Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael. It's people like that woman that just make my
blood boil. My dad and mom raised eleven kids on
one income that my dad worked his butt off morning, noon,
and night to make sure he could provide for us.
My mom was a stay at home mom. There's no
excuse for someone to be on these social programs for
fifteen years when they were perfectly able to work. It
(00:22):
just really irritates me. Have a good day.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Daughter's been there, done that. Yes, there is requalification on SNAP,
at least in New York every six months. I do believe,
see you in Koa, or should I say, hear you
in Kowa starting the tenth.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Yep, use your earballs.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
Use those earballs and you'll hear me Koa starting the tenth.
I you know I will. I'll dig further into the
requalification because based on the stories I've read, if there
is a requalification, then it may just be refilling out
the forms.
Speaker 3 (01:06):
Over twenty years ago when I was on the food
stamps in the SNAP program, Yes, there was a requalification
every six months or so. And what I find interesting
too is they're really concerned about people not getting their
benefits on the first Well, depending on where in line
you are. Your benefits don't get distributed on the first,
(01:29):
yes for some people know for others. For me, I
think in Colorado, it depends on the last few digits
of your Social Security number. So if it is like
a one, you get distributed on the first. If it's
the two, you get distributed on the second, so forth,
and so forth. So if you were distributed last month
or this current month, October, on the first, you knew
(01:50):
the government was shutting down, so hopefully you would have,
you know, maybe planned a little bit better and not
used all of your benefits in that first day or two,
so you've still got some on your card.
Speaker 4 (02:04):
So this it's somewhat like social Security checks. It depends
on your date of birth. There's some determining factor that
depends that determines when your card or distribution was the curve.
Speaker 3 (02:17):
I'm almost one hundred percent certain on this. Another ninety
eight percent certain that if if your Social Security number
ends in like a nine or a ZrO, it's not
distributed until the ninth of the tenth. So in theory,
you've still got money from October because you didn't get
your money until the tenth, so you're still good and
everybody can see me do air quotes here, but plan
(02:39):
this stuff out. You shouldn't be starving, even if you
are being delivered your your funds for October.
Speaker 4 (02:48):
And you just use the term starving. There's no reason
for anyone in this country to be starving. If you go,
you could live in the smallest town and go to
(03:08):
a church or to one of the civic clubs or something.
And maybe they don't even have a continuous, already existing
food bank. There are ways to get food, but that
(03:29):
takes some work and maybe it's embarrassing to you, maybe
it's uncomfortable. You know when Tama told me when she
lives on Wednesday at Cherry Hills that she said, there,
you know, there were people that showed up that were,
(03:50):
you know, clearly destitute, and others that she looked at
and thought, not destitute, but maybe living on the edge.
So there is an entire spectrum of people but truly starving.
I mean, you know how many times you said, I've
said it, man, I'm starving to death right now, I'm
starving to death.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
We ain't, but we ain't.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
In fact, you know, we don't know what starving is
in this country. We don't have distended bellies, were not
living in sub Sahara, Africa. But I want to take
the whole food stamp thing one step further. You don't
have to I want you to follow along, but you
(04:33):
don't have to buy what I'm selling here. But what
I'm selling here is truly my belief. I know you've
seen now. For example, yesterday I wanted to play a
couple of sound bites of people of these angry individuals
(04:54):
announcing that they're going to loot the grocery stores. Dragon,
didn't you put one up on the website.
Speaker 3 (05:01):
That I don't recall. You'd have to go to Michael
Sis says, go here dot com.
Speaker 4 (05:04):
Yeah, there was one in particular where she was showing
the stuff that she had stolen.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, that post her.
Speaker 4 (05:11):
Yeah. So there were dozens and dozens of those yesterday,
but most of which I couldn't use on air because
it sounds off when you got so many. When you
have more leaps, then you have words coherent sentences, it's
not worth playing on the air. But you've surely seen
(05:31):
your share of angry people announcing that they're going to
loose grocery stores if their EBT cards are not fully
charged with o PM other people's money. But the next
one I want you to hear goes a little further
(05:52):
before you hear it, though, I want you think about something.
Just please follow along. We've talked extensively about rules, veridics
and the Cloward Pivet strategy. In particular, the Cloward pivot
strategy is the idea that you create a social welfare
system and that you overwhelmed that system such that it
(06:15):
finally implodes and collapses, and then there is a revolution.
I mean, this is this is not theoretical. This is
what they truly believe. This is what they advocate. And
for those like Alexandria Cossi Cortez or zofram Mondani who
truly are members of the DSA and who truly do
(06:37):
believe in Marxism and communism and who have said that
they true. Barack Obama, I mean he is. He is
the king of the hill when it comes to the Democrats, Socialists,
the Communists, the Marxists in this country who want to
fundamentally transform this nation. I cannot emphasize enough that what
(07:00):
their purpose is. They do not believe in a constitutional republic.
They believe in socialism. They just believe that it's never
worked in the past, or they ignore the past. But
when they look at the past, their response is, well,
they just didn't do it the right way, and they
believe that their way is the right way. History, world history,
(07:24):
the history of humanity shows us that socialism does not work.
The purpose of now I would I'm going to start
with LBJ, Lyndon Baines Johnson. I don't believe that lbj's
(07:47):
purpose in creating the War on Poverty was to fundamentally
transform the nation. LBJ was a stereotypical Democrat liberal from
growing up in the you know, going to Congress in
the forties and you know, running the Senate in the fifties,
being one of the most amazing political leaders. Although I
(08:10):
disagree with all his policies, I recognize him for his
amazing political abilities. And if you've never read the Robert
Carroll biographies multi volumes on Lyndon Johnson, that is a
must read because it will show you the inner workings
of how a master politician can get exactly done what
he wants to get done. So Lyndon Johnson, with the
(08:32):
War on Poverty was not necessarily a part of the
Cloward Pivots strategy, which technically came later. Anyway, his idea
was he was trolling for voters. He truly believed, as
he once said about blacks, except he didn't use the
word blacks. He used the n word that if we
can get this Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights
(08:54):
Act pass, we can have those inwards voting us for eternity.
That was their Oh, it wasn't to fundamentally transform, It
was to get there. It was to get that voting
block of a particular race voting for a particular party
in perpetuity. However, that morphed from gathering votes into the
(09:20):
Cloward Piven strategy to fundamentally transform the United States. That
is the march of progressivism from just liberalism to socialism,
to Marxism to communism. And I mean, I feel like
we're in the we're back in a cold war. Internally,
(09:49):
the hordes of these furious snap beneficiaries provide insight into
the purpose of this welfare state, I think too, as
well as the purpose of the humor shut down. Democrats
have been breeding armies of these people, and it did
start with Lyndon Johnson's great society, war on poverty, the
(10:11):
nineteen sixties, and then in the face of Trump's remarkably
successful second presidency so far, the radicals now calling the
shots within the Democrat Party believe the time has come
for them to be deployed. The time has come to
pull the trigger. Oh you can't say that, can you.
(10:34):
But that's what they're going to do. They're going to
pull the trigger. The woman yesterday who proudly announces on TikTok,
er ax or wherever she was posting her video, is
pulling the trigger. She's pulling the trigger of committing a crime.
She is and in fact, depending on how much those
(10:55):
food stuff that she stole from the grocery store or worth,
she's either committed a misdemeanor or a felony, depending on
your jurisdiction and what the jurisdiction says in terms of
the value of the goods stolen. But that is a
part of Cloward Piven, that's a part of the destabilization
(11:17):
of our society. That is a part of creating the chaos.
So that and this is where we have to be
as conservatives, libertarians, constitutional republicans that believe in limited government blah,
blah blah, all of that stuff that we have to
be very very careful because an overreaction on our part,
(11:40):
which is why I watch everything about law so far.
I'm just fine with restoring law and order because we're
not yet clamping down and taking away civil liberties. I
will always be and always believe that civil liberties and
our freedoms come first, and we have to reserve our
(12:00):
freedoms sometimes even if it is at the end of
a rifle. However, what's going on here is they are
engaging in the ultimate, the very beginning of what I
would describe as the ultimate goal of the Cloward pivot strategy,
(12:24):
and that is to implode the system, cause people to
rise up in revolt, and in doing so create such chaos,
such panic, such fear, that we do say to ourselves,
oh my gosh, we got to give up our civil
(12:44):
liberties temporarily because we've got to get control of this.
That's where we're headed. It's precisely where we're headed. This
woman provides the evidence of that.
Speaker 5 (12:58):
I just want to come roll fast to make this
video just to make something very very clear to the
white man black American.
Speaker 4 (13:05):
See, we've we have allowed racism to propagate throughout every
aspect of our society. We fight a civil war. And
for black families, black individuals, Asian families, Asian individuals, and
(13:29):
non white let's just say non whites, race or ethnicity,
I don't care. I truly feel badly for you because
the radicals in your race. Now we've got radicals now race.
Look at AOC, look at Bernie Sanders. They're truly radicals.
(13:49):
But I don't let them embarrass me because I know
what I stand for and I know what I believe in.
But if you are a lower middle class, middle class,
upper middle class, successful, depending on however you define that,
but you're working, you have conservative values, you have basic
(14:13):
religious values, you have cultural values, you're a productive member
of our society. Then people like this woman that you're
hearing is doing nothing but using race to divide us.
And so that makes me feel sorry for people that
are not white, because you're being used. And then you
(14:36):
get lumped in with all these crazy people like this
woman who is very angry, very mad, and she's mad
at white people, who I got news for her. It
wasn't always white people that destroyed much of your race.
(15:01):
It was members of your own race, the al Sharptons
and the Jesse Jackson's of the world, all the race
baters who poisoned your mind with racism and made you believe,
made you look upon I never look upon Blacks as
some monolithic group of that race as monolithic. There is
(15:28):
every demographic that you can possibly imagine on the political
and economic and cultural and social spectrum. It goes all
across the spectrums in the Black community, as it does
in the Asian community. Now get into ethnicities, it's exactly
the same thing. Everything from radical leftists to radical right
(15:54):
wing nut jobs demographically all across the spectrum economically, culturally.
But people like the woman you're going to hear had
been convinced that she's part of a monolith group, and
she thinks that I am part of a monolith group.
This is directed as much at me as it is
(16:17):
everyone who happens to be Caucasian.
Speaker 5 (16:21):
I just wanted to combro fascist to make this video,
just to make something very very clear to the white man.
Black Americans do not care about your government shut down,
and Black Americans do not care about you taking away
our EBC and our government assistance. Because Black Americans never
depended on the American government to take care of us
(16:42):
and feed us, because we never could.
Speaker 4 (16:45):
We weren't interesting because the person before who happened to
be black, I didn't mention her race, happened to be black.
And she is totally dependent.
Speaker 5 (16:53):
Never able to depend on the government, in spite of
what you may say and.
Speaker 3 (16:58):
What you may try to us to believe. So you
can sit.
Speaker 5 (17:02):
Back and you can mock, you can laugh, and you
can think that you're about to starve us to death.
But I'm here to let you know that we are
going to eat regardless, even if we have to hunt
you animals down and roast and eat you the delectable
criers and cheese. We will make it happen if we have.
Speaker 6 (17:25):
To just and believe me, and if it takes this
government shut down for black people to finally come from
under the government and understand that we don't need to
be paying our taxes into this government. What we really
need to be doing is taking care of one another
fine land and growing our own food and building our
(17:46):
own nation. And this government shut down and starvation is what.
Speaker 3 (17:50):
It's going to take.
Speaker 4 (17:51):
And let the party begin.
Speaker 5 (17:53):
It's black power, baby, and.
Speaker 4 (17:55):
Rocks right there. A revolution a racial revolution.
Speaker 7 (18:07):
Michael Tom from South Dakota. If I have to watch
one more local news program on food insecurities and the
SNAP program and the poor broken food banks and all
of these BMI challenge people picking up food at the
food bank and the crappy food that they get fed
(18:28):
with all the carbs and stuff, I'm going to puke
and maybe stop eating because it looks so sickening.
Speaker 4 (18:38):
Okay, Sorry, sorry to get your riled up on a
Friday morning. We were trying to talk about French fries earlier,
but we can you know, we well, what can we
talk about dragging it? Because you know there's it's truly
my blood pressure is already up.
Speaker 3 (18:56):
To Halloween candy? What's the best Halloween candy you go
to trigger treating? Right now? What are you going to
be excited for when you see it in your in
your little pumpkin pail?
Speaker 4 (19:08):
Okay, so you know I really try to watch my
sugar intake.
Speaker 3 (19:11):
Well, it's Halloween. We don't care about that kind of
stuff today, see calories. So what's the best candy you're
gonna get?
Speaker 4 (19:18):
Do you think either the promotions people or anybody on
the third floor is listening, right now to us. Yeah, no,
not a chance in hell is there. Okay, So you
know what I do the Saturday program. The building's empty,
right right, So you know where Studio C is, right, okay.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
Almost directly underneath us, yes, exactly.
Speaker 4 (19:39):
And next Studio C is a little what would you
call that an all viewing room, a viewing room right
where where guests or the managers or whatever can say
if they're not sitting in the control room, they can
sit in this little room with couches and chairs and
a little refrigerator and some bowls of snack and everything
(20:00):
in there.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
Yeah, with with signs on them that say.
Speaker 4 (20:03):
I don't read English. They don't have they don't they're
not they're not in legal East. So I don't know
what the signs.
Speaker 3 (20:11):
Say, multiple signs. Even as you walk into the room,
there's a sign.
Speaker 4 (20:17):
He know, how do you know there's a sign.
Speaker 3 (20:19):
There because I've seen it.
Speaker 4 (20:22):
What does the sign say?
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Tell me?
Speaker 3 (20:23):
Because I don't know, something along lines of uh, freak candy.
Speaker 4 (20:28):
That's exactly what it says. It's freak candy. So oftentimes
during the break I see this sign that says come
in enjoy.
Speaker 3 (20:37):
Yourself employees only.
Speaker 4 (20:41):
That's what you think it says that. I think it
actually says something about these are for our guests, keep
your stinking hands off, don't don't touch, or something like that.
So of course what do I do. I open the
door and go in and look. So they got a
gi Get. They got a big ass, fat ass bowl
of the little many candy bars. So I'm trying to
(21:06):
decide whether it's the Baby Ruth, Milky Way, Butterfinger. They
didn't have any tiny Reese's cups, but they had those three,
and I thought there was a oh the what's the
chocolate bar with the kind of rice thing in it?
Speaker 3 (21:25):
Crunch crunch bars or also the one hundred grand those
are freaking delicious.
Speaker 4 (21:30):
Yeah, so there anyway they might be missing some of those.
I think Butterfinger and Babe Ruth at the top of
my list right now.
Speaker 3 (21:41):
Okay, sure, yeah, Now, dear, going back to the whole
Chick fil A thing where they Chick fil A changed
their fry recipe. Do you are you aware that Butterfinger
had recently within the past couple of years changed their recipe.
Speaker 4 (21:54):
I did not, but I thought so when when I
took the fingers the first one I ate, I thought, is.
Speaker 3 (22:04):
This stale right or is it what?
Speaker 4 (22:06):
Because there's just there was something that's not quite right
about it, so it was not aware. But what a butterfinger?
Speaker 3 (22:14):
Again, I don't know the exact details and whatnot, but yeah,
a few years ago they slightly changed up their recipe
and I think they actually put like chunks of peanuts
or something in there too, And it's just like, don't stop. Yeah, yeah,
we've we've stopped buying butter fingers.
Speaker 4 (22:29):
Yeah. I still have maintained that my favorite of all
time is either a cherry mash or a payday candy bar.
Speaker 3 (22:38):
Okay, all right, but you rarely.
Speaker 4 (22:40):
Find the pay First of all, you got to really
search out cherry mashes, right, and truly, if you can't
eat more than half a cherry mash here, just you
go in, you go into a diabetic coma. So there's that.
But and they don't have any little mini ones that
I at least that I'm aware of, or the payday.
But I will confess that when I drove down to
see my mom, you know, I stopped to get gas
(23:03):
and I had run in to get you know, had
run in to take a whiz and can't know how
much those big candy.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
Bars cost expenses. Now, holy crap, it used to be
you know, like eighty something. Since now it's like two
and a half bucks.
Speaker 4 (23:16):
No, it's like three something, at least at least at
a convenience store in Raton, New Mexico. It was like
I pulled out two dollars thinking it was gonna get
a dollar. I had to reach in and get another dollar.
Speaker 3 (23:28):
It was like three just to get one.
Speaker 4 (23:30):
Yeah. Yeah. And then I said to myselfself, just eat
half of this. How long do you think that lasted?
So eight half of it laid it on the seat
next to me. I'm cruising down the highway at the
appropriate speed, you know for m sport. I'm at the
appropriate speed, and you know, sipping in a Sonic diet
(23:52):
coke that I got saw Sonic Diet cherry coke that
I gotten in Ratton, and I'm I'm headed you know west,
I'm headed east into the Oklahoma pan Handle. But that
candy bar is sitting there by itself, and it's it's
just wrong to not finish it.
Speaker 3 (24:07):
Of course, if I finished it, just like when you
get a TwixT bar, there's two twix bars in per package,
and oh, you just you can't leave one by self
eat both.
Speaker 4 (24:16):
Right. They've been together in that package for god knows
how long, you know, sitting there, all the preserves and
everything they deserve to be consumed at the same time.
Why couldn't he just have that candy bar there? Agreed, Yeah,
that's me how I felt afterwards.
Speaker 3 (24:32):
Terrible but horrible.
Speaker 4 (24:33):
It's like going to McDonald's, you know, the McDonald's, because
you got this craving for you know, a quarter pound
or a big mac or something, and so you do it,
and then you it's like taco bell. You instantly regret it.
Speaker 3 (24:45):
Oh it's delicious while you're eating it, but yeah, give
it a few minutes and you're.
Speaker 4 (24:48):
Like Google number zero four three three. One thing that
totally gets under my skin about the food stamp program
is how people abuse it. I know for a fact
that people come into convenience stores and spend sixty to
seventy dollars on nothing but junk. I have a step
daughter in Connecticut that gets over sixteen hundred dollars a
(25:12):
month in food stamps. Is that possible?
Speaker 3 (25:16):
It might be a combination of both the food stamps
and actual cash funds. Because the EBT cards can do both.
Speaker 4 (25:26):
Cash and yeah a card.
Speaker 3 (25:29):
Yeah, though the EBT IT it stands for Electronic Benefits Transfer,
so it's not just for food. You can you can
if you get if you apply for it and you
get qualified for it, you can get straight up cash
cash on that.
Speaker 4 (25:44):
So you go to an ATM and withdraw.
Speaker 3 (25:46):
Cash you can. Yeah, there's somebody a text message in
earlier too that there was a news story somewhere that
you can use EBT cards for DoorDash, which if you
qualify for that cash portion. I can see that. And
even if it still could work for like Papa Murphy's
the take in bake place because it's not cooked food,
(26:08):
so you could still get those, I could see that
loophole be working there.
Speaker 4 (26:17):
Oh my gosh. Then gouban over forty three forty four rights.
I wish these people would put a fraction of the
energy into getting off of welfare as they do staying
on welfare. And then I hate, you know, can I
get dispensation to read an email from agent Jeda, our
(26:43):
associate produce, our intern producer. I know, I hate to do.
Speaker 3 (26:48):
This, but that's fine. He's occasionally got a good point.
Speaker 4 (26:52):
Well, and this I hate say, but this is a
good point. It's say, I haven't verified this, and Lord
knows he gets things wrong because he's an engineer, so
most of everything that he does is wrong. But he says,
this is a Ben Franklin. Ben Franklin quote. You know,
doctor Franklin, Michael Douglas. If you don't know who Ben
Franklin is, it's Michael Douglas. In case you haven't seen
(27:15):
the movie, that would help quote. I am doing good
for the poor, but I think the best way of
doing good to the poor is not making them easy
in poverty, but leading or driving them out of it.
I observed that the more public provisions were made for
the poor, the less they provided for themselves, and of
course became poor. And on the contrary, the less was
(27:39):
done for them, the more they did for themselves and
became richer. That's a great quote, but not just at
face value. It's a great quote for what it tells
us about exactly what we know about stray cats. It's
(28:00):
also a great quote to give you an idea about
how far we have strayed from our ability to have
a serious, rational public discussion about where we are. We
are taught hammered into us. I don't know whether it's
the church's I don't want to believe it's the churches
(28:24):
doing it to us. It certainly is the media doing
it to us. The cabal pounds us with this every
single day, and I know politicians do it, and then
many people because well they're afraid. You can go through
the stuff that I've gone through in my life and
(28:45):
you have the media come down on you and back
them old you all the time and try to slit
your throat you. Certainly, I just don't give a ratsass.
I just don't. And so that's why I say that
when you tune into me. And by the way, this
is a I tried to give this warning yesterday on
Mandy Show that and with Ross's show that for and
(29:07):
you goobers are going to have to help me to
know that when we go over to Koa. I'm not
certain that they're always accustomed to just real, raw discussion
like we do here, which is what they want and
this that's what they're going to get. But I think
we've been taught, oh, you can't say things like that.
(29:30):
You can't. You can't live in the real world. We
have to live behind this facade. We have to live
behind this idea that we can't say anything like what
like what Benjamin Franklin, one of the founding fathers said,
because Michael, that's just why you have to show respect.
You know what, I believe that I am showing respect
and I'm trying to get these people to a better
(29:53):
place in life. And a pox on those who say that, oh,
you're being racist, or you're being what, you're being cruel
or whatever. No I'm not. I'm being truthful. And the
other thing is we've got to start learning that we're
not helping those people. Not not only are we are
(30:14):
we not helping them, but we're actually empowering those democrats,
socialists of America, the Marxists who want those dependencies because
they eventually went to overwhelm the system because then they
get the revolution they want. Butter Fingers, are you e
f and kidding me?
Speaker 3 (30:31):
So?
Speaker 8 (30:31):
I wonder it didn't glue your mouth shut so you
couldn't talk for five seconds. At least you'd be under seven,
you'd be safe, have a great day.
Speaker 4 (30:43):
The hate toward butterfingerstly.
Speaker 3 (30:46):
Love it because there's no wrong answer, and there's no
right answer for any of this stuff, because there's those
people that hate almond Joys, but then you get those
other people that are like, hm, I would trade for those.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
Yeah, I don't like almond joy my.
Speaker 3 (30:58):
Candy court and my wife. I ten years of marriage
with this woman, and I find out last year she
loves candy corn.
Speaker 4 (31:06):
Oh really, what you freak? So candy candy corn is
one of those that I've learned just to avoid it.
It's just water and sugar, yeah, and food coloring. Yeah,
and it's just terrible. It's horrible. I don't know why.
As a kid, I kind of liked it, maybe just
because of the sugar, but oh my gosh, it's absolutely horrible.
(31:30):
Give me a little chocolate, you know, some peanuts. Give
me a little you know, chocolate for the wind, the
texture and everything that you need in your mouth, you know,
if you're gonna eat something sweet, give me some texture
and different flavors that combine together.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
The Reese's Cups, the Snickers bars.
Speaker 4 (31:45):
Oh, Snickers was the element downstairs? Yeah, Snickers? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I like Snickers. And of course what's what's hilarious is
the typical Halloween candy bowl that we could put out
here on the fourth floor too. The good stuff gets
picked out, so you know what the crap is because
the craps want always left. Nobody wants that.
Speaker 3 (32:07):
Why buy it exactly?
Speaker 4 (32:11):
I just want, you know, maybe I'll print a sign
to take down there tomorrow that says you're out of
the good.
Speaker 3 (32:17):
Stuff, the good stuff.
Speaker 4 (32:21):
Right, Just refill the good stuff. You know some little
boxes like I don't know what it is, but it's like,
you know, just jelly beans or something. I don't know,
but it's just crack.
Speaker 3 (32:30):
He gets a little boxing nerds like, what the hell
is this?
Speaker 4 (32:33):
And the other thing I've discovered on the third floor
where the secret storeroom is, Yeah, unlocked. Sometimes sometimes some
of us get key cards that give us access to
things that they don't realize they give them the access to.
Speaker 3 (32:53):
I miss those days. I used to be friends with
Ron Smith. Me too, Oh, Ron, I could go anywhere
I wanted this building now since they got the new
card from your system, and I'm not as well liked.
Speaker 4 (33:03):
When I first came here and Ron Smith realized that
I came from Homeland Security. Oh my god. He would
come up to the fourth floor, yo, buddy, buddy, and
he would drop on my little cubicle out there. The
emergency plans for you know, clear channel at the time,
these big giant notebooks, and say could you look at this?
(33:25):
And because I didn't want to say no, I'm not
going to look at that crap, but I'd say, sure,
I'll look at it. So you know, I'd take it
home and leave it there for a few days, then
I'd bring it back. Oh, this is a great plan.
This is a great plan because I knew that one
those kinds of plans aren't worth crap. Because if if
there's an attack on this building, the plan goes out
(33:47):
the window immediately, exactly, that goes out the window immediately.
And we also know that you and I are the
only ones that probably know really how to escape this building.
There was we truly had a fire. Are in the
building one time. You were, I'm sure you were.
Speaker 3 (34:04):
I think I was, because we were both the same
amount of tenure here, right.
Speaker 4 (34:08):
But I don't know. I don't remember the time of day,
but I was in the building, and so everybody evacuated
next to the you know, the parking lot. But I
went to the very back of the parking lot, back
you get where the walkways build that green green Belt
is and Greg Foster came back and said, what are
you doing back here? And I said, well, if the
(34:29):
building explodes, I want to be out of the line
of the blast generator. There's a diesel generator right there,
and I don't want to stand here. And he went
and he yelled everybody, Hey, come back here, come back here. Well,
that wasn't the plan.