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April 8, 2026 42 mins

Join Lynda McLaughlin and Eric Eggers on the latest episode of "Rogue Recap," where they dive into the week's most outrageous media moments and political antics. From discussing the absurdities of voter ID laws to the mysterious disappearances of NASA scientists, Lynda and Eric bring their unique blend of humor and insight. Don't miss their take on the latest headlines, including a hilarious story about gold shoes in Florida's Villages and a candid discussion on insider trading in Congress. Tune in for a show that's as entertaining as it is enlightening!

This will be a new segment that Lynda and Eric will bring you every week. Stay tuned for more!!

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@RogueRecap

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@Eric_Eggers

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Welcome to the Rogue Recap. Hot takes, cold facts, and
zero respect for the official narrative.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Sit back, roll your eyes and let's.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Recap rogue style. What's up, guys, and welcome to the
Rogue Recap. This is Lenna McLaughlin. I have an awesome
show for you today. My buddy Eric Aggers is here
and he's an awesome dude. He's vice president of the
Government Accountability Institute. He is the co host of the
Drill Down podcast with Peter Schweitzer. He's a best selling author.

(00:32):
He has a movie under his belt called The Creepy Line.
He's just a He's just a phenomenal dude. He's also
an awesome husband and dad. And you know, last year
we were challenging each other because we were reading the Bible.
He definitely beat me, but that's okay. He's still my friend.
I forgive him for winning in that area. But Eric Agers,
welcome to the Rogue Recap. Today's show. Just you guys know,
we're gonna every Wednesday is gonna be called sound bites.

(00:54):
And Eric is a lot nicer than me. He's snarkier
than me, so it sometimes it feels like he's not
you know that nice, but he is, but he doesn't
curse as much. But this is where we make fun
of the media and all the dumb shit you're hearing
in the media that you might not hear anywhere else, Right, Eric,
is that a fair description.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
I'd like to go back to the me being a
best selling author, like you told sixteen lies. And I'm
not saying you have no credibility as a media personality,
but half of what you said is incorrect.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
I'm not a best selling author.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
I am a selling author, and I will say I
will say quickly, my book sales, my profitability as an
author increased this week because my book was one of
like the ten that the chatbots were stealing or like
cotton goost. So your boys got a three K check coming,
let's go get it.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
Brother, You're like mortgage payment done, You're welcome. Well, the
scary part is you know not that this is on
our guys. We have a repertoire today of stuff we're
going to hit for you. But as you guys know,
if you listen to the road recap, I am obsessed
with the Save Act. I love Senator Lee, I hate
John Thune, hate John Cornyn, hate Tom Tillis, Murkowski, Collins,
they're all asshole liars. They need to be voted out.

(02:01):
I can't wait. But we can't vote the mount unless
we pass the Save Act because they're going to rig
it right, and in their case, we can't make it
too big the rig because they got it's all figured
out on there. But they're probably looking at your book
to figure out how they could get around what is
coming for the midterms. Because they know they're hated.

Speaker 4 (02:18):
They know we can do.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
We could do a whole show playing clips of people
defending the fact that they're not going to vote for
the Save Act. The iron of course, is that when
they do vote to either pass or not pass the
Save Act, they'll have to show an ID to do so,
which is something that put it.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
Oh my god, I don't forget who posted that. I
don't know who it was. And I was like, this
is like if you guys didn't see this, I'll put
it up on X. But somebody posted where they have
to slip in their ID into the machine to verify
that it's them voting, So they're voting with ID so
that you don't have to vote with ID. That's right.
Let that sink in that's a true statement. So Eric

(02:55):
and I are going to talk about some funny shit today.
One thing that's not funny is Gavin news some wife. Now,
if you thought Gavin Newsom's hair was good, Jennifer, she
steps it up all right. She does a lot of
hair tossing as she talks, you know, a lot of
amphaesis on the hair.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
You can actually hear her tossing hair while she speaks
like she somehow madeag to do. Local intonations are like
the equivalent of like the hair flip.

Speaker 1 (03:17):
It's insane little wind toss there. But she's dumber than shit,
just like her husband. And she's just a bad person.
She's a really bad person. And we could do a
whole show on her. Maybe we will sometimes, I don't know.
I don't like her, but we have a clip of her.
We're going to toss to it and then we're gonna
get Eric's take on the other side about the hair tossing.
Newsom had to be very raw.

Speaker 5 (03:37):
When we interviewed the young men who were juvenile offenders
in San Quentin. I told them about my own loss
where I lost my older sister a few days before
my seventh birthday and I blame myself for her death.
And I share that because that they ultimately were accused

(04:00):
of committing these violent crimes and sentenced for life. And
I think it shocked them that this you know, blonde
lady who was you know the interviewing them, had a
similar story. It was perhaps in the wrong place at
the wrong time, and but wasn't punished the way they
were because clearly it was an accident.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
But their's was probably an accident too.

Speaker 5 (04:24):
So anyway, I share that just because I guess, you know,
I quite enjoy spending time with people and being real
and unmasking and showing them that it's safe to unmask themselves.

Speaker 6 (04:39):
Beautiful, beautiful, do.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
You feel like you can be unmasked with me? Eric,
because I want you to unmask.

Speaker 3 (04:47):
What I feel like is, I think we have a
major business opportunity. I'm going to immediately start selling t
shirts that say San Quentin, it was probably an accident.
I cannot wait to hear, like some follow interviews with
these offenders in San Quentin, people who've spent the number
of years incarcerated, to hear how they felt with corporate offender, Barberer,

(05:09):
juvenile offender Barbie's attempting to relate to her.

Speaker 4 (05:12):
No, I'm the same as you, guys. I happen. It's
a tragedy.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
I didn't even know this this quick in twenty sixteen,
but I guess she ran over her sister on a
golf cart. I don't think that's I'm willing to bet
the people that she spoke to in San Quentin did
not commit crimes involving golf carts, Like that's just one
I'm willing to kind of weigh in on and also
willing to say, Okay, so you ran over someone in

(05:35):
a golf cart.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
You were Manslaughter is a term that's used.

Speaker 3 (05:39):
I'm not saying it's accurate, but it's a term, and
they're saying, okay, and we committed some crimes, and the
differences you continued on your vacation and I went to prison,
And that's how we're the.

Speaker 4 (05:48):
Same, I really.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
So it's funny. Eric and I were talking about this
before we started the show and he was like, YO,
just remember that this clip is from twenty sixteen, and
I'm like, bro, I'm fully aware. All it tells us
is that she has been an asshole for at least
a good solid ten years, maybe before maybe after sprinklings
at age seven. Obviously it is a tragic accident. I
am sure when you're seven. I'm not really sure why

(06:12):
she was driving a golf cart at seven, or if
she just decided, like, hey, why not start criminal behavior now,
I'm going to take this bad boy for a joy ride. Whatever.
It's a life of privilege. That's what she knows. And
as we know, people who have a life of privilege
typically are the ones committing the most crimes and then
saying that wasn't a crime. I had a friend, they

(06:33):
had a tip. It's not a big deal. It's totally fine.
Oh is it okay, Jennifer.

Speaker 4 (06:37):
Yeah, by the way, I like that.

Speaker 3 (06:39):
In addition to drinking wine, the other pastime in the
Newsom families attempting to relate to black people by like leveraging,
you know, brokenness. She's like, no, I've also committed crimes,
and Gavin Newsom's like, yeah, I also grew up poor,
and he goes on the podcast it's like, oh, the
mac and cheese and the whole thing. Meanwhile, he's doing
the growing up Getty deal. It's interesting that this is
part of their playbook. And yeah, somehow it's successful because

(07:00):
he's the.

Speaker 4 (07:00):
Front runner of the Democratic primate.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
I have to be honest too. And if you think
about his aunt Nancy, do you remember when Aunt Nancy
took us on a tour of her new home and
she went, do you remember this? She took I forget
what network it was, into her home. Dumb dumb, dumb idea.
And her house is just littered with wasteful spending. Right,
so she's got this side by side sub zero refrigerator.

(07:24):
Right now, we all know Penwa Paul is only drinking wine.
So I don't know who this fridge is for because
she's about eighty pounds soak and wet. So they open
up to fridge and she's like, say, this's refrigerator. Oh
my god, it's got the best ice cream. I keep
it in stock. It's like eighty dollars the pint, but
it's fine.

Speaker 4 (07:38):
I do you remember the bougie ice cream? That's right.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
I was like, ma'am, do you not have one pr
person to say bad idea? Maybe not inside the house
or directly inside the refrigerator of wasteful spending. I'm like,
how many tax dollars or insider trading tips did it
take to get you that zub zero, ma'am.

Speaker 3 (07:55):
And we had some briers, but we keep it with
the servants exactly right.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
So, speaking of dumb women that I can't stand, Aaron Burnette,
who's on CNN often, just you know, Flip Flop City.
She has a permanent residence there now Stonewell loves it.
Big House's great. And I stumbled across this this morning
on Mays on X for those of you who follow Meze,
he's awesome. He's got great stuff. And I saw this

(08:22):
and it's only like one of the clips. I think
they're both in twenty twenty five, and then there's a
twenty twenty six clip because she started out talking about
for Dough and then she moved on to this. I
just and it's all about Iran and she is a
hot mess. Did you have anything you wanted to add
to the setup of this clip, mister Eggers.

Speaker 3 (08:39):
No, I think you've expertly laid it out. I just
think it's interesting to hear Aaron Burnett.

Speaker 4 (08:43):
My favorite.

Speaker 3 (08:43):
Here's what I think you should listen to, audience, is
listen to Aaron Burnett talk about CNN reporting. I was like,
it's twenty twenty six. I don't even think those are
two words that go together anymore. Like if you're watching
coverage of the Iarran wars, like, I wonder what CNN's
sources say about this.

Speaker 4 (08:57):
Yeah, not so fast, us. Now let me get some
on this.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
Well, here you go. Take a listen.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
This timeline of Iran being a few weeks away from
a nuclear bomb is in direct contradiction to CNN's reporting.
According to US intelligence assessments, Iran is three years away
from being able to produce a nuclear weapon if they
wanted to. So, the facts on Iran getting a nuclear
weapon do not bear out the claim at the heart
of what has put the world on the verge of

(09:25):
World War Uran's uranium may still be intact and in
Iranian control four hundred and eight kilograms of it now
enough theoretically, according to experts, to make nine nuclear weapons,
only set back the Iranian nuclear program by months.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
We got to call it like it is.

Speaker 2 (09:40):
It's a big deal, sources tell CNN. There is no
US intelligence that Iran is building missiles that could soon
hit the United States.

Speaker 4 (09:46):
That's a really big deal.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
It's a big deal.

Speaker 3 (09:50):
Okay, it's a big deal. You know, it's not a
big deal CNN's ratings. In fact, I think that you
understand why CNN might be doing reporting sympathetic to the
interest of Iran, because I think the only audience might
actually come from that country.

Speaker 4 (10:04):
Everyone in America has chosen to.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
Reject what they have to do and say Scott Jennings
like the only thing happened him and Harry and I
have some time for Harry and everybody else on CNN.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Harrietton is hysterical. I honestly, here's what it baffles me about.
Harry Anton. And for those of you who don't watch CNN,
God bless you. But Harry Anton is a guy who
comes on. He usually does the morning, mid afternoon, early afternoon,
I should say, and he does what's happening with the polls, Democrats, Republicans,
latest polls, how it's looking YadA, YadA, YadA. And he
is excited. I mean, he makes me look very calm.

(10:37):
My man is jumping, his arms are up, he's in
a suit. He is very very excited. And CNN lets
him come back on and all he does is trash Democrats.
These are not going well.

Speaker 4 (10:47):
Well.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
You know why he's excited because his LinkedIn ad to
try to get any other job with any of the
network continues to do well.

Speaker 4 (10:53):
Per LinkedIn. He's like, let's go, I got three interviews
later this week.

Speaker 3 (10:57):
He's like, He's like, Republicans aren't the only one who's
pull number are improving.

Speaker 4 (11:00):
It's Harry time coming here.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
Harry time is a real thing. And it's always like
with the most unfunny stoic you know, anchor standing with
him looking at the big board, and I'm like, oh,
poor Harry, He's got to stay with these people all day.

Speaker 4 (11:14):
So boring, right, yeah, it is boring.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
What is not boring is this next story, which we
have three different clips on, and you I have to
give you credit because like if you guys don't have
the personal privilege of being close friends with Lenna McLaughlins.

Speaker 4 (11:26):
So you don't know what it is.

Speaker 3 (11:27):
It's like, I think I'm going to talk about A
and Linda's like, let me tap about this crazy shit
that I've been following. They're like, no one else knows
about it, Like Linda, I'm actually afraid I don't know
what to do with that. I'm like, I think the
government is just listening to our phone call because of
the sensitive information. You just wait and whether the government
was listening or not. This story, which we've got three
different kind of clips on, it's something you've been on.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
I didn't know anything about it.

Speaker 3 (11:50):
But we've got a guy who was connected to like
NASA research with the Air Force.

Speaker 4 (11:54):
He's gone missing.

Speaker 3 (11:55):
And I guess, like, big picture, what do you think
this story means?

Speaker 1 (12:00):
So I'm gonna I'm going to tell you this is
the weirdest thing about this, right Obviously many of the
scientists with NASA that are specifically dealing with, you know,
alien life, which I would say, I don't know about you,
but I feel like over the last eighteen months there
has been a real uptick in people talking about I
saw an orb or things are flashing in the sky

(12:23):
and like when and then I see like regular people
posting it, like just not like you know, if you
look at their feed, every second post is about how
they saw an alien. It's like somebody who's like, I
have never posted about this before. I'm sorry, I don't
know what that was, but it's freaking weird. And now
we have nine scientists that are all linked together.

Speaker 4 (12:42):
I know it's not that I know, it'sot the order,
but shoes should show the chart. Now, let me show
the chart.

Speaker 1 (12:45):
It's actually a good idea. So this is This is
a chart that was put out by RT and here's
what's weird about this, right, So it says this is
what it reads if you're listening and not watching. Multiple
scientists tied to NASA and Los Alamos found dead. We're
missing nearly all of them worked together and died or
vanished within the last two years. Tennessee Congressman timber Chet

(13:06):
If you don't know him, he's great warn the public
not to trust the government, urging attention to the cases.
Daily Mail put it out, Our tea has it up,
all the things. But it's like the head scientist, right,
the guy who's studying alien life, the guy who found
water on another planet, the woman who's the administrative assistant
to both of them. You know. Then we've got the

(13:26):
guy whose job it is to do all the research
into these things. They're all dead.

Speaker 3 (13:31):
Yeah, it's like one is an accident, two is a trend.
Nine is a story we probably shouldn't be talking about
on a podcast. A public consumption, right, I mean, I
as you know it. We have families and you know
and whatever the government's up to. Listen, I trust you, okay, obedience,
it's not a big deal. We should just keep it moving.
And you know who else doesn't think it's a big deal.

(13:53):
William McCaslin, the engineer who went missing his wife. Listen
to this U nine to one one call when she
discovers he's missing.

Speaker 4 (14:00):
Lenna McLaughlin.

Speaker 3 (14:01):
I've had more energy in my voice at a fast
food restaurant and this urban has which is reporting on
her husband's disappearance.

Speaker 6 (14:10):
This is April. How may help you?

Speaker 7 (14:12):
By April. My name is Susan Wilkerson. My husband is
missing and it's been about three hours, and I have
some indication that he must have planned not to be found.
He's left his phone, he changed his clothes, and I
don't know what I think. He's on foot. All of
our cars and bicycles are in the garage. I left

(14:36):
for a doctor's appointment at about eleven ten and he
was here at that time at the house. And I
got back from that at noon and he was gone.
He turned it off and left it behind, which seems
kind of deliberate because he's always got his phone. He
has a smart watch. I don't know if that's with

(14:59):
him or not.

Speaker 6 (15:00):
Has he ever done this before?

Speaker 7 (15:02):
Never, nothing even remotely like it. He's a retired Air
Force major general. He's very responsible, but he's also facing
some medical issues.

Speaker 6 (15:14):
Do you have any video at your home?

Speaker 4 (15:16):
No?

Speaker 6 (15:18):
Has he been diagnosed with any mental disorders or anything
like that.

Speaker 7 (15:23):
Well, we've been seeing the docks for both physical and
mental in terms of anxiety, short term memory loss, lack
of sleep. The same doc I went to see today.

Speaker 6 (15:37):
Did he carry any weapons on him?

Speaker 7 (15:39):
Well, not generally. He does have a gun safe, and
I went to look in the gun safe to see
if anything was missing, but I couldn't tell if anything was.
He has quite a number of pistols and rifles. Other
than saying if his brain and body keeps terriorating, he
didn't want to live like that. But it seemed to

(16:02):
me that was just a man, I hate how this
is going kind of thing. Because I told him, yes
you do, Yes, you do.

Speaker 6 (16:10):
Okay, we're going to send some deputies up to talk
to you. See if you can search a little bit
and see what's going on. Okay, sure, thank you very much,
you're welcome. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:19):
That at the end, it is because I think she
sort of realizes, maybe, you know, this is something that
I mean, and honestly, like whatever else is happening with
these other sciences, they are connected to it. You know,
maybe this is a different trajectory that's a little bit
more autonomous.

Speaker 4 (16:35):
But either way, it's bizarre. The whole thing is bizarre.

Speaker 1 (16:38):
Well, I think too, you know, so supposedly so they're both.
My understanding is that she also works in science. She's
also like a nerd, and you know, they have that
in common, which is great. But the way that she's
making this now, let me just preface before what I'm
about to say. Everybody handles shit differently. I don't know
if my husband went missing, my kids went missing, God forbid,

(16:59):
you know, I don't think my nine to one one
call would be like, I'll take the peace. Are did
they come in to stay?

Speaker 8 (17:04):
Are they fresh?

Speaker 1 (17:05):
Great? It feels very like I'm ordering lunch. It's very calm.
I don't know if that's the scientist in them in
their relationship. He is an avid hiker, like all the
pictures they release of him is that he's this avid hiker.

Speaker 3 (17:22):
So like, it's impossible to think about this story not
in the context of the Nancy Guthrie disappearance Thank you,
which which became like this all encopassing, like lead the
news thing with here's a guy who's in the military,
he disappeared and to the point, and I love that
you found this clip too, Like while this drew national
media interest and lots of so many volunteers for the

(17:43):
Nancy Gutrid disappearance that they're like, hey, you're actually destroying
the crime scene with too many people here. A guy
was part of the search party looking for gentlemen.

Speaker 4 (17:52):
McCaslin, M. Yeah, and this is what.

Speaker 9 (17:55):
He said, spending most of my time off trail and
it's very very very rugged. A lot of loose rock,
loose soil, cactuses, boulders, extremely rugged terrains. I'm really surprised.
I haven't seen anyone. So I got here three days ago.
Now I'm under the impression that a lot of the
searchers are volunteers, so they're going to be out here

(18:15):
on a weekend. But I was out here all day Sunday,
didn't see anyone. I haven't seen any aircraft, haven't seen
any drones, haven't seen any searchers.

Speaker 4 (18:25):
In his role with the Air Force, McCaslin over.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
It is so odd to me how strange this whole
story is and how no one is covering it. And
I think that's the part that probably freaks me out
the most, is that whenever you research this and you
start to look and you just pick up more and
more and more. There are so many pieces to the
story and it's not on one major news network. Like

(18:50):
nothing against the Guthrie family, but who is Nancy Guthrie? Right, Honestly,
she's some famous person's mom. Okay, that story was interesting
for like a couple of days. There were how many
more people missing in Arizona. They were showing all these
pictures of kids that could have been trafficked, human trafficked,

(19:10):
people that were hit by illegal aliens. Nobody gave a shit.
But we're talking about an eighty plus year old woman
who hated Donald Trump, belong to all these weird groups.
She was in this check group. In that check group,
they're like, oh, she went to church, and then the
next group it's like, oh, no, she didn't go to
church anymore. She watched it on Facebook. And I'm like,
all right, so which is it? Like nobody had one
story and honestly, not for nothing. If your mom or

(19:34):
loved one is coming over for dinner, pick her up.

Speaker 7 (19:37):
She's eighty.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
Why are you not? You're sending an uber what an
You're an asshole? Get your mother? Pick her up? Am
I wrong?

Speaker 4 (19:47):
Listen?

Speaker 3 (19:48):
I'm not going to disagree with you about elder care,
you know, and so I think you're not wrong. But
obviously there's there's a lot that doesn't seem right about
all these stories, which is why, you know, Flo, that's
why they created the villages.

Speaker 4 (20:01):
Just you ship your parents there.

Speaker 3 (20:04):
You don't have to worry about them wandering off into
the woods or the mountains like they might get in
some other trouble to the villages, but disappearing ain't gonna be
one of them.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
That's why you want to tell you I have a
great village the story. Do you want to hear it.
It's a great story. Now get ready. Now for those
of you listening and watching, this is not PG thirteen,
all right, So just saying fair warning. So we went
to the villages many months ago. I was there for
work and on someone's book tour. Okay, fine, so we
get there, people are stoked, Okay, fine, so we're doing
live broadcast, book signing all the things. So the skywalks

(20:33):
out to me and he goes, I take it you
don't live here. I'm like, well, I'm twenty five, so
I hope not. I'd he's super weird. He's like, cool,
I'm gonna give a little tip. It's gonna be a
fun piece for your segment. I said, oh, thank you, sir.
What is it? He goes, look around for the gold shoes.
You know what I'm saying. And I looked at him
and I was like, no, I'm sorry. I actually have
no idea what you're saying. And he said, gold shoes

(20:55):
being you are ready for an afternoon delight?

Speaker 4 (20:59):
Got it.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
I looked at him and I'm like, okay, I'm sorry.
Are you saying that you have sex with other members
of the villages if they have gold shoes on?

Speaker 8 (21:06):
He goes, oh my god, what say it like that.
I'm like, you're coming up to me talking to me
in code. I just want to get the backstraight. He's like, yeah,
So I tell you what. I was like, the were's
waldo of gold shoes that day. I'm like, gold shoes,
gold shoes?

Speaker 4 (21:21):
You like, stay long, sir?

Speaker 3 (21:23):
Would it also be possible, not just to look for
the men, like is that also not an indicator?

Speaker 10 (21:28):
No, these were the women. Women wore the gold shoes.
It was your like, knock on my door, my man,
Like I was like, what is going on at the villages?

Speaker 3 (21:39):
Anyways, So, speaking of Florida, devinc I feel like we
now have to again, we have to do a little audible.
We have to play the clip of America's Governor Ronda
santists because in a recent interview, like listen and I
live in Florida. I'm so proud to do so. I
know deep in your heartland, I know you wish you
did too.

Speaker 1 (21:57):
Yeah, and also tells people.

Speaker 3 (22:00):
And because like, look, schools were open first, we opened
up parks.

Speaker 4 (22:04):
It's the free state of Florida.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
But apparently, according to Ronda Santis, there's still one horizon
of freedom we have yet to fully conquer.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
Or my free state of Florida. Governor Ronda Santa's governor,
good to see you.

Speaker 4 (22:19):
Maybe I'm just a little ignorant here.

Speaker 2 (22:21):
I didn't know that it was legal to marry a
first cousin.

Speaker 11 (22:29):
Well, in a lot of states, it's not. Florida needs
to get with the program on that one it's obviously
part of.

Speaker 3 (22:37):
And I would just say, right there, listen, Ronda Santis,
your presidential campaign just took a step back, buddy.

Speaker 4 (22:43):
Okay, you either do you want to be.

Speaker 3 (22:46):
Part of the nanty states where they tell people how
to live and who to love, or do you want
to just continue to expand the free market?

Speaker 4 (22:52):
Okay, the heart.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
One day, when you sent this to me, I thought
you were spoofing me.

Speaker 7 (22:57):
Bro.

Speaker 1 (22:58):
I was like, this cannot be real. And I heard
it with Sean Hannity doing the interview. I'm like, oh
my god, it's real. It's from last night. Okay, moving on,
please continue.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
Well listen, you know, you know, I don't know what
your thoughts are if you think that we should outlaw
being able to marry your first cousin. I understand that
there's some health concerns with it, but you know, listen,
the heart wants what the heart wants, and if what
the heart wants carries with it a side effect of
some birth effects, that's between you, your God, and your medicaid provider.

Speaker 4 (23:25):
You know what I mean? Let the people do their thing.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
I really that whole expression, give the people what they want.
I'm calling this is it. This is the line. Everybody's
got a line, right, that's my line. I'm like, Nope,
can't marry your family member's freaking weird. Sorry, that's like.
Have you ever see the movie Daddy's Home?

Speaker 4 (23:41):
Of course?

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Okay, so my youngest son is ten, and he is
obsessed with this movie and he wasn't allowed to watch
it until he was ten. So now we have to
see it at least once a week, right, because that's
what we do when we're ten and we finally find
a movie we like. And there's a scene in Daddy's
Home too, where the fathers come in and the old
boy kisses his step sister, so there's no blood, they're

(24:04):
not related. I saw it. Now, Obviously I'm not paying
attention to the dang movie. My husband was watching it
with him, but.

Speaker 4 (24:09):
I hashtag active parenting and keep going.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Yeah, No, I was not. I was active cooking. My
husband was active parenting. I was in the kitchen. I
was like, what is going on? Because all I hear
is hate kissed his sister, and I'm like, what the hell?
But it was so funny, and my little guy turns around,
he goes but it was his stepsister doesn't count right.
I'm like, nope, it totally counts. Weird. No, you share
a bathroom, you're in the same house. No, absolutely not.
And then this segment on the first cousin, I'm like,

(24:32):
holy shit, I don't know what's wrong with people. I
don't know what's going on. Can't marry your cousin just
to know there's a billion people in the world, go
marry somebody else.

Speaker 3 (24:39):
Well, listen, if it's good enough for the royal family,
it's good enough for our brother's down and we will okay.

Speaker 1 (24:44):
Hate those people terrible?

Speaker 4 (24:45):
All right?

Speaker 1 (24:46):
So which asshole should we go to next? I guess
we'll do Mom Donnie, Should we talk about Donna?

Speaker 4 (24:52):
Yeah, okay, the opposite like Florida.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
Florida is the new New York, right, So we're gonna
go from to where people are moving to where people
are moving from for exactly this reason.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
Yes, and so Mom Donnie, Now I have it written
out here, and I want to make sure that I
quote Mom Donnie properly. We're going to show it in
a minute. But this is somebody who's saying that we
are going to tax whiteness because of white privilege. So
for those of you who didn't know. If our Lord
God decided that you were going to be white on
the conveyor belt of life, it is your fault, okay.

(25:23):
And so mom Donnie wants to make sure that you're
properly taxed here on earth because he's struggling. He's struggling
with the success of the white community. I have so
much to say about this before we play this clip,
but I'll have tip it to you and then we'll
come back and discuss on the other side.

Speaker 4 (25:38):
Please, no, listen.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
This is you, This is where you live, this is
where you work. This is your mayor, you know, so
have at it. You know, I played my governor, you
have your mayor.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
I will tell you here there's a few things that
I don't like about mom Donnie. We'll start with everything,
and then the second one is everything, and then the
third one is that he thought he was a rapper.
So Mom Donnie has all sorts of strange bedfellows, right,
His acting park partners, his music video partners, his I
Hate Jew's wife, his friend Hassan Piker who thinks America

(26:10):
is responsible for nine to eleven. Right, there's no shortage
of radical psychopaths in his path. Right, The one thing
he does not have around him is one person who
is able to form a cohesive thought about politics and government.
Absolutely not. He's got funding from Soorrows, He's got schooling
from his big brother Obama, who had him over to

(26:32):
his house. I don't know what was it, six or
seven times before the New York election. And here's the
funny thing. They didn't need it because in New York
you don't need idea to vote. You can walk in.
We had people on film standing outside. Here's the funny part,
true story, standing outside of the boiling places and you're
in line. You're like, oh are you in line? Or like, oh,
you can go. I already voted like three times. Maybe

(26:52):
they're being nice to you, not knowing that you're a
raging conservative. And I'm like what They're like, Oh, yeah, yeah,
you're good. Sorry, I think I think I heard you wrong. Yeah,
I'm just going to keep voting because they don't check.

Speaker 4 (27:05):
So check.

Speaker 3 (27:05):
And I have multiple stories in my book about voter
fraud from New York.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
It's uh, it's quite problematic. But yes, that for you guys,
I love that.

Speaker 1 (27:12):
Listen. It's a real thing. And I can remember my
first time voting in New York because I was registered
at the time as an independent, because my friend told me,
if you come to New York and you register as
a Republican, you might as well sleep on the day
of the election because they're never going to count your vote.
And I'm like shit. They're like, he's like, pick the
best of the worst, that this is like the best

(27:33):
bad plan. We have that expression that's like, legit, pick
the candidate that you hate the least. I'm like, God,
my god, all right, but at the time, I wasn't
ready to be have a d anywhere near my name,
and I ended up never doing it because I just can't.
But I registered as an independence. I couldn't vote in
the primary. I could only vote in the general. So
when I got there, they were like, oh, okay, you're
an independent godah blah blah blah, and I said yeah.
I was like, here's my ID, here's my voter cards,

(27:55):
because oh, I don't need that. I was, you know,
and I was like, oh, She's like, oh, I don't
need you to check in. She's like, where are you?

Speaker 4 (28:02):
The best Philly thing for.

Speaker 1 (28:04):
I was like what, She's like, you live on West
twenty fourth Street, cause that's where I at the time
I lived. And I was like, yeah, She's like, yeah,
no problem, You're gonna you go over there in the
Chelsea section. You're good, ma'am. I'm sorry, Luisa behind me
could be me. You don't care. They don't care, and
that's what goes on. So as far as I'm concerned,
Mom Donnie had his you know, Antifa collection. Folks. They

(28:25):
came on in with whatever sign they were given when
they got off the bus that day. They voted twelve
times each and that's how we ended up with Mom Donnie.
Not to mention the fact that we had the chronic
women abuser hustler of all hustlers, Cuomo still in the race,
and then we had Courtis Leebell, who was riding the
subways and putting up the good fight. I was like, sir,
this is not AnyWho. For those of you who want
to know what I'm talking about here is Mom Donnie.

Speaker 12 (28:48):
The inequities in this city, the racial inequities, are stark.
We are talking about findings that have shown that the
wealth of a median white household in the city is
more than two hundred thousand dollars, while that of a
black household is less than twenty thousand dollars. This is
not an indictment of any one New Yorker. It is
an indictment, however, of policies and politics that have persisted

(29:08):
for far too long. Our commitment now is to act
upon these findings, to do so in concert with New
Yorker's comments, as we've now opened a public comment period
for the next thirty days, to ensure that we have
a city where we are reckoning with the long history
of racism here and starting to act upon a framework
that puts equity right at the center of it.

Speaker 3 (29:30):
I love that the gut instinct is not like, hey,
maybe we should do something to help the African American
community to see boost that number. Instead, it's like, the
best way to create equality is to lower the top line.

Speaker 4 (29:41):
Like, that's what we're going to do.

Speaker 3 (29:42):
And by the way, the gest I mean, what are
the people in New York, What are you going to
do the same thing that people in California do? When
California's proposing something similar, right as wealth tax, They're like,
all right, love that for you guys. Deuces that that's
why Florida continue to grow exponentially.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
Yeah, and we're seeing it already.

Speaker 7 (29:57):
Right.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
We got the Starbucks CEO, we had Joe Rogan leave,
we had a bunch of the venture tech funds leave.
All these people are leaving. They're like, I'm out, have
a nice life, me and my money. We're going to Texas,
We're going to Florida, We're going to Tennessee wherever they're going. Right,
here's the issue that I have with Mom Donnie. Actually,

(30:18):
let me rephrase that. I have many issues with Mom Donni,
but this is an issue I have with everybody. When
you say to me, my sources tell me many sources
have said the findings show you're so full of shit.
You literally wrote a bunch of notes last night on
a piece of paper and thought, I'm gonna say some

(30:39):
shit tomorrow and people are just gonna believe me. Do
you have anything to prove what findings?

Speaker 7 (30:44):
You know?

Speaker 1 (30:44):
It's like when you say the polls are I'm like, okay,
So where was the poll taken? Who monitored the poll?
What was the sample size of the poll. If the
poll was two frickin' people and one said yes and
once say no, it's a fifty to fifty, Well guess
what it's not really, is it right? It's two people.

Speaker 3 (30:58):
I personally am shocked that someone who ran as a
democratic socialist is now committed to redistribution of wealth. But
I think the tell is like, it's not about hey,
rich people, we're going to tax you. It's like, hey,
white people, we're going to tax you. Imagine being a
dude that's a cab driver or something, and you're like, whoa.
You know, so I guess the good news is in
democratic circles, it's not about reality, it's about identity, so

(31:21):
you can just begin to identify some other thing. It's
like the dudes that played on the Italian baseball team,
you know, it's like they weren't American, their Italian. I
think you're about to find a whole lot of white
looking New Yorkers. Is they going to start acting like
something else?

Speaker 7 (31:32):
Well?

Speaker 1 (31:32):
I think there's also this whole idea of you know,
if we look at the appropriation of funds from any
government and we say, if I'm applying for college and
I'm white, how much do I get zero? If I
am applying as a white woman and I'm going up
against a black woman, what do I get zero? Right,
I can remember myself being, you know, super nerd in

(31:55):
high school, going to college alongside my great one of
my dearest girlfriends. She had a making her last name.
I haven't making my last name. She was black, I
was white. I was very poor growing up. So I
grew up in a very black neighborhood and it was fine.
Come twelfth grade, we get our scholarships. She gelds say,
full ride and I get work study. I'm like, wait,

(32:16):
but dude, you live like three houses down for me.
I don't understand what's happening, Like, I don't know how
how this math is not math in right? But it
didn't matter because I was white. Well, we assume you'll
have more opportunity. Why why would you assume that I
don't get it? And that's this whole idea that we
need to lower the standards, the requirements, the benchmark. Whether
you're a policeman, a fireman, a doctor, you don't need

(32:37):
as good a grade on your MCATs. Why, I'm sorry,
Are they doing surgery different than the white person? I'm
pretty sure it's the same surgery, right, open heart, same shit.
I'm pretty sure. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (32:46):
The good news is the police shortage in New York
is about to get less bad because they're going to
have a lot fewer people to have to police.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
Bro, it's a real thing, I'm telling you right now.
And you're gonna see all those cops moving. You're gonna
see all this firemen moving. And you were going to
have a city of people who were unable to pay
any of the taxes. Rent's already too damn high, right,
they just raised all the red costs. Anyways, I digress, Mom,
Donnie is a racist pig and moving on. Oh and
his wife can't draw for shit. Art is my ass.

(33:13):
So let's talk about the next thing that I want
to talk about, which is that we're getting our frequencies
into our brain. Eric, are you aware of this?

Speaker 3 (33:21):
I spend a decent amount of time with air pods
in and I know.

Speaker 1 (33:25):
You were confused. I knew it. I knew there was
a reason.

Speaker 3 (33:27):
Well, it's unclear if it's the r F frequency or
the vodka. It's like one of the two. And I'm
frankly interested in finding out, like doing a longe tudinal
study about what the impact of my various vices are
on my body.

Speaker 1 (33:41):
Yeah, I'm telling you right now, so true story. I
have become obsessed with the buds thing. So I love buds.
I don't wear the air buds.

Speaker 6 (33:48):
I wear.

Speaker 1 (33:50):
The Jabras. I love the jobbers with their little funky
shape and they fit right in your ear, and I
would wear them constantly, and I was I was telling
Eric when we were picking out stories for today's show.
I was like, you know, I love I'm on the subway.
I don't need to know what you're doing down there.
I had a guy take a poop in front of
me last week on the subway, actually on the seat,
and they get up the next seat. True story. I
took a picture because nobody believe me. I was like,
you think I'm kidding, I'm not so anyways, So these

(34:14):
things happen all the time. So you know, nice pair
of buds take you right out of where you're at.
You just like I got to get to where I'm
going and hopefully I can just not be bothered. All right, Fine,
But I was having all kinds of like headaches and
like brain fog, and I started looking into it, and
they were saying, you know, people who weren't wearing the
buds anymore were having more clarity. I haven't worn a
pair of buds for I want to say four months,

(34:37):
probably about four months, and I feel so much better.
My husband too, is the craziest thing. And it turns
out it's not my head, not anymore. But I'll play
this clip and you tell.

Speaker 13 (34:46):
Me what you think, Kara, what it is like? You
put those apple things in your ear, Dude, that's the
stupidest thing you could ever do.

Speaker 8 (34:52):
I stopped using them a few months ago.

Speaker 13 (34:54):
I got the wired ones. Now, yeah, that's not good.
Wired ones probably aren't good either, No, because you're still
getting jump conduction into your ear, which will bring you
to my work. My work is the next level of Becker.
Like if Becker had lived, he would have looked for
the source of the DC electric car. Well, we found it.

Speaker 3 (35:14):
So like I'm open to this, but to me, I
guess my gut instinct when you send me that story
was Wait. I remember seeing a tweet thread in which
somebody was citing a paper with mice and like low
frequency radiation exposure, and it actually it showed they had
like greater resistance to cancer and like a suite of
health benefits. And so I'm thinking, well, then I don't

(35:35):
know if I believe this guy But to me, the
larger thing is in twenty twenty six, you have videos
of guys and hats talking about health. It's like, I
remember one time I was trying to fix something on
my car and I looked it up on YouTube, and
to me, it's the total subcontracting of expertise on things
that could kill you or things you own to the internet.

Speaker 4 (35:54):
And I don't know, it sounds good, he sounds good.

Speaker 3 (35:57):
You take I'll take your video, and I'll raise you
a paper on mice that I think I read so
to see who lives.

Speaker 1 (36:05):
Longer, I would say, did the person who wrote the
paper on the mice have stock in AirPods? I think
we need to get the answer to that question before
we can read that paper, because I'm pretty sure doctor Cruz,
who you just saw, who's a neurosurgeon, doesn't have any
money in either one of these things. He's just saying, bro,
don't put that in your ears because it is literally
transmitting RF so you know, maybe not near your brain.

(36:29):
I don't know, Like, would you want a microwave popercorn
on your head? I don't know.

Speaker 3 (36:33):
Hey, like that's fine, but I'll tell you what doctor
Cruz is not going to be doing he's not or
I'll tell you what. He may be living longer, but
you know he's going to be spent at least some
of that time doing being stuck in a conversation he
doesn't want to have with a stranger because we didn't
have his AirPods. Then to send the signal that he
is out of commission for social interaction. That's actually the
best value that AirPods provide. I think we all know.

(36:53):
It's just a trade off. Life's a series of trades.
And you know, I mean that's actually what AirPod should do.
They should make a commerce. Forget about the music, forget
about the lifestyle. I should show someone stuck in a
conversation with a care and it be like air pods.

Speaker 4 (37:07):
Never again.

Speaker 1 (37:08):
I have to tell you that shit does not work
for me, all right, bro, I literally it doesn't matter
if I have them in my ears or not. The
Karens find me, they want to talk to me. They
want to tell me what they don't like about what
I'm doing. Sometimes it's just a Mamdani supporter who is
upset that I'm a blonde. He's like, you offend me.
You standing there, It offends me. On like, pisso off, asshole.
I just paid for your apartment, so be nice for
Mommy's not paying next month. So all right, last clip

(37:30):
of the day, our favorite ro Conna. Go ahead, you
set it up, Eric, tell us how you love Rocanna.

Speaker 4 (37:37):
I would have said this. Rocana is an interesting guy.

Speaker 3 (37:39):
He's running for president because I think Silicon Valley is
going to give him a lot of money to do so.
He seems to have friends in the media, like he'll
go on Mark Calprin's show, He'll go on, He'll talk
to I think maybe not so friendly audiences. He's got
a significant amount of hypocrisy as it relates to insider
stock training. But it turns out that's not the only issue.
He flip flops off.

Speaker 1 (37:59):
Yeah, let's give the audience old taste.

Speaker 11 (38:02):
If the United States Congress has any life left in it,
every member of Congress and Senator must be calling for
Trump's removal today based on the twenty fifth Amendment. He's
threatening the entire destruction of a civilization. He is calling
Iranians animals. He is showing a total disregard for the
humanity of people in Iran and Gaza in Cuba.

Speaker 13 (38:25):
This is a moral crime.

Speaker 11 (38:27):
It is a war crime. We need to be demanding
that Congress convene today, and we need to be invoking
the twenty fifth Amendment. As a human being and as
an American citizen, I am relieved that Donald Trump has
accepted us as far and wouldraw on his threat to
destroy Iranian civilization. But let's be clear, this did not
happen because of Congress, which barely made a whimper. This

(38:50):
happened because of the force of the American people, not
just progressives and liberals, but conservatives like Tucker Carl's and
Margorie Taylor Green and even Ann could A spoke out
against the horror of threatening genocide against another people.

Speaker 1 (39:05):
This tells me one thing.

Speaker 11 (39:07):
The only thing that we'll save this country, the only
thing that we'll save our democracy, is a broad populist
social movement, anti Epstein class, anti war, pro working class.

Speaker 1 (39:24):
I'm like, sir, can we first announce the last three
people you named, because I'm like one hundred percent sure
we as conservatives are not hanging out with them. Although
if I am being honest, I don't even know that
I would call myself conservative anymore. I've been for a
very long time saying it's in us against them, because
there are so many asshole rhinos in Congress, just as

(39:44):
many scumbags on our side as there are on the
DEM side. So I feel like it's a more us
them thing. Like I'm an equal opportunity hater. I don't
care if you're an R or a D. If you're
against America, if you're screwing us over, you're no friend
of mine and I have no interest in you at all.

Speaker 6 (39:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (39:58):
I think Rocata is a smart I think he's got
some interesting things that he likes to talk about. I
think the ven diagram of people that are supporting Rocanna
and the people who go to CNN for Iranian intelligence
analysis is like one hundred percent.

Speaker 4 (40:11):
It's a small circle.

Speaker 3 (40:13):
It's not a large audience, but I think they are
the same people, and so you know, those are the unfortunately,
so I love that for them.

Speaker 4 (40:20):
You enjoy your day.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
Guys, Listen. I think we need to point out so
I sent Eric this link and it has the top
ten inside traders of Congress. Sadly, uh, the second one
is a Republican, Mike McCall. But McCall's a rhino. We
all know that seventy five million, Rocanna number three, fifty

(40:42):
five million, my brother fifty.

Speaker 3 (40:44):
Five million, also outspoken about wanting to ban insider trading
in Congress. He says it's his wife. But you know,
I would say that that's true, so they getting worse.
I would say he must not be a huge fan
of his campaign, because she had any stops.

Speaker 4 (40:58):
She's out there hitting the e trade button on the rid.

Speaker 1 (41:00):
So she was like, click, click, But I love it.

Speaker 4 (41:03):
All day long.

Speaker 3 (41:03):
It's insane, but ro Conna, it's hey, yelp, but clips
like that, people like rocannor exactly why we wanted to
do this. Linda, and I just want to say thank
you for letting me come on your show, and thank
you for I think we're going to start this every
Wednesday now because there are just so many, too many
insane things. Yeah, people say that deserve elevation. Uh, they're
not always going to be missing Air Force kernels. They're

(41:24):
not always going to be you know, I think stories
from Linda and the villages and gold shoes, but they
should all be entertaining.

Speaker 4 (41:30):
And interesting and things that hopefully brighten your deck.

Speaker 1 (41:32):
You are welcome, America for gold shoes and missing NASA scientists.
I'm Lynda McLaughlin. He's Eric Eggers. This is the Rogue
Recap at Linda Meck at Rogue Recap. What's your handle? Eric?

Speaker 3 (41:42):
At Eric underscore Eggers'.

Speaker 1 (41:44):
State like this so aggers. That's all all our friends.
That's how we say it. He really likes it. We
will see you next week for more soundbites. Guys, have
a great night. Pray for our troops. Good night,

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