Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
What's going on? Guys? You boys ku for twenty we
are back at it, day zero, day one ninety one.
Of course we've got the Powerful One with is Cory Hughes.
We've got what powerful what? What? What? The how many
the day? Uh huh? I mean that's what Lindsay had
out here. I'm hoping she's right she had one.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
I'll check everything that well. We might be one ninety one,
we might be one ninety two. It might be one
ninety three. We might be one ninety. We might we
might be a step ahead. Now bam, you see there
it is.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
I mean, whatever it takes.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
Yeah, yeah, there we go, there we go. We've got
we've got the Grand Master, the Grand Master, Charlie Robinson.
Speaker 3 (00:51):
The Grand Wizard. I prefer sorry, here we go the
Grand Wizard Cyclops. Oh yeah, that's even better, is it?
Speaker 1 (01:02):
See how we get? I don't I don't know about
the Grand Cyclops.
Speaker 3 (01:05):
Look, I think he might be like the top white Devil.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
He might be the top white devil. So so he
might be like one of the the hidden ones, the
one that's actually over everything but you never actually seeing,
Is that right? The Grand Cyclops?
Speaker 3 (01:28):
Yeah, I think so.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
Yeah, because you know, you know how it is in movies,
like you always you see the low level thugs. They're
doing all the bid and then you've got a guy
who sits like in a mansion somewhere, and he makes
a couple of phone calls and ship happens.
Speaker 3 (01:42):
That's the Grand Cyclops, head of the White Devils.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Yeah, and he's the grand Cyclops has a special red regalia.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Sure, yes, okay, okay, like a hood.
Speaker 3 (01:57):
Is that what we're talking about, like like the Imperial
Guard that flew in The Emperor? Oh yeah, yeah, there
talking about you're such a redneck that you go from
being a white hooded clansman to be red there you go,
that's awesome. I'm uncertain on what I'm looking at right here.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
It's like if Dumbledore was a racist all of a sudden.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Oh yeah, well, it looks like there's a there's a
there's a mix between you know, of course KKK and
like the Knight's templar.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Right, that's exactly. Yeah, I was getting the same.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
Yeah, you know what I'm saying, I'm looking some assassin's
creed action. That's what I'm looking looking at. Somebody, somebody
ida and then when sure they accept.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
All kinds of even racist horses. That horse had a
hood that's pretty awesome.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
Mayn uh, yeah, they probably they probably wouldn't let with
the Well, no, I'm assuming that the KKK is fully
disbanded now, right, is it fully disbanded or there's still
I'm sure it's still around.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
Can I ask a question, and this seems like maybe
a technicality, but perhaps you could answer, do their horses
have to be white as well?
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Oh? We can't have no brown horses, black horses.
Speaker 3 (03:21):
No. I mean I wonder just how pure are we
talking here? Like, how or how far down are we
going with this whiteness.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
It's got to be pure angry of Saxon, right, white
is the white Huh. That's a that's a good point.
That's a good point. He can't have any brown horses,
no black horses, only white white horses.
Speaker 3 (03:46):
Just stand around, do nothing with the.
Speaker 1 (03:52):
Yeah said, they don't do anything at all. It's it's
absolutely horrendous. So, I mean, what's the last time that
we heard from the KKK, Like, I think my friend's
parents were in the KKK.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Not since she took my baby away.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
I honestly, I really think, I really think my friends
when I would go to Tennessee every summer as a kid,
I had friends that lived there full time, but I
would just come in for the summer and we'd go
do stuff. And one of my friend's parents were I mean,
(04:33):
if if I had if we'd been playing hide and
go seek and I hid in the master closet and
was hiding next to a big white robe, I would
not be the slightest bit surprised. I'm just saying they're rich,
did not appreciate the black gentlemen. They were vocal about that,
and I think they were pretty well connected. And I
(04:55):
think that I think the guy was in the fucking Klan.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
Hmm okay, but that that's uh. I guess you always
have pockets of those, you know, they stay hide. Maybe
they maybe yeah, maybe they brought like like the snacks, snacks, drinks,
will like what's.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
The you know, where's the difference? Like he was this
dude was a businessman. What if he joined like the
Rotary Club. But it was a bunch of dudes that
looked kind of like him, and he had his mentality
and he was just like, listen, we're just not going
to be doing a lot of business with any of
the colored folks, you know, something like that, Like that
could totally so it could be like a like a sort.
Speaker 1 (05:38):
Of uh.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
Hidden covert KKK that's sort of like ideology, only they're
not really wearing hoods anymore. They're just they're they're running
like dry cleaners and working with other whites and things
like that.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Okay, I can understand that. Well. I went to uh
Corey's favorite thing, uh a I because they has got
the answers for us, all right, and we got the
overview right here, and they said that the ku Klux
Klan still exists today, but in a significantly different form
and with considerably less influence than its historical heydays. So
what we got right here decline and fragmentation. The KKKA
(06:17):
has experienced significant decline and fragmentation due to factors like
public condemnation, law enforcement efforts, and internal conflicts. That the
internal conflicts might have been between the white, brown and
black horses. I can see that, all right, yea. So
let's see here this estimated membership of what we got
from three thousand to eight thousand members that you see,
(06:37):
that's not gonna get it done, you know what I'm saying,
so where are they all at?
Speaker 3 (06:43):
Then?
Speaker 1 (06:44):
What would be the spot where you think that they
would be, because that's like a town, that's like.
Speaker 3 (06:49):
One town they would be in Alabama.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
Okay, so that's worth anywhere. It's somewhere near Birmingham, maybe
maybe somewhere near there.
Speaker 3 (07:02):
I mean, okay. I spent a lot of time in
like East Tennessee, and I saw some things that would
get you shot in Los Angeles, and that's where I
was kind of coming from l A.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
And and I was just.
Speaker 3 (07:15):
Could not believe it, like the level of racism like
that that I actually there was a place I actually
saw it. Now, since I've been grown and there's been
this big agenda to push like racism and everything, I
don't really see it all that much. But back then,
(07:36):
they were not afraid to let people know what they
thought of them right to their face. It was wild.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
Yeah, I want you see. I think maybe that they
need to they need to open their open their ranks
a little bit to to some other people who might uh,
who might self hate, you know, because they always any
anytime you speak out against your particular race and they
you know, people want to say that you self hate.
That's usually black people. All right, let me just be honest. Okay, Yeah,
(08:07):
anytime anytime I say something, you know, what you say,
the black people probably need to this. Oh you you're
a saying self hater.
Speaker 3 (08:13):
I was like, so you you you're not allowed to
criticize at all. Everybody gets a pass right or else
you'll be accused of being a self hater. We don't
get that too much in the white community, I guess,
do we. You know, like, if you're a self hating white.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
I don't sense like any racial anything weirdness going on
amongst white populations except amongst the Jews, right, fuck them,
But everybody else who's white, like, it's pretty much copesetic.
Speaker 3 (08:41):
I did go into a I think a white only
bar one time in Huntington Beach, California, and I was,
I mean, I'm about as white as they come, let's
be honest, But even I was a bit like unnerved
by it. There's something about the place man made me
feel like there was really going to be like a
(09:02):
rally in the back. But aside from that, I don't
really I mean, I guess living in southern california's so
multi multicultural that you're you're kind of forced into it.
Whereas the people who I sort of grew up with
as well during the summers in Tennessee, they'd never met
(09:22):
a Mexican. There's no such thing in the This is
like I'm talking about the eighties. This is like when
I was a kid out there in the eighties in Tennessee,
that didn't exist. You might as you'd have a better
chance seeing in Eskimo. So like, their worldview is very small,
so they didn't really have anything to measure it against,
like as opposed to me growing up in southern California,
(09:43):
where you see like all kinds of everything, and then
in Palm Springs specifically where it's a huge gay community.
Due I was just thrown in the mixture with it,
all of it from an early age. So nothing like
really totally shocks me, except when I see like the
over like crazy ass racism that I saw in the
eighties and Tennessee. It was wild. I couldn't believe. I
(10:07):
couldn't believe how bold they were. I watched just to
put to paint a picture.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
Here.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
I was in the backseat of car and I must
have been sixteen, and we pulled up at a red
light next to another car that was a convertible and
had four black guys in it, and the guy who
was driving the car I was in looked over at
the other guys and goes, what's up niggas like that?
(10:34):
And I was like, I just I reflexively like braced
for impact, like, oh my god, like we're just about
to get completely shot up. And they looked at us,
and they put their turn signal on and they made
a left turn and like got out of there, and
I was just like, what is going on? Like my
friends were like, we're like, I think, pretty pretty racist.
(10:58):
But it was just dealt with. I mean that the
black community was terrified of the whites there, and I
just had never seen.
Speaker 1 (11:07):
Anything like it. Yeah, I don't. I don't think. I
think the the self the self hatred in the in
the white community would be the massive amount of suburban
white women that have that white guilt.
Speaker 3 (11:20):
Oh yeah, yeah, that's that's a mental illness. That's a
really funny one.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
Yeah, it's it's overwhelming because I always see them explaining how,
you know, how well pressed black people with being and
how you should you know, give them a helping hand,
and everything's racist, and they're still oppressed today, and I'm
just like, ma'am, I mean, I mean, it's all good.
Speaker 3 (11:45):
You know. They they're busy bodies. White women are busy bodies.
They want to go there. They're always looking for some
problem to fix that nobody asks them to fix, and
this is a perfect one. It's all. Also, they're they're
also latent racists themselves because they make the assumption that
black people are so stupid that they need this left
(12:08):
this white woman to come fix all their problems for them,
which they didn't ask for and don't want. So it's
like it's like an arrogance, a presumptive arrogance that like, oh,
I'm going to inject myself into your problem and fix it.
And then there's also like because dot dot dot, because
you're too fucking stupid to do it on your own,
because you're whatever color or whatever, insert the malady that
(12:33):
they think that the people have. Like it's I apologize
for our women, like they're they're the they're hard to
deal with. Sometimes they're just busy. They need to sit
the fuck down and not not get themselves involved in this.
It's not your problem to fix.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
It's actually not anybody's problem to figs like. It's like
you just move on. Some people make it, some people don't.
It's okay, it's okay to some people don't make it.
I'm I'm I understand it. I'm aware of it. People
talk about what's fair and what's not. I'm like, but
you just you do the best you can and at
the end you might get fucked anyways, and so nothing's
(13:16):
fair about about being alive at all you can.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
That's how you can instantly tell that you're arguing with
an unseerious person is when they drag fairness into the equation.
You go, well, this isn't fair. You just go time out,
time out, time out, Go live a life first, and
then talk to me about the realities of fair I mean,
come on, dude. The game gets rigged in a bunch
(13:41):
of different ways.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
It is.
Speaker 3 (13:44):
By default unfair. Some people benefit, some people get born
in the right situation and benefit because of that. And
some people get born and in the middle of nowhere
bumblefuck Egypt and can never get out, Like it's unfair
that there's childhood cancer. Like, spare me the unfair. I'm
being like oppressed in the you know lake, shut get
(14:06):
the fuck out. Of here. There's just you've got to
have some perspective before you start talking about oppression.
Speaker 1 (14:15):
You know, it's yeah, it's true. And one of the
things I seen right here recently, I think Ryan Clark
talked about it. Uh it was a you know, going
on with angeries and Caitlyn Clark and they were sitting
and he was like, who was it, Griffin? I believe
that's his name, RG three RG three, he interjected, and
(14:38):
he talked about the situation. It's like, well, how can
he really talk about it when he has a white wife.
I'm pretty sure that they don't go and sit around
the dinner table and talk about how black women still
have it bad today. I was like, nobody does. Like
when when when you go home, you're like, okay, kids,
let's gather around and let's talk about black women struggles today.
(15:00):
I mean, ain't nobody doing it, not even the black folks.
Speaker 3 (15:03):
I was just like, yeah, oh yeah, this is You've
just added homework for me to do. I have to
go care about black women's struggles, no offense, but not
going to impact my life at all. I have to
life is about prioritizing what you focus your energy on,
and if I'm worried about black women's struggles. I'm doing
(15:25):
that with time that I could be used using it
to do I don't know literally anything else in the world,
in the universe would be better than me focusing on that.
So exactly, Zark was married to a white woman before.
That's what he failed to mention that he conveniently left
that part out of the equation. He's such a gigantic hypocrite.
(15:48):
Espn is awoke, uh cess pit of.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
It's bad kind of you, I'll put it that way. Yeah,
stephen A's kind of flipping with his show and stuff
like that. But for the most part, they've got the
they got the same type of talking points, you know,
kind of similar talking points that that Joy Reid had.
You know what I'm saying, Uh, white people are evil.
(16:20):
I mean it's pretty much. I mean.
Speaker 3 (16:24):
All they have to do is say some white people
are evil. See if they just do that, I can't
argue with it. It's the blanket statement. You know, it's
all white people are evil. All white people are are
sitting around oppressing me. The thing again, it goes back
(16:45):
to this underlying arrogance, like don't flatter yourself, you know,
like you think that we're all sitting around figuring out
how to oppress, like whatever.
Speaker 2 (16:57):
Where they oppressed ones, I got better ship to do?
Speaker 1 (17:01):
Yeah, currently do that?
Speaker 2 (17:03):
Well, white people only make up nine percent of the
global population. Were the world minority?
Speaker 3 (17:07):
Yeah, and we get we we're getting. Uh, none of
the breaks either. I mean, everybody else is a protected
class except us. You can hunt us down, you can
say all kinds of crazy shit about us online. It's
totally fine. Censorship will not come for you. We're open.
(17:29):
It's where it's open season on us, the.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
Same open game. It's almost like it's almost like the
hunger Games on white people. You know what I'm saying.
There's people in stands class, especially white man. White man. Okay,
straight white man, let me say that, because if you're
a gay white man, it's okay. If you're a trained
white man, it's okay.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
I'm repressed, man. I'm a straight white man who is
feeling oppressed and I wants. Yeah, here, I'm willing to
make a deal in my reparations. Here's the deal. You
go your way, government, and I'll go my way, right,
and you don't ask me for money, and I don't
ask you for the roads deal. Can we do that
(18:15):
and then you can go bomb the ship out of
whoever you want, and it's not on me.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
We're bombing bombing. Speaking of bombing, he led right into it.
Speaker 3 (18:24):
Yeah, I heard there was a bombing.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
There's there's been plenty of bombings right here recently. Of course,
is the IO struck first, and you know it was
due to Iran being a threat to them, and then
we have followed suit with a few bombs ourselves, getting
into technical position. So thoughts, I mean, I'm pretty sure
(18:50):
y'all are y'all are way more up to date and
savvy on it than I am. The history of this
per se. So go ahead and let some folks know
what you think.
Speaker 3 (19:02):
This is. This is incredibly arrogant and foolish of the
American Empire, and it's a stain on Donald Trump's legacy,
whatever you consider that to be. He is he has
solidified Israel's golden kneepads. You know, he fully works for
(19:26):
that nation. He is captured. He is an embarrassment. He
is a war criminal, just as Net and Yahoo is
during the same category. I have no respect for him,
I have no respect for Yahoo. I don't want this
war I want nothing to do with it. Fuck him
for dragging us into this. And you know when when
(19:51):
ten thousand US troops get loans smotherings in these bases
around the Middle East, which can easily happen. I don't
want to hear any complaining about how you know, oh,
Donald Trump. I can't believe Donald Trump did this. He
said he was going to do He said he was
going to work for Israel when he took the money
from Miriam Maddelson, Like this should not be surprising to anybody.
(20:13):
He's a dual agent. He works for Israel. That's why
we're in this. There's no this does not benefit the
United States in any way.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
Mm hmm. How are yours? Your thoughts?
Speaker 2 (20:32):
What the fuck is there to say? I mean, I
feel you brought us into another war. This is the
conspiracy that Hip warned us about one hundred years ago?
Speaker 1 (20:46):
Got you? Is this stamen all from like the you know,
weapons of mass destruction?
Speaker 3 (20:56):
You know?
Speaker 1 (20:59):
Yeah? I mean this it seems like the same playbook.
So how the fuck?
Speaker 2 (21:02):
This is what I want to know? They knew that
they had already moved all the materials out of there.
They had to have known, otherwise their intelligence is just flawed.
So and so.
Speaker 3 (21:16):
So let me ask you this, if we allow for
the possibility of four D chests here and I'm not
saying I think this is what happened, but is there
a scenario in which this was performative by Trump to
appease the Zionists component, to say, hey, I dropped this
(21:40):
these big ass bombs like you wanted me to, knowing
damn well that either a they're ineffective or maybe they're
hitting a place that's been hollowed out, you know, a
week ago. I think this information was kind of targeted.
I mean, I think people I don't think it was
a surprise that if they were going to hit any
of the places, these are the ones they were going
to hit, right, so they have time and then understanding
(22:04):
to get the stuff out of there that needs to
be gotten out of there, and that that maybe this
is best case scenario. This is like wrestling where we're
watching real bombs hitting real places, but knowing damn well
that they're not going to do what they're gonna what
they're supposed to do, but it ticks the box where
they Trump can say to Israel, all right, well we
(22:25):
did our part, Like you handle the rest or is
that just complete and utter q tard fantasy? Uh hopium
trust the plan five D CHSS sort of thinking, here's
that he could ever pull something like that off, or
that even he that he would want to.
Speaker 2 (22:46):
The Iranian reaction will tell us everything we need to know. Okay,
if there was back channel communications going on there, there's
no way in hell Iran would ever agree to pull
off some fake bombing shit with it because Israel, you know,
they fucking hate Israel. They won't even say the name Israel.
They call them the Zionist entity.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
They fucking saying that Iran is in on it. I'm
saying that Trump dropped a big bomb on an empty warehouse.
Speaker 2 (23:12):
Well, I guess this has been done before. After Trump
bombed killed Solimani. Yeah, the Iranians responded and they blew
up an American base that they knew was abandoned.
Speaker 3 (23:26):
That they and that they said they were going to retaliate, right,
so they did every they telegraphed everything right, correct, And
this is so in.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
This case here they fucking hate Israel and at some
point in time, it's been fifty fucking years that Israel's
been fucking with them remember the birth of Islamic terrorism
happened in seventy nine. What the fuck else happened in
seventy nine, Well, they kicked out the Shah and all
the Americans and took their government back, and that's what
created Islamic terrorism that same year, seventy nine, Carter and
is the big new Brazinski get with the Israelis and
(23:56):
formal Kaida. Right, So I forget where I was going
with this, but it really doesn't fucking matter. All roads
lead to the same place that at some point in time,
Iran is not going to just take this shit anymore.
And it's a country of seventy million people. We're not
going to overthrow anything. We're not even gonna have a
ground war. The whole thing is ridiculous. And I think
(24:19):
Iran's going to continue to pummel the fuck out of
Tel Aviv until Trump begs them to stop, because I
don't think Trump's going to do any more bombing stuff.
His political career will be over.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
Did you? And I don't know if this was Ai.
You gotta be careful with everything, AI, But what I
thought i'd seen something with Putin talking about the bombing
right here recently and the comment he had made was
how many Russians are currently in Israel.
Speaker 3 (24:54):
I'm sure there's.
Speaker 1 (24:57):
I got a ton of So it was almost, I
don't know, it was almost like he was quote unquote
siding with Israel in the United States. I well, I
mean that's almost kind of the way it sounded.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
No, he's just pointing out the fact that there's like
two million former Soviet Jews who moved to the moved
to Israel after.
Speaker 3 (25:25):
The fall of Soviet Ok, that's it, Okay.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
If you ask me, those people are traders to their country,
and they deserve to get bombed. Fucking leaving your homeland
to go to Israel. Fuck you. Anybody who left their
homeland to go to Israel deserves to get bombed in
the fucking massacre.
Speaker 3 (25:40):
Well, whether they deserve it or not, they're about to
get it, because who needs nukes when you have hypersonic missiles.
This has been just as much a psychological terror campaign
on the Israelis as it has been an actual bombing.
Because they've got a that popular relation who's all filled
(26:01):
up with spike proteins, and and because they were lab
rats during COVID. They've and and they've got all these
bomb shelters everywhere everywhere, and these sirens going off every
thirty minutes. Man, they are going to turn these people
psychotic as it's raining missiles every night. For their not
(26:26):
known for their ability to handle uh chaos without overreacting.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Well, I think I don't think. I was talking about
this with somebody at work the other day, Like, I
don't even think the new thing is like like even
an option anymore. Like I think when it happened in
World War Two, but its were like, oh shit, who okay,
I'm I don't know if we want to drop those again,
(26:56):
you know what I'm saying, because because since then, nobody's
dropped a nick Like when they dropped those nukes then
they were like, holy fuck, okay damn, I didn't know
that was gonna do that. And then like ever since then,
folks have talked about nukes, but it ain't nobody ever
hit that.
Speaker 3 (27:12):
But well, do we know that if they're real or not.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
Corey, they seem real people after fucking World War two
had radiation sickness. I think the thing is that the
world recovers from these things a lot quicker than they
tell us. Remember in the eighties, it was all those
movies with like they talked about fallout and it was
always like the fucking snow that was fucking toxic falling. Yeah, yeah,
(27:37):
Like I don't think that's the case anymore. And then
we're here's the thing, Like when you look at some
of those fucking bomb blast videos or the pictures from
Nagasaki in Hiroshima, there's some weird anomalies in those photographs,
like it might have been a firebomb like something, you know,
something like that, or but some of the weird stuff
was like this, like that there was destruction everywhere, but
(27:58):
all the streets were completely empty. Streets were completely clear,
you could see the streets everywhere, but the houses that
all the buildings were destroyed. Really weird. Ship. So but no,
I'm pretty cood. I'm I mean, the idea is pretty
makes sense. He split an at him. It blows up,
shit blows up. I think it's the effects and stuff
that we've been bullshitted about and the long term effects
because Chernobyl's got like fucking all kinds of animals and
(28:19):
plant life, and it's fine how.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
People lived there, people lived there. I was like, when
I did a video on this guy, they had probably
about a year and a half ago. So I was
going through and it was like, yeah, the people who
live in Chernobyl.
Speaker 3 (28:35):
I was like, you get some cheap, cheap real estate there,
I would think.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
I mean, I've just seen a whole movie, The Chernobyl
Diaries I think that was the name of it, where
it had zombie like folks running around trying to eat people.
Speaker 3 (28:48):
That's what it would you tell me to stay? That's
where I would expect them to be. I mean, if
I had to, you know, you had to pick a place,
a place that you know there in like Fukushine, Fukushima zombies,
I would I would put in that category.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
That's where there would be. But yeah, I mean it's like, yeah,
we told people to leave, but they said, I'm not leaving.
This is where you know, I set up shop. So
they've just been there. And I was like, well, you
mean to it. They ain't dead. I thought it was uninhabitable,
so how are they inhabiting it?
Speaker 3 (29:27):
I think we're lied to about a lot of a
lot of stuff, this being.
Speaker 1 (29:33):
Probably I mean, unless god unless, unless Godzilla is real
and he came around and soaked up all the radiation
out there.
Speaker 3 (29:42):
You know.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
That's that's what Godzilla runs off of. Radiation. That's what
woke them up.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
I watched that Godzilla Minus one this week. It was
actually pretty good.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
Oh it was. It was all in Was it all
in Japanese Chinese?
Speaker 2 (29:54):
Yeah, but we got the American fucking overdub now.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
So oh okay, we got to overdub Okay, okay, like
that like our old school kung fu movies. Yeahs as
we're always good.
Speaker 3 (30:09):
I say that the Japanese are so into Godzilla that
there's a Godzilla hotel and that's where we stayed the
first night, and they have like it's like a killer
lobby with like all the old movie posters that are
done up real nice. Dude, they fucking love Godzilla. There.
There's even like a Godzilla shaped head that's like welded
(30:33):
to the side of the building and they give you,
like you have tours of it. I've never se culture
is just so into Godzilla. Yeah, I.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
Don't know the whole, the whole Godzilla like over fanned them.
Speaker 2 (30:53):
It was supposed to be a fucking film about the
dangers of nuclear radiation. That's ultimately the the original god
propaganda propaganda film. Yeah, everything's propaganda, knew. I can't say
good morning to somebody about fucking it being propaganda? Is
it really a good morning? Is that right? That was raining?
(31:14):
If you looked outside? What the fuck?
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Well? It can still be raining to be a good
morning if it's a if it's a light missed. I
don't know. We do have the heat wave on the way.
The heat wave?
Speaker 2 (31:28):
What heat wave you talk about? Because we're about to
get snow again up in Montana. I just run, it's
a snowfront coming to Montana.
Speaker 1 (31:35):
What notthing playing? It's not playing. No, it's going be
a heat wave over here in the uh over here
in my neck of the woods. Was the heat wave
a hundred degrees? One hundred degrees?
Speaker 2 (31:47):
Oh my god?
Speaker 1 (31:48):
Tell me about the point? About the point? Yeah, but
they were saying about the due point. The due point
is what it is? What the real the real issue?
Speaker 3 (31:58):
We is?
Speaker 1 (31:59):
All right?
Speaker 3 (31:59):
That it's like if it's above seventy, that's like statistic
I don't really normally follow.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
Yeah for weather. Yeah, I've seen some meteorologies. They've been
on the TikTok right here recently giving me a breakdown,
and they were like, oh, you know, it could be
one hundred. But if it's a dry heat, that's one thing.
But if it uh, if the dew point is above seventy,
(32:26):
that's what makes it, you know, unbearable, the amount of
moisture in the air.
Speaker 3 (32:31):
I have lived in multiple very hot places. I have
lived in dry heat in Palm Springs for many years
during the summers. And I've lived in Bradenton, Florida.
Speaker 2 (32:43):
So like Tampa, you live, Oh yeah because of the
tennis stuff, right, yeah, yeah. I used to live in
Parish right next to Bradden.
Speaker 3 (32:51):
Yea, And those summers are the worst because of the humidity.
Just you know, take a shirt and extra shirt with
you to work because you're gonna have to change halfway
through the through the day.
Speaker 2 (33:08):
I used to wear long wool pants and a bulletproof
vest in that fucking.
Speaker 3 (33:11):
Heat god.
Speaker 1 (33:15):
Pants mm hmmoo. To fucking ask me, she can't try
to figure man said he wore a wool in the
middle of summer. Okay, that I mean, I guess it's
all right. I guess it's all right. You didn't You're
still alive, So that's what's key. You know, you didn't die.
(33:36):
You didn't die.
Speaker 2 (33:36):
I figured out I lost weight. I always figured being
in that show would make me lose weight from sweating
it all out, and it never did.
Speaker 1 (33:45):
Yeah, you figured it would, but that is ah, that
is not the case. Well I guess that. I guess
technically you would have lost weight, but have been water weight,
so the minute you went and drank some more water,
you'd put it back home, you know, kind of like
when fighters go before they need to go up and
weigh in, you know, they spent two hours on the
cycle if they need to get off of an extra
(34:06):
payounder tea.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
Well, the funny thing is I went to the office,
and when I moved to the sheriff's office, they I
did doctor supervised weight loss and they had me jacked
up on speed like while I was working. I'm like,
did you people think this through properly?
Speaker 1 (34:22):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (34:22):
Wow, I want my cup on on downers, not speed.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
It was a Federmine was the fucking drug. It was
like it was a ninety milligram. It's basically like a
tenth of a grammar methoday, like sanctioned by the state.
Speaker 3 (34:36):
Oh wonderful. What could possibly go wrong with cops that
are hopped up on amphetamines?
Speaker 2 (34:45):
Ie?
Speaker 1 (34:46):
Not much A lot of people got okay, So you
say you were cracking down on people? Is that what
we got going on? We were, we were hyped up
on it.
Speaker 2 (34:58):
I was very good made. Yes, what would be no
cor Did.
Speaker 3 (35:05):
You ever see a movie called the seven to five documentary?
Speaker 1 (35:10):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (35:12):
In New York.
Speaker 2 (35:13):
Yeah. So I don't understand how like an agency like
New York that has like fifty thousand cops, I don't
comprehend like how that kind of structure works that you
could get away with that to me, the idea that
you got, like you see in movies, you got like
training day, You got detectives who are just off doing
their own thing with bullshit, total bullshit, bullshit. You need
(35:35):
to check in everywhere you fucking go. You carry your
radio just like everyone else, and that and your sergeant
needs to know everywhere you are at every minute of
the day, that whole fucking CoP's going off and working
undercover and all total nonsense. Ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (35:50):
Are you trying you mean to tell me that you
don't just go off and go rug The only thing.
Speaker 2 (35:55):
Never, not once ever, under any circumstance, even the undercover
guys have a fuck team and a van following them
and shit. I mean, like there is no I'm just
going off on my own to do go bust some
drug dealers. Fuck so ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (36:10):
Come well, man, do a little undercover work.
Speaker 2 (36:13):
You know, it's amazing how many fucking shows that are
propaganda shows there are on TV and there have been
for decades. I mean it's not new, but like every
cop show is propaganda. Navy and cis holy fuck what
they needed to get in on the game. Really, like
that's all propaganda. CSI is all propaganda. And when you
think about it, like CSI, the whole purpose of CSI,
(36:33):
I think was to like get people to think that
no matter what you do, they're gonna bust you, right
because they got all that fancy for Wrenzy. None of
that shit is real. That shit is not real. It's fake.
Oh no, bro, You know I love when I see
like they have shootings and they get the guys in
there with like strings everywhere, Like nobody does that. That's
pure fucking Hollywood. Make believe fucking retards.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
No strings with the with the blood splatter and all that.
Speaker 2 (36:58):
Come on, man, no, no, no, you don't.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
They don't do that shit.
Speaker 2 (37:04):
Maybe the FBI does, and they got some of that.
Maybe they got some of that time on their hands.
And nobody hires a blood spatter and analyst. Nobody at
a period, you don't hire a blood spatter analyst. You
hire forensic technicians, and they're trained in a multitude of
different things. So the idea that an agency would hire
somebody for blood spatter is that's ridiculous too. That the
idea that you would think you'd have enough homicides to
(37:25):
send this guy out fucking five calls a week or
whatever is So this is what I'm talking about. It's
all propaganda. They make you think that the cops can
get you, and like they have the murder rate in
this country, the solve murder rate is falling from like
ninety something percent down to like seventy something percent.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
How did anybody ever get caught back in the old
days with murder? I mean, you know what I mean,
Like you could just be traveling through town, shoot a
guy and just like get on your stage coach and
you know you're gone, and who the fuck would ever know?
Speaker 2 (37:59):
That's how it was to like, literally, like fifty years ago.
Speaker 3 (38:02):
You a guy in a bar fight and then just
get on your horse and vanish nobody ever sees you. Again,
there's never anybody held accountable. They grab some other guy
that big sheriff didn't like and say that guy did
it right.
Speaker 2 (38:17):
But see, usually like neighbors or acts of they're they're
done in like the heat of passion, right you have to. Usually,
unless you're robbing a store or something like that, you
have like an emotional connection to the person you're killing,
and that usually has everyone's undoing. So it's always someone
you know, Like I don't give if someone breaks into
your house, it's somebody you know. I'm telling you with certainty,
if your house is ever broken into, it's somebody who
(38:39):
brought somebody over to the house or told somebody something.
It's always a connection that way. It's never fucking random.
Nobody scopes out houses waiting for someone to leave. Well,
maybe they do in like the rich neighborhoods, like the
super fancy neighborhoods, so if they know something, But crime
is never usually that random.
Speaker 1 (38:57):
No, it's not, which is why every time I see
I see one of these shootings, I'm like, Okay, what's
the motive, And they'd be like, well, they want no motive.
They just woke up that day and decided they want
to go shoot a bunch of kids.
Speaker 3 (39:07):
I'm like, that's just the FED do. Yeah, that's not
what people who actually lose their mind do.
Speaker 1 (39:16):
Sorry, Yeah, I know that's there. There's always some type
of motive, some type of connection something that you wal.
There's always there's something. But when it's just like, oh, yeah.
Speaker 3 (39:25):
You know, they just woke up and the manifesto, Yeah,
manifesto on anybody when you when you were arrested somebody, nobody.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
I'll tell you something I do have, Like I still
I kept this for some reason. I don't know why,
but I did find like I forget if it was
like a missing person's case or what the fucking deal was.
But it didn't end up going anywhere, and they ended
up not nobody ended up taking picking up this case
and doing anything with it.
Speaker 1 (39:56):
And I have like.
Speaker 2 (39:58):
Ten pages of writing from this person and it's just crazy,
like they're schizophrenic or something like this wild stuff. And
I thought, I don't know why I kept it. I
think I found it in some notes after I had left,
and I thought it would be interesting, like basis for
a plot line of a story or something like that.
But no, I never found a manifesto, never found a
(40:20):
manifesto because people don't write manifestos, only the FEDS do.
Speaker 3 (40:24):
Right, Yeah, that's like, how did you know that the
manifesto was fake? Because it was a manifesto.
Speaker 2 (40:33):
So people who are people who are actually angry and
going to go do shit, they don't give a fuck
about explaining anything to anybody. They just want to go
out and fucking let out their rage or whatever, and
like who gives a fuck if anybody has any answers? Like,
so it's really stupid. I'm really curious. It brings me
back to the memory of that Buffalo shooter with the
manifesto who had the fourteen fishes on the rifle. That
(40:55):
case is still fascinating to me. One of the people
who died in that invented like a fucking car that
ran on water or something.
Speaker 3 (41:01):
I heard about that. That's yeah, that's very unusual.
Speaker 2 (41:04):
Well, they always seem to multitask, you know, there's never
an operation for one reason. Operations have multiple reasons.
Speaker 3 (41:09):
It seems, well, are we going to get, speaking of shooters,
are we going to get some false flags inside America?
Blamed on the Iranians to draw us into having some
public support for this, for the United States having a
(41:32):
bigger role in this.
Speaker 2 (41:33):
I don't see how they can continue to do false
flags because everybody knows about them before they even happen.
Speaker 3 (41:40):
Yeah, well for sure, Yeah that's sort of the best.
Speaker 2 (41:43):
Like everyone's anticipating one right now, so it would be
the worst time to do one because everyone knows you're
going to do.
Speaker 3 (41:47):
It, right, and that would be that would make sense.
I just wonder if their arrogance is their undoing and
they do it anyway because they don't really care, They
don't really of respect for us. They figure forty percent
of the population will believe literally anything they're told as
long as it comes from authoritative sources. So they'll do
(42:10):
whatever they need them to do, uh, and believe anything.
And then maybe they don't even care. Maybe like it
works even better if we know, because then it's like
fuck you, we can do we you know it's coming,
we know it's coming, and yet it's still coming. Here
comes the flag, you know, and so.
Speaker 1 (42:32):
What what what do you think that would be?
Speaker 3 (42:35):
Power grid?
Speaker 1 (42:38):
Okay, shut off? You don't think to any type of attack?
Speaker 3 (42:50):
Uh? Biological Uh, you know, I could see a biological
that that that gets let out in.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
Them all.
Speaker 3 (43:00):
Blamed on Iranians. You know, I see, I've seen an
Iranian gentleman running from the scene getting into a writer van.
Speaker 2 (43:13):
I can't I can't believe they tried to pin Like
nett Yanhu actually said that I Ran tried to kill
the president twice. Like everybody know what they want to say. Yeah,
they say whatever they want everybody.
Speaker 3 (43:24):
It's like, are you denying that the Iranians tried to
kill the president? Yeah, I'm denying that. That's fucking retarded.
I mean, I know a bunch of other countries that
would like him dead. I mean, I think people inside
his own administration are probably more likely to to get
(43:46):
him than the Iranians. But whatever, well you got.
Speaker 1 (43:51):
You gotta have that out there at all times. You
gotta dangle that bait. And that's easy bait, easy bait
to dangle. It was Iraq at one point in time.
It was alright for twenty years, wouldn't it that was.
Speaker 3 (44:09):
Yeah, yeah, twenty years it was a a Iraq for
I mean, here's the thing is that, how do you
how do you keep time? How do you keep track
of it? Because we're still have bases there, so we're
still there. So it's not maybe a war necessarily, but
it's an occupation in some fashion. So you know, I
(44:31):
don't know in five years the seventh country this is,
this is like, it's not speculation. They gave up the
plan back in.
Speaker 2 (44:43):
You know, I don't going to get the Saudis to
go along with the Greater Israel shit.
Speaker 3 (44:47):
Because I think the Saudis are Zionists.
Speaker 2 (44:53):
I think that doesn't make any sense.
Speaker 3 (44:54):
I think that I think that the NBS, his loyalties
are to Isel. I think he sees working with them.
Hm hmm, okay, I think he teams Ionism. You know
(45:14):
that calculation which is which is okay? So so suicide
that this is a suicide pack you make when you
when you open the door and allow Israel in. You
you you you make a deal with the devil and
(45:36):
they will get you. And Saudi Arabia should think twice
before doing any sort of partnerships with Israel.
Speaker 2 (45:47):
It's just like Brown Schoper said, you have to invite
them in and.
Speaker 3 (45:50):
When you do, you're going to get the same outcome.
They will hollow you out.
Speaker 1 (46:00):
You're saying so, so it's like the the evil. So
you're comparing them the vampires.
Speaker 2 (46:06):
I think that was bram Stoker's complete out.
Speaker 3 (46:08):
It's a pattern. It's a pattern, and when you start
recognizing patterns, then you know, I can't have that.
Speaker 1 (46:21):
Ye, this is true. So so if if if things
do pop off over there, does that mean that Iraq's
gonna come to the defense of Iran? Are they gonna
be joined in in together?
Speaker 3 (46:38):
There are? There are so many potential outcomes, it's hard
to know what's the most likely.
Speaker 2 (46:47):
Here, I gotta do the show this, But what's that?
What's that Dracula guy around his neck?
Speaker 1 (46:58):
Oh? The star?
Speaker 2 (46:59):
David start, David, there you go. Bram Stoker was warning us.
Speaker 1 (47:08):
I think like.
Speaker 2 (47:10):
We have.
Speaker 3 (47:12):
We have the potential for them to shut down the
straight of horror moves, which they're talking about doing. And
then that right there is worse than any sort of
missile they can shoot into Tel Aviv, because if they
spike the price of oil, they double the price of oil,
they're going to kick off an economic collapse. Because ever
(47:35):
we're teetering as it is, you had that, you know,
we add one hundred and fifty dollars a barrel oil
to the mix from like where we are now, what
sixty five? Maybe you can't like process a shock like that.
I bet you they plan this at Buildeberg like they
(47:56):
did the seventy three oil crisis. I bet you. I
bet you they talked about this and it's on the calendar.
Speaker 1 (48:03):
Yeah, because it cast somebody in damn LA to cost
them damn fifteen dollars a gallon.
Speaker 3 (48:08):
Oh you waited down the straight to horror moves you?
It is going to be ugly.
Speaker 1 (48:16):
How was anybody in California still still able to like
make it? That's what I'm trying to figure out unless
you're wealthy, Like, how is anybody else like living out there,
like in d C? Like because so so you have
these service sectors, like you have people that got to
feel these jobs. So like the people who are filling
(48:37):
the jobs as baristas or waiters or you know somebody,
I mean, how were they able to make it at all?
Speaker 3 (48:46):
It's tough, man. I lived in in LA for a
long time. It's it was expensive then it's way more
expensive now you've got to be rich or we like
we lived in a four bed droom house with four
of us each paying rent, you know, and so like
we were able to make it work and we were
(49:08):
getting a deal like that house now totally unaffordable. But
you just have to kind of cram people in and
you you you've got to live in the hood. Now,
you have to live in the hood if you don't
make money. You can't just like coast through living in
(49:29):
West Hollywood figuring it out working as a as a
as a barista. You surely starved to death. It's just
too expensive. So I don't know. I mean, I think
it's people who working, you know, high paying jobs, that's it.
But everybody else is just in rental health.
Speaker 1 (49:49):
Out there in Compton, because I still remember it to
this day. They were they were doing the uh, the
the flip flip matches. Would al Masusi or whatever his
name is, Yeah, yeah, yeah, and it was like, yeah,
you know, wearing Compton and uh, I bought this house
for five hundred thousand dollars. I'm like, you did say Compton, right,
(50:13):
Oh yeah, like straight out of Compton. Is that what
we talk about?
Speaker 3 (50:19):
Dude? I used to work in Compton. That was one
of my when I was in industrial real estate. That
was one of the cities that I was in charge
of Compton, Carson, Torrents, Rancho Domingo's I had to walk.
I had to walk through like uh shoot. I would
walk in to the back of a warehouse building with
(50:45):
a shirt and tie on, and Mexicans would run out
thinking I was immigration. If they didn't know me, if
like if a lot of times people didn't reck, I
would see guys scatter and I'm like, no, no, no, no, lemigra,
I want to talk to your boss, you know, like
about whatever, buying or selling, releasing, you know, the building.
(51:08):
So I was I would have to walk all the
way through Compton, like through the industrial parks, park my
car and then just walk building from building. Dude, I
spent way too much time in Compton, and it's scary
if you get in the residential areas, like you will
get shot. But I I used to eat at Carls
Junior in Compton all the time. Nobody bothered me. I
(51:29):
look like a fed.
Speaker 1 (51:33):
Oh man, that's crazy, dude.
Speaker 3 (51:35):
Five hundred thousand dollars house man, that's unfortunately, that's like
a thing there. Imagine having like three thousand dollars a
month mortgage payment and having to live in Compton.
Speaker 1 (51:50):
It's crazy, soud Like I to you, like whenever somebody
says Compton. I'm sitting there like, I'm like, okay, you know,
we the hoods. You know, shit ain't gonna be that
expensive because, like I think still like in Detroit and
some of like your uh in some of your worst areas.
(52:10):
I was seeing it when they were doing their the
Flip show on that, like they were buying a property
for like twenty five thousand dollars and selling it for eighty.
This was just like two years ago. I was like,
with damn. So I was like, so this's got to
be how it is like in Compton, like now five
hundred thousand. I'm like, nope, nope, it's not even realistic.
(52:34):
I was like, I see why people are living in
the car and shit, living on the side of raight.
Speaker 3 (52:39):
Totally. People in the two bedroom apartment we slept in
like a really well engineered bunk bed system when I
was like my first three years out of college. So like,
you do what you gotta do. And the same goes
(53:01):
for New York too. I always wondered, like, how do
people live there? I wondered that thirty years ago. Now
it's even more expensive. It's like, how how the fuck
do you work at Starbucks in Manhattan. How you can't
live in Manhattan, you have to live somewhere else. So
do you commute in like forty five minutes each way
on the trains and shit like that? To work at
(53:24):
Starbucks feels like a money loser to me, you know
what I mean? Like it just feels it like time
value of money and you know, like calculation about all.
Speaker 2 (53:35):
What about places like like Aspen. I went and looked
at houses in Aspen. The cheapest house in Aspen was
like a couple of million dollars. I think I was
like seven millions. How to fuck you got a Starbucks there?
I don't care. I don't care where you are in
middle of Colorado. If you live along seventy and Colorado
in the mountains, you're paying out the ass. Like it's
expensive out there, so you just don't have.
Speaker 1 (53:58):
Yeah, you've been, you've been all over to what was, uh,
what was the most expensive place that you lived in?
Probably say Vegas?
Speaker 2 (54:10):
No, well, Vegas wasn't very expensive when I lived there.
I had a fucking four bedroom, twenty five hundred square
foot house for seventeen fifty a month, which by today's
standards is very cheap. That same house as like twenty
six hundred or something like that. So I don't know.
I lived in New York when I went to college.
I had a fucking studio at a apartment for seven
hundred bucks a month in nineteen ninety four. So that
(54:33):
was kind of expensive at the time.
Speaker 1 (54:36):
Yeah, I would say, so, I'll say, yeah, seven hundred
dollars a month in ninety four year, Yeah, because it
probably in most of the country, seven hundred dollars a
month at that time probably at least got you three bedroom.
Speaker 2 (54:50):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (54:51):
M So it's it's similar now because I see people
when they're talking about, oh, you know this is where
I stay. It's four thousand dollars a month, and it's
a studio apartment and like it's like three hundred square feet.
What was I think it was one the other day
where there was a there was a woman who was
(55:12):
renting out uh someone's garage with her and her two kids.
I think it was in California, two hundred and seventy
five square feet garage square foot garage, and that's where
that's where her and her two kids were living because
she's like, I can't afford rent, and she was paying
a thousand dollars a month, Jesus.
Speaker 3 (55:34):
But if you got garage, well then you've got to
live somewhere else, Honey, you know what I mean, Like,
I can't, I can't. No, I don't know how I'm
going to be able to live here. Well, you're not
going to be. You have to live somewhere else. You
can't live in New York City follow your dream anymore?
Speaker 1 (55:52):
Sorry, Cloth, Yeah, well this is true.
Speaker 3 (55:58):
Yeah, but in New York, calculation of like based on
how much money I make. This is how much I
can afford to spend on housing. And if you're just
unrealistic about it, then you'll find out the hard way.
I suppose you know.
Speaker 1 (56:17):
Yeah, yeah, this this, this is Sue. But the house
and stuff is I don't know if it's probably not
gonna get better. Let's just say that.
Speaker 2 (56:28):
So we have breaking news. Now Trump is calling for
a regime change, and I ran okay, So his limited
strikes was more bullshit. The guy can't seem to tell
a goddamn same story twice.
Speaker 3 (56:46):
Just he's he's entirely full of ship always and in
all ways. He's just a liar of stupendous proportions, and
the people who make excuses for him over and over again. Man,
(57:12):
It's just it's hard to be that delusional. He just
because there's so much evidence. He says one thing and
does the other. You can never ever take him at
his word. Didn't he just come out and say that
this wasn't about regime change? M hm, yep, okay, and
(57:35):
now it is.
Speaker 2 (57:37):
Now he.
Speaker 3 (57:40):
Is this part of some like strategy to destabilize your
enemy by pretending to do both things at the same time.
Speaker 2 (57:52):
Well, the funny thing is how Israel moved the goalpost
and went from in a single day, went from we
have to stop the nuclear program, so we have to
set up the nuclear program and the ballistic missiles. Really
now you got to stop their ballistic missile program, the
one that they've got no, twenty five thousand ballistic missiles
or something like that. Like it's it's truly fucking unbelievable.
Least I'll be fucking hanged.
Speaker 3 (58:12):
Well, let me ask you this, what do you do
if you're a RAN and you say ship, well, they're
going to try and take our ballistic missiles, we might
as well fire them all off right now.
Speaker 2 (58:23):
Right, Yeah, I mean, doesn't have much to lose.
Speaker 3 (58:27):
I mean, that's what I'm saying. Yeah, is there is
there a way that you put them in a situation
where they.
Speaker 2 (58:38):
Good down that they.
Speaker 3 (58:42):
Launch all their missiles immediately you're back. I know, I
can see my internet was acting weird. I'm just saying,
is there a possibility that this behavior makes your just
launch all of their missiles because otherwise, you know, use
(59:07):
them or lose them, that sort of thing.
Speaker 2 (59:09):
Well, the funny thing is, now that you've got this
happening and the strike from America and Iran, you've got
they haven't named them, but I'm sure it's Pakistan who's
already offered to give a rand nuclear warheads like their
are offers on the table to just give them nuclear warheads.
They don't even have to enrich their own shit anymore. Right,
That's how much outrage there is over fucking Israel's actions.
(59:30):
So that's a good thing because they either here's the deal,
Iran ain't nuke ANDAs Iran's gonna nuke fucking Israel, and
what else can anybody ask for? It'd be like Christmas.
Speaker 3 (59:43):
They are certainly provoking them.
Speaker 2 (59:47):
Mm hmm, and they're only gonna and they've been provoking
them for fifty years.
Speaker 3 (59:51):
Yeah, and they've had fifty years to build up a
nice arsenal of missiles that they can launch.
Speaker 2 (59:58):
Right as long as they're was an Israel, they knew
they would not have peace.
Speaker 3 (01:00:02):
How many missiles does Iran have? Do we know? They?
Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
Israeli's claim they had somewhere in the neighborhood of I
believe it was like twenty five thousand.
Speaker 3 (01:00:12):
How many missiles does Israel? Well, it doesn't even matter
answer anyway.
Speaker 1 (01:00:18):
Okay, Yeah, I got twenty five.
Speaker 2 (01:00:25):
Spies. Who the fuck knows? Okay, the spies can't be
that good because, like I said, they moved out all
that shit from the from the nuclear plant before they
got hit, and the idea of the government, our government
didn't know that I know.
Speaker 3 (01:00:43):
Yeah, no, No, That's why I say it could be performative,
because they would have to know that that's a waste
of time, that maybe it just sends a message, but
it doesn't really knock it out. Israel's got to know
that too, right.
Speaker 2 (01:01:05):
Oh, there's some more news. New York is now under
a state of emergency. Hochel declare the state of emergency
today just shortly ago.
Speaker 3 (01:01:12):
So she can vaccinate everybody against uh Iranians.
Speaker 2 (01:01:17):
She declared an emergency in the state because uh temperatures
have shattered one hundred and twenty five year old record.
Speaker 3 (01:01:27):
While I was tailing you the climate change emergency. Climate
change emergency is now what we're talking about here.
Speaker 2 (01:01:33):
What caused the temperature to get that high one hundred
and twenty five years ago?
Speaker 1 (01:01:40):
Kail Forest Cali for exactly there was too many KALs.
I mean, that's it, right, So that's why they were
wanting to cull all the kaos because you know, Kale forest.
Speaker 2 (01:01:51):
It's a dumbest shit.
Speaker 3 (01:01:53):
They just don't want you to eat. That's that's what
they want. They're trying to kill.
Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
Well, there was somebody talking about I think they were
I've seen somebody we're talking about if you work and
you work outside, you should band together and tell your
employer that you're not gonna work because it's hot. I'm like,
I don't know if that's gonna I don't know if
that's gonna be the best thing. It's gonna work out, man,
(01:02:27):
it's hot outside. But I've seen I've seen Mexicans working
outside during the heat of the day and they got
full clothes on, like I'm talking about like long pants,
long shirt, everything. I'm just on top of a wroof.
Speaker 3 (01:02:43):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:02:43):
But it's like so like if you're gonna go to
your employer, be like, you know, it's gonna be hot
this week, so we're not gonna be able to work.
They're gonna be like what it is the summer.
Speaker 3 (01:03:00):
Ask yourself this question, could my job be automated away
by artificial intelligence or robots? And if the answer is yes,
then shut the fuck up because you better get your
(01:03:20):
ass out there in the heat lest you be replaced
by one of Elon's new robot droid you know, enemies
that he unveils. That's coming, that's coming sooner rather than later.
It's hot in the years, coaches pulling you out of
(01:03:41):
the game, you're fired. You're being replaced by C three.
Pout your ass up on the roof three po and hammer.
There's fucking nails in there.
Speaker 1 (01:03:53):
Yeah I mean that that that's that, Like, that's that's
on the way shortly, like it's no longer like something
that's distance and off in the future and you can't
really see it now, like you see it.
Speaker 3 (01:04:05):
Oh yeah, you're you're if you if you flip burgers
in California, and they're paying you twenty dollars an hour
because they have to now by law. You if you
are looking at your robot replacement, Okay, it's coming, it'll
be here soon, and you will be gone. So you
(01:04:27):
will fuck around and find out with the robot overlords,
because it's just gonna be so much easier and cheaper
for them to replace you with just about any one
of these manual tasks. Digging ditches, flipping burgers.
Speaker 1 (01:04:47):
Oh yeah, and they can have it there. They can
even they can even justifiably just stay open all the time. Now, sure,
justifiably just be like, yeah, yeah, been all day, no restocked,
you should be fine. Yeah, robot didn't have to sleep.
(01:05:08):
They doesn't get tired.
Speaker 3 (01:05:09):
They don't miss the bus, their baby doesn't get sick
and can't come into work today. They don't give you
any bullshit. They don't unionize.
Speaker 1 (01:05:20):
Perfect exactly. So I mean that that reality is is
coming upon us extremely quickly. Uh and we even see
it in uh in content creation now, where God, the
amount of AI that people are using for content creation
is it's actually pretty wild. And so you don't know
(01:05:44):
if you're actually looking at the real deal or not,
especially with the like Google Vo three that they just
came out with. I mean, that ship is so on point.
Usually you could you could tell the anomalies, but now
it's it's tough. People are using it right now just
for somebody to say outland and stuff, which makes it like, Okay,
(01:06:07):
that's Ai, you know what I'm saying, Like a like
an old grandma got it. I was like, yeah, I
want to get fucked by you know, nine dicks. At
one time, you'd be like, Okay, that's Ai. You know
what I'm saying. You see you see something like that.
But you know, eventually people start using it in a
sense to where they want this to be believable that
somebody's actually having this show talking about this stuff and
(01:06:28):
all that, and even use it to potentially stage events
as y'all said the false flag stuff. Uh, that's gonna
be the next wave. It's not gonna be They're not
gonna have to use anything in public per se. Ain't
just stag it via that.
Speaker 3 (01:06:45):
Oh then you'd never know, you know, as long as
they have control of like a location, it could make
it look like something happen there, create the whole thing
in a studio, put fake cc TV camera footage together
and everything, make it the whole thing. Uh, press release
(01:07:07):
photos things like that that of completely fictional crime scene. Absolutely.
Speaker 1 (01:07:15):
Yeah, So that's that's that's our next step of what
we've got to uh fight against propaganda wise is going
to be the the AI sector, which is going to
be which is gonna make it even harder to believe
what you see, even harder to believe what you're seeing
(01:07:39):
as opposed to I mean even five years ago, we
won't even worried about it.
Speaker 2 (01:07:43):
Well, it seems as though we have pretty good detection
tools for AI, so if there's ever a question, you can,
you know, run some stuff through AI. But here's another
weird thing. I ran one of them pictures of Adam
Lanza through the AI detector and it said it was AI.
So I don't know what the fun He's a fake,
he's a he's a fictional care Well, it appears that
he was real at some point when you get into
(01:08:04):
the statements of neighbors. I started reading through the files,
and those files are impossible to read because they're all redacted.
I've never seen such redactions in any documents in my life.
Three thousand pages ninety nine percents redacted. But in the
parts that aren't redacted, you have neighbors who had known
and met and or had children in school with him
at some point, so he was real at some point,
(01:08:27):
or someone using that identity. But here's what's the problem. Like,
when you get into like the CIA and their identity
transfer operations, it's hard to determine who was using that
identity because it might not have been a he might
be a fabricated person, but there was a person with
that identity at some point in time, for sure. But
the more I learned about these identity transfer operations, the
more I realize that they're not limited to just creating
(01:08:50):
a single fake person or two people swapping roles, but
there are undoubtedly multitudes of people in certain circumstances using
single identities. You know, I got threely Harvey Oswald's operating
in three places at once in February of nineteen fifty five.
I still can't figure it out, but I got him
(01:09:11):
in three places at once.
Speaker 3 (01:09:13):
Have you ever heard of these cities that are basically
like just completely overrun with CIA agents.
Speaker 2 (01:09:20):
I've heard that, I've heard about I've heard that like
Newtown like was like that was something like that, which
one like Newtown, Connecticut where the fucking san.
Speaker 3 (01:09:30):
How Town was like that, Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 2 (01:09:32):
And I also heard that a lot.
Speaker 3 (01:09:34):
So my.
Speaker 2 (01:09:37):
Chris's wife has a friend who was living in that
area at the time, and she says, though the whole
thing is fake. She's like, I was living there. The
whole thing is fake. All those people or none of
those people live there, Like that's all. She's like, the
whole thing is fake. So but nobody can give me
an answer on the school, on whether the school was operational.
Nobody can come up with an answer to that question.
Speaker 3 (01:09:58):
I as a real state broker, I pulled. I have
access to like a pretty sophisticated database. So what I
did was I went in and looked for closing transactions
in that area. And what I found was that they
(01:10:21):
were like I think seven or eight homes that closed
for zero dollars sales, all at the same time. And
they were which zero dollar doesn't necessarily mean you know
that that could be like moving it from like into
it trust or something. It doesn't necessarily mean that it's
(01:10:42):
being sold for zero dollars, though it could be. But
the thing that was interesting about it was that it
was they were all They all happened and were recorded
on Christmas Day two thousand and nine, which is impossible.
You can't get it. State buildings are closed on holidays,
(01:11:04):
you can't record it. You'd never You'll never have that.
And the fact that there were like seven or eight
of them all at the same time, same day, three
years before the event. I went, what, there's something going
on here. So there were a bunch of houses that
were gifted to people in advance to put them in
a position, in pre position them in that city back
(01:11:28):
in two thousand and nine, And I found it with
my software, And nobody has ever given me an explanation
as to how you could have that many closed, how
you could have any closings on a day in which
the county clerk buildings are not open.
Speaker 2 (01:11:45):
Christmas Day, so you have local government complicity.
Speaker 3 (01:11:50):
Yes, you would have had to go into the building
on Christmas Day and put those sales through manually, because
otherwise there'd be nobody that So who did that? That
person is in on it as well. So yeah, I
think that's a spook city. I think there's a bunch
of fuckery in there.
Speaker 2 (01:12:11):
You know, I think one of the weird things is
like the moving of some of the gravestones. There have
been a couple of the gravestones that were suddenly gone
and reappeared elsewhere, which.
Speaker 3 (01:12:21):
Is kind of strange. Yeah, and we know about a
lot of the kids like showing up in different events,
like pictures of kids showing up in different events.
Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
Yeah, it's a fucking clusterfuck that thing, man, It's totally like,
what the fuck was that all about? Like it makes
no sense at all. It's got to be something more
to it than the gun grab shit, Like I just
don't buy because the gun grab shit's never going anywhere.
It never has, it never will. So the idea that
they would pull stuff off to for gun control issues,
to me, is just retarded. So it's got to be
something other than that.
Speaker 3 (01:12:53):
I think it's I think it's I think it could
be you know, a variety of things. It could just
be gladiot type stuff, you know, just destabilize the general
public through random acts of terror targeted towards kids. I mean,
they NATO wrote the book on that.
Speaker 2 (01:13:11):
Shouldn't there be like detailed records of the school somewhere,
like architecture plans, like the licensing, the fucking permits they got,
and then when it shut down, you had to get
permits to go work on the school. Because remember there's
that big circle in the back that says call before
you drill the cbyd is on spray paint with the
(01:13:32):
circle back there. Yeah, obviously they were. That place was
clearly in the process of being knocked down or excavated
in some kind of way. There's got to be paper
trail for all that. One hundred percent of that has
to have paper trail, not just at the local level,
but at the state level. The state would have copies
of all that stuff.
Speaker 3 (01:13:52):
So and who ordered the porta potties and when did
you order them? I mean down to the down to
the I want I want that level of detail. Let
me sit on that commission, tell you what I want.
You I want. There's a stack of you know, I
want the utility bills for that school. Was it functional?
Speaker 1 (01:14:18):
That you'll never be able to get.
Speaker 3 (01:14:20):
Exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:14:21):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:14:21):
That that that's that's the stuff that gets a billion
dollar lawsuit.
Speaker 2 (01:14:25):
See, this is when you need somebody who's got like
terminal cancer to go hold some hostages and be like
you're gonna tell me the answer. I'm just gonna murder
all of you because I got cancer. I'll not die anyway.
What's the matter of me?
Speaker 3 (01:14:35):
Yeah, the terrorist torpedoes that go in there who are
on a one way mission.
Speaker 2 (01:14:42):
Like fucking Marina Oswald is still alive in Texas. She
could be held hostage very easily, and she's got answers,
trust me, she.
Speaker 1 (01:14:50):
Got allegedly allegedly.
Speaker 3 (01:14:52):
I don't think we should. I think I think any
sort of information you get under interrogation, for.
Speaker 2 (01:15:02):
For for trained people, but under normal circumstances, when I
threaten to cut your fingers off, like and the first
one goes, you're gonna start talking, So.
Speaker 1 (01:15:11):
It does. So you you're you're a finger guy. You're
not You're not a waterboarding guy.
Speaker 2 (01:15:20):
No fingers for sure, Okay, everybody. Then and then you
go to the wrist, and then the elbow and then
the shoulder. You know you got six fucking you gotta
got six acts before you even get to the body.
Speaker 3 (01:15:33):
It's it's kind of like, uh, you know, who wants
to be a millionaire?
Speaker 1 (01:15:40):
You get like the waterboarding is always like the popular one.
Speaker 3 (01:15:46):
You still have a phone friend.
Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
Because who wants to be a millionaire, the one with
all the hot chicks and they got a case and
they got to open the case.
Speaker 3 (01:15:55):
That's uh.
Speaker 1 (01:15:58):
No, I know what you tell man, I can't think
of it day.
Speaker 3 (01:16:04):
That's the one of those yes, yes, six.
Speaker 1 (01:16:11):
Guys. The lead singer from Disturbed.
Speaker 2 (01:16:13):
It was Howie Mandel. What show was that? That wasn't
Who wants to Billy a millionaire? Deal or no deal?
Deal or no deal? There we go. They got that.
I want to take speak of two channels that I
actually I accidentally get stuck on every once in a while.
Speaker 3 (01:16:31):
We have been watching uh, Pressure Luck. The new version
of Pressure Luck.
Speaker 2 (01:16:35):
Oh there's a new version doesn't have whammys.
Speaker 3 (01:16:38):
It does have whammys, and it's got Elizabeth Banks and
she's Oh, there was a.
Speaker 2 (01:16:43):
Big scandal with the original Whammy show. That's a documentary
made about the scandal with the original Whammy Show. Way, yeah,
I haven't watched it yet. I watched the one on
the prices, right, which was really good. The guy who
like the guy who like memorized all the prices.
Speaker 1 (01:16:57):
You watch that on a plane?
Speaker 3 (01:17:00):
So good?
Speaker 2 (01:17:01):
It was so good? What I fucking nerd this guy was?
Speaker 3 (01:17:04):
I watched that on an international flight where I had
like all the time in the world to watch crazy
shit like that. I watched one the same I think
around the same time, where a guy like dove in
headfirst into a swimming pool and broke his neck, and
normally that kills you, but in his case, it gave
(01:17:27):
him the ability to just channel music, like piano music,
and he was like, look, he would just start playing
piano like like fucking Mozart, right. He was just he
was playing all the time. But and people were like,
isn't this the greatest gift ever. He was like, I
can't make the music in my head stop, and you thought,
(01:17:50):
oh god, damn man, this might have been the worst
thing in the world that happened to him. He was
like he felt like he was getting ready to say, like,
please shoot me.
Speaker 1 (01:17:59):
I can't stop, you know.
Speaker 3 (01:18:00):
But he was like a shredding piano player. Like did
you play piano before?
Speaker 1 (01:18:05):
He's like, no, not at all.
Speaker 3 (01:18:08):
It's like I broke my neck.
Speaker 1 (01:18:10):
I went in the hospital.
Speaker 3 (01:18:11):
I woke up next thing, you know, I can play piano.
And that was that was one of those same like documentaries.
I was like, I've got twelve hours to kill I
think I'll turn this on that.
Speaker 1 (01:18:25):
Yeah, that was actually the basis in I watched the
movie to Day The Accountant too, so that was actually
the basis of that movie. There was a woman who
got in an accident and somehow it rewired her brain
and she became like super intelligent but also extremely flies
(01:18:48):
that she was dumb before.
Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
We just need smacking people in the head until they're smart.
Is that what you're saying?
Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
Yeah, well what she.
Speaker 3 (01:18:58):
She was?
Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
She was she was mazicing and you know her husband
got shot in the head and all this other stuff. Yeah,
you know what I'm saying. Yeah, but but that, but
that that was the premise because you know that The
Accountant is all about, uh the high function and autism,
because that's what Ben ben Affleck is. He's got autism,
but he's high functioning. Never watched it, Uh yeah, So
(01:19:22):
it's it's on Prime so you can see the The
Accountant of the original and then The Accountant too.
Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
Do you have to see the first one to understand
the second one? No?
Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
Okay, Actually, if you want me to be honest, I
got done in a movie and I was like, hold on,
what was the plot again? Because it's just like it
kind of just went into light some killing. I was like, okay,
and I and then he gets it in He's like,
hold on because it didn't. Because it didn't it didn't
really lay the groundwork for the plot that well, let's
(01:19:56):
just say that. So it was more like a what
would you say, like a Sacario type plot. It's like
a revenge type plot, but not for ben Affleck and
his brothers, kind of for this other chick who was
not really on screen a whole lot. So I don't know,
it was it was a little weird. I mean, it was,
(01:20:16):
it was. It was okay enough, you know what I'm saying.
But that when you're talking about, you know, people getting
in an accident and all of a sudden they come
back and and they they spoke about that, it's like, yeah,
you know, somebody could get have head trauma, wake up
the next day and they're able to learn another language
in a day.
Speaker 3 (01:20:32):
Like it's just like the Mandarin mm hmm some somehow. Yeah, Now,
what do you think that would go back to the
to the idea that we live multiple lives as ally
Buddhism and then what Buddhism is reincarnation?
Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
Am I right?
Speaker 2 (01:20:57):
Well, well, the idea if you got reincarnated you remember
shit is ridiculous.
Speaker 3 (01:21:03):
I mean, there's there's some some people who talk about
like these memories are like imprinted, like on your soul
or on like the Acashic records and things like that,
like record, but the cloud of the universe, so to speak,
(01:21:23):
and it comes comes back to you from time to time.
I don't know if you've seen Defending your Life. There's
a great scene in Defending Your Life where they go
to the uh Past Lives pavilion and you put your
hand on this activator and it and it projects out
uh you in a previous life, and it's you know,
some big dude is looking at it, and he and
(01:21:44):
and in the pictures him like as a like a
four year old girl like rushing like his doll's hair.
He's like, what the what the hell is this? You know?
So and then it shows like people like back when
they were nights, and it's it's a it's a comedy,
so it's trying to just show a bunch of funny stuff.
One guy's getting chased, He's getting chased by a lion.
Allian's about to eat him. So uh so, I don't know.
(01:22:08):
I mean, I think some religions think that, and I
think I think some of the spiritual people talk about
like that soul trap surrounding the planet. You know that
we're on a prison planet and that going to the
light is trap. You wind up stuck reincarnating in this hellscape.
(01:22:34):
That's what they say. I don't know. I think we
live in a dome and an enclosed system now after
my d MT experience, so that's my I'm throwing my
support behind enclosed dome system. Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:22:51):
Okay, enclosed dome, Corey, Corey, what about you? You feel
the enclosed dome?
Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
Understand?
Speaker 1 (01:22:56):
Go to Mars.
Speaker 2 (01:22:58):
I understand the enclosed dome idea. It's more about there
just being nothing outside. And I don't know, it's a
series of self contained systems. It's really this because I've
had the same experience and the self the understanding of
the being in the series of self contained systems would
imply that there was something beyond those systems, which would
(01:23:20):
imply the bubble or the dome.
Speaker 3 (01:23:22):
Sure, I just I've seen it.
Speaker 2 (01:23:27):
Yeah, you can't really argue with that.
Speaker 3 (01:23:34):
I do. I admit that I was enhanced, but dude,
I saw I saw I saw what I saw.
Speaker 1 (01:23:48):
And I said, I saw it.
Speaker 3 (01:23:51):
I mean I like that, I saw, I saw the
grid man, I saw the top of I saw the
roof of the place. I saw the roof of the astrodome,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (01:23:59):
So Chris is having a guy on his show I
think today right now actually as we speak, where these
guys did a bunch of DMT and then they shine
the laser. Oh that guy, that guy the laser. Yeah,
you know what I'm talking about. Yeah, yeah, yeah, and
then they saw like actual code, yes in the shit like.
Speaker 3 (01:24:17):
And they had a ton of people come over and
do the same thing and they all saw it.
Speaker 2 (01:24:23):
Yes. Okay, So here's what I have problems with. I
get that. What I have problems with is like our
current mathematical system as is ones and then the two
and then a three and all the stuff that we
would think of as code or zeros and ones. Our
men made concepts to represent reality. So therefore, if someone
is on such a larger grander scale than us and
(01:24:43):
they can create this matrix of code, what are the
odds are going to use the same system we do,
slim in the fucking nun. So like to me, the
idea of seeing code that we would recognize in computer
code as code written in the fabric of the universe
is a major technological.
Speaker 3 (01:25:02):
I don't think what they're seeing is code. I think
is as ones and zeros. I think what they're seeing
as symbols that look like a code are symbols. But
it's not like it's not like matrix ones and zeros,
it's like hieroglyphics.
Speaker 1 (01:25:19):
So the premise is is that no matter what you're seeing,
you're always trying to attribute to what you know as
opposed to what it actually could be.
Speaker 2 (01:25:30):
Oh right, I see, yes, yes, so that's what I'm saying.
But he's saying that there is actual.
Speaker 3 (01:25:35):
When when they're looking at that, when they're looking at
the laser, when they're smoking d MT and looking at
the laser, they're not seeing ones and zeros. They're seeing
symbols of things that they can't seem to explain or.
Speaker 1 (01:25:54):
Uh, don't comprehend.
Speaker 3 (01:25:57):
Yeah, but they're all seeing it, and I get that.
I mean I think that like when I did that
on the beach with Johnny Dollar, he specifically didn't tell
me what the experience would be like because he even
(01:26:22):
though he had done it plenty of times the vape
pen that he had. What he told me afterwards, when
he told me, say keep your eyes open and tell
me what you see. He didn't want to interfere with
my experience. He just wanted to know what I saw.
And then I said, I saw the grid, and he said,
(01:26:45):
everybody sees the grid with this stuff. And so I
don't know if it's like specific to the chemical compound.
You know that makes it like everybody sees the grid
or you know what that guy is showing with the lasers.
Everybody sees the hieroglyphics when you shine the laser on it.
(01:27:05):
Maybe it's the batch of the of what you're smoking.
There is potential everybody sees the grid when they smoke
the kind that Johnny Dollar had. Then that's pretty cool,
But that seems very mathematically impossible unless it has to
(01:27:33):
do with like the substance itself.
Speaker 1 (01:27:36):
Well, there's some people in the chat has said hieroglyphics,
So we go hieroglyphics. Ask can we compare that to what,
uh the I mean wonders of the Pyramids? You know
what I'm saying? Maybe potentially, maybe maybe they were, And
there's a lot of stuff out there that that we
(01:27:57):
don't know, and but somebody else news but just ain't telling.
Let's just say that I think I think there's a
I think there's a there's a subset of people that know,
you know, what what the exist, what our existence actually is,
and you know other finite details of uh, past human
(01:28:19):
civilizations and stuff that they just you know, aren't divulging
that maybe to protect you or protect the masses from
themselves because you know, extinction level events happens every so often,
the things of that nature, so they don't want to
cause chaos or uproar, or maybe they're hiding the truth
because you know, they know there's a better life potentially
(01:28:43):
for you, and they don't you know, they want to
have that for themselves. But you know that's stuff that
you won't ever know will have speculation, and so the
speculation is what is what kind of keeps that interesting?
And uh, you know with your experiences with the d
m T and stuff like that, when people see stuff
(01:29:04):
like that, then that you know that triggers something in
as far as the expiration and that's what we are
as humans who want to explore find new ship. Not me,
but I'm talking about most folks, all right, not me.
I don't give a damn. I'm gonna eat my friend
and burber French rise. Yeah, I'll be good, play basketball
and I'll be just fine. Uh before we get out
(01:29:26):
of here, uh independent media token, Corey. I see that
they've said there's been some activity on Twitter right here recently.
Speaker 2 (01:29:38):
July first. Uh huh July first, July.
Speaker 1 (01:29:42):
First, Okay, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, I've seen. I've seen
there's been some some activity as far as uh they
created was X now, but created a X page and
started shouting out some of that stuff to make sure
y'all go and y'all follow that on X and be
on the lookout. I dot network, IMT dot network as
(01:30:05):
makes you y'all got that, got that up here. Let
me put that in the shit right and that as
Corey said, it'd be hitting July first.
Speaker 2 (01:30:17):
The longest fucking week of my fucking life is about
to be. That will be between now, between now and
July first. I've been waiting four or five days since
we already made this decision and got everything finalized, and
like I cannot come quick enough. It's the I'm sitting
here every day just like, are y'all working around the
clock for you'd be surprised. We've worked on this for
(01:30:39):
almost a year. We minted the token in August of
last year. We started this probably in fucking March of
last year, so it's been well over a year we've
been working on this, and we got all the kinks
worked out and it's done and ready to go, and
there you go. So obviously we're gonna need a better
cheerleader because I'm not a cheerleader for anything.
Speaker 1 (01:30:56):
So truckles, it's all good. I mean, hey, get ready,
people get hyped.
Speaker 3 (01:31:05):
I m t.
Speaker 2 (01:31:06):
This is for independent big tip babes to do my
promotion from me.
Speaker 1 (01:31:10):
Now, if we get some of those, then it's gonna
work out just fine.
Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
Okay, nothing's just credibility like big titted crypto bitches. Yeah,
I think you're going.
Speaker 1 (01:31:21):
Now they gonna they gonna want to fee. Now, they're
gonna want to feed poster hose, want to feed tea,
you know what I'm saying. Even though they ain't real hose,
they're poser hose, they need a fee. Okay, so we'll
have to work on that. Charlie, have you you got
anything new you want to talk to the people about
Barnum World.
Speaker 3 (01:31:39):
Go check it out. The film with Drew Treglia, director
Drew Treglia, and Legal Man. It's available for free on YouTube.
You can just search Barnum World. It'll come up under
Drew Medium and uh go check out that uh summer
movie Hits. It's a funny one. It's one of those
(01:32:03):
movies you have to watch twice because there's a lot
of hidden stuff. Drew is really good about putting Easter
eggs and shit like that in there, So check it out.
Activist post macroaggressions.
Speaker 1 (01:32:14):
That's it there. It is. Of course, we know Corey
has been deep in I in t Corey is the
Oswald work? Is that coming down anytime?
Speaker 2 (01:32:22):
Saying, well, I'm having an existential crisis over it because
it's way longer than I fucking thought it would be,
like by fucking like two hundred pages, so I don't
know what I'm on. I'm having an existential crisis because
I'm pretty much at the end of like the first section,
which is two hundred and something pages. Oswald's likely goes
into Marines. I'm about to transition to the Marines, and
(01:32:44):
that's going to take me like two hundred plus fucking pages.
So I'm looking at like a four hundred and fifty
page book, and okay, way, that's that's twice as long
as I was anticipating. So I'm kind of at a
standstill right now because I'm not sure what direction to take.
Speaker 1 (01:33:00):
So you teater, okay, okay, because I know what for.
At first, she was saying it was gonna be a
lot of the kind of like documenting your journey throughout.
Speaker 2 (01:33:11):
His whole life and documents undeniable proof of Oswald being
in two places at once all the way from nineteen
forty five to leave leaves the Marines in fifteen fifty nine.
So it's a lot. It's a lot of shit, you know,
people giving different descriptions of him, you know, all kinds
of cool stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:33:28):
Okay, okay, all right, man. Also make sure y'all Corey
Hughes dot org, Bloodyhistory dot subsect dot com. Of course,
Charlie Robinson, the owner of Activist Posts, make sure y'all
going there checking out everything on Activist Posts as well.
If you need some real estate help in the area,
Charlie help you with that too. Yeah, if you need
(01:33:50):
a little expertise that's his name in Vegas. Maybe everywhere
somewhere else you're on your own, sorry, everywhere else down
on their own. Maybe they can come to you. Maybe
you do some consultation, Charlie, in consultation. There you go,
there you go, running numbers. Look at this, hey, man,
what do you think?
Speaker 3 (01:34:09):
Man?
Speaker 1 (01:34:09):
Give it? Am I I'm getting fucked or not. Just
let me know I'm buying it anyway, but just tell
me if I'm getting fucked that way. Sure, you know
what I say this, I can go to bed, you know,
sleep well at night that I know that I get
screwed on this deal. But I have no choice because
that's the way the market is right now. You either
buy and get fucked or you just you stay rent.
That's it. I mean, that's that's kind of it. I mean,
(01:34:33):
I know that sounds bad, but uh, I don't see that.
Uh turning anytime soon for me. X Q four twenty
dot com. Check out everything I do there. We appreciate
y'all being here with us, Day one ninety one. Be
back with y'all next week, day one ninety two. Until then,
boy x Q four twenty Charlie Robinson, Corey Hughes Lindsey Charmon.
(01:34:54):
Hope you she'd be back to lead the ship show
that we got going on next week and make sure
y'all are going and checking out all her stuff roadways
dot org. And we appreciate y'all for being here. Peace out,
MHM