle, that's
what it is. Uh, let's see. The Georgia based change
is adding a fifty cent charge per egg, per egg,
per egg. So you want a couple of scrambled eggs.

(01:47):
I'm trying to think if you went to I Hop
or Denny's or.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
What are some of the others, the Beneicott and I
don't know anyway, Yeah, first.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
Watch whatever, a couple of scrambled eggs. Now you're gonna
pay an extra dollar for two scrambled eggs as a
result of the nationwide rise in the cost of eggs. Now,
we had a either an email or a text message.
Maybe it was a talk back. Anyway, we had somebody
interacting with the program that told us wherever they live

(02:19):
that they're buying you know, a dozen a dozen eggs
for you like you know, two bucks a dozen or something,
and the probably you know, there's plenty of eggs and
nothing's gone up, so you must not be in Colorado.

Speaker 3 (02:31):
I have heard, though, thankfully, the Reesus eggs have not increased.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
What's a egg? You know?

Speaker 3 (02:39):
The Reus peanutburg cups? Oh oh oh?

Speaker 2 (02:41):
Those those?

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Okay, those prices have stayed consistent. So we just have
those for breakfast instead of just a chicken egg.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
Yeah, okay, all right, peanut.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Butter and chocolate baby.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
The continuing egg shortage caused by the bird flu is
caused a dramatic increase in egg prices, waffle House said
statement to CNN, customers and restaurants are being forced to
make difficult decisions. A sticker informing customers customers about the
egg surcharge has been added to waffle House menus. How

(03:14):
many eggs do you think waffle House serves per year?
Do give any like?

Speaker 3 (03:21):
Does wild ass gues more than seven?

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Sometimes? I truly hate your guns.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
I'm not wrong.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
Two hundred and seventy two million eggs per year.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
And they're getting fifty cents more per egg.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Yes, so that's what roughly one hundred and thirty five
million dollars extra uh.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
And it will.

Speaker 2 (03:46):
Continue to monitor egg prices and will adjust remove the
surch charge as market conditions allow. Two hundred and seventy
two million eggs, which surpasses hash Browns at one hundred
and fifty three million, and even waffles at one hundred
and twenty four million. So why isn't it the egg
house instead of the waffle house? I mean, why isn't

(04:07):
it the egg house? Shouldn't be the waffle house. That's
that's lower than even hash Browns. Get Hash Browns, of course.
Jasmine Crockett, Jasmine Crockett, Hakeem Jeffries, the House Minority leader,

(04:30):
shouted that we ought to be that Democrats ought to
be fighting in the streets over everything that Trump, well,
not really Trump. They're I'm not sure whether they're more
upset about Donald Trump or Elon Musk, but anyway, they're
Democrats are pissed off. They're sore losers. So the keen
Jefferies comes out and in a press conference talks about how,

(04:53):
uh Democrats have got to learn to start fighting in
the streets. Okay, exactly what does that mean? You want
us to go about fighting in the street?

Speaker 3 (05:04):
What?

Speaker 2 (05:06):
Well, just take you listen for yourself.

Speaker 4 (05:07):
We are going to fight it legislatively, we are going
to fight it in the courts. We're gonna fight it
in the streets.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
I don't know. If it looks like a thug, talks
like a thug, chances are it might be a thug.
I don't know. Thugs want power, and thugs do terrible
things when they get power.

Speaker 3 (05:29):
That almost sounds worse than make your voice is heard.

Speaker 2 (05:35):
Well, let's okay, go forth and make your voices heard.

Speaker 4 (05:40):
We are going to fight it.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
I like the way he says fight it and he
emphasizes it with his hands. Just fight it.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
I'm just comparing, you know, peacefully, patriotically, make your voices heard,
mark your way over to the capitol or this.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
Oh that's a myth. You're talking about January sixth, That's
a whole myth. Trump didn't say that. There's no record
of him saying that anywhere. I watched the j six hearings.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
One's an exurrection and one's just nothing.

Speaker 4 (06:10):
We are gonna fight it legislatively. We are gonna fight
it in the courts. We're gonna fight it in the streets.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
Oh and in the streets. We're gonna fight it in
the courts and in the streets. So Jasmine Crockett confirms
that Democrats want their supporters to get confrontational on behalf
of the Black Lives Matter types that she represents. She shrieks,

(06:41):
and actually I think shrieks the right word.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
We are not gonna sit around.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
Well, you go ahead and desecrate our constitution, or you
look at the laws that have been passed into.

Speaker 3 (06:51):
Law and say.

Speaker 4 (06:52):
Never mind, we'll just ignore that.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
Instead, we are gonna be in your face. We are
gonna be on your asses.

Speaker 5 (07:00):
We are gonna light short, We're gonna light sort.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
You understand what democracy looks like. Oh okay, okay. Now,
if the idea of these Democrat dufaces calling on the
mob to get in the face of their political opponents
sounds familiar, well you may be confused because standing right

(07:27):
next to Jasmine is Maxine.

Speaker 5 (07:31):
Do you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant,
in a department store, at a gasoline station. You don't
get out, and you create a crowd, and you go
back on them until you tell.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Them they're life welcome anymore anywhere anymore. You're not welcome
anymore anywhere. Both, I mean so far. It's a Wednesday,
February five, still in Black History Month, and in Black
History Month we have three black members of Congress telling

(08:09):
us that they're gonna fight us in the streets. They're
gonna get in our faces. They're calling on the mob
to come and get us. And I don't know, I
just don't think that that's what black. Ye know, I'm
not black, so I don't know, you know, like I'm
not female. I never had a baby, so I don't know.
So it just seems to me that that's wrong, might
be wrong. Now to give them credit, Sometimes the thug

(08:33):
approach actually does work. Remember Maxine Waters showed up in
Minneapolis to threaten riots. She actually threatened riots if Derek
Shaven was not, you know, convicted and thrown in jail.
Water's told reporters, if the former police officer isn't found

(08:54):
guilty of murdering Floyd, quote, we've got to stay on
the street and we've got to get more active. We've
got to get more confrontational. We've got to make sure
that they know that we mean business. Okay, we hear you. Uh,
Derk Shaven I think is innocent. He's currently in prison
recovering from oh predictable stab wounds. Yes, yes, speaking of

(09:20):
Black History Month. Now, Dragon already knows this because well,
he has his subscription to pornhub porn hub, which I don't.
But February is the month that liberals kind of double
down on their uh feticization of everything black, and nobody
is you know, more quintessentially liberal than say, porn Hub.
Black History Month, they write, is a time to celebrate

(09:43):
our diverse community and recognize the achievements of pioneers who
fought free equality without the bravery of adult industry icons.
DESI right, desirey desiree. That is desire dragging you know?
You know or I don't? Is it desiri?

Speaker 3 (10:02):
It's probably just desire.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Well, it's got to ease.

Speaker 6 (10:04):
On the end.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Name desire desire that I don't know, last name West.
I'm sure that's on our birth certificate too, Jean Lamar
and n Callless others. Porn may not be what it
is today. And don't get us started on the rule
Paul and the trailblazing black bragg icons that pave the

(10:28):
way for generations of l B t q I A
plus folks to feel comfortable with their sexuality. So porn
ib is now promising to promote the bipop community, which
we are invited to pretend is a is somehow oppressed
by systemic racism in this country, and they're going to
promote social injustice by giving to something called LIPS Florida,

(10:52):
an organization run by black trans women for black and
POC trans folks. We moralistic posturing doesn't seem to be
very inclusive, doesn't seem to be right to me. The
Germans have noticed that their leftist government, which is close

(11:16):
to collapse, will not defend them from the Islamic welfare colonists.
Is important to displace them. Germans have never felt less safe,
according to new data, This feeling that if I'm in
the wrong place at the wrong time, it could cost
me my life. This is increasingly rapidly in Germany. According

(11:37):
to Remixed News and Views, eighty one percent of respondents
eighty one percent of respondents to a survey are convinced
that Germany has taken in too many refugees. Now there
is I'll let you just a bit of this reduction.

Speaker 3 (11:54):
I'm assolved one an.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
That's for all you German speaking people in the audience anyway,
He refers to Aschfenberg. That is a reference to where
a failed Afghan asylum seeker who should have been deported,
targeted a group of kindergarten children in a park, and
stabbed a two year old boy to death. But yeah,
eighty one percent think they've gone too far with immigration,

(12:21):
as in this country, the dumbasses the Marxist though, keep
doubling down on the dumb assery that made everything such
a mess. The leader of the Left Party in Germany
has suggested that the country could grant asylum to a
million what they call migrants, to a million illegal aliens
a year in order to protect them from the consequences

(12:42):
of climate change. This despite the fact that foreign migrant suspects,
according to the story, are responsible for nearly six and
ten that's sixty percent of violent crimes in Germany according
to the government statistics. So the Germs I got a
real problem here, which have nothing to do with the

(13:03):
climate or with the weather. They have to do with
the rule by the sort of lefties who would open
the borders and leave them open and then demand that
even more come in. So then the question becomes this
is that a left field will they protect ponies? Ponies?

(13:26):
They won't because as long as we're talking about devent behavior.
A shocking case has emerged from the beautiful town of
Obernvauk in Bavaria which involved a fifty two year old
Turkish asylum seeker allegedly breaking into a stable and sexually
abusing ponies. The man, who is from a refugee shelter

(13:48):
in the nearby town of Onnaffen, was arrested after he
was caught on you are so sick, you are a
sick puppy. The man, who is from a refugee the
nearby town Onhalten, was arrested after he was caught on
surveillance video which showed the man had sexually abused multiple

(14:09):
female ponies in the course of twenty five minutes. Several
of the ponies suffered physical injuries, including one that ended
up collapsing onto the ground. You know, the the amorous
multicultural tapestry. Enricher has been doing this routinely. He knew

(14:30):
about the surveillance cameras, but he didn't care because he
knew there wouldn't be any consequences. According to a local
woman in this story, on Saturday, the man was wandering
through our village again. I'm scared, especially for children and animals,
because the police say that's not enough for either prison
or deportation. Now you might think that this is, you know,

(14:55):
just an aberration, but yeah. The problem with stories like
this is that you google it to find out whether
it's true or not, and then you stum belong to
another story. Well, apparently the illegal aliens had been caught
raping ponies in Germany before. Here's an example in twenty seventeen, Assyrian.

(15:18):
According to the story, migrant raped a pony in broad
daylight at Berlin's Gorduz Park. Petting zoo and ponies are
not the only ones getting raped. Last year, policed in
the German state of North Rhine Westphailure arrested one hundred
and fifty five suspects in connection with two hundred nine

(15:41):
cases of gang rape. A total of eighty four suspects
were foreign nationals and seventy one were German citizens. At
the request of the Alternative for Portchland, the AfD State
parliamentary party, the state government has published the first names
of the German suspects, alcam Buyer, Bilal Barack Barack, for Kahan,

(16:07):
Jamil Hanif Hassib Ibrahim is Smile Khan, Malik Barack, mir
Haan Muhammad, Muhammad, Nicholas Orbert Birkin, second, Sita Sullman, their
no Walhel yasir ergen Jussen yasmin Jusen Zecharia said, oh,

(16:29):
those are German names. Those are German names everard of them. Yeah,
now that's not that's not an exhaustive list of the
so called German suspects, but just maybe an indication of
how crime stats can be skewed by left leaning administrations
to high the effect that this migration policy of the
Germans is having on public safety in Germany. And then

(16:51):
you got the whole they're all worried about the you know,
accepting climate refugees, and then now they're suffering because they
adopt the whole church of the climate activists orthodoxy, and
now their power prices are sky rocketing and they're wanting
to turn it back on their nuclear power plant. Imagine that.
Save the ponies.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
I said, hey, Michael, can you name the most popular
politician in Germany?

Speaker 2 (17:20):
Yeah, it's the mayor. Oh, you just egg them on,
you just egg them on. There's a fifty churcharge for
that too. Speaking in Germany. Right here in little old Denver, Colorado,

(17:42):
Denver Right reports that as a possible immigration crackdown, loomed
over Denver. About one eight hundred people crammed into Shorter
Community AM Church on Monday night for a know your
Rights training. Katie Leonard, who's the organizer, said from the
dias as she opened the session that quote, we are

(18:03):
fourteen days into the second Trump administration, and what is staggering?
Two weeks it has been well, she and I agree,
it's been staggering. It's been simply amazing. I don't think
she means the same thing that when she says it's
staggering this I mean that it's staggering. I'm just guessing.
I don't know. The event was organized by a group

(18:24):
which I'll tell you the name of in just a minute,
because I want you to understand who's operating our in
our community. Yes, it's our community. The event was meant
to teach people how to resist federal law enforcement and
protect undocumented immigrants they write from arrest. It was one

(18:48):
of the largest events organized local in response to President
Donald Trump's new administration. Now I find that interesting. Now
I would have to listen to or hear precisely what
they say. But the way Denveright reports this, they may
be actually training people to violate the law because it

(19:08):
is illegal to harbor an illegal alien. So if you
are trying to teach them how to protect what they
refer to as undocumented undocumented immigrants, which are under the
law undocued uh illegal aliens, if you're teaching them how
to protect an illegal alien from arrest, because that's what

(19:31):
it says. What's the difference between that and being an
accessory or obstruction of justice or any of the other crimes.
When you know that Dragon Redbeard has, you know, committed
a crime and I let him hide in the in
the in the back of the jeep, I wouldn't n
even hide in the trunk of the beamer because he's

(19:52):
just too well, he's just too big for that, and
I don't want to you know, hurt the damage the beamer.
But if I take Dragon, who is can Fest to meet,
he's committed to felony and I go out somewhere and
I hide him, I've committed a crime. Yes, So when
they say that they're teaching these so called undocumented immigrants

(20:14):
how you can protect them from arrest, you might be
training them to commit a crime. The event is organized
by the Party for Socialism and Liberation in Denver, Colorado.
We have the Party for Socialism and Liberation, and apparently

(20:34):
it's been around for a while. He gained traction in
twenty twenty as Trump's first term waned and the city
roiled in a wave of protests against racism and police violence.
And of course they cite Elijah McClain and the Aurora
Police Department paramedics as the reason. Who's this Leonard Leonard Leonard?

(20:56):
Let me find that person, Katie Leonard O. It's Kate.
It's the organizer, Katie Leonard up and his billionaire friends?
Is Tom Holman a billionaire? Is Christinome a billionaire? I
don't think either one of them are billionaires? I jd Vance,
I don't think it's a billionaire. The fake Ronald Swami,

(21:18):
I think it's a billionaire. But he's no longer part
of DOGE. And Elon Musk is a friend, but he's
a friend. Trump and his billionaire friends of a coherent, aggressive,
and highly coordinated plan. Part of their strategy is to
launch attacks from so many different directions that we can't
keep up. And the hope is that we will be

(21:40):
so lost in confusion and fear and despair that we
won't know what to do or even have the spirit
to try. But we have not lost spirit, have we?
In the crowd booms back. No, that paragraph right there
sounds to me exactly like the cloud Pivet strategy. They're
accusing us of what they've been doing for the past

(22:01):
fifty years. Part of the strategy is to launch attacks
from so many different directions that we can't keep up.
That's the same as what you do is you flood
the system. You just so overwhelmed the system that you
just throw your hands up. You just can't deal with it.
Last week, about four hundred people tried to fit into

(22:24):
their office on Downing Street for an organizational meeting. That's
when they decided to move to the Ame Church so
they could accommodate an even larger crowd. Let's see what
else is interesting in this story. Oh, here's what Dinveright writes.
This article is part of a series about how Denver
Metro area residents are responding to the new Trump administration

(22:48):
and its plans for an immigration crackdown. Elsewhere, attorneys are
helping immigrants apply for asylum, and immigrants are looking to
escape notorious apartment buildings in Aurora notorious apartment buildings in Aurora.
What do you I'm sorry, what are you trying to escape?
An Aurora that is so bad that you need to escape?

Speaker 4 (23:10):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (23:11):
You mean.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Illegal aliens that are members of Venezuelan gangs. But that's
just your imagination. Now this requires audience participation. America's Perfect Day?
Where the hell did you find this story?

Speaker 3 (23:29):
What does this?

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Somebody called Swns.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
I know what that is, and it's on a New
York post. I think that one, okay, it says.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
By s Wns. Whatever that is. America's Perfect Day includes
the following three hours of movies or TV, a nap,
and at least an hour with your pet. They survey
two thousand Americans, which pinpointed exactly how they'd spend an

(24:00):
ideal twenty four hours, and found the average person thinks
they've experienced twelve perfect days in twenty twenty four. You know,
United used to have the Hemisphere magazine United Airlines and
they always had a section called I think it was
ten perfect days, or maybe it was twelve perfect days,

(24:22):
twelve perfect days in Belize, or twelve perfect days in
whitess Ares, twelve perfect days in Wyman, Colorado. You know
that it was it was always I always read it.
The respondent's rest to allocate twenty four hours across various
categories to compile their perfect day. Results showed the perfect

(24:45):
day includes seven hours actually six point nine hours of
people sleeping with people waking up at seven forty eight am. Oh, dragon,
wake it up at seven forty eight am. Man, we've
been busy for two and a half three hours.

Speaker 3 (25:01):
I know that's almost four hours of sleeping in that's right.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Wow. It was conducted by Talker Research. Now here's what
I want you to do. Let me see if I
can find the list. Uh, okay, here, here are the categories. Sleeping,
eating time with family, looks at producer, time with family,

(25:28):
you know, like your lovely wife and your mother in law, or.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
Going to go see a musical you already saw with
your son or yeah, or.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
That are you going to take her with you too?
Your mother in law? Now did she go the first time? No?
Did you offer no? Are you going to offer this time?

Speaker 1 (25:47):
No?

Speaker 2 (25:50):
Well, you can't have you can't have a perfect day. Sleeping,
eating time with family, time with friends. That would include
me right now, watching films or TV phone use I'm
not sure what they mean like talking, does he make
talk on a phone anymore? Yeah, scrolling or you know,

(26:12):
playing a game or tweeting or something. Hobbies, pets, exercise
or sports, music, mapping, and shopping. So you got those sleeping, eating,
family time, friend time, TV films whatever your phone hobbies, pets, exercise, sports, music, mapping, shopping.

(26:35):
So I want you to text me what your perfect
day is now, not looking for smart ass answers.

Speaker 3 (26:42):
Day when you're on vacation.

Speaker 2 (26:45):
As I said, I'm not looking for smart ass answers
I'm looking for I'm actually trying to despite the efforts
of my producer to derail this segment, I'm actually trying
to be serious here and find out of those things,
if you had to categor ariz them, what would be
your perfect day?

Speaker 3 (27:03):
And we did get a text saying it was three
perfect days?

Speaker 2 (27:06):
Oh is it three perfect days? Yeah? Okay, three perfect days? Well?
United Airlines just want you to buy a really expensive
ticket to go somewhere for just three days. They want
you on the plane and get back on the plane
three perfect days. Must be an old United employee or
a former you know, Global services member. So what's your
perfect day? Uh, here's mine. Changing the hours of this

(27:30):
program from six to ten to either six to nine
or seven to ten one of the other.

Speaker 3 (27:37):
We'll do six to nine.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
Yeah, just I just want to get rid of the
uh fourth hour, because when I go in to do
the Saturday program, those three hours are amazing.

Speaker 3 (27:48):
It's probably because I'm not there.

Speaker 2 (27:49):
Well, there's you're not there. There's nobody else in the
building not there that does help. Yeah, and so it
makes for a wonderful, you know, Saturday morning. So it
would be cutting the hours of this program from four
to three hours. It would be a nap. I wouldn't
mind having a nap every day walking the dogs. But

(28:11):
I'd like to walk the dogs in New Mexico, like
in the mountains. And I say, with all due respect
to the Colorado Mountains, which I love, but the only
way to get to the Colorado Mountains is to go
up to eighty five or seventy or you know, to
go down to slide it or something, and that just
takes too long. So I can I can actually drive

(28:32):
to the undisclosed location in less time than I can
probably get to Veil. So, you know, hey, walking the
dogs every day, having a diet.

Speaker 3 (28:43):
Coke eating in there. Eating needs to be an eat.

Speaker 2 (28:47):
Obviously eating's in there, but I was trying to decide
that have to be careful your case Tammer's listening either
going out to a really nice restaurant or having Tammer
cook one of my favorite dishes, or you know, are
all the above? Why not both are okay? Or both?
But then I have to include like a sometimes don't

(29:07):
you just want a greasy burger? And I'm not talking
about McDonald's, of course, I'm talking about a diner, greasy
burger with big homemade fries, like actual handcut fries, skins
still on the potato, deep fried in whatever you know,
lard or something. Doesn't that sound good? Lettuce, tomato sometimes,

(29:28):
picklenuts sometimes not, pickle cheese and bacon, yeah, bake curtly
bacon sometimes cheese sometimes not. Just depends on the mood.
Let's see.

Speaker 3 (29:39):
Phone use.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Yeah, I enjoy social media, and of course I love exercising,
so I do the exercising and I don't do this enough.
Listening to music? Do you ever? Dragon?

Speaker 3 (29:50):
Do you do?

Speaker 2 (29:50):
You have a turntable at home and you listen to
air pods?

Speaker 3 (29:53):
You used to have a turntable at home, but no,
not anymore. Being a guy that worked on a music
station for as long as I did, I don't do
much music listening anymore.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
Oh see, I would like to get back to listening
to more music.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
So they're they're there.

Speaker 2 (30:08):
And then, of course eight hours of sleep. I gotta
have eight hours of sleep.

Speaker 3 (30:12):
You gotta take a break, and I gotta take a break.

Speaker 8 (30:15):
My perfect day is be walking into the restaurant here,
having lunch at sitting down.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
At your table, and refuse them to leave till you
buy me a margarita.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
Well, in that case, you get that margarita so damn
fast you you'd be in and out in a New
York minute.

Speaker 3 (30:32):
So Michael will go back to the kitchen and make
the margarite.

Speaker 2 (30:34):
Absolutely absolutely, So let's go back to the beginning of
the program. Remember Chuck Schumer win this fight?

Speaker 7 (30:41):
Yeah, way well, when way well, when way well?

Speaker 3 (30:47):
When way well, when way well? Where nobody's cheating with him?

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Nobody?

Speaker 1 (30:53):
No, I know.

Speaker 2 (30:54):
It's hilarious. By the way, you can see that up
on the website. Well, a pair of John Stewart is
a little distraught over it. I've checked a dragon.

Speaker 7 (31:05):
It's clean, open a sleeping giant, not Canada, not Mexico,
but the Democratic Minority Senate leader.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
Release the shoemar. It's going to affect the here. Okay,
most of it corona here comes from Mexico.

Speaker 6 (31:22):
It's going to affect your guac because what is guacamole
made of avocados?

Speaker 7 (31:39):
Your response to the trade war is to tell us
guacamole is made of avocados? Is that what?

Speaker 2 (31:52):
When the people found out?

Speaker 6 (31:55):
When the people find out the precious Super Bowl dip
is comprised of mainly avocado, also tomato, sometimes onion, it's a.

Speaker 7 (32:07):
Bit much for me.

Speaker 6 (32:09):
Obviously we'll dispocus and uh.

Speaker 2 (32:16):
Excuse me one second?

Speaker 7 (32:22):
Democrats, can you please stop trotting Schumer out there every time?

Speaker 3 (32:38):
From traverses into the unreal He's not.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
Good at this.

Speaker 7 (32:46):
What is the decision making process here?

Speaker 2 (32:48):
Hey?

Speaker 8 (32:48):
Oh, should we get out there to effectively battle one
of the most savvy presidential media manipulators in history.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
I don't know how about Schumer.

Speaker 8 (32:56):
He's uninteresting, but at least he's monotone. Oh wait, had Chuck,
before you go out there, you look too young.

Speaker 7 (33:06):
Put on these.

Speaker 3 (33:07):
Readers and lower them on your nose.

Speaker 7 (33:13):
Perfect honestly, listening to Chuck Schumer speak on almost any tomic.

Speaker 3 (33:21):
Makes me want to bomb Canada.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
As Dragon pointed out, whispering in my ear during John
Stewart's tirade against the Democrat Party. Oh, I just realized
now it's okay to make fun of the Democrat Party. Yes,
you see, there's the Trump effect again. The Democrats are.

Speaker 1 (33:43):
So bad now.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
I'm not gloating because at any moment they could actually
wake up and realize how bad they are and find somebody,
I don't know, maybe aoc elon Omar to Pressley, somebody
from the squad. They can actually find someone who's articulate,
who can actually take on, as Jon Stewart says, the

(34:09):
most media savvy and medium manipulative president in the history
of the country. Yeah, well, you've had two weeks. Actually,
you've now had uh three months, and you haven't do anything.
I don't think it's gonna happen.
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