Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
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will coup the spoon and with the sundown shut in.
Speaker 3 (02:03):
I found my mind in a brown paper peg.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
But then.
Speaker 4 (02:11):
I tripped on a cloud and fell eight miles high.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
I told my man when.
Speaker 3 (02:17):
A jagged sky, I just dropped in to see what.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
Condition my condition was?
Speaker 5 (02:24):
In?
Speaker 3 (02:28):
What condition? Condition?
Speaker 2 (02:43):
Welcome everybody that doctor crips natural health hours. It is
the twenty ninth of October. It has blown by unbelievably,
and we actually hit some cool weather this morning. When
I woke up, it was in the fifties and right
now it's probably sixty something outside in the front. I'm
(03:04):
not sure about the back, but I think we hit
about fifty four today, a little cooler. We had some
rain yesterday, so the time has come for Susie to
start cooking those warm soups of herds and chilies. Anyway,
we got Susie, Bill, myself, producer Steve behind the curtain,
(03:26):
and we're all here tonight. Susie and Bill. If you
guys like to say Hello.
Speaker 6 (03:30):
Hi, everybody, totty folks.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
Here we go and producer Steve as always, the curtain
is open. You're welcome to join in anytime you like.
Well we got tonight. We're talking about aches and pains
and all those things that lead people to taking medicines
they shouldn't and many times leading people to get knee
(03:59):
replaceds and hip replacements, and I've seen shoulder and wrist
and it's just unbelievable what people do. And one of
the saddest that I just saw it today from somebody
that I know, but they live in Connecticut and they
went and got carpal tunnel surgery, which is absolutely ridiculous.
(04:27):
In just a few minutes, I can make a tremendous
difference on that. You have three main nerve roots that
come through your wrists where all the carpal bones and
the owner and the radio are. What happens is sometimes
(04:47):
if you're using them a lot, you get kind of
all an inflamed area, or you get where the everything's
extended a little bit and it'll compress those nerves and
getting them cut on. They go in there and they
just rote a root a little bit, and that didn't
fix anything. It's usually a repetitive use injury kind of thing,
(05:12):
and it's just your body saying, hey, you did some
work and you're a little sore there, but it usually
will clear up. But I can get in there with
my thumb and then I do some ultrasound and some
laser and then give you some things to take on
the inside. The first thing I ever do with anybody
(05:32):
in pain, and I get a lot of knee pain, elbow, wrist,
hip pain, that kind of stuff. If it's if it's recent,
you know, like real cute, then I always do cataplex ACP,
which is very good for inflammation, swelling and repairing soft tissue.
(05:56):
And then I'll do legaplex one or legoplex two. Depending
on whether it's a disc related spinal issue, I might
go ligaplex one. If it's joint health in general, I'll
probably go ligaplex two. And usually with those two products
(06:18):
and a treatment or two, everything clears up pretty quick.
I've never had those things fail me. Now there are
times when we have more issues and then we get
more aggressive, but those two, especially legoplex two and cataplex ACP,
they have never ever let me down. But a couple
(06:41):
of things we use, like we use osterplex by standard
process and just like the name, it is more for
osteopenia osteoarthritis. Then we have Rooumaplex same thing, room type
issues where you you know you're with rheumatoid problems. And
(07:03):
then we have Glucosamine Synergy, which I like this one
especially maintaining things because it's got some legaplex two. It's
got glucosamine to hydrate to join, and it's got boswelia
to help heal, so it's a pretty good product. And
(07:24):
then for like say you've just got pain and we
need to help calm that pain down, saladjsy by many
herb is a good thing. And again the cataplex ACP
getting rid of that inflammation and swelling a lot of
times will work. Boswellia complex very important. So there's a
(07:46):
lot of things you can do. And what happens to
a lot of people is they exercise too much and
that damages your immune system anyway. But what will happen
is somebody will decide they're going to work out and
they haven't done it in a long time, and the
next day they can't move. So we have to deal
(08:08):
with that and a lot of it's just from working
out or doing something you haven't done well. You might
have played a sport, ride your bike, jog and all
those kind of things, and the next day your body's
going to raise hell because it's not happy it didn't
want to go on a bike ride or job. So anyway,
(08:31):
a lot of good products. There's a big debate with
people that will always tell me I put heat on it. Well,
you don't want to put heat on anything in the
beginning because heat will feel good initially, but it brings
(08:51):
all the inflammation and swelling to the spot you put
that heat on, which is going to make it hurt worse. Initially.
We want to do ice, and nobody likes that because
it's like, oh my god, that's cold. But you put
ice and it has a numb nest and cut down
(09:12):
on the feeling a little bit and it gets rid
of all the inflammation and swelling and that helps a lot.
And you can some people say can I alternate ice
and heat? You can, And after you've got past that
(09:32):
acute face, ice and heat. Ice will get rid of
the bad eyes. Heat will bring blood flow and nutrition
to try to heal that area. But in the beginning
not good. And what I see a lot too. Like
years ago, I had a lot of patients that rode
(09:54):
that MS one point fifty. And you know, I like
riding a bicycle to the mailbox and that's about it
unless it's got a motor on it, and then I
like riding it anywhere. But those people that rode that
MS one point fifty when they got back and a
bunch of them came to see me, they were just miserable.
(10:16):
They'd overworked everything because they only do that once a year.
And guess what, the body is not happy and it
will punish you accordingly. So there's a lot of things
we can do. It's pretty important if you're going to
do any kind of exercise, workout anything different, you want
(10:39):
to choose some cardioplus and maybe a cataplex B or
becore with that, and that makes sure you've got plenty
of blood flow and nutrients to all the muscle tissue
and good circulation because the heart is a muscle and
cardioplus benefits the heart, all your muscles, all that circulation.
(11:03):
And so if you're going to be doing some exercise
that you don't normally do, that's a good thing to do,
and it really helps the athlete. If you're trying to
get in shape for certain sport, things like cardioplus and
cataplex B or bcor very good to start fine tuning.
You get your muscles plenty of blood flows so they
(11:26):
could function properly. I had a gentleman want me to
treat his son who was in college playing football, and
he was very upset that his son needed an extra
step or two in speed, at least he thought he did.
But his son had already made the team, so he
(11:48):
must have been pretty good. But he wanted me to
take his son down steroid row so that they gave
him that edge. And I told him, I said, first off,
you don't understand that you might get some glory out
of that in the beginning, but it's going to destroy
your son. And I said, I don't think that's what
(12:09):
you want. To pump him up full of bad stuff
so you get maybe a little glory in college. And
then one of the bad things about steroids they cause
long term joint degeneration. And nobody tells you that because
it's big business and it's like taking a big giant ass.
(12:30):
When you get immediate relief, but then you suffer later.
So anyway, I offered to help his son be a
better athlete nutritionally, and that man got so mad at
me because I would not help him get steroids and
things that didn't belong in his son's body. So I
(12:51):
guess he went shopping around for another doctor. But I
felt good that I did not cave into that pressure
because I didn't want that on my conscious that we
didn't help the kid. And he, like I said, he
already made the team. He's in college playing ball, so
it must not be that he too far off. But
(13:11):
his dad seemed to me to be living through the
sun and wanted to pat himself on the back every
time his kid did something good. But if you do sports,
if you do any kind of exercise, if you do
a job that you haven't done around your home, like
landscape being her cutting the grass, and your sore, that's
(13:33):
when we want to come in with cataplex ACP and
legoplex two in most cases. And how I do that
on DOTCHDI is I will start with three cataplex ACP
three times a day and two legoplex two. And like
I said, it has never ever let me down and
(13:57):
lgaplex two is very important. You may hear chiropractic doctors
say they can't hold an adjustment, and the Lgoplex two
is very good for that problem because it helps with
the tendons, ligaments, disc and that's the problem when you're
adjusting somebody and it doesn't take very well. They're not
(14:22):
healthy nutritionally in the ligaments, tendons, and disc So you
can move them all you want, but you're not doing
a lot of goods. So I know a few doctors
you know, walked in their office and they do an
exam and then they say, here, you're going to take
this Legoplex two before you come back, because you could
(14:44):
hold an adjustment with a vice script. So it's a
good thing to take it on a regular basis, Like
right now, I think in my cabin that I'm taking
glucosamine synergy. It's got a little ligaplex two, a little
bust and the glucosamine. So it's a nice thing on
(15:04):
a regular basis. And what people forget, the people that
haven't been doing a much exercise or working out or
any of that stuff is a lot of times by
the time you feel a pain and I'll ask, well,
what do you know, have you done anything? Do you remember?
Answers know what happened? Is it takes sometime six months
(15:26):
to a year before something shows up that's been coming,
depending on what's going on. And so that's why I
like to do a little bit of things on the
maintenance side of life, like the boss Welia complex or
the glucosamine synergy to keep the joints healthy, and then
(15:47):
the cardio plus always for good circulation cataplex B or becre.
Those two work together because cataplex B the B vitamins
and the B are the part of the B vitamins
that vaso constrict and so they help when you don't
(16:07):
have good B vitamin in there to get the things
to contract and muscles to flex and do what you
need them to do. And then the cardioplus has got
the other part of the B vitamins that vaso dilate
and make sure you get that blood flow in there.
So between the two of them you do really well.
(16:28):
A lot of times when you hear about things like, oh,
the heart has a fib problem, usually that's a B
vitamin efficiency and those B vitamins get in there and
they constrict and they help the nutrients for the heart
to be able to pump better. And so you've got
(16:51):
cardioplus with its B vitamins that vaso dilate cataplects B
constricting and together they'll make very heart healthy heart and
muscle and good circulation. So that's a great thing, all right, Susie.
Speaker 5 (17:06):
Anything, Yeah, Well, I've taken all those things in and
they're they're very effective. You know, last week we talked
about you know, what to keep in your in your
first aid kit, and uh, you know, one of the
things that I like is UH FLEXI Flexi cold k
(17:29):
O L D. I'll put a link in UH in
the rumble comments and the reason I like it. And
these things are like five years old and I got too,
So you know, if it's kind of a you know,
a serious situation, if you've got two, then you've got
to back up. Of course, I know you say the
(17:52):
you know, limit the amount of time that that you
use it for. But there it's it's a gel cold
pat and so it's flexible and they have it in
all different sizes. I mean, they've got one that's like
(18:15):
for Nick. They've got some that's like for that has straps,
and I just I think it's a it's a good
product and longevity so far. Like I said, I think
they're about five years old.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
I'm glad you brought that up because I forgot. In
my office, I use sombra. It's a liquid roll on,
and after I treat people, the last thing I do
is put some somber on there, and it comes in
cold and warm. But I, like I said, I like
the cold the best unless they're pretty well healed up,
(18:53):
and then warm just feels better. But h pretty similar
to what you're talking about, and I had forgot totally
to mention that, so thank you.
Speaker 5 (19:02):
But this is actually a cold pack, ye that you
keep in your freezer.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
Yeah, I have those. I have several on my freezer
and I have a shelf of them because patients choose
to get them from me, and it just like you said,
it's wonderful. And I used to if somebody came in
with a disc compression and they were lit up in
miserable pain when we finished, I put that right on
(19:30):
there and I strapped it on whether some kind of strap,
even their own belt, so they could wear it take
it home. And you're right, they last a long time,
So thank you for bringing that up, because I totally
forgot all right, Bill anything.
Speaker 6 (19:50):
Yeah, I'm glad you're brought up the heat and cold
applications because people seem to have that just reverse. I
remember what. I used to go to the gym a lot,
and I hear all these everybody that goes to the
gym is an expert, you know, and it was just, uh, yeah,
it was wrong and they were wrong. They were wrong,
(20:13):
and which of course you're not going to correct them.
You're not going to change anything because they know more.
But understanding how to treat a particular kind of injury
can make all the difference on them. Where do you
heal up or not?
Speaker 2 (20:29):
Yeah, that's very true, and you're right. Uh, I hate gems.
The only thing I liked about the gym was the
pool and this and uh hot tub or not hot tub,
but uh the steam room. Yeah, the steam rooms. Some
had wet, some had dry. But that was a wonderful feeling.
(20:50):
And but and I worked out with machines because I
like that. Too many people do free weights, and free
weights are bad for your poor body. But I'm I'm
with Winston Churchill on that though. All that exercise he
used to say that. They asked him did he do exercise,
and he said, nope, none, not anytime ever. And he said,
(21:13):
I get enough exercise carrying all my friend's coffins that exercised,
and he was true. He went to a lot of
funerals and they all worked out and did all that.
And you know, you take a look at people today.
They don't understand. And like Bill said, they all at
the gym. Everybody knows everything, and you're not going to
(21:36):
convince them of anything, so it's better don't get in
those conversations. But they'll work out too hard and they're
destroying their own immune system, and then they can't figure
out what's wrong because I worked out and I did
all this, and they get pumped up and they start
looking in the mirror and seeing all that. We had
(21:56):
an instructor when I was in medical school that look
like Hulk Hogan for a little while, and then he
quit working and he stopped the workouts and he started
looking shrinky, upy and flabb and I felt bad for him,
but he'd quit all that. And too many times the
(22:17):
guys that you see bulking up too quick, and women
are doing steroids or even if it's a natural form
of the steroids, and it's just not good for you,
and I'm sorry. You know, there's better things to do
in life than hanging out at the gym, because you
think nobody's going to like the way you look if
(22:38):
you don't, and they get obsessed. And boy, so many
of them that I worked on did their own damage
at the gym. And I have a little home gym
kind of thing that I work out with maybe I
think just once a week just to kind of stay tone,
(23:00):
but it's a nice little home thing and it's all
where you're sitting. There's no free weights, and I don't
like anything with free weights, but I know how people feel.
You can hurt yourself and not realize that doing a job.
I can't remember how many times I've talked to Bill
and he played Tarzan working on the top of his
(23:21):
trailer and cut forty acres of grass, and then he
wondered why he was sore The next day. I said, damn, Bill,
you work tarder than a twenty five year old kid.
What do you expect? Do you remember those conversations? Bill? No, yeah, no, Yeah,
(23:45):
he's the only guy I know that works that hard.
You know, most most people don't mess with that stuff.
Like he gets up there and waxes top of the camper.
I guess that's what it is, waxing A lot of
hard work. I was tired when he told me about it.
Speaker 5 (24:05):
Sounds like my husband.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
Oh oh, oh funny, Hey, Susy, you'd be proud of me.
I actually cooked spaghetti and meatballs the other day.
Speaker 5 (24:19):
And meatballs. See I love meatballs, and my family doesn't.
They're like they want the ground meat just pounded into shreds.
Speaker 2 (24:28):
You know, that's funny. But see, I'm not much on pastas,
but I like spaghetti and meatballs. And I like to
put slices of jalapeno or some kind of hot yellow
peppers in there that are not too fiery, but just
enough to give it a little spice kick. I like that.
Speaker 5 (24:49):
Yeah, I like that, and I like the red pepper flakes.
But yeah, I was much. I wasn't much on pasta either,
until you know, I found the Ironcore pasta and yeah,
that's that's that's fabulous.
Speaker 2 (25:09):
And I'm going to try that thing. Bill. You were
talking about putting a little bit of chocolate and the chili.
Have you tried it yet? No, nope. And how much
do we put in?
Speaker 6 (25:21):
Not very much. I'm talking about maybe half a teaspoon.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
Oh okay, so I got on age. Yeah, just break off,
just break.
Speaker 6 (25:32):
Off of it, because you'll be able to tell the
difference in the taste. Another thing that really makes a
difference that cooking is and I know I've talked about
on your stew of bitters, which is what they use
in Manhattan's. But if you have a stew, a stew
or a soup and literally one drop one drop, not
(25:53):
too one drop, you can't taste it, But everything tastes better,
everything taste more intense. It's just.
Speaker 2 (26:04):
Wonderful. I think there's a lot of drinks they use bitters.
You know, in the old days, everybody drank bitterers before
a meal because it started getting the juices ready for digestion.
And now somehow it worked its way into drinks over
(26:25):
the years.
Speaker 6 (26:27):
But if you are one of Italian drinks is or
one of those kinds of pre apple or pre food
appetizer kind of things, is chizeno. It has bitters in it,
but it's a kind of calms your stomach and get
everything ready for what's coming along.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
And what was that called again.
Speaker 6 (26:45):
Gizon c I n's g A n O chiz.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
I don't remember that. I was in Naples. Maybe they
didn't do that in Naples. Of course I drank.
Speaker 6 (26:56):
They probably don't do a lot of things in Naples.
You never know about neopallops.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
Yeah, it's totally a different world there. Yeah, bitterers is
a big thing. I've got some bitters because I make
a martini every once in a while and it calls
for bitterers and I forget how many drops. It's not
very much like you said, and I usually you can't
tell us in there, but it's supposed to make everything better. Yeah,
(27:23):
So I do not know, Susie. Have you ever tried
bitters in anything?
Speaker 5 (27:31):
Yeah? I think I made the martini one time, and
I don't think that Dean Martin would have approved.
Speaker 6 (27:39):
I've never heard of anybody putting bitterers. It's a very
dark liquid, very dark brown. I've never heard of ever
using that as a clear drink. It's not like bitters. Oh,
what's the name of it. It's kind of like a
beer or an ale. Uh. It's called bitters, and it's
kind of one of those mildly permitted British strikes, which
(28:05):
I never had. But Guinness is stout is part of
that that family, I think. But they have a glass
of bitters. It like a glass of beer. Yeah, but
it's not the same.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
I remember the old days. Yeah, the old days they
did it. They would, they said that, And I think
I learned about this in one of the classes in
medical school for Christian that they would drink bitters in
the old days and kind of like you said, with
that stuff in Italy to get the system ready for
(28:41):
the meal. It was like what they had right for
the meal, and somehow we ended up with it now
where we've put it in Manhattan's and martinis and things
like that. So, Susie, did you like the martini?
Speaker 5 (28:56):
Well, no, not really. A restaurant in Austin that makes
some Mexican martini and I like that for some reason.
Speaker 2 (29:08):
Yeah, Bill, you have ruined her, she says no, And yes,
just like you do. She didn't used to be nice.
Speaker 6 (29:15):
Nice to get to my age and learn that I
could still corrupt a woman. Yeah, that's hilarious.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
That's funny. Bill. Do you have a favorite drink mixed
drink dope water?
Speaker 6 (29:30):
And I like a glass of milk that's about thirty
eight degrees.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
Yeah, I like. I like my beer and my milk
very cold.
Speaker 6 (29:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (29:40):
I keep glasses in the freezer just for that kind
of stuff.
Speaker 6 (29:44):
I tell you. When I was in England, though, I
got used to drinking beer that was warm, and I
really had gotten so I prefer that. Unless it's like
living in Southeast Texas, when you know there's a cool
days one hundred and ten, then a cold beer is good. Yeah,
you can't even drink it after you pour it all
over you.
Speaker 2 (30:04):
I was in England, I was in Portsmouth, London, and
I dated a girl from Bristol, and so that fish
and chips I loved. But warm beer ain't happening. I
did not like that, and they have a lot more pain.
Speaker 6 (30:26):
Yeah. I remember a limerick once it started about there
once was a girl of Bristol, but I can't remember
the rest of it.
Speaker 2 (30:35):
All right, guys, well we're at break time. This is
Doctor Cooper's Natural Health Hours. Susie Bill, our producer, Steve
and myself will be right back. Please listen to our sponsors.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
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eaten every day. Standard buckets are GMO free, contain no aspartame,
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You can be confident your new Mana meals will be
there for you and your family when you need them
during an emergency. New Manna dot com a nutritionally healthy
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one and prepare to be amazed. I remember waiting for
the school bus.
Speaker 7 (32:32):
Jenny Klayton was my first crush and neither one of
us had a.
Speaker 8 (32:38):
Clue, no shy and it was my first child, riveted,
rough and kind of beat up.
Speaker 7 (32:50):
But we see jompted a battle brand new.
Speaker 4 (32:57):
And now these days when on Jilt you small Time,
turn my stereo and brow my windows.
Speaker 3 (33:07):
Down because they remind me of the first.
Speaker 4 (33:11):
Day in those days and always miss some time Patty
on the radio.
Speaker 2 (33:20):
I'm going stabby.
Speaker 4 (33:21):
With nowhere to go, no money, tellus time to spam
it all.
Speaker 3 (33:28):
Chabby and a couple.
Speaker 4 (33:29):
Of friends you can all have. I wish that I
could gone back and turn.
Speaker 8 (33:37):
Up just as I do the kid and.
Speaker 7 (33:45):
I remember drinking from the same cop we break up
just to makea I remember body in Love with You
single Vince song, Tail Season any else?
Speaker 2 (34:22):
All right, we are back. Welcome back to Doctor Cooper's
Natural Health Hours. It is the twenty ninth of October,
and uh, if you're a baseball fan, the World Series
is on.
Speaker 1 (34:36):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (34:36):
The Blue Jays and the La Dodgers are tied to too.
We've got Bill, Suzzy, producer, Steve behind the curtain, and myself.
We're all here. And that song reminds me that I
do take requests. I just don't play them. Uh, but
it's nice to hear from you. Anyway. That was a
(35:00):
song by Susie, So I'm just teasing her, and I
think it was one of her first questions Kid Rock.
So we are back and we were talking about aches
and pains and a lot of times we've inflicted it
on ourselfs or we did too much. One of the
bad things I've noticed about me is I'll start doing
(35:22):
something and even if I'm tired or I'm wore out,
I just keep going. I want to get it done.
And then when I get it done, I can't move.
So I have to take care of that. And I've
learned to slow down a little bit and try to
do everything a little more paste and I make sure
(35:43):
that I have some organic gatorade to keep hydrated, especially
in the summertime in Houston, where you could stand outside
and feel like you're taking a shower at three in
the morning without moving. So anything else, Susie on aches
and pain and stuff like that.
Speaker 5 (36:03):
Are you saying that you do not like kid Rock?
Speaker 2 (36:06):
Oh, there's are things about Kid Rock. I like some
of his songs.
Speaker 5 (36:10):
Yeah, Well the old stuff's pretty bad, but but he's
grown up.
Speaker 2 (36:17):
Yeah, but you got to remember even some of that
stuff that you might say is bad or I might
not like, or Bill might not like, or producer stieve
there's somebody that liked or he wouldn't have been come
so damn famous. Yeah, well there's always somebody.
Speaker 5 (36:35):
Well it's interesting. He's a different man now.
Speaker 9 (36:38):
But you know, it's kind of like like having a
nephew that you always saw potential in and and and
he just.
Speaker 5 (36:48):
Kept rooting him on because you saw potential. And you
know what I like about him, And I know I'm
going off the rails here what I like about him
called like John Rich he told Nashville in the corporate uh,
you know, record makers that they could pound sand and
(37:08):
that they could be successful without them anyways, eggs and pains. Yeah, well,
I don't do weights. Sometimes I wonder if I if
I should. But you know, my thing is a swimming pool,
and I think it is the easiest on the body
(37:30):
at the same time getting results.
Speaker 2 (37:33):
Yeah, I agree. I tell everybody walking, bicycle, riding, swimming
and you can walk into pool like you do. That's
a great exercise. Uh, but all the a lot of
the other stuff is it is too hard on the
body and people will just wear theirselves out.
Speaker 6 (37:53):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (37:54):
I've seen so much damage from people going to the gym.
They they it became an addiction like a drug. And
if they don't go to the gym and push themselves
beyond belief, they feel like they did something wrong. And
so I'm glad I don't have that disease bill anything
(38:15):
to add.
Speaker 6 (38:18):
Yeah, I remember there are running into how many people
that said, you know, no pain, no gain, and they're
the ones that's got no joints left, right, What's that
a marijuana joke? Yeah, it was.
Speaker 2 (38:35):
Well, you know what always was sad for me is
how many people got talked into hip and knee and
different replacements. And it's because it's so easy. There's so
much money to be made. But oh my god, what
they go through and then usually ten to fifteen years
(38:56):
down the road, they tell you you're going to have
to redo it. I just can't understand that. There's so
many things we can do, and we can shift gears
and find out what your body needs, and there's things
that you can do in the way of a lot
of people should not jog, they do it anyway. Walking
(39:18):
is good, the swimming, all those kind of things. Bicycle riding.
There's a lot of good exercises people can do that
you don't destroy your body. And I do not agree.
Unless you've had a horrible bot of cancer and the
joint is ate up beyond repair, we can probably fix it.
(39:41):
We can probably make a big difference. So I don't
like to see hip replacements and need replacements. There's too
many things we can do. And a lot of times
when people come in your office, they have the IT
band which is on the outer side of your leg
and close runs between the knee and the hip area,
(40:06):
and a lot of times that IT band is pulled
spasm tight, causing the knee problem. And the reason it's
doing it is something in the low back locked up,
shifted turned, and so it's trying to protect you. Well,
if you go to the wrong guy and he doesn't
understand about joints and moving things and freeing stuff up
(40:28):
and getting it to heel, they're going to find a
way to cut and replace. And I don't like that
at all. So all right, it is that wonderful time
of night for some of these great great jokes. But
I had a political thing before we jump into that.
Bill Gates, who I should not say a whole lot,
(40:53):
because Mama said, if you can't say something nice, don't
say anything. Turned around just recently and is now telling
people that climate stuff is not the catastrophic things that
he was telling people before. That just came up this week.
(41:15):
Now he's telling people you ought to look into food
and other things, and you know, sustainable stuff, But he
said that climate stuff is not the catastrophic stuff that
I was saying. Also, car chases my cops. I seen
(41:35):
the other day where a cop got killed. I seen
where an innocent bystander got killed, and I seen where
the guy they were chasing got killed, all in one week.
And then there's a channel on Roku that is dedicated
to nothing but police chases all day long, twenty four
(41:58):
hours a day. And I'm thinking, in this modern era,
where you've got helicopters and you've got addresses and you've
ran plates, why are they putting everybody's lives at risk,
including their own chasing some guy. And there was one
(42:19):
the other day where it was just a traffic thing
and they ended up chasing him and probably he was scared,
maybe he had some other stuff, maybe he had drugs
in the car. Who knows, but he ran and that
puts him in danger. Somebody else could get killed that
he runs into. And we've had too many issues where
(42:44):
cops got killed or hurt or hurt somebody else. So
I'm thinking, why would you be chasing these people in
this modern era? You don't need to do that. There's
just no reason for it. Sissy, what you think.
Speaker 5 (42:59):
Oh great, there was something recently this week. I think
card chase ended up being an illegal up to speeds
of one hundred miles an hour. Just absurd.
Speaker 2 (43:20):
Yeah, bad news, bill.
Speaker 6 (43:21):
Way, you think, Yeah, we have mixed mixed feelings about
all that. I've uh, I kind of want to get
into this for for what I was going to talk
a little bit about, but so much of that that
stuff is cultural. People are a particular group of people
(43:43):
think that if if you're you got to run, no
matter what, you got to run, you will get away,
and it just makes the problem worse. On the other hand,
not very many people are going to say, oh, there's
a red light, I think I better pull over, and
it persists. It's a cultural anomally that that has been
(44:04):
an issue and has become worse in the last couple
of decades, But yeah, there's it doesn't seem to me
that there needs to be that kind of a dramatic chase.
I mean, police car's got radios.
Speaker 2 (44:19):
In them, blocked the road off a mile down.
Speaker 6 (44:23):
Some guys going on hunt. Yeah well yeah, but you know,
you just don't hop in a helicopter and take off,
and there's there's a lot of air traffic stuff that's
involved with that, and there's those mechanical problems with these things,
or mechanical warm up times of these things, and they
don't keep choppers running. They got to go in and
(44:44):
start them up, and it takes a few minutes to
do that, by which point the guy is where. So
you know, if you got a chopper in the air
and he's available and there's clear air traffic is clear,
that's one thing. But otherwise there's just too much, particularly
in large cities with major airports, there's just too many
(45:04):
aircraft around to be going doing that kind of stuff.
It's a great idea though, some time ago, that the
car people were the manufacturers were putting a device in
automobiles that enable the police to basically turn the engine off.
Oh yeah, yeah, Well, you know, there's pluses and minuses
(45:28):
for that. If some guys you know, got a hostage
in the car or is held up someplace and is
trying to take off and you can shut his car down,
it beats having a high speed chase.
Speaker 2 (45:39):
Yeah, I think they get an adrenal rush. And I've
seen so many bad videos that I think a lot
of these people are watching these videos on things like
YouTube and they're seeing like there was a thing just
the other day where the lady just got out of
(46:02):
the shower, she's naked, and they broke down her door
and it was the wrong house. So they've got her naked,
wouldn't even let her grab a towel, handcuffed and she's
trying to tell him you got the wrong house. We're
not anything to do with that kind of stuff. And
they're tearing her house apart, running all over the place.
(46:25):
So people are afraid. And I know a lot of
cops and there's a lot of good guys that I know,
and I've met some bad ones, and people are scared
to death they see these videos. Guy gets pulled over
because his taillight was out and the cop didn't like
the way he was talking. I saw one recently where
(46:45):
the cop did not know that the rookie riding with
him was undercover because they had complaints about this cop.
And he's telling the rookie, you just write down what
I tell you, because how here there's not any rules.
It's what I say. So people are afraid, and I
think that's why they run too. But chasing them in
(47:08):
this modern era with all the traffic, just gets somebody killed.
And there's got to be a better way to do it.
And they got they got the radios that usually they've
already got the tags. Somebody saw that car. You can
block the road, do something, but don't know.
Speaker 5 (47:27):
I'm itching to say this. Me and Bill could have
a good, healthy debate. I think over the automatic you know,
shutting off cars. You know what if someone's abducted? You know,
how about carrying a handgun with you? I just I
(47:48):
was raised up, and then I raised myself up even
more for personal responsibility. Uh, if those cops, and this
might be too much information, but if I'm here alone
and I'm taking a shower, guess where my handgun is,
like little table right outside my show shower. I can
(48:11):
grab it really quick and yeah, not in the shower.
I will shoot you dead naked with soap in my
hair if I don't know who you are, and and
then I'll dry my hair. I'm not even put on
some makeup, and then I'll call nine one one and
(48:34):
and say, yeah, bring it back. But but no, I
don't like the setting off of the car thing. I see.
It's not a good option.
Speaker 6 (48:50):
If we could put those devices in the cars of
bad guys, it'd be a lot simpler.
Speaker 5 (48:55):
Yeah, of course, But it's like the Patriot Act. You know,
it's to keep you safe, to keep you safe, to
keep you safe, and I'm like, I keep myself safe.
Speaker 6 (49:05):
Yeah, well, you know, you used a word that I
wanted to get into any way a little bit. But
it's and that's taking responsibility for yourself because we we
because of particular politics, all responsibility is off. We don't
have to take responsibility for anything we do because something
(49:28):
is always somebody else's fault and we're all victims, so
whatever we do is okay. We've got to learn to
take responsibility for ourselves, right.
Speaker 5 (49:37):
And to my point about carjacking, you know, unless you're
walking to your car, and I would be wearing a gun,
so good luck with that. And I'm a better shot
than most men. Now, I have not been in a
crisis situation full blown. I was in a minor one
(50:02):
at a gas station in Houston, of course, and some
man just kept walking towards me. It was interesting because
I was concealed cary and you know, women, Oh my gosh,
my dad used to complain about this. You open the door,
or you get back in your car from the convenience
(50:23):
store grocery store, and you leave your door open while
you fiddle, you know, with your keys and your purse
and this and that and check your hair, and your
door's open. I mean, hello. So when when I get
out of my vehicle to pump gas, I lock it
(50:43):
as soon as I get in. I lock it before
it does off locks. You know, you have to get
up to I don't know what, ten miles an hour
before I hear the locks click. So I mean, I'm
not I don't live in Daily Fair, but I live
(51:07):
in I don't want to shoot someone, I really really don't.
So if I do these certain things and it's habit now,
the likelihood of me having to send someone to their
maker is much more slim.
Speaker 2 (51:27):
Good stuff.
Speaker 6 (51:30):
I still think you. I think, yeah, I've told people
for the first thing that you do when you get
in a car, the first thing you.
Speaker 2 (51:37):
Do is lock the door, right.
Speaker 6 (51:40):
And leave it locked, like you said, leave it locked
at they get Yeah, And the only thing I take
out of the car is the car that I use
to splod in the in the gas pump to pay
for I don't take my wallet with me out of
the car, but I lock it as soon as I
get out the door.
Speaker 5 (51:54):
Well, and that's a and that's problematic too, and we
can go down so many rabbit holes. I don't remember
three years between three and four years ago, I bought
gas in Kervell, used my card and then I'm getting
online to check uh, you know, bank account and and
(52:16):
there's like twenty five hundred dollars and five or six
transactions to Happy Cellular. I got Patriot Mobile. I don't
had no Happy Cellular. And so I showed Huntley and
I was like, oh great, how did this happen? So
(52:37):
we immediately called the bank. They shut down the car.
Then then we you know, start the investigation. And then
they're they're dragging their their heels and they don't want
to reverse these fraudulent charges. And then I mean they
ultimately did after they made the mistake of saying to us,
(52:58):
do you really want the bank to have to eat this?
Yes we do, Yes we do. And so the very
next day we went and opened up another bank account.
And here's the absurd part about it. We opened that
account in Dallas in eighty six, and so, of course
(53:23):
the bank sold and changed hands over all the years,
but we never officially changed bank accounts. We just had
it for that long. And so we opened up another
bank account. And what we found out was when they
finally decided to investigate, they could tell, they literally could
(53:47):
tell what gas station there was a skimmer in. So
now I take my card if it's a manned place,
HGB has the little cubicle thing, and I'll take my
card and I'll say I'm gonna fill up on number one,
and she just takes the card and does a preapproval.
(54:09):
But I do not. I hope no one else puts,
especially debit cards into gas pops.
Speaker 2 (54:17):
Yep, bad things, all right, well, good stuff. I still
think when it comes to the police chasers and all
that stuff, we need to get back to protect and
serve and peace officers, and that'll solve a lot of
it all right. A couple of jokes. A wife. A
wife went in and hit her husband husband over the
(54:38):
head with the skillet, and he said, what was that for?
And she said, I just found a piece of paper
in your laundry with the name of Jenny on it.
And he said, oh, that was a horse I bet on.
And the next day he's in the living room and
she comes in and wax him again with one of
(54:59):
them Ryan vans, and he said, what was that for?
And she said, your harsh just text you so that
he ain't get away with that no more, all right.
Once upon a time a guy asked the girl to
marry him. She said no, and he lived happily ever after.
(55:26):
I like that. I like that all right. The guy
got fired from his job because he was asking each
customer which do you want smoking or non smoking? And
he said, apparently the politically correct is do you want
cremation or burial? That was good. I don't care who
(55:50):
you are, all right.
Speaker 5 (55:54):
Do you see do you see the place? Matt right now?
That much? She's okay, yeah.
Speaker 2 (56:00):
It looks good.
Speaker 5 (56:02):
I didn't do that.
Speaker 2 (56:05):
Well, I don't know what you guys, I don't know
who does what, But I can. I like watching them change.
And between the two of you you've become some evil,
mad people. So that's pretty good. All right, Oh we
got here right.
Speaker 3 (56:19):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (56:20):
Bank robber goes in and he's just finished robbing the
bank and he's getting ready to leave. They're getting ready
to make their escape, and he asked a guy, did
you see my face? And the guy said yeah, and
he's shot him. Then he goes over to this other
guy and he said, did you see my face? And
(56:41):
he said, no, sir, but I think my wife did.
Speaker 6 (56:45):
Oh no, where do you Where do you get these.
Speaker 2 (56:50):
Dark web They just come to me? They just all right.
So lady goes to the doctor and she's telling the doctor,
my husband talks all night long in his sleep. What
can I do? And the doctor said, you might let
(57:10):
him talk during the daytime. That was That was so good.
You gotta love that. You gotta love that. All right.
That covers them pretty much. My My favorite was the
skillet where your your heartsh just text you. That didn't
work out well for him. All right, Well, we're just
(57:33):
about at break time, going back to Oh I got it,
I got one more. Uh. The guy's at a funeral
at the church, and he asked the priest what's the
WiFi password? And the priest looks at him and he said,
(57:54):
have some respect for the dead. And the guy said,
is that small letters are capital? That was great. I
thought that was great. But anyway, going back to the
police stuff, I think we need to quit police chases.
(58:16):
Bad guys most of the time get caught somewhere, and
nowadays there's enough technology to catch them. And there's too
many videos where mistakes were made and people see this
and they're scared, and it's really sad because I remember
growing up as a kid, we knew the deputy sheriff
(58:39):
to patrol the neighborhood. He was friendly and nobody ever
had any fear growing up like that. It was just
a normal. He was just another one of the people
that worked in the county, and my mom worked at
the courthouse, so what I had a whole different kind
of thing there. But nowadays it is scary. I don't
(59:01):
care who you are. If you look up in your
rearview mirror and you see a cop, unless he's a relative,
people just scared. They have a little Booker factor. I
remember the deputy here in the neighborhood. Remember I told you, guys.
I stopped and talked to him one day about the
dogs attacking us, and I asked him, I said, are
(59:24):
you know are you one of them guys that considers
yourself a peace officer, protect and serve? And before I
could even say law enforcement, he said, peace officer, protect
and serve. He said, I'm old school. And I love that.
I mean, because somehow we got into this thing about
(59:47):
law enforcement and everybody says it, and I just think
it's wrong. I don't want guys enforcing laws. I want
them public servants, peace officers, protect and serve, And we
have so much better world if that's the way it worked.
All right, Well, we are at break time. This is
doctor Cooper's Natural Health Hours. It is October twenty ninth
(01:00:11):
Susy Bill, producer Steve and myself will be right back.
Please listen to our sponsors.
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Design eight three zero three seven seven two one three one.
And she likes her t plane. By the way, what
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great pride in meeting it or going lower, not above.
The quality is so great you'll have to see their
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Speaker 4 (01:02:27):
Woman, she don't be me she bed, I've had a
comment to me, but I wanted in that way.
Speaker 2 (01:02:41):
I think that any of its should do it, so I.
Speaker 3 (01:02:46):
Don't undernet.
Speaker 4 (01:02:50):
That they would be bun house and said nothing yet.
Speaker 3 (01:02:56):
Baby, just it's nothing yet.
Speaker 2 (01:03:00):
There's something that's you're never get from a baby.
Speaker 3 (01:03:04):
You just think yet that's what can you at?
Speaker 6 (01:03:08):
It around?
Speaker 4 (01:03:24):
And now I'm man and.
Speaker 2 (01:03:28):
Gods I found down the shore.
Speaker 5 (01:03:32):
She's coming.
Speaker 4 (01:03:32):
We do it doctor and he put me up of you.
Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
They said that ending up is good enough. So I
think what I could get, there's what I could get
in and s could be remembered. But that it's it.
You may say nothing again from.
Speaker 8 (01:03:54):
A baby, there's something, there's something you forget.
Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
You know, you know, you know, you're just nothing yet.
All right, we are back, Welcome back to everybody did
Doctor Grouper's Natural Health Hours bill. It is too bad
you can't see the placemat at the moment because Mushy
(01:04:26):
outdid himself. It is so cool looking. It's got a
wheel and it says bad joke. I've never heard that
on our show. And Mushy song and stop me blair
Pad song. It's just it's just downright ridiculous. I just
can't imagine anyway. We are back and it is that
(01:04:49):
time for Bill to jump into the weekly topic. So
Bill take it away.
Speaker 6 (01:04:56):
Yeah, Okay, I was, And that's something I've been been
kind of mulling around for several weeks, but it kind
of got pulled into focus this week. I don't know
if you guys have ever heard of a college called
Hillsdale College. It's up in Wisconsin's a very conservative school
and they put out a monthly publication that is usually
(01:05:20):
a synopsis of a speech that was given on campus,
and this one it kind of caught my eye because
I thought it was right on its kind of what
we were talking about a little bit before before we
went on on the air. But it was really a
(01:05:45):
cultural issue that's kind of come up to the front.
And this particular speech, which was given in September of
this year by a woman whose name is Miranda Divine
and he writes for a couple of national newspapers as
well as in uh in Australia as well, where she lived.
(01:06:09):
But this particular speech is called Wawlessness is a choice.
Lawlessness is a choice. And it started off by I'm
not sure if it was a paraphrase or a quote,
but a representative from the federal from from from the
(01:06:35):
House of Representatives, the federal government, a woman from Texas
and I'm thinking Southeast. I don't know where this woman's
district is, but her name is Jasmine Crockett said, just
because someone commits a crime, it doesn't make them be
(01:06:56):
a criminal.
Speaker 2 (01:06:58):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:07:00):
It's kind of an interesting idea because if you look
up criminal in the dictionary, it says a criminal is
someone who commits a crime. What this brought to mind
was this governmental liberal push to decriminalize everything. And you
(01:07:21):
look at the bozo who's running for mayor in New
York who wants to make absolutely nothing be a crime
because you know, the only reason people do this is
because they need it. You know, they need whatever they steal.
But to the whole, the whole concept of not understanding
(01:07:45):
what the fundamental one of one of the several fundamentals
of civilization is is a sense of stability, a sense
of law and order, and a sense of everybody agreeing
that there are certain behaviors that are not acceptable and
(01:08:08):
that there should be a reciprocity for that. There's the
difficulty with that is that in most of it. You
look back at most of the major civilizations in the
world where it was European or even as Tecan or
the Incas, or the Romans, or the Greeks, or the
(01:08:32):
Egyptians or the Mesopotamians, that the whole concept of what
constitutes a civilization is pretty much determined by the majority
of people. There is always a group of people in
any one of those our civilization included. And I make
(01:08:54):
a difference between American civilization and European civilization, although they're
both Western civilisations. There's always a group of people who
know they don't do that, they think that they don't
need to do that. This is this is kind of
what the focus of this saying thing. Well, you know,
(01:09:15):
if just because you commit a crime doesn't mean you're
a criminal. Yeah, it does basically. And it is the
problem that I have with the title of the speech.
If lawlessness is a choice, I think for people who
(01:09:37):
maintain that semblance of civilization, lawlessness is a choice. But
for people who live within that cultural structure, who do
not conform to the strictures of that particular civilization, it's
(01:09:58):
not a man If it is a true choice, it's
what I call a default choice. It's like, you know,
if you decide not to make a choice about something,
you've made a choice, but you've decided that you're not
going to make a choice here, I'm not going to
do this. And so certain behaviors in certain groups of
these people. And we find this more in inner cities
(01:10:20):
than we do any place in large metropolitan areas, and
inner cities particular then we do in other parts of
our culture. It's because the whole concept of theft or
violence or hatred are not seen as aberrations from that
(01:10:42):
particular microculture, of that particular way of looking at things.
So to say that they make a choice to be lawless,
I don't think that's right. I think they're just adhering
to their own set of rules, which is in conflict
with the larger cultural matters that you describe our civilization.
And you look at the civilizations of Rome, or Egypt,
(01:11:04):
or Mesterta, even even the as Texts, even even the Mayans,
those civilizations ultimately dissolved and disintegrated because of either invasion
by a more primitive society or from more more primitive
societies already within that culture. And we're looking at I
(01:11:28):
think a lot of what we're seeing today in terms
of violence in UH in the cities is essentially an
extension of a tribal culture. I think there are ethnic
groups tend to tend to live together, tend to hang
out together. They have their own sub rules that are
(01:11:49):
maybe occasionally in accord with the larger cultural values, but
maybe maybe not so much. And so I'm thinking that
that while the lawlessness is something that occur, I don't
I don't think I have ever met anybody who, at
some point or other has not broken a law. Either
(01:12:12):
run a red light, or you go too fast, or
you inadvertently walk out of a store with something that
you've forgotten to pay for. We do a lot of
that kind of stuff. But that's not really to be
a kind of uh concerted effort to be lawless. It
(01:12:34):
just kind of happens that we're still bringing the law.
And if we if we go too fast, we get
pulled over, we we're going to get fined. There, We're
going to get a ticket, and we're going to pay
the fine, and we accept that responsibility. And I think
this is another aspect. And I think to the larger point,
what the what mster I was talking about in her
(01:12:55):
speech was the government politicians not so much, but politicians
in order to get reelected and become softer and softer
on crime. They've put judges in place that let people
out of jail that don't they don't prosecute them. We've
got prosecutors that go after folks that they really shouldn't
(01:13:17):
be wasting their time on. The whole system has kind
of bogged down in a sense that nobody can do
anything wrong because there really isn't any wrong. Everything's fine
no matter what you do, you've got a reason for it,
and society is to blame for it the whole, the
(01:13:39):
whole aspect of And I think we're taught this early
on in school.
Speaker 5 (01:13:43):
You know.
Speaker 6 (01:13:45):
You as a kid, I has grown up. If I
if I'm going to do something stupid, I know there's
going to be a consequence for it, and I'm going
to have to accept the consequence or I don't do
this stupid thing. I don't think that works anymore. And
I and I think that the part of the difficulty
that we're experiencing is a culture is and we're seeing
(01:14:05):
it basically in a top down situation. It's starting when
our politicians are government officials who, in an effort to
get re elected all the time are being software on this,
and software on that, and more tooler than this. There's
no moral compass. There's no moral compass. I was thinking today, you'd,
(01:14:28):
being an old former Navy guy, you know how many
cardinal points there are on a compass card. So is
there right or wrong?
Speaker 2 (01:14:39):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (01:14:39):
Our culture determines pretty much right, what's right, or what's wrong.
And that's what laws are all about. One of my
favorite authors has remarked several times in his books that
laws are meant to give us freedom. It gives us
(01:15:02):
freedom from fear. And you said, you talked a moment
ago about how we're afraid.
Speaker 2 (01:15:06):
We all are.
Speaker 6 (01:15:07):
Yeah. I think a lot of people are afraid. And
I think that they're afraid of the stuff they see
on TV, because that's all pretty much slanted anyway. We
don't hear about successful thwartings of robberies, or we don't
hear about bad guys being apprehended right away on the
(01:15:32):
commission of a crime. We hear about all the bad
stuff that happens. And I think if we look at
at how the reporting of these incidents is done, we
begin to see a pattern that supports the whole thing
that the bad guys are the victims. You know, bigod
guys aren't the victims or the purpse. It's not a
(01:15:55):
tough concept. And how do we within our own our
own sense of self, how do we how do we
begin to find a sense of balance with working our
way through all this stuff? You know, our politicians are corrupt.
How many times has a bill been put forth in
(01:16:18):
a federal Congress to eliminate insider trading? Half a dozen
dozen and it gets voted down every time. I just
read the other day on the internet that right before
the major investigation of a large corporation, Nancy Pelosi sold
a huge amount of stock to about an eight plus
(01:16:42):
profit and that investigation hit the news. The stock would
a tank that's called insider trading. Congress won't do that.
So if there are very role models in the government
(01:17:02):
have no sense of moral compass, no sense of honor
or decency. That's one of the things I really began
to notice this first with Bill Clinton's presidency, and actually
it went back farther to John Kennedy, but go go
back that far back. But here is a man who
was the president of our country, who's supposed to be
(01:17:25):
an optimal role model for everything that's good and decent
and right, and our country comes first, and you know,
there's honor, and there's there's trust, and yeah, here he
is with Monica Lewinsky in closets in the White House.
I what the hell is that all about? And people
(01:17:45):
wonder why we don't have any trust in government. You
look at how many people go into government, get elected
to government offices that are broke. You know, in a
couple of years they're millionaires. We don't hear much about
that in the press. Used to be we would back
when they had newspapers, they had real reporters. But the
(01:18:08):
lack of moral a moral fiber has been a long
process at the generation. They've been going on for fifty
sixty years. I think really after now, maybe after the
Korean War, but certainly after the Second World War, things
began to be different and essentially has progressed. Back back
(01:18:34):
to her point about lawlessness is a choice. No being
following the law is a choice. Lawlessness is just let's
take what we can get in the hell and everybody else.
And I think if the people are afraid I'm much
(01:18:54):
more afraid of of being like Sudan said something at
the gas station, or having a home invasion or something
about that, than I am being hassled by a cop.
Yes there. In fact, the other day I was I
(01:19:16):
was coming back to the house here and I happened
to look in my mirror, and Doc's favorite scenario was
all I could see was red and blue light slashing
and all right, and he was right on my tail.
So I pull over and a guy comes up, and
I don't know how long he'd been back there. He
could have been back there a couple of blocks, I
don't know, but anyway, he kind of walked up on
(01:19:38):
the past your side, the nicest guy. He said, first
of all, I want to tell you you're not in trouble.
I said, okay. First of all, why'd you pull me over?
And he said, well, okay. He said, you've got a
plastic license plate cover on your rear license and it
doesn't look like you have any license plate at all,
which is what I saw when you went by. Was
(01:19:59):
here's a with no license plate, and I will pull
you over and tell you to get a license. And
I saw you had it, and it's because of this
particular kind of cover and just get rid of the
plastic cover, and that's good, but he says, somebody's going
to really hammer you hard if you if you keep
driving with that, have a nice day. Okay, got rid
(01:20:21):
of the plastic cover, no problem. I had no idea.
The guy at the autopart store said, no, this is
a good cover because there are plastic covers that can
seal the license plate from the cameras on the toll roads,
and apparently this was one of them. But the guy
at the car parks store told me it wasn't. How
am I supposed to know? So how do we how
(01:20:44):
do we maintain a sense of a balance with all
of this kind of stuff? It's very hard. I've talked
all off about this for weeks, that trying to maintain
a sense of balance when things are so screw it up.
And now I'm starting to get all the junk and
the mail about vote for me, vote for this, vote
(01:21:05):
for that, is coming to the election time, and all
the bs is starting. Yeah whatever, you know, I just
don't believe any of it. These guys are in it
for whatever they can get out of it, and I
don't like to be that cynical about these kinds of things.
I like to be cynical about other things, but not
about these kinds of things. I think the government should
(01:21:27):
be here for government by and for the people, not
just a few. But lawlessness. Lawlessness is not, as I said,
it's a default choice. It's a choice that you made
by making, not by not making a decision to obey
(01:21:48):
what our culture stands for and what our society expects
of us. I think we make the mistake of figuring
that everybody, everybody has the same values as we do.
Everybody in this country has the same values. No, they
don't for some values. For some people, their values of
domestic violence or assault or robbery, or that's not a problem.
(01:22:13):
That's not a problem. But it is. And when their
values that are so antagonistic to what I think most
of us grew up believing in this country was all
about when those values become so intrusive. We watch the
news in the morning, nothing but bad news, nothing but
(01:22:39):
bad news. As well as this Randolph first said, good
news don't sell newspapers. But I think just the incessant
exposure to bad news, to evil, to the wrong things
that are going on in this country. Where's this out.
Speaker 5 (01:23:01):
There?
Speaker 2 (01:23:01):
You go, well, I don't know how you thought about it,
because you said that he was nice to you when
he talked to you. But I'm sitting here thinking what
part of protecting, serve, public service and peacekeeping? Did pulling
you over to enforce the law that he couldn't read
(01:23:25):
the plate? And you know, it's just why is.
Speaker 6 (01:23:29):
It a law if we're not going to enforce the law? Doc,
why haven't Well?
Speaker 2 (01:23:33):
Right, but when you're out there, it should be protect
and serve, public servant and keeping the peace. How did
pulling you over for the wrong plate qualify for any
of that? And that's how I grew up. That's that's
what it was.
Speaker 6 (01:23:54):
A protect he's serving the culture, he's serving the law.
In fact, if you ask almost any cop out there
if they believe in protecting terms, they tell you yes.
But it's a different value than when you and I
grew up. I mean, you're talking fifty years ago. Things
have changed a lot. Bad guys are really bad guys.
(01:24:16):
If you pull a couple of of car over at
night and there are five guys in there, did they
have guns? Probably everybody's a bad guy down on the
ground now. But again you don't ask them, oh, because
you please get on the ground. I need to ask
you a couple of questions about why you're out late
(01:24:36):
at night driving around with five guys in the car. No,
everybody's a bad guy until you find out who's who.
Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
But see, uh, what if you're out and your family
just got in from the airport on a very red
eye flight, just because you got the family in the
back of the car, they should assume you're bad until
proven different.
Speaker 6 (01:24:59):
What were you doing. Were you driving eighty five miles
an hour in a thirty five mile an hour zone.
Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
Yeah, well that's that's different. Then then you're doing something
that could hurt somebody. But my whole point is, too
many times we're enforcing laws that are silly little things.
I watch people get a ticket for having their windows
tinted too dark. But every cup, but every cop car
(01:25:29):
has got their windows tended as dark as possible.
Speaker 6 (01:25:33):
Is there, but they were within the legal limit. And
you can get your tent windows tended that are almost
impossible to see out of as well as to see into.
And if you pull a car over like that at
night and you don't know how many folks are in
that car or who's in there. Yeah, that's not a
good thing. Yeah, well, I never got your vision is
so inhibited. Your your vision is so Have you ever
(01:25:55):
driven in a car with those kinds of titted windows
that are almost black, can't see out of them? You
think that's not a danger to the rest of us? Well, yeah,
but how do I know?
Speaker 2 (01:26:06):
There was a guy just recently dressed up as a cop,
fake cup car, pulled up, knocked on the door, and
killed a whole bunch of people. How do I know
what the dark tinted windows if it's really a cop.
Speaker 6 (01:26:26):
You don't have a bunch of guns. How do you?
Speaker 1 (01:26:28):
How do you?
Speaker 6 (01:26:28):
Nobody knows? Yeah, yeah, I don't know, I cos I
just cocise to that.
Speaker 2 (01:26:38):
Yeah, well, I understand what you're saying. I just I
guess I don't like worrying about enforcing laws. A good
friend I used to work as the supervisor over the
school security for one of the largest schools in the city,
(01:27:01):
and then later on they got their own police force,
and he was still in charge of all that, and
he said their main jobs were to protect the schools
and if there was an alarm, to go check that out.
And he said too many times we would call them
(01:27:23):
and they were doing a traffic stop and said, I
can't go get that, I can't go do that. Well,
he eould remind them that their job is not traffic stop.
But that's what they liked. There was a certain power
to that. I told you, not too far from where
I live, there was a school and I saw all
(01:27:47):
the cop cars sitting out there and I'm driving down
the road and they pulled me over about the school
zone and it wasn't even the right time yet, And
when it happened, they didn't even say I'm sorry, sir. Uh,
they just walked away. So we've got a we've got
(01:28:08):
a problem with the mentality that. Yeah, I'm sure they
deal with a lot of bad guys, but people are
scared because too many things happen to good people, like
that naked lady in handcuffs, me getting pulled over for
no reason at all because it wasn't time yet. You
(01:28:30):
and a silly plastic license plate is worth pulling you
over for, I'd see. I don't agree with that. I
think we need to be doing more things to make
neighborhoods good again. And and let everybody know you're you're
if you've got you patrol the neighborhood who you are
and get to know that.
Speaker 6 (01:28:49):
I think that's I think if that could happen, that
would be great. I don't think it'll ever happen.
Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
Yeah, you're probably right, So is he anything?
Speaker 5 (01:29:00):
My hand's only about to explode or you know, your
house getting raided based upon a h a swatting call,
which is where someone wants to to cause you harm,
so they call nine one one, supposedly anonymously, you know,
(01:29:22):
and h then the police come and invade your home.
So you know, am am I a back to blue person.
Absolutely not.
Speaker 2 (01:29:35):
I don't.
Speaker 5 (01:29:35):
I don't back an entire industry or community or everything's
on an individual basis. And I might as well go
ahead and say the controversial thing though I haven't said
in a long time, Dad gumm it, I don't believe
in city police. Uh, they are not bound by the
(01:30:00):
constitution and that they should not exist. County sheriffs is
all that a community should have, whether you're in the
city limits or not. And to prove my point, your
(01:30:24):
county sheriff is elected by the people, Your police department
is hired by your mayor, and your city council. So
they are not a.
Speaker 6 (01:30:36):
Count political political so that's why.
Speaker 5 (01:30:39):
They act the way that they do. Usually I get
looked at like I have a third eye in the
middle of my head when I say that. But what
I do is I look at the person who doesn't
understand my point, like they have a third eye in
the middle of their brainwashed head. And so so, yeah,
(01:31:02):
there should be absolutely no such thing as city police.
And that doesn't mean if you like in Gillespie County.
I haven't looked in a while, I don't know how
many deputy sheriffs there are. So what you do is,
if let's say there's a dozen, there's probably more, okay,
(01:31:26):
And let's say we got rid of the city police
in Fredericksburg, please God, So you would have to hire
more deputy sheriffs, and the city would be assessed, I'm
(01:31:48):
just I'm thinking out loud, would be assessed their portion
of what it would cost to have you know, sheriffs,
you know, in the city within the city limits. And
I watched lastly, I watched the video. I think we're
past break, but I watched a video about a year
(01:32:09):
or so ago that absolutely blew my mind. And there's
this guy that's teaching city police, their police chief, uh,
their their you know, their beat cops, their squad car cops, whatever,
(01:32:30):
the most radical information. They are the enemy. Remember, the
people are the enemy. All that matters is that you
come home okay, and here's the tactics that you need
to use to brutalize the people that you encounter. And
(01:32:51):
then I went and I did dougs further to see
what municipalities were hiring this man and his little crew
to teach police departments. And when we had the opportunity
to get rid of Buddy Mills here, I literally talked
(01:33:12):
to the candidate that ultimately won and I say, Chris,
I want you to watch this video, all of it,
and then get back in touch with me and tell
me if you're going to allow any of this evil,
demonic brown shirt stuff to take place within our sheriff's department.
(01:33:39):
And he literally did. He watched it. He was floored.
He never heard of this guy. But there are people
out there making a living teaching cops how to brutalize citizens.
Speaker 2 (01:33:51):
Yep, yep, and we are past bread that. I wanted
to say one thing, Sheriff Mac who we've had on
the show before, and he used to be a sheriff,
and he used to be his local copy did all
that stuff. He said, one of the things that made
him quit, the local police stuff is because all they
(01:34:15):
wanted him to do was ruin people's lives by pulling
them over and writing tickets so they could get more funding.
And he said, too many times he pulled over people
and it just it was terrible, and he just felt
so bad, so he finally quit. But my thing is
today you've got too many cops that have probably dealt
(01:34:39):
with a lot of bad people, a lot of illegal immigrants,
and so they're thinking the worst on everybody they pull
over before they even talk to him. And you've got
an awful lot of people who are scared to death
and they've seen all the videos and all that stuff,
(01:35:00):
and it's really bad. And that's why I think we
need to get away from this mentality of law enforcement
and go back to peacekeepers and public servants and protect
and serve. I think that would make things a lot better. Anyway.
It is Doctor Cooper's Natural Health Hours, October twenty ninth
(01:35:21):
Susie Bill, producer Steve and myself will be right back.
Please listen.
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Send bum down hother.
Speaker 5 (01:37:03):
You know.
Speaker 3 (01:37:06):
Mother, you know saying should be her name? Mother? Know
to me they are about the same. Mother. Know every
time I'm open my mouth steps it out up, put
(01:37:28):
me out. Of course, she's too so long hothering know.
Speaker 2 (01:37:39):
Mother, you know, all right, we are back. What a
what a great thing, mother in law. I love it,
I love it. I got a million of them. All right. Well,
(01:38:01):
there is that time of the night where Tequila Susi
needs a little help with the name and of her company,
and then she's gonna take us down recipe road.
Speaker 3 (01:38:10):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:38:11):
The name of the company is Rocks and Dirt Construction, Susie.
Speaker 5 (01:38:19):
Clothes. It has something to do with houses too, renovation
and design custom homes. If you can go to dot
creeper dot com, go to be a bat page, scroll
down about three quarters there's a link that will take
you to our website. We do remodel and we do
(01:38:40):
new construction, and we can also be reached at eight
three zero one.
Speaker 2 (01:38:49):
All right, take it away, Susi.
Speaker 5 (01:38:52):
Okay, oh no, Probably American listeners will remember this recipe.
It's pretty big, you know, in the late eighties and
the nineties, and that was sausage balls. However, I think
maybe this was an invention, if you will, bis Quick,
(01:39:14):
so they could sell more bis Quick. And I do
have a recipe where you can make your own Bisquick
instead of you know, the poison stuff. But that's for
another another show. So this is iincorn sausage balls. And
my kids used to love this stuff. I would literally
(01:39:37):
put it together at night and put it on in
the morning and it worked out fine that way. So
you could do that, you know, like for Christmas morning,
and mix it up ahead of night. So you need
(01:39:58):
one pound. This says mild breakfast style sausage. Well, I
don't know why it's got to be mild. Do you
pick spicy mild? Eight bounces of cream cheese, a cup
of shredded cheddar cheese, and two cups of all purpose
iron corn flour and preheat your oven to three point
(01:40:22):
fifty and then just put parchment paper on a baking sheet.
And I find the easiest way to do this is
in a stand mixer. When you put the paddle attachment on,
it just helps break all that up. You might want
to crumble your sausage in there by hand, because that
(01:40:43):
can be you know, a little hard to break apart.
And then your softened cream cheese and then your cheddar
cheese and your iron corn flour. Do this on a
medium speed until it's all mixed, all combined well, and
(01:41:06):
then using like a medium sized cookie, scoop or spoon
or whatever you know, make yourself, you know, some little
balls and play something about two inches apart. They don't
really spread or rise that much, and then bake them
(01:41:28):
for twenty five minutes. And I mean this could be,
you know, for a football game, and I don't know,
I don't guess anyone's gonna care about basketball, uh wink wink,
they probably will. And or just you know, a yummy treat,
(01:41:51):
a healthy treat if you will, especially with the iron
corn flour for your kids, for yourself, and they all
so well if you put them in an air airtight container,
and I cannot imagine having any leftover. Let's see how
(01:42:13):
many of this recipe makes. It doesn't tell you. It
says twenty. And so, like always, I will put this
in the chat and the comments section at our rumble
by the way, that is doctor d R. Krupa's Natural
(01:42:35):
Health hours at Rumble. And we're kind of stuck on followers,
so if y'all want to head over there and give
us a follow, it's free, and it helps, you know,
get our fabulous show out to more people. And that's
it pretty simple.
Speaker 2 (01:42:54):
Sounds good. Kind of reminded me. Of those Scotch eggs
used to get it runners out. It was all sausage,
and I think they had an egg in a aried center.
Speaker 5 (01:43:07):
Yeah, a hard boiled egg generally in the center of
the sausage on the outside. There's a place here in
Fredericksburg that sells them. I think it's called the Brewery.
I had them there once. I tried to make them
at home and no one really liked them. But the
sausage balls, yeah, these are very you know, I cannot
(01:43:33):
believe these words are coming out of my mouth, but
the sausage ball recipes, especially the bis Quick one is vintage.
Speaker 9 (01:43:44):
Yikes.
Speaker 2 (01:43:46):
Well they sound good makes me hungry just thinking about them.
Speaker 5 (01:43:50):
They are, and they're super easy. And I've even, like
you talked about on your meatballs, minced up jalapeno really
fine and mixed it in there. And uh yeah, those
that are old enough listening probably remember sausage balls. I mean,
(01:44:10):
whose mama didn't whip out, you know, a box abyss
Quick and sausage and Chadary cheese and what the sausage does.
And yes it's raw, that's why you're cooking it for
twenty five minutes. It kind of holds everything together.
Speaker 2 (01:44:28):
Sounds good, Bill, anything, No.
Speaker 6 (01:44:33):
It does shelp. It does sound good. It's just yeah,
I haven't heard of those for Oh, I don't want
to use your word vintage, but it's been decades.
Speaker 2 (01:44:45):
Well, you gotta remember she's she's a little self conscious.
She just had a birthday. And then I played that
wonderful song for.
Speaker 5 (01:44:54):
Yeah, it sucks game old.
Speaker 2 (01:44:58):
I love that song. It starts off what a drag
it is getting old?
Speaker 5 (01:45:02):
I heard of drag.
Speaker 2 (01:45:05):
There's an old song that you, guys and Mushi would
really like this. It says I was looking back to
see if you were looking back to see if I
was looking back to see if you were looking back
at me. That tell me that hate country. Funny stuff.
(01:45:25):
Funny stuff. Oh, Bill, And I forgot to tell on
her last week. So I want to make sure that
you know that she has cheated on us and she
got caught. She actually confessed to sending care packages, but
not to you and me, and far be.
Speaker 6 (01:45:46):
It from me.
Speaker 2 (01:45:48):
Well we're special, she said, Oh, I guess I told
on myself, didn't I? I said, yeah, you did. I
like them sausage balls. That would be a good thing
for her to make her pennance. I always love you
(01:46:10):
go to a Catholic church and you go to the confessional,
and you could say I murdered forty three thousand people,
drove over the sky's farm, burned his house to the ground.
My son say five Hail Mary's and a couple of
(01:46:30):
our fathers, and don't do it again. That was always
funny to me. That's something that I gave up on
very quick when I wasn't in school and they made
me do that stuff it. I quit that quickly. Any
of you guys ever do that? Go to a Catholic confessional.
Speaker 5 (01:46:50):
I never confessed to a man, a man who puts
his pants on the same way I do.
Speaker 2 (01:46:58):
I'm kind of worried how you know how he puts
his pence on?
Speaker 5 (01:47:01):
But that's one.
Speaker 2 (01:47:04):
How about you, Bill? Did you ever go to a.
Speaker 6 (01:47:09):
Why Why would I do a thing like Why would
I do a thing like that?
Speaker 2 (01:47:14):
Well, I don't know. You used to work play in
the organ. I didn't know if he ever did it
in a Catholic church.
Speaker 6 (01:47:19):
They have those in Protestant churches too.
Speaker 2 (01:47:24):
Oh, I've never seen one in them, of course, I've
never been in very many.
Speaker 6 (01:47:29):
Uh not confessionals. I'm talking about organs. Oh, you're the
only people that apparently need to confess. I guess they just,
you know, don't need to confess.
Speaker 2 (01:47:41):
I always thought it was funny they say, you're supposed
to go in and say, bless me father, for I
have sinned? How much time you got?
Speaker 5 (01:47:50):
How many times did the father sand well the earthly mother?
Speaker 2 (01:47:57):
Can I have some of that wine? That's what I
wanted to ask, But I really didn't like wine, so
that wouldn't go over well. But I'm sure they had
good booze.
Speaker 5 (01:48:07):
Well, I don't know why you didn't ask me all
of a sudden what the temperature was.
Speaker 2 (01:48:12):
Oh, you know, I forgot all about that. You were
hoping for cold weather, did you get it?
Speaker 5 (01:48:19):
It has been so windy all day long, and fifty
three degrees at the start of show, and so we're
supposed to get down to thirty eight degrees tonight and
someone's going to have to tap me out of building
a fire in the fireplace.
Speaker 2 (01:48:34):
How cool? Yeah, we were at literally eighty four this morning. Now,
my front door one is always warmer than the back
because it's sits closer to the house, so it's a
sixty five, but that means it's usually cooler out there,
thirty percent humidity. Uh, but we didn't have thirty eight
(01:48:55):
in the forecast. It's funny. It's been real windy here too, Bill,
real windy where you're at. Oh yeah, yeah, that's a
pretty big front that can make it windy from Susy
and Steves area all the way down here. Kind of crazy.
(01:49:18):
Maybe our government, yeah, maybe our government's working on the
weather up there at that uh, those towers and nothing
would surprise me. And you know what's funny, The weather
people and the far left crazies are so upset that
(01:49:39):
they don't have a hurricane hitting land and killing a
bunch of people and flooding everything. And I mean you
could just hear them. They're talking about that that Earth,
I mean, that hurricane that's in the Caribbean right now
and it's making a sharp uh. I guess it's making
a right turn and looks like it's gonna did some
(01:50:03):
damage to some islands, but nothing like what they were
hoping for. And they just all look so disappointed when
they talk about it. And I'm thinking, thank you God,
don't let it hit animals, people, homes, businesses, or property.
So it's been a real quiet season. That's another wonderful thing.
And I'm grateful for it because I don't like them storms.
(01:50:28):
And living here in Houston is not cool. About that
we're only about maybe fifty miles from the ocean. That's
not good. Not good. All right, So anything on your mind, Sissy,
you want to talk about before we close up?
Speaker 5 (01:50:45):
Oh that's dangerous.
Speaker 2 (01:50:49):
Yeah, but we're used to.
Speaker 5 (01:50:53):
I can't think of anything yet, it'll happen. You should
ask Bill.
Speaker 2 (01:51:00):
All right, Well, ask Bill, And just so you know, says,
anytime I ask you those questions, we put a rubber
force field around you so you can't hurt anything.
Speaker 5 (01:51:10):
It should be a rubber force field around me so
that I don't hurt me.
Speaker 2 (01:51:17):
Yeah, you have tried to commit suicide by jumping off
a four foot deck fifteen times and it didn't work.
Speaker 5 (01:51:26):
No, just once.
Speaker 2 (01:51:29):
That, Bill, you got something up your sleeve you want
to talk about before we close up.
Speaker 6 (01:51:37):
Yeah, you haven't said anything about Halloween. And I was thinking,
it's always seemed to be such a funny, a funny name, Halloween.
But the day after Halloween is all Hello's Day, all
Saints Day, and Hello essentially means sacred or holy. This
(01:52:01):
hallowed Ground I think was in the Gettysburg address sacred ground.
But all all Hallows Eve is All Saints Day, and
Halloween is really a contraction of Hallows Even and Hallows
Even before All Saints Day, the evening before even they
(01:52:23):
talked about eventide or evening, and Halloween is just kind
of a and it used to be pre Christian time.
Speaker 5 (01:52:32):
It was.
Speaker 6 (01:52:33):
It was one of the two major festivals in Druid
England and Europe. It was a harvest festival. It was
a very big, very big festival, and like so many
other pagan festivals, that was taken over by the Church
and sort of transition would be a little smoother, and
(01:52:54):
a lot of the sacredness was taken out of Hallows
Eve and Sacred Evening and I and I think it's
it's kind of kind of a special day if we
can kind of get back into that understanding of really
what it is and where it came from. And it's
(01:53:16):
just not kids walk around with stupid costumes on eating
a bunch of bad candy. It's it really was was
a much more significant event than that we that's but
as I say, I haven't had any anybody talking about
Halloween is coming up in a couple of days.
Speaker 2 (01:53:37):
Well, you know, when you don't have little kids anymore,
it's not that big of a deal. And unless you
are a little kid, is not But and and most
of the world, isn't that day of the Dead celebrating
the dead?
Speaker 6 (01:53:53):
Well, I think that's a different day. I might be
wrong about that, but I think that's a different day.
Speaker 2 (01:53:58):
Oh, I was thinking that was.
Speaker 6 (01:53:59):
How celebrating Yeah, no, this is celebrating the Saints, All Saints.
Speaker 2 (01:54:04):
Day, Okay, because I always remember Da Delos.
Speaker 6 (01:54:11):
Or something of that nature, and I thought that was
Halloween Spanish is interesting. Yeah, No, I don't think it is.
I think that Day of the Dead is a different
a different time, a different holiday.
Speaker 2 (01:54:25):
Well, I think you're probably right, because I've never heard
anybody say that. I don't think much about Halloween since
we don't have kids anymore. Little kids, when you were little,
it was fun and you get to get all that
candying and everybody was excited. It was it was that
nobody had any idea why they celebrated Halloween, but it
(01:54:47):
was fun for the kids.
Speaker 6 (01:54:50):
Yeah, kind of like Christmas.
Speaker 2 (01:54:53):
Yeah, that's the only Christmas is so cool when you
can watch the little kids. Yeah, that's that's a fun thing.
And I remember growing up we used to go to
on Christmas Day. We'd go to one grandparents house and
and then the other grandparents house. And the one grandparents
(01:55:16):
did not drink or do anything like that. So the
grandparents house that we went to last was the ones
that drank and watch football, you know all that stuff.
I remember my uh, the man that raised me his
the family was all German, and then on my mom's side,
(01:55:39):
I guess they were Scottish because it was hill And
I know this. People from Scotland used to come to
Missouri all the time. So a lot of a lot
of good drinking people in them countries.
Speaker 5 (01:55:56):
What was it?
Speaker 2 (01:55:56):
Ben Franklin said that God truly loves us, he gave
gave us beer, and thanks to Winston Churchill, we have
a cigar that's called the Churchill which I'm going to
have one of those in a little while. See, you
(01:56:19):
got to have some vices. You guys that don't have vices,
I feel bad for you. We don't have to go
to confession though, Yeah, I don't go to confession anyway.
When I was a kid, we were in Catholic school,
and I made it to the sixth grade and I
couldn't take it no more, and I begged my parents
(01:56:43):
to put me into public school. Had a real cool
junior high, real new It was just fabulous. They had
a softball team. I got to play, and it was
just great. Of course, my grades went right to hell,
but I had a great time and I made made
the softball team and got to travel and do all
that with the team. It was a lot of fun.
(01:57:05):
But Catholic school was rough. I mean you had to
go to church every single morning, and if you got
out of line, them nuns could handle it.
Speaker 3 (01:57:18):
You were not.
Speaker 2 (01:57:19):
I mean they still dressed in the traditional nuns where
and they did not tolerate anything. You messed up, the
pointer came out and you got whacked.
Speaker 5 (01:57:31):
That's horrible.
Speaker 2 (01:57:33):
Well that was what it was. I'm pretty sure no
terrorists would have ever overtaken the school because them nuns
would have been them. It had never made it.
Speaker 5 (01:57:53):
My mother used to say, y'all, cut it out. They're
I'm going to beat you within it into your life.
And I never knew what that meant, and she never
beat us, but it always scared me.
Speaker 2 (01:58:06):
I bet it.
Speaker 5 (01:58:07):
I mean, what does it mean within an inch of
your life, you know, not two inches? Within an inch?
So but she would also say cut it out, or
I'm going to pinch your head off.
Speaker 2 (01:58:21):
Well, yeah, I've heard that.
Speaker 5 (01:58:23):
She never pinched our heads off, but we took it seriously,
so I don't know. We were a bunch of gullible little.
Speaker 2 (01:58:33):
My neighbor's dad used to say knock it off, or
I'm going to cut your water off, and I had
never heard that before. That was different.
Speaker 5 (01:58:45):
Well, I mean I've heard it all. Cut it out,
or I'll give you something to cry about, or Susney Lane,
you know better. I mean, it really did suck being
the oldest because I didn't want to know better.
Speaker 2 (01:59:03):
And Bill, you were an only child, so I bet
you got away with murder. Yeah right, there's only one kid.
They can watch everything you do. When you have brothers
and sisters, you could spread it around a little bit.
Speaker 6 (01:59:20):
Yeah, but our mom would get that hair brush out,
and I knew it was about to get ugly.
Speaker 2 (01:59:28):
It's so funny when you look back to the way
we all grew up. They used to smoke in the house,
they used to drink when they were pregnant funny times,
and we all kind of survived, all right. I heard,
I heard the cuckoo clock. Any last thing, Suzzy before
we start shutting it down.
Speaker 5 (01:59:49):
Yeah, no seatbelts and we rode in the back of pickups.
Speaker 2 (01:59:52):
Oh yeah, I hate seatbelts. You ride a motorcycle and
they tell you what you're in the car though you
need a seatbelt. I mean absolutely crazy and I'm certainly
not wearing a seatbelt on a motorcycle. All right, Well,
ladies and gentlemen, we thank you so much. Again. This
week we had twenty something nations listening to us. It
(02:00:16):
was just absolutely fabulous. We even had something pop up.
You know how we always get different nations. Well, this
time the very bottom one says other. I don't know
what that means, not enough people to have their own country.
(02:00:36):
They caught somebody in the middle of the ocean listening
on his boat. I don't know, but it said other,
and that was kind of funny. Let me see if
I can pull it up and I'll just mention it
real quick before we disappear. Yeah, right right before Uruguay,
it says other. And they had a half a percent
(02:00:59):
listening to us. That's kind of cool. So maybe wherever
you are, yeah, whoever you are, another, we're glad you're here.
All right, Well, what listeners, So wherever they're at, it's
got to be a certain percent to show up, Like
(02:01:19):
right now, we have forty eight oh no, excuse me,
twenty eight percent in Brazil, about five in Australia and England,
and it goes all the way down. But there's a
few of them that it's half a percent listening to us.
(02:01:40):
So anyway, ladies and gentlemen, I am so grateful you're here.
We have a wonderful team. When you check out the graphics,
Susy and our producer do them. And Susy said tonight
he did most of them. They're very cool, always making
fun of me. I have my feelings hurt. But anyway,
(02:02:02):
I know you love these guys as much as I do.
It's a great team. We have a lot of fun.
Hopefully we bring you some things that you didn't know,
and some great recipes and weekly topics and just a
little bit of everything. So anyway, may God bless you
all with health and happiness, keep your lives peaceful, free
(02:02:27):
and safe. And very importantly, it is time for good Scotch,
good cigars, and good night.
Speaker 5 (02:02:37):
At all, Good night everyone, God bless.
Speaker 11 (02:02:41):
Seems the love I've known has always been the most
destructive kind. Guess that's why now I feel so old
before my time. Yesterday, when I was, the taste of
(02:03:02):
life was sweeper as rain upon my tongue. I teased
at length, as if it were a foolish game, the
way that even breathes may tease a candle flame. The
thousand dreams I dreamed, the splendid things I plan