Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
What's going on, guys, you boys Q four twenty here
we're back day zoid day one ninety six. Of course
we have got Charlie Robinson with us today. Charlie, you're
doing well.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
I'm doing well. Yeah, yeah, how about you guys?
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Yes, I'm decent. And there we go, Landsay, Landsay, not
dead yet, You're alive. So that's what's key with uh,
You're a healthy sues the mystery.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Fucking disease shit like, oh my god. Everyone's like, are
you feeling better? I'm like, well, yeah, But last time
I was feeling better, and then the way steroids work,
so I had the anaphylactic whatever, got the steroids. Everything
went down. Steroids build up in your system and then
they slowly move out of your system, so you stop
(00:55):
taking steroids, but they're still active in your body for
a week or more. And so last time I felt
fine too after the steroids. But like a week and
a half I think, or maybe two after I stopped
taking them, it all came back again. My throat started swelling,
my lips or sweatying, my eyes are swelling closed, steroids again,
(01:15):
started feeling fine.
Speaker 4 (01:16):
I think I'm on day four now. After steroids.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
I think I have another week or so to see
and if it continues at that point, if it comes back,
then I have to be admitted and they have to
check to see that my organs aren't failing, because whatever
this reaction is attacks all of your organs and staculling.
Speaker 4 (01:37):
Yay.
Speaker 1 (01:42):
Yeah, I mean well, you know, you start talking about it,
you're like, oh, this child's play, right, My goodness, They're like.
Speaker 3 (01:53):
Zero point zero three percent of people or something. So
I'm a miracle of death. No, I really do hope
it's just over this time, Like, dear God, that'd be great.
No more steroids.
Speaker 1 (02:13):
Yes, the answer to that question is yes.
Speaker 4 (02:17):
And I don't know if people know.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
I might seem very sweet, but I'm like a pretty
I'm a recovering, deeply aggressive person, and so on steroids,
I'm a fucking nightmare. Like I'll just misserate people like
for no fucking reason at all. I just go straight
back to like hood lindsay, it's nobody likes it, so
(02:40):
it's it's best for all of us.
Speaker 4 (02:42):
That's I don't have.
Speaker 5 (02:45):
Cube.
Speaker 6 (02:45):
Have you ever taken steroids like to like for the
gym or anything?
Speaker 1 (02:51):
No? No, no, his own that steroids. Yeah. Yeah. When
I had hipberd citis, they gave me that. Uh that's
oh immediately oh with that, like that was so it
(03:12):
goes wisdom teeth and then hipber citis. That's my too
much painful encounters. Uh. And the hippercitis like I couldn't
see it any type of way, Like I couldn't lay
on my back, I couldn't lay on my side, I
couldn't lay on my stomach when I got in cars,
(03:33):
like I was on the verge of crying, like it
was like it was that bad. And the bad part
is that I had to go out to the damn
pharmacy three times and uh I was by myself. So
every single time I was like this is bullshit because
I literally I put my right leg in and then
I would muster all my energy up to drag my
(03:54):
left leg into the car. Yeah. So so yeah, but
I took it and immediately the next day like I
wouldn't one hundred percent, but I was like I can
actually function. Yeah, I can function. Yeah, because the night
before is that what that is? Uh, you got bursacks
(04:16):
on your hips, and so what happens is that they
they'll become inflamed and just like press against the bone
and so any which way you move, it's like it's
like fluid. I think it's it's almost like he's like
like cushions, like motor mounts for your hips. You know
what I'm saying. Yeah, that's what it's what it's almost like.
(04:38):
So so yeah, that that wouldn't fun at all. But
that's that's my only encounter with steroids. I I've kind
of I'm kind of backed off my heavy lifting journey
as I've aged back back about fifteen years ago with
me and my buddy was going. We were we were
(04:59):
lifting so serious. It's, uh, two forty fives on each
side and the twenty five on each side. Was that
ninety fifty one eighty five No, no, no, that one
eighty fifty fifty two thirty two seventy five. That's what
we were rapping. We were wrapping two seventy five eight
times three seven brus Yeah, did you like thirty Uh
(05:25):
what no, I'm thirty Oh no, the bar is forty five. Yeah, yeah,
so the bar is forty five. So yeah, two seventy five.
We were wrapping that. But I mean like we were in there,
we were in there serious. Now it started to get old,
stuff started to pull. I was like, ah, I'm just
scaling back, you know what I'm saying. It's all good.
(05:46):
And once you get to a certain point. Once you
get to a certain point anyway, the only way to
go past that point is to continue lifting heavier. Uh
so you have to have progressive overload. But my issue
was is that my buddy he was he was in
the midst of get married and have a kid. So
I mean it's just like, you know, you didn't have
(06:09):
that person there that's gonna push you back past that point.
But once you kind of get to where you want
to be body type wise, like he really only got
to live like one time a week to maintain it.
That's pretty much it. Getting there is the hard part.
But once you get there, like maintaining it is like nothing.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
I've been the same.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
I'm just in height and maintenance and weight.
Speaker 2 (06:35):
I've been same height and weight.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Since college.
Speaker 6 (06:42):
Having the heaviest I was was right out of college
and then I just stopped drinking doctor pepper and lost
like ten pounds real fast and that like that, And
I never never been heavier than that. Ever, I've always
been the same wait, but also been doing the same
(07:04):
stuff and going to the gym five days a week
for thirty two years, just religiously obsessively, like I'm so
trained to do it, I don't even think about it anymore.
Some people are like dreading going to the gym. It's
like I've already been finished and have come home before
I even I feel like I'm awake.
Speaker 7 (07:27):
You know.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
Yeah, And it's weird. It's weird if you don't do it. Yeah, Like,
if you don't do it, your day is weird, Like
the day feels weird. You're like, something's all.
Speaker 7 (07:36):
I remember.
Speaker 8 (07:37):
I was jogging every day for years, and then I
broke cart of my side so I couldn't jog anymore,
and I went through like a severear withdrawal and depression.
Speaker 4 (07:51):
I had no idea that you were that I was
addicted to running at all. I have no idea. I
had to just suddenly see. It was extreme. It was
like quitting a dream. It was really fucked up.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
Oh yeah, yeah. Once your body gets used to stuff
his and then you try to untrain it from what
it's used to, it rebels, you know what I'm saying.
It rebeils just like hey, hey, hey, hey, what we
got going on here? I mean, let's get back to
what we've been doing. Let's get let's get back to
what we've been doing.
Speaker 4 (08:24):
You know, yeah, did this fine?
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Doctor?
Speaker 3 (08:28):
I didn't know for sure what was wrong, right. I
went to the like arrow whatever at Swedish Hospital and Seattle.
He did a CT scan on me. Have these two
metal rods next to my really large and you.
Speaker 4 (08:40):
Know, cut from like neck down to put them in
the extreme.
Speaker 3 (08:44):
And so I went to see, like what's going on
this guy? Like the whole time I'm there, like meet him,
we're going through, we're getting the CT scan, we're going here,
and we're going there, he's just like passive, just like
no emotion, like nothing phases him at all. He puts
my CT scan on, he starts looking through it. He stops,
and he like jolts and his face becomes like pale,
and he looks at me and he says, how are
(09:05):
you walking right now?
Speaker 4 (09:07):
And I was like I don't know why.
Speaker 3 (09:09):
And he's like this part of the rod like broke
and is like digging into your vertebrae and both halfs
of your vertebrae are broken. And I'm like, ah, he
just was like so floored. He was like, what the
actual fuck. He's like, I mean, I guess if you
can walk, we don't have to fix it. And I
was like eh, and then he's like, okay, So anybody,
(09:32):
anytime anybody looks at an extra of my spine now,
they have the same response. They're like, what are you
doing moving?
Speaker 2 (09:38):
I'm like, oh, just seems to work, and you never
got it fixed.
Speaker 3 (09:43):
It's still broken now. Yeah, it's all fucked up. I
have so many, like the list of things. I don't
even think people believe me half the time because it's
like too much.
Speaker 4 (09:53):
But h so I just keep going. But I I.
Speaker 3 (10:01):
Mean, like the level of pain. At some point, you
stop feeling pain because it just you know, your brain
is like okay, well, I mean if we're not going
to do anything about that, we'll just lower that signal.
So I just think I've had enough pain that it
just I dissociate from it, like I literally stop feeling
it so I can like tune into it and be like,
oh y if that hurts, and then I can like
tune back out again with that specific one. But if
(10:25):
they were going to fix it, not only would it
be hundreds of thousands of dollars. They'd have to reopen
me from neck to butt and pull out all this
hardware that's like screwed into my spine and then put
it back in again differently, and then who knows if
it would just happen again. So I'm like, what, it
already hurts, Like that would just hurt more, cost money
(10:47):
to have a huge recovery. When I got this done,
I was sixteen, so you heal fast, and like, you
know that still took years. This what would happen now?
I just be crippled for the rest of my life.
I mean like, yeah, so I just don't do it,
And I don't know why I would.
Speaker 6 (11:02):
You know, what happened, what broke what broke your back?
Speaker 2 (11:09):
What did all this stuff?
Speaker 3 (11:11):
Well, this so the scoliosis. I had really severe scoliosis,
which is what they put the rods in for in
the first place. And then that hurts. I mean like
you're the rest of your life, you like can't really
move in different ways, and there's all sorts of problems
and issues, so like it didn't hurt before, but it
hurts afters But also I won't die from having my
organs crushed, you know, as it like compresses your whole
(11:32):
body and twists, is like a very severe double curve.
So that's why I had that put in. And then
that causes all these injuries above and below where the
rods are because it's the only part of my spine
that will move. And then the broken part happened because
I was on a jet ski. I was on a
jet ski and the person went over a wake of
a giant like river boat, you know, with like the
(11:55):
big wheels and whatever. Big wake flew up and then
just like crashed. I'm like landing, like I felt it snap,
like it was awful. So I didn't move for a
few days. And then the parts that broke on that
same exact vertebrae, they were probably weakend because of all
the other chaos, you know, but it was because of running.
Speaker 4 (12:13):
I wasn't supposed to run.
Speaker 3 (12:14):
No one fucking told me that, so I just ran
all the time. And I was like breaking my own
spine by running, damn. So yeah, I've slipped discs, I've
broken parts of vertebrae, I have broken rod my spine
like a very So I tell people they're like, oh,
you're young, you don't have back pain. I'm like, bitch, please.
Speaker 1 (12:35):
Said, I've got a ninety five year old back, yes,
since I was sixteen. Yeah, yeah, that's that's insane. And
the fact that you're not, that you don't let that
affect your mood is incredible. All right.
Speaker 2 (12:53):
Why was for a.
Speaker 4 (12:54):
Little while.
Speaker 2 (12:56):
I'd be awful, I'd be unu.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
The vast majority of people with this surgery this far
down the road are disabled and miserable and on painkillers
and like whatever. But I was like, well, I don't
want to be on painkillers my whole life, because you
know that's not a life really either.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
So here we go, and that's what I tell people.
I was like, man, I don't like Earth, but I
don't let it affect my mood.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
I mean, I've got beef. I've got beef with Earth
in general, but I'm not gonna sit here and wake
up every day pissed. You know, that's the whole prison.
People like you you're pessimistic. I was like, it's like,
are you gonna give me some reasons not to be
you know, like, are you looking around? You're gonna give
(13:43):
me a reason to be optimistic? About something. Hey, look,
I'm trying to latch onto it and I'm trying to
find it. But we're running thinging. That's all I know.
I think optimistic mm hmm. Yeah, it's not.
Speaker 3 (13:57):
If you think the realistic outlook is bad, that's your passage.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
Yeah, yeah, that's the premise. Have you seen that right here? Recently,
everybody's saying that the the grocery prices that like Walmart
have doubled. I don't know if that's the case, that's
what people are saying. I'm like, doubled.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
I'm like, I don't know. Are also so yeah, there's that.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
I mean they were they were sitting there and they
were talking about, well, you know, last week the coffee
was eleven ninety nine and today the coffee's eighteen ninety nine.
I was like, well they got that Dunking coffee right
there for seven ninety nine. I want you buy that.
Oh I don't like Dunking coffee. We just don't buy
no coffee. I don't. Here's how this shit works, Okay,
(14:49):
the ship, this luxuries, like you can break them by
just not buying the ship. To see it, like you
just I just don't buy the sh I mean, that's it.
It's like, hey, guys, ain't nobody buying that stuff? Like
like this didn't work. But if you continue to buy
(15:10):
the ship, then they'll just continue the mark the price up.
It's the same thing as cars. Yeah, it's the same
thing as cars. Cars. Right now, more and more people
are starting to go eighty four months on their car loans. Yes,
you heard me, eighty four months on their car loans. Yeah,
(15:34):
so Jesus seven seven, oh yeah, seven years.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
Then your car has no value usually little, right.
Speaker 1 (15:44):
Well, the premise is is that once you get to
a certain point, you're just traded in anyway and roll
over that negative equity, which is what the past majority
of people do.
Speaker 4 (15:52):
It's not a slave society, like you own nothing.
Speaker 6 (15:55):
Well, every several generations you've nothing. You treade that car
equity three times in a row, and you own jack shit.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
Yeah. With with people the way the way they see things,
they see things in payments, not in totality. So they're like, oh,
how can I how can you get me to where
I can afford this payment? Well, we can stretch it
out to eighty four months. They're like, good, that's what
I'll do. Like that's forever on the car. That like
(16:31):
that that that is forever on the car unless you
keep the miles low on it, unless you don't drive
a whole lot, then you can then you can get
something out of it. But if you if this at
the time.
Speaker 6 (16:42):
What's the interest rate you guys charge on something like that?
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Uh well, right now, I think it's it's like six
point two six point two percent.
Speaker 4 (16:54):
It's crazy.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
And actually just recently bought my girlfriend in a car,
an Equinox because hers was hers was crashed out. But
but yeah, I think it's six point six point two. Yeah,
and that's I like, like, that's good credit, you know
what I'm saying. That's great credit. So if your credit shitty,
(17:17):
then you know, you could go a little bit higher
on that for that particular interest rate. But I mean,
you come in, no money down, no trade in, and
the cars, you know, forty five thousand dollars and you
got to do something, so they just extends you out.
It's like you do it in five years, but it's
(17:38):
gonna cost you eight hundred and fifty dollars a month.
If we got to seven years, then we can get
it down to five hundred and fifteen dollars a month.
I'm like, okay, I'll do that. I mean, it's a premise.
Can I can I afford the payment? So that's why
everybody's looking at it, affording the payment.
Speaker 4 (17:56):
I get why no one can afford anything.
Speaker 3 (17:59):
I mean, like most people, I think it's like fourteen
hundred a month or their mortgages at least, and then
and then their car might be eight hundred of month.
They're electricities.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
That's you wipe down. And you know what's crazy, It's
like in a point in time where you need other
people in your life more than ever to make it. Financially,
we're moving further and further apart from each other, Like yeah,
relationship wise, free and white like like people are just
(18:30):
like separate now. It's like dude, and I see everybody
talking about, oh man, you know, if the dude's gonna
pay all the bills. I was like, booth, They ain't
a whole lot of dudes out here that can pay
all the bills, you know what I'm saying. And the
dudes that can, but they're hitting all type of puss
all right, they ain't just want yours, you know what
I'm saying. I mean, I mean they want you and
(18:53):
your friends, and some of them down the street too.
So it's just like, I mean, at this point in time,
you probably need to be linking up with somebody. You
need to find somebody you like and can build a
life with or have friends, roommates, things of that nature.
Otherwise you need to make a ship ton of cash.
That's just it. Otherwise you fuck either that or you
(19:18):
can live in the hood. You mean you might be
fucked with that.
Speaker 4 (19:22):
Yeah, well, poisoning, all kinds of poisoning.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
Yeah, somebody busting in your house, stealing your shit.
Speaker 4 (19:30):
You know.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
So I look at the content that pops up all
the time, and it's just people just bashing each other.
I'm just like, but I mean, all of us got
to wake up the next thing and live. So right
now it's a good if you hadn't started to right now,
it's a good time to try to make a friend,
(19:51):
have friends. Right now is a good chime, you know,
find a significant other, stop a good time.
Speaker 4 (19:58):
Offer Donald Trump or whatever they're imagined weird ship you
think matters.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
Like, yeah, yeah, it's like, oh, I just own my
whole family because you know they they voted for Donald Trump.
Now it's not the time, now help you buil. Yeah,
I mean, now, it's not the time, but one slip
out here you fuck you know, and is.
Speaker 3 (20:20):
Gonna show up at your house if you need some help, dude,
you know, yeah, I don't think the fucking Mormons.
Speaker 4 (20:26):
They don't even care who you are. They're gonna help
you out.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Okay, okay they will shown. Now are we gonna get
the Mormons so we won't get those Mormon wives as
on Hulu spreading that puss around.
Speaker 3 (20:38):
They're gonna come to your house to help you move
and cook you food at the same time they're gonna
they're done and the heaven they're amazing.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
I mean, that's crazy. That's crazy. And you know people
are talking about the fair cutting rates and ship like that.
I was like, Bud, I was like, man, they bout
can't even there. If you want me to be honest,
I don't know if they should cut rates ever again,
they pro should leave it right where it's at, because
if they cut rates and the mortgage rates and all
(21:14):
that shit drop due, a house is gonna really be
a pipe dream because it's gonna fucking explode in price
because everybody's gonna be trying to dump their ship. Dude,
there's been people been trying to move since they bought
their ship in twenty twenty. They can't. They've been trying
to move, Charlie. I know you've probably seen some of
(21:37):
that kind of well, want to move. They're trying to
go somewhere a different opportunity. They can't.
Speaker 6 (21:43):
Even if they're in the same city and there's nothing
that's like, you know, they haven't changed jobs or anything.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
They just need a bigger house.
Speaker 6 (21:51):
If you have an interest rate on if you bought
a house that was small but it's the right size
for you when you bought it and your interest rate
was three percent, you can't sell that house today and
buy the proper, the bigger house that you actually need
because to do so, you're going to reset at six
(22:13):
and a half percent. So not only are you buying
a house that's going to be more expensive because the
prices have gone through the roof in the last couple
of years, but you're also going to be buying it
with a rate that's double what you're used to paying.
So you just make the calculation and you go, doesn't
make sense to leave even though I need a bigger
house and I want it and I can afford it.
(22:36):
I can't give up this rate that I'm locked into.
It's too good of a rate, and I would be
unlocking that and locking into something that's double what it.
So it's like not only it'd be one thing if
if it was one or the other, like either the
price of the house you want to buy is astronomically high,
but at least the interest rate is the same as
(22:58):
what you paid before, or the interest rate's gone through
the roof. But the housing markets and the tank so
I don't give a fuck anyway. So, but if you
have to pay double for the house and then double
for the interest rate, you're not buying it. You're not
doing it. So a lot of people have been sitting
on their hands waiting for something to happen, either prices
to come down or interest rates to come down so
(23:20):
that they can then move move something, move maybe physically
move to like another state, or just move up in
buyer profile and move into like the move up buyer profile,
or move down. You know, maybe the kids are grown
and off, you know, at college, and you want to downsize,
like whatever the reason is, you can't do it when
(23:42):
you feel like you're you're locked in, and it I mean,
it's one thing. If it's if interest rates have always
been at the same rate for like the last ten years,
then it's like it doesn't matter. But they were so huge,
like they were zero and then they were five percent
in like a year and a half, and everyone went,
that's really fucking un healthy for the market. Let's not
(24:02):
do that anymore. And so if you've got in at
the bottom there, you can't you don't want to leave,
and you shouldn't leave. It's a math problem at that point,
and so.
Speaker 2 (24:11):
You just deal with it.
Speaker 6 (24:12):
You just expand your house, you know, maybe you build
an extension.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
On or you do something else.
Speaker 6 (24:18):
But you can't and you can't sell it because you
don't have buyers. Because those buyers are sitting around they're
unqualified because.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
The rate's so high and the price is so high.
So it's like if.
Speaker 6 (24:28):
Trump wanted to kickstart the economy, which he may or
may not want to do, but if you wanted to
and he could control Powell, which you can't because the
FED is an independent, privately owned central bank, if he
threatened him enough, you know, and got that guy to
drop interest rate, it's a full point this year, then
(24:48):
the economy would would kick back to life. But I
don't think. I think these decisions are being made above
Trump's pay graade.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
Yeah, and I like what I like what you talked
about right there, like that you can't even downsize, Like
like you're like, Okay, I don't need this big a
house anymore, let's downsize. It's like ship, I can't even downsize.
It's like the downsize is gonna bust my ass.
Speaker 6 (25:19):
With the downside, let's say you get a smaller house,
a cheaper house, but the interest rate is now double,
and next thing you know, you go, it's the same
price as what I'm in. Now I'm supposed to be downside,
I'm going to a smaller house but pay the same
as I pay currently for the big house.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Why would I do that? Right, You're just not gonna
do it.
Speaker 1 (25:37):
So Yeah, And the issue with building onto is that
most of your houses are now in places where there's
an h O A. So now you got niggas in
your business. They're like, oh, you can't building your extension
on there because the other houses don't have the extension
that it would look weird for the neighborhood. And It's like,
fag it, get out of here. Man. There's something the
(25:59):
gay ship I've ever heard my life. Dude, that ship
is gay.
Speaker 4 (26:07):
In your business.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Like niggas in your business. Man. Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
But I'm just like, bro, it's like, well, I mean,
you know, I want to build a you know, a
small shipped out back that puts all. You can't have
a ship out back. The rest of them don't have sheds.
And it's like, dude, can you worry about cutting the
grass and keeping the pool right and and and the
(26:29):
damn workout facility and not worry about this around here?
Like you just all up in my business. I mean,
I just don't get it, you know, garbage. Like I said,
h r A could be a good thing if we're
talking about share community spaces. If you come in, you know,
we've hired people to cut everybody's grass, so everybody's landscaping
(26:50):
and stuff looks good. We've got the community pool, you know,
if you want your salt water pool, you know, that's
the thing. Now they're getting the salt water pools. We
get a couple we got a couple of places around here. Uh,
new apartment they building gonna have the salt water pool.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
They need to do that.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
Salt water pool. You got your twenty four hour fitness facility,
were keeping on. Hey, hey, I get it. You get hey,
we give you a cable package TV package. Hey, hi
way all good, but no, you move in got hi way.
Niggas don't even cut the grass. You ain't got no pool.
But it just be upping your ship. If you want
(27:29):
to paint your house, you know what I'm saying. Let's
just be like no, I mean shit, crazy man, this
new place I moved into.
Speaker 2 (27:42):
Go ahead, Oh, I'll just hit it.
Speaker 3 (27:44):
When someone's like old and disabled or something can't like
mow their lawn, the HOA is all mad at them
and giving them notices. I'm like, just mother fucking lawn
for them, dude, do akey more effort to write this up,
print it out, walk it over and staple it to
their door. Then you can just like quickly mother their
fucking mom for them.
Speaker 5 (27:59):
I watched their video. I watched some random ship on YouTube,
and this is one guy who cuts lawns and like
he has a YouTube channel where he cuts lawns for
free because that's his stick and he doesn't okay, and
so this one, this lady got a ticket for overgrown lawns.
So he went to go mow the fucking lawn and
the cop showed up and said, it's interference with process.
Speaker 4 (28:21):
What the fuck, dude?
Speaker 6 (28:24):
This is why people.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
Yes, and they're like, you can't do that. I'm like,
why can't die? Who cares? Who put it in? Its money?
You get money?
Speaker 1 (28:40):
Mean, I can't put a quarter in their mater. I
just did it. I mean like, but but I just
did it. Like when I did it, like it didn't
grab my hand and like and like rip my hand off.
It works just because it knew that it can do.
A person who was supposed to put the quarter in.
Speaker 2 (29:03):
You can't do that.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
No, no, no, I guess that's.
Speaker 6 (29:05):
It's okay, it's fine. I'm fine, I can do it. Yeah,
I can do it, nigga.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
The mater's not tied to biometrix.
Speaker 6 (29:14):
It doesn't it doesn't discriminate between my quarter, that gentleman's
quarter quarter from some homeless guy who just found it.
I want to put quarters in there.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
I put quarters in there.
Speaker 6 (29:27):
Somebody to tell them that there's a cop sitting around
the corner incoming traffic. Hey, there's a cop back there
being a cunt.
Speaker 2 (29:36):
Flash flash flash.
Speaker 6 (29:39):
Damn right, you guys conspire against uff, We'll conspire against
you too, you fuckers.
Speaker 5 (29:46):
That's been upheld numerous times in court. You can do
that because this one motherfucker had a sign. He got
tired of the cops being up the road from his house,
so he went out and put it in his lawn
said speed trap ahead, and they fucked with him, and
like he won in court to this first amendments.
Speaker 1 (30:01):
Dude, dude, Google Maps, you can report where the cops
are at and then to tail you.
Speaker 5 (30:11):
It really freaks me out how ridiculously accurate. Sometimes it'll
be like there's an obstruction in the road in one
hundred meters and it's like there's a tire sitting there.
Speaker 6 (30:19):
So I never used that. My wife uses Ways and
it's like that. Sometimes it's like cops spotted ahead. I'm like,
I do like that feature of being able to rat
out where the police are on this.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
That is kind of a nice feature.
Speaker 5 (30:34):
Cops tried to get Ways banned when it first came out.
It's hilarious.
Speaker 1 (30:39):
Yeah, but it's literally on Google Maps. I mean, they
tell you when there's a there's a wreck ahead and
all that stuff. I mean, I mean people actually using
a report stuff and they report the cops all the
time because they'd be like speed trap ahead, report this. Yeah,
they gotta Hey, they're trying to be Hey, look in
(31:00):
a world where everybody's out for themselves, you know, at
that point in time, one good Samaritan. Uh. The thing is,
I guess it's great for everybody. Now. Now the rest
of their lives are they're pieces of ship. Now. I
can't help them with the rest of their lives. I got,
you know, three baby daddies. You know what I'm saying,
don't pay rent and you know EBT buy up all
(31:22):
the damn Dr pepper and junk food and all this.
I mean, they do all that other stuff, you know
what I'm saying, Like that's acto human beings. But at
least they you know, they did one thing right in
their life. So when they get to the Pearly Gates,
it said, I did tell the folks behind me there
was a cop ahead, and I mean, God's got to
be like, I'll take that. I mean, I'll take that.
Speaker 2 (31:43):
This seems like good.
Speaker 6 (31:44):
I'm the type of guy who puts the shopping cart
away and who flashes his high beams to out the
cop the tightening.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
The bushes to.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
Agree. I see it, and I would think that.
Speaker 2 (32:02):
I think that.
Speaker 6 (32:04):
I do that because it's the right thing to do.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
And fuck the government.
Speaker 4 (32:11):
Alcatraz people going on hunger strike.
Speaker 5 (32:16):
I like alligator Schwitz better.
Speaker 6 (32:21):
It will be if they just import some Typhus in there. Yeah,
I guess they're on Tampa Typhus.
Speaker 4 (32:30):
They're playing like their fourteenth and now hunger strike.
Speaker 5 (32:32):
I just love what's going on there because it just shows,
like that's what happened in World War Two, what's happening today?
Like nobody was at the death camps. They were putting
some alligator. Alcatraz is all over goddamn Poland, is what
the fuck happened?
Speaker 1 (32:47):
Well, man, you're right too, And what else happened is, uh,
you know the Sydney swingy stuff. You know, you've got
good jeans.
Speaker 5 (32:54):
She got some goddamn good jeans and she is she
looks goddamn good jens.
Speaker 1 (32:59):
Yeah, Nazi propaganda, propaganda, I.
Speaker 3 (33:04):
Guess I like it, Like that's a good I like
that ad. I'm a female and I like that ad.
That's a cool car. She looks good in those genes.
She's a beautiful woman. She has exceptionally nice breasts, So
what who can fucking say that she doesn't like she does?
Speaker 5 (33:20):
She has good genes, those eyes just say.
Speaker 4 (33:27):
Right.
Speaker 3 (33:28):
The people saying this is Nazi ship are all ugly, fat,
trans by like whatever, non binary, like, they're all people.
I don't care if you're ugly, but you you know
you are. And if you're jealous of people who are beautiful, like,
that's a big you problem.
Speaker 5 (33:43):
Here's a deal. Ugly people get fucked too. It's all
about personality. You got you can. I've seen some dudes
with some gorgeous chicks and I'm like, what is happening there?
Speaker 1 (33:55):
And easily and usually there's a there's a story behind that.
But with the with the ugly women, I mean there's
a there's a dude out there waiting on you. You
know what I'm saying, wait just for you. You know
what I'm saying, You can be like, man, I ain't
got nothing going on. You got just enough. He's like,
(34:16):
what you mean you got a vagina? Like, I mean,
you just said you got just enough and that's all
you re a You gotta leverage that thing. That's all
I know. I've said if you born one, you need
to leverage. It's just.
Speaker 4 (34:32):
Being jealous too.
Speaker 3 (34:33):
Like, you can make yourself attractive in some way no
matter who you are. I mean, like, okay, I guess
maybe not like everyone, but like a lot of people.
Even if you're like really low on the scale, there's
a lot of things you can do with like your
hair and your makeup and your clothes and your personality.
Mostly it can make you a lot more attracted. But
if you're a miserable person who's like sitting here screeching
about a beautiful person existing, you're dropping yourself down further
(34:56):
on the hole. You're making yourself uglier. You're ugly, and
now you're uglier.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
Well, well what what what the people were saying was
that it was saying that white people with blond hair,
blue eyes are supreme to everybody else. That's what people
were saying. That is why it was a Nazi ad.
I mean, yeah, yeah, suburban white women. Look, I mean
(35:22):
you know what I mean, the bane of the existence
of America right now, Yes, suburban white women that take
the day of the four kids, the soccer practice and
ship boats. They be cutting up about stuff like that.
I'm trying to take and they be they be on
(35:42):
the ramp page because it's like, oh we need why
why are why are they showing the black people. I'm like, Bud,
just settle down, Okay, all right, there's been there's been
good looking black women in uh in commercials. Old school
was Tyra Banks tacking They whoo, I.
Speaker 5 (36:00):
Mean along the way, along the way all the fat women,
all the black women became fat in the ads.
Speaker 9 (36:06):
Yeah, that's what kind of happened. It's being it's stopped
being Tyra Banks and Tracy Bingham then started being uh Antemima.
Speaker 5 (36:21):
Oh no, not answer, mama, she got baded.
Speaker 2 (36:25):
Oh yeah, that's right. Sorry, Old Mills Road or whatever the.
Speaker 6 (36:28):
Fuck it's called now old Mill it's some dumb, woke,
retarded game.
Speaker 5 (36:38):
Now my pancas' got a black woman on it. I
don't want it.
Speaker 6 (36:42):
Yeah, it's my syrup. Listen, I am particular about my syrup.
I prefer it delivered to me by a large black woman.
Speaker 5 (36:53):
It's good decision I made.
Speaker 6 (36:56):
It's probably actually filled with hyper corn syrup.
Speaker 5 (37:00):
So on that note, I must prefer the modern bullshit
fake pancake syrup to like real maple syrup. I've had
a lot. Like I'm like over it. I'm like, fuck
is it it's not the same.
Speaker 6 (37:14):
I'm gonna have to I'm gonna have to wade into
this one only because somebody tried to pass off a
U of McDonald's pancake syrup. Have you tried that? Have
you actually tried one of those recently?
Speaker 5 (37:32):
It is.
Speaker 6 (37:34):
Inedible. It is poison. It is literal poison. It is
you can taste the chemicals in it. My daughter ordered
like a we're at the airport, and she got like
a McDonald's breakfast and it had like a big breakfast,
had like pancakes, and and I said, don't eat that syrup.
That is garbage. Like I hate to be the food police,
(37:54):
but like I can't allow that so unbelievable.
Speaker 5 (38:00):
Is ruined breakfast for the girl.
Speaker 6 (38:02):
I'm sorry, but it's not syrup. It's not I don't
know what syrup and name only.
Speaker 3 (38:09):
Real maple syrup is so good. It's full of nutrients
and minerals that came from a tree.
Speaker 4 (38:14):
It's a tree. Is blood. You can drink it straight
out of the tree.
Speaker 6 (38:17):
Is delicious, drinking tree blood.
Speaker 1 (38:19):
Corey think a bit like that. Yeah, I don't mind it.
Speaker 5 (38:23):
I go to the eye hop. I want some extra
tree blood on that ship.
Speaker 2 (38:27):
Give me tree.
Speaker 1 (38:28):
But let me tell you right now, look, I noticed
because my girlfriend goes and she asks for the the
maple syrup, just because she tries to cut back on sugar.
When she can, they charge you exture alright, that maple
that that maple syrup. Don't come free the tree the
real ship, all right, that run that run in the pocketbook. Okay,
(38:52):
so pocketbook gotta be ready. If your pocketbook ain't ready,
you won't have to take the chemical laiden syrup, all right.
Speaker 6 (38:59):
Pay the piper on that one, Hey, a little bit
more and get the good.
Speaker 3 (39:03):
Ship honey too, you know, pass off. They'll be like, yeah,
it's honey. And it's just like yellow corn syrup, just
golden corn srut. And maple syrup is like corn syrup.
They're both just sugar.
Speaker 4 (39:21):
It's like hard to come by in public. You have
to go by that ship.
Speaker 5 (39:24):
Oh so, uh, sugar is like the bane of existence
and fucking horrific for you and all that stuff. But
I'm obsessed with candy making. I think I'm gonna do
it one day. I watched these guys. Yes, it doesn't
seem that hard. Like you put some you butt your No,
I don't like a resh. You put some corn syrup
(39:44):
in here and some stuff and you flip it around
and you throw some color in there, and next thing
you know, you got candy.
Speaker 4 (39:52):
Corys candies will be great.
Speaker 6 (39:54):
Yeah, you could drive around in a white van and
hand it out to children.
Speaker 1 (39:59):
Okay, it went. It went a little rough there, like
we went, we went, there was some inn window, Corey's
candies and then drive a white van. It's like, man,
we didn't move to a bad place.
Speaker 4 (40:13):
On the bag. On the bag, people will absolutely love this.
Speaker 3 (40:20):
You have good security. You'll make a big ste but
he will because any press is good press. So everybody
will be like, look at this racist Nazi guy handing
out candy.
Speaker 4 (40:29):
And then everyone will well, you.
Speaker 5 (40:30):
Can make swastika candy, because what they do is when
they make like the candy that's got a face on it,
it's like this big around, it's huge, it's like that big,
it's massive, and then they stretch it so it gets small.
So you can do a swastika candy like, no problem.
Speaker 1 (40:50):
Candy is right for you. Yeah, I mean, yeah, it's
like in this like put it when they say check
the tim you're in the ring.
Speaker 3 (41:05):
People are freaking out right. Now there's the city. There's
also All White Membership Association.
Speaker 1 (41:13):
You know, we talked about that the Arkansas Northeast Arkansas
D eight. But about about four tenths of a Negro
out there anyway, Northeast Arkansas. How many negroes out there?
Speaker 2 (41:26):
Man, I don't know if they want.
Speaker 4 (41:28):
To be all white. And if you did, all black
people celebrate it.
Speaker 1 (41:32):
No, they said no Jews too, So Jews are white
folks too, so they don't even like white folks.
Speaker 5 (41:37):
All right, So I say I have an all white household.
Ain't no Jews and no Ninjas up in here?
Speaker 4 (41:47):
Hispanic whites.
Speaker 1 (41:50):
So we got there and it hey, look.
Speaker 6 (41:55):
Yeah identified as white, none of them.
Speaker 1 (42:00):
Yeah. I just like people are just freaking, oh, look
at that white supremacy coming back. I'm like, in Northeast Arkansas.
What the fuck is in Northeast Arkansas? Man? Anything of
the klan.
Speaker 6 (42:13):
I mean, listen, if white supremacy comes back, you'll fucking
know about it, Okay, it won't.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
You won't have to ask pretty obvious.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
So Northeast Arkansas cities. All right, now listen it is
let let the honkys be out there.
Speaker 2 (42:36):
They're not bothering anybody. I know, don't be rich and
ship like that.
Speaker 6 (42:42):
You go fucking around with people that want to be left,
and you get.
Speaker 5 (42:45):
Shot Clinton from Arkansas. Yeah, here's saying that guy, that
guy's from Arkansas.
Speaker 1 (42:52):
Yeah, Bill Clinton, I believe.
Speaker 5 (42:54):
I don't buy that for a split second. That seems opportunistic.
Speaker 1 (42:58):
Yeah, but but listen to is Northeast Arkansas.
Speaker 6 (43:00):
Populated state and you install him in there that sort
of thing.
Speaker 1 (43:05):
Yes, yeah, yeah, listen, listen, this is the I'm gonna
give you the top five cities. Top five cities in
northeast Arkansas. Jonesborough got eighty one thousand people, Para Gold
got thirty one thousand people, West Memphis got twenty three
thousand people, Marion's got thirteen thousand people, and Mountain Holmes
(43:28):
got thirteen thousand people. Now, out of that, what's that
about one hundred and fifty thousand people. There's probably twenty
Negroes and they're ready to move. You know what I'm saying.
They're ready to move out of Jonesborough.
Speaker 6 (43:42):
You know what I'm saying I can't move in that
one spot that's been spoken for already.
Speaker 1 (43:50):
It's how about sorry, there ain't even nothing up there
Little Rocky, even in northeast you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (44:01):
That's the thing though, It's like, did you want to
move into this area? It's like no, I just want
you to not be able to have your area.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
Like like nobody's like, hey, you know, I'm picking my
family up and I'm going to Paragold in Northeast Arkansas.
Speaker 6 (44:20):
Who if you're if you declared that Pasadena was now
all white, that would be a problem, right.
Speaker 1 (44:32):
But yeah, if.
Speaker 6 (44:34):
You're if you've got some community of yours that you've
dreamed up in Northeast Arkansas with your drinking buddies and
fishing friends, then and you've got this idea that it's
going to be like free of blacks. I think that's
kind of implied in the fact that who would really
(44:54):
want to be living there if they weren't looking like
the people that are currently living there, you know what
I mean.
Speaker 5 (45:04):
They're trying to take over to city council.
Speaker 6 (45:06):
Oh hell, there might.
Speaker 1 (45:07):
Be, but they were trying to make a black only
city just a few years ago. If I'm correct, Musalem
City in Houston outside of Houston.
Speaker 5 (45:18):
That guy shut down that guy completely.
Speaker 7 (45:20):
Next yeah they said ross, Yeah, they said bacon industry.
Did they they tried building all that ship without permits.
Speaker 5 (45:31):
They're like, fuck you guys.
Speaker 6 (45:35):
The pork lobby threw their weight around and got them
thrown out.
Speaker 3 (45:41):
I don't care if people are racist, like, let them be.
If those super actually racist and that's why they want
their all white community, like, oh well, but it doesn't
fucking affect my life at all.
Speaker 4 (45:50):
I think it affects anyone's life at all.
Speaker 5 (45:53):
This week, fucking what's his face, dick fuck green Blats
went on a fucking gave a goddamn speech with some
bullshit nobody politician tried to pass an anti semitemptism act.
I can again, it's in the works right now in Congress,
I guess.
Speaker 4 (46:10):
And and so what do they want to happen? Now?
If you do things that aren't actually answer, if.
Speaker 5 (46:15):
You has, the house will follow on you.
Speaker 6 (46:17):
Okay, they steal your they steal your home.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
They just.
Speaker 6 (46:29):
They just if you get if you say something anti
semitic on Twitter, they just take your home.
Speaker 4 (46:37):
They just have people grill.
Speaker 3 (46:38):
They starve you and then have people grill right in
front of you.
Speaker 5 (46:42):
Well, they're trying to charge the social media companies five
million dollars a day for every and a Semitic post, which.
Speaker 3 (46:50):
Is like you, they're not if they were actually looking
for hateful like I hate you sort of post, like
maybe maybe i'd listened to a fraction of their art
gument I sot probably wouldn't agree with them. But what
they call anti Semitic is like being critical of Israel
every time of the time. Like they never ever call
anything anti semitic that's actually hateful towards Jewish people. Ever,
(47:13):
it's all made up bullshit. It's like numbers and like
weird symbols and shit. They're like the letters H or
something and the number eight to like, oh this fucking shit.
I'm like, this is you're retarded. You're fully retarded. Now
you've broken down completely, your brain doesn't worry.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
Yeah, I mean the anti semitism. I thought when when
they say anti semitism the first time, I thought it
was a made up word. I didn't know what they
were talking about, almost like anti semitism.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
I was like, hold on, well, think about it.
Speaker 6 (47:46):
The context in which they use it, it's it's kind
of meaningless because they're not semis right, So like, what
are we talking?
Speaker 1 (47:55):
That's what I want? Yeah, I was like semits. I
was like, oh is anti g I was like, well
did you say anti get?
Speaker 4 (48:07):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (48:09):
Where did the sanitism? I was like, hold on a second, man,
is this this is some twenty twenty shit? Ain't ocause
that's where I didn't hear no anti sanmitism before twenty twenty.
Speaker 6 (48:21):
S where I assure you, as somebody who's been annoyed
to death by it for decades, It's been going on
a long time. It's just aver ending, constant drip of
complaints and grievances that can never be satiated. You can
(48:42):
never bend over backwards enough. There will always be another
new issue, will always be somebody else. And then there'll
be an event that happens where a synagogue gets tagged
by a bunch of stuff, and then and it'll be
all over the papers. And then what won't get reported
is that we later the owner of the building will
be taken away in handcuffs.
Speaker 2 (49:03):
Who was the guy who did it hit to his
own building?
Speaker 4 (49:06):
You know?
Speaker 6 (49:06):
And it's just it's just it's never ending with the
anti semitism. No, it's not anti semitism, it's your behavior
is reprehensible in the general public is noticing it and
is talking about that's what. Yeah, we don't have to
(49:27):
make up.
Speaker 2 (49:29):
Things.
Speaker 6 (49:31):
There's plenty of ammunition out there.
Speaker 2 (49:34):
It's just.
Speaker 6 (49:36):
And I just because I just just I'm working on
stuff that I just wrote about the ADL, about how
it came about in a very in a very specific year,
a very important year, a very transformative year for the
United States, nineteen thirteen. Yeah, along with a lot of
(49:59):
other things where the world changed and you weren't allowed
to notice anything after that. I wonder why the ad
L was installed the exact same year as the Federal Reserve.
Speaker 2 (50:10):
I wonder.
Speaker 1 (50:13):
I mean, they had liked it. Jewish folks had to
getting a hands kicked in the street or something. My
folks are running a day in a whooping.
Speaker 3 (50:19):
Them and then and then you have fake shootings to
make people feel.
Speaker 4 (50:27):
Like at that museum.
Speaker 5 (50:33):
Went to Israel at some point.
Speaker 6 (50:36):
Yeah, yeah, exactly that they there's an event that happens
that's used to craft a narrative. Poor us, we're always
the victims. Somebody victimized us and did the shooting, and
then you go, let me dig into that a little
bit deeper. No, no, no, no, we're onto something else.
We can't talk about it. And then a week later
(50:58):
it comes out that well, you know, actually shore Or
was connected to the massade and this person was connected
to that, and you go, oh, full story stinks. So
like how many times you have to see that before
you just recognize, like, this is what they do, especially
with the media.
Speaker 2 (51:17):
You know, this is how it works.
Speaker 6 (51:19):
They play these things out and use it for a
week to create a feeling, and then it just falls
off of the media landscape almost immediately. What within seventy
two hours usually they stop talking about it. Right about
them is the time that people dig into the reality
of the story and find out that it's totally fabricated
(51:41):
or that they're the people involved in it have ties
to intelligence, and you just go.
Speaker 2 (51:45):
Everything is motion, everything.
Speaker 1 (51:46):
Is nice, Things are bullshit, you know, living a lot
of black rock or whatever.
Speaker 4 (52:00):
It wasn't black It wasn't Blaxton Blackstone. Sorry, yeah, what
about that?
Speaker 3 (52:08):
Fishy had a few like fishy things and a few
things that were like usual false flags.
Speaker 10 (52:14):
Sure, I mean who knows third floor, thirty third floor
starts ringing bells.
Speaker 2 (52:25):
Of course, Waxstone all the.
Speaker 3 (52:28):
Way across the country to go to that specific floor
to shoot up that like weird no name housing firm.
Speaker 4 (52:36):
It's a long drive to show.
Speaker 5 (52:37):
The single best thirty three was the fucking COVID fucking
news broadcasts. Like nothing I'll ever beat that. What there
were like twenty in the same day. That was like
twenty broadcasts that said that their city had thirty three
new cases of COVID. It was like a seven video.
It was like the video is like seven minutes long
of all these clips of all these different cities, and
it was the same fucking day in cases.
Speaker 3 (53:01):
That football guy too for COVID was like thirty three,
like he died, but then he didn't die, but then
there were thirty threes everywhere.
Speaker 4 (53:09):
Again, but he looked like a replacement.
Speaker 5 (53:12):
Whatever happened to him? Does he play football anymore?
Speaker 4 (53:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (53:15):
He does.
Speaker 2 (53:17):
We were able to get insured.
Speaker 1 (53:22):
Is it him? Is it him? Maybe? Maybe?
Speaker 5 (53:28):
But does he actually does he still play on a team,
because I never hear the name anymore.
Speaker 1 (53:31):
It's like these very Buffalo Bill's Allegedly he's still on
the bill maybe.
Speaker 4 (53:36):
His double plays on the bills.
Speaker 1 (53:40):
Yeah, body double. Yeah, because that was a lot of
weird ship around. It's like, oh, when you take a
heavy blow to the chest, you know, sometimes your heart
can stop. I was like the chest he got tapped
and then he will start walking and fell over. I'm like, y'all,
I mean, come on now, I mean, I mean, you're
(54:01):
trying to tell me that I just didn't see what
I just saw.
Speaker 3 (54:05):
That's never happened. And they're like, oh, yeah, kids do.
Kids have always had heart attacks all the time. Don't
you remember all your friends dying in preschool?
Speaker 1 (54:14):
No? No, because when it does happen, they have a
fucking thirty for thirty episode on it. Yeah, right, because
it's so rare. Right, the dude who was in college,
he died on the court had a heart attack. Yeah,
that's how rare it is.
Speaker 2 (54:30):
Yeah, I remember that.
Speaker 4 (54:33):
So bad.
Speaker 2 (54:36):
About this.
Speaker 3 (54:37):
We're just supposed to not fucking notice any of the thing.
They're still having all these embalmers pull out those long,
fibrous like tubes from people just like everywhere, all over
the world, everywhere. It's something like eighty percent of involvements
in bombers, right, warmers are saying. I'm like, yeah, this
is weird. I never saw it before the injections and
(54:58):
now here we have it in, which means you didn't
take it might have that too, which is also really disturbing.
Speaker 1 (55:09):
Why I had somebody did uh?
Speaker 10 (55:11):
I know?
Speaker 1 (55:11):
Come? My word is like yeahead iy COVID three times
over the page year. I'm like, how do you know?
I mean, I mean, what, how do you know?
Speaker 5 (55:22):
Because it's I think so the tests are huge because
that's how they fake the AIDS epidemic with tests. They
use the Western blot, which has been like so debunked,
like it doesn't do fucking squat nothing, and they used
it for like thirty fucking years for HIV detection.
Speaker 4 (55:39):
Same thing, CR and the Western super questionable.
Speaker 5 (55:43):
They're all questionable. I think either total bullshit. PCR was
never meant to fucking test for anything. And PCR is
a replicatory mechanism. You take a little bit of DNA
or fragmented DNA, and you can replicate it because they
know what DNA strands are attached to on the other side,
So when they have broken and fragmented DNA, they can
reconstruct it with PCR. That's the point had nothing to
do with testing ever, like never, like not fucking once.
(56:06):
It doesn't tell nothing, and a joke, not.
Speaker 6 (56:09):
A diagnostic tool.
Speaker 2 (56:11):
That's what Carrie Mos said.
Speaker 3 (56:14):
Yeah, and you can't tell people this because they just
have such just blind faith, blind faith. That's a test.
The test shows that you don't even okay. I mean
you can like walk them through step by step and
they just look at you like you're retarded and like
shut down and then like never.
Speaker 4 (56:32):
Talk to you again.
Speaker 1 (56:35):
Right, well, I mean people are just in denial, but
they earlier we talking about has tested me.
Speaker 2 (56:44):
You see, that's all it takes, really see the test.
Speaker 1 (56:50):
Well, people are just they sitting around and they're wondering
while we're in the situation that we're in now. I
was like the bud they put twenty one and they
pulled the trap door and everybody free fault. It was
a free fall. Once they pulled that trap door, we
were fucked from here on out all right, So it
(57:11):
was like you need to try to figure out how
to make it because we are but we coming hard
and heavy with this thing. Ald that's what we put
into you, and people are like, I don't understand how
stuff's got so expensive and all that. I was like, Oh,
the fucking you advocated to shut down the world. It
was all like when they told you that, hey, we're
(57:33):
shutting the world down and you're not gonna do shit
about it, you went and sat in your house and
to do shit about it.
Speaker 3 (57:39):
They like, are lying about that to you. They're like,
we never did that, that never happened. I'm like, so,
you're even more deeply insane than I thought. You can't
even remember a few years ago and you did like
you said what you loved and what you cheered for.
You're insane. Crazy people.
Speaker 1 (58:00):
They shut down plants for like four months. I remember
with GM two, they shut the plants down for like
three months.
Speaker 6 (58:08):
Where Carson, I'm like, I'm.
Speaker 1 (58:12):
Like, dog, I was like, man, you you were orchestrating
your own demise by not saying, fuck this ship. You
know what I'm saying, Like, trust me, when you come
out on the back on the back end of this,
you might have you might have wished that you died
at that point in time, you know what I'm saying.
But the way you're gonna have to scuffle, it's like
(58:32):
but and folks still don't know. They still don't get it.
They're still Oh, blame this, blame that. Don't blame yourself, man,
that's another one. If you were the one that was
sitting around you were scared to death, if somebody walked
up to you and didn't have masks on you about
you about failing the floor, blame yourself. You were part
(58:53):
of the problem. You're part of the reason why we're
while we're at where we're at now.
Speaker 3 (59:00):
To solve it until you figure it out for yourself.
I mean, like, we can't go anywhere with a population
that's just retarded, broken, like in denial, insane, not connected
to reality, and capable of thinking there's just nowhere to go.
Speaker 1 (59:16):
It's gonna be right about that.
Speaker 4 (59:18):
And again, I just I.
Speaker 3 (59:19):
Was reading these books lately that are just reminding me
like how intelligent people used to be. Right, they both
like a couple of different books I've been reading lately,
or like focused in the you know, twelve hundred and
thirteen hundreds whatever, and people motherfuckers were like making codes
for each other that were like nearly unbreakable, like as
a pastime, just for fun. They're like encoding their letters
(59:39):
and sending it to each other. And then you'd have
to figure out the code and cipher it and like
break the code to like and then you'd like encode
or shit and send it to them. People were writing
fucking like all kinds of like just like insane and
just normal people, not like one hundred percent of people
were super intelligent. I'm just saying it was like a
normal thing to be clever, to be able to like
think clearly, to use logic, to think about the public
(01:00:03):
good or like society, you know, and like this this
is gone. We don't even have people. I have a
book from when I was a teacher I found in
one of my classrooms. It was like sixty years old,
and it was a primer for eighth grade. And this
motherfucking I don't know anybody who could pass the tests
in here. I don't know anybody. I could take it
to my fucking master's program where all of us got
(01:00:25):
like fourteen hundred on our gres and have a high IQ,
and none of those motherfuckers could pass these tests.
Speaker 4 (01:00:30):
That was an eighth grade test.
Speaker 3 (01:00:34):
Just a little while ago. And now people like can't
even write a fucking like just one piece of paper
with like a cohesive series of thoughts on it, just
we're so we're fuck. They're very hopeless about the intelligence
level of the world.
Speaker 1 (01:00:51):
Yeah, hopeless. And speaking of hopeless, the uh uh allegedly,
the job mark is hopeless currently right now that you've
seen that, they revised the numbers dramatically, Like, I mean,
you talking about going for like one hundred and sixty
thousand now to fifteen thousand. I'm like, I'm like, hold
(01:01:14):
on a second, Like there's a you've got a margin
of era when we're talking about mathematics. That margin seems
a little much. Yeah, normally, yeah, I mean the margin
seems a little much. But I thought about it. I
was like, Okay, let's say that it is true. Is
(01:01:35):
this not what we're expecting to happen. Didn't y'all tell
us that AI was on the way to fuck people.
I expect us to have less jobs continuing from here
on out, Like what they got to do with the
market shouldn't have shit to do it because you told
us that AI is gonna come and kick people's ass.
I don't need you do, so I'm getting rid of you.
(01:01:57):
I got AI. Wasn't that the premise I'm saying off
the job market is bad? I'm like well, the job
market should be bad because a I should be kicking people's.
Speaker 6 (01:02:07):
Ass, right, so we don't need the ten just came over, right?
Is that what we're also saying, like if the job,
if there's no jobs, then yeah, then like we're full
right or no?
Speaker 1 (01:02:24):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:02:25):
Or do we still have to play.
Speaker 6 (01:02:26):
That game where we go from which spots?
Speaker 1 (01:02:33):
Maybe just making that and the pic to pick cotton
or whatever they do. People still pick cotton, you know what.
Speaker 6 (01:02:43):
I think it will be replaced by cotton picking robots.
Speaker 1 (01:02:48):
Yeah, yeah, that's a primouse market. Yeah. When they talk
about the job mark and I was like, well we
should have speake to see a decline in job We
should go in and we should be in a negative shortly, right,
y'all said, AI is accelerating. You want everybody to use it.
(01:03:08):
You want to bring robots. Elon Musk said, the robots
are gonna be on the way. What he say, a
couple of years, A couple of years to be on
the way, robot to be thirty k apiece. Then think
about a corporation if they can spend thirty k apiece
on a robot bo that is a deal. That's a deal.
Speaker 2 (01:03:28):
Yep.
Speaker 6 (01:03:28):
That robot is the bus, that robot doesn't show up late,
that robot doesn't have to get a babysitter, that robot
doesn't need healthcare, doesn't you know all of these things
you start begging for twenty dollars an hour minimum wage,
like California and the fast food industry, you're begging to
get replaced by robots.
Speaker 1 (01:03:49):
Yeah, so that's that's what should be expected.
Speaker 3 (01:03:53):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (01:03:53):
I mean, it's just like and then trum that's the
fires the woman that does this is that? Did he
really do that? I was like, boy, I was like,
well this this okay. He's he's a wild card because
he's the wildest motherfucker that has ever been in office.
There's like no doubt about it, Like like he's wild
(01:04:16):
and like and you sit there and you look at it,
it's like, oh yeah, the global and stuff. I'm like, man,
I don't know, man, because he's too wild and random
with his ship. His ship is all over the place
at all times.
Speaker 6 (01:04:28):
Ship.
Speaker 3 (01:04:29):
I'm like, what he's lost? The fucking AI video of
like the Gaza strip just has this weird tranny like Wonderland.
Speaker 4 (01:04:36):
I'm like, what is even? What even is that?
Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
It's not even just we want to take over godsa
make it into some like casino strip. This is like
the weirdest ship I've ever seen in my life. Combined
with take over Gadza turn it into casino strip.
Speaker 4 (01:04:49):
Ship is weird. He's a weirdo. I love it. It's very.
Speaker 1 (01:04:55):
He's strictly entertained. Yeah and so and so. Like folks
are now saying that you know, Target and Walmart, they
went up on their prices because of terrors. I'm just like, no,
they didn't.
Speaker 3 (01:05:11):
They put up on their prices because they're leftist fucks
and they're hoping to get all the people who want
to be mad about terrorists to come there and complain
about shit, or they're trying to crash themselves. Most of
the tariff money, from what I've heard, was like being
paid for by the people who are producing the shit.
They're like founding it into the cost of their so
it's not being passed on to the consumer, like they're covering.
Speaker 6 (01:05:32):
It, right, So like it's bullshit.
Speaker 1 (01:05:34):
Right, and people, Okay, so people assume that the tariff
would be on what you pay in store. The tariff
is on how much it costs to produce it, not
how much you pay in store. Yeah, it's like so
if it if it cost them five dollars to get it,
(01:05:55):
and it's a ten percent tariff on it, you know
what I'm saying. It's just like but they said, oh no,
it costs us. It costs one hundred dollars for US,
and it costs them five dollars to produce it. So
they're putting a ten percent tariff on that, on that
one hundred dollars, I'm like, that's not what the tears
put on. No, it's on the cost of production.
Speaker 4 (01:06:17):
Yeah, and I talking about this last week too.
Speaker 3 (01:06:20):
It's like some corporations like Nike are like passing it
on to the consumer.
Speaker 2 (01:06:24):
But but Nike a five dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:06:26):
A bunch of whores and they always have been. Their
shoes are produced for like sixty cents by a slave
in like Taiwan or something. But I'm justsed to pay
like one hundred and fifty bucks written and then you're
also gonna pass a tarifft pass onto me, Like but
like a bunch of producers aren't doing it, just like yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (01:06:44):
And all you got to do, Oh my god, this
is so simple. All you got to do is wait
them nigga's out and no come back to you again. Yeah,
you just got to wait them out because they got
they got all these outlet stores and all that shit.
Now they can say you that one hundred and six
dollar pair of shoes for sixty five dollars at the
outlet and I know they're still making money, you know
(01:07:05):
what I'm saying. So just wait, that's all you got
to do. Everybody, Just sit down and look at them.
I said, okay, yep, gold fight dolls on your shoes.
I'll wait for you. We'll wait for you. I ain't
got no holes in the shoes I got right now.
I'll wait and they'll come right back down to you. Hey,
like with shit, man, Hey man, I'll say these tea
for sixty five? Man, will you think? Okay? Now now
(01:07:28):
now we're playing ball. Now we're in a good range,
all right. So that's the whole premise. It's like, folks
ain't willing to wait it out, but you got to
wait that thing out. You know, you got to have
that result. But I know it's tough. I know it's tough.
You see something new, you want it right then, price
(01:07:48):
be damned, I'll put it on after pay the corner,
which they're getting fucked right now because what do you
know broke folks? I mean, well, you know, Bill, I
think it was gonna make a lot of money. M Yeah,
(01:08:10):
well that was it DoorDash that they teamed with DoorDash.
But but the premise is team yeah. Yeah. The thing
is is can you get broke people to pay their loans?
Like the people that you're that you're extending this this
(01:08:30):
a good will money out to a lot of times
are not the most upstanding citizens. Let's just say that. Yeah,
they're used to not paying their bills. They're used to
having to hide their car because it's coming to get
repaid because they ain't paid in four months. You know
what I'm saying. They used to getting kicked that going
(01:08:52):
to their apartment and the doors boarded up and they
can't get in, and so they got to go somewhere
else like that, Like that's how they leave.
Speaker 6 (01:09:01):
They know, they know there's a certain percentage that are
going to be shitheads like that, and then they account
for that. They've got some calculation that tells them that
there's an acceptable number of people who.
Speaker 2 (01:09:18):
Have their doors boarded up. Yeah, that are going to
be part of your client because people must love it,
but they account for it.
Speaker 6 (01:09:29):
Hmm, they're making money like crazy.
Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
If you have the financial so far, you are asking
for trouble.
Speaker 1 (01:09:47):
Well, I mean I guess you're able to. Yeah, you're
able to financial grocery from last week. Yeah, I've been paying.
It's crazy.
Speaker 6 (01:09:59):
It's so bucks that people need that. I mean, I
I envision a a segment of the users who desperately
need it, who it's like a savior for them to
have that as an option, And I think that's.
Speaker 5 (01:10:14):
How do they get that regular credit card?
Speaker 2 (01:10:17):
And then I don't know.
Speaker 6 (01:10:19):
Then I think there's also a portion of their users
who are just really really really bad with money and
and do ship like that because they.
Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
Don't know what they're doing.
Speaker 5 (01:10:34):
But bro, they can't.
Speaker 6 (01:10:36):
You can't be financing your fucking or dash.
Speaker 2 (01:10:40):
You can't do that.
Speaker 6 (01:10:41):
That is that is that's a that's a gigantic.
Speaker 2 (01:10:46):
Trap you're walking into.
Speaker 6 (01:10:47):
In case you didn't know, let's like getting a like
all the tables that are set up on college campuses
they're giving away like sign up for this free credit card,
like a ten thousand dollars limit.
Speaker 2 (01:10:59):
That's a track up like well, if you're gettingning.
Speaker 5 (01:11:02):
It's weird as they fucking Amazon is doing that shit too,
because I bought a yeah, king size bedframe, and it
just gave me the option instead of paying one hundred
and fifty bucks, to pay fifty bucks three times over
three months. And it was like, what.
Speaker 6 (01:11:22):
If it's that, I don't I don't have a problem
with that.
Speaker 1 (01:11:26):
If it's that.
Speaker 6 (01:11:26):
If it's if it's we're the house and we're in
charge of the payment structure and we can break it
up into smaller payments and no additional charge, I'm fine
with that.
Speaker 2 (01:11:39):
And that's pretty nice, or like lay.
Speaker 5 (01:11:41):
Away whatever Amazon is. Yeah, Ia, Amazon's trusting people to
make them to make sure their credit card is clear
for three payments or more is ridiculous, I think. I mean,
they're sending you the product for fifty bucks and then
they're hoping to be able to charge your card another
hundred over time. So they're taking a risk big time
by doing this, But I don't know why. I honestly,
(01:12:02):
that's worth it for them.
Speaker 6 (01:12:03):
They're Amazon, and you need them, Yeah, and if you
if you don't, if you don't pay your bill with Amazon,
you may go away and disappear.
Speaker 2 (01:12:15):
And run away from you.
Speaker 6 (01:12:16):
But at some point you're gonna need them and they're
gonna be like, you still owe us some money.
Speaker 2 (01:12:22):
Going by the way with interest. So I don't know.
Speaker 6 (01:12:26):
I think I think Amazon wouldn't be the I think
they've made a calculation.
Speaker 5 (01:12:32):
So I had a weird something happened to me this week.
I got an email from Wells Fargo about my new
bank account and I didn't open a new bank account
with Wells Fargo.
Speaker 1 (01:12:44):
Uh huh so okay.
Speaker 5 (01:12:45):
I actually called them on the phone. I said, Yo,
Ninja's what's up? And I was like, I don't know.
I was like, I had an account with you like
ten years ago. It's been closed for years. And they're like, okay, yeah,
this is a new account that was just opened. And
I said, well, how does someone open the account? And
she said somebody had to go into a store in
person to open the account, or going to a bank
(01:13:07):
in person open I'm like, that doesn't really make sense
to me though, because the email address they used is
like a ten year old email address that I don't
use for anything. It still forwards to my new email,
so if stuff goes there, I still get it. But
I don't use that email, and I haven't used that
email in like ten years, so that's a weird thing.
So Wells Fargo got in trouble a couple of years
(01:13:28):
ago for just randomly opening accounts for people. Yes, so
I'm thinking that that might be the case. My shiit
just got randomly opened because maybe they're.
Speaker 6 (01:13:37):
Going off their internal your your old account with your
old ten year old email, and then somebody gets that
information opens up a new account. I bet you they're
doing it again, because again, they don't ever do anything.
It's not like the head of Wells Fargo was led
out way in handcuffs.
Speaker 5 (01:13:57):
Oh and here's another thing. It was the account was
opened and has with no deposits. Nobody made the opening five. No,
you have to make a five or ten dollars deposit
or whatever just to get an account open, Like there
was no money in the bank and nobody had deposited anything.
So it seems like.
Speaker 6 (01:14:13):
Numbers just to show that they've got to show that
they've got that they're opening new accounts.
Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
So I mean a bank committing.
Speaker 6 (01:14:25):
Fraud, no way. Imagine my surprise that Wells Fargo is
committing fraud yet again and opening fake accounts like they
used to remember when they got busted for that.
Speaker 5 (01:14:42):
I wonder how many people get new accounts opened up
and the email address is just not accessible anymore and
they don't even know they have an account.
Speaker 1 (01:14:53):
What does that even mean? I don't even know what
it means.
Speaker 6 (01:14:57):
It means it would be on your credit statement.
Speaker 5 (01:15:00):
Well, one thing I told was I went through and
I changed that fucking I ended up looking and checking
and seeing I had about five or six accounts that
were still attached to that where you're logging is that
email address? So I changed all those because like they can,
if they have access to any of that, they can
just fun if that access to your email, they can
just fucking reset a password on any account.
Speaker 1 (01:15:19):
You know, I didn't know if you had some tenant
ship on and some future Corey was coming back and
trying to open an account and.
Speaker 5 (01:15:29):
To two thousand.
Speaker 1 (01:15:31):
Motherfucker, that's what future trying to come.
Speaker 6 (01:15:35):
Ye tell my future traveling self to go back in
time and do that.
Speaker 5 (01:15:40):
Please see you motherfuckers. You need to do that. Bitcoin because
y'all can buy Independent Media Token, which is going to
hundred x in the next year, so it's better than bitcoin.
Speaker 1 (01:15:49):
Yeah, better than better than just take my word for you. Yeah,
I didn't know. If I didn't know if he has
some ship going on, I don't know. I had some
uh was it? It's called stash. I've never heard of before,
but I guess it's like a where you can invest money.
And like they keep sending me ship like your payment failed.
(01:16:12):
I was like, yeah, because I ain't never done anything,
so the payment is gonna fail. I don't know if somebody,
somebody asked me to put the wrong thing in there.
Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
I don't know what the fun was, corner ship or
something like that, like a letter.
Speaker 4 (01:16:28):
And now you can no, I don't even know who
you are, shut the ship down.
Speaker 3 (01:16:34):
It's like they're hoping you will go activate the card
and just start using it, and that makes you agree
to their terms.
Speaker 4 (01:16:41):
Horrible terms. Something I would imagine where this kid.
Speaker 1 (01:16:50):
They try to get you. Every time you go into
one of these one of these apps, it's like they
put the credit card first. Thing. It's just like a
Clarina Event made cash app. They like, oh man, you
can you can put put the bundy that people send
to you on our debit card and use it that way.
I was like, but why would I want to?
Speaker 5 (01:17:13):
So Clarina has got to be doing good though, because
I just watched a video on YouTube about how if
you look for remote hiring jobs, they're hiring like thousands
of people.
Speaker 2 (01:17:23):
They just got in public.
Speaker 5 (01:17:25):
Oh that's wilde some jobs. So they should give me
a whole bunch of stock and just let me pay
it off over time. They won't do that. Well, they
let me put my let me put your stock on
your Clarina card.
Speaker 1 (01:17:43):
Hey, well, well, hopefully hopefully they're doing better than what
they were doing back. I'm assuming that they've got to
be doing better. Now, what was it? In the first
half of twenty twenty two, the company reported a loss
of five hundred and eighty million.
Speaker 2 (01:18:01):
Yeah, that lappened.
Speaker 1 (01:18:02):
Yeah, that sounds like fucking Marvel. Sounds like Disney making movies.
That's what that sounds like.
Speaker 6 (01:18:10):
Like?
Speaker 1 (01:18:10):
Shit? Was Klarna?
Speaker 2 (01:18:12):
Uh transitioning? What happened?
Speaker 1 (01:18:18):
Well, it said there's no education that the company is
on the verge of bankruptcy. Despite the losses, Clarna has
been taking steps to achieve profitability, taking steps. I don't
know what that means.
Speaker 6 (01:18:31):
It's borrowing money, yeah, I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:18:36):
It's like, uh, let's see here. So with this this
is from NBC News Finance. Oh man, it says households
a record eighteen point two trillion in various forms of dead.
That's pretty good.
Speaker 5 (01:18:50):
That's the whole GDP. What the fuck are you talking about?
Speaker 1 (01:18:53):
Yeah? But this was from when is this from?
Speaker 2 (01:18:58):
Is this from me?
Speaker 5 (01:18:59):
So? Well? I think I thought I thought that was
crazy that I just saw it was the stock market.
So you can take margin calls right where you like
bet on the stock market at like leverage ten or
one hundred times or whatever. We're currently sitting at more
margin debt than we've ever known in history, at one
point three trillion dollars in margin debt. That means that
(01:19:20):
your fucking short squeeze got squeezed out and you owe money.
That's a lot of fucking money to be owed within
the stock market system. Like when it crashed in like
two thousand and eight or whatever, it was like way
less than that. It was like eight hundred billion or something.
It was way less.
Speaker 3 (01:19:38):
We have this like multi systemic global failure coming out
like any moment how or like the markets crashed and
the Thousan's dying and like a fucking mega floods.
Speaker 5 (01:19:48):
And all of the the housing markets about to fucking
crash too, so.
Speaker 3 (01:19:53):
So like just everything that wants to be so amazing,
and then the astrois crashing, and then the aliens would
column be like, how are you guys doing. I'll be like,
no good, and I'll be like, okay, bye, I'll leave again.
Unicorns will come out of the deep ocean. It'll be wonderful,
but they're like the terrifying ones that are like dark
(01:20:14):
and like look like dead flesh.
Speaker 1 (01:20:16):
Oh you mean like in the movie Death of a Unicorns. Yes. Yeah,
they're trying to damn horn gas, damn those type of
unicorns as bad. I don't know this. This year, Corner
Corner's consumer credit losses swell seventeen percent in the first
quarter from the same period a year earlier, hitting one
(01:20:37):
hundred and thirty six millions. Oh no, it just sounded
like that. It sounds like some type of scam that's
going on. What it sounds like to.
Speaker 4 (01:20:43):
Me everything is a scam.
Speaker 1 (01:20:47):
Yeah, I don't know, I mean, is it real. I
mean I'm saying I'm trying to figure out like people
people able to run these scams and you just sit
there and you think in your mind. It's like a
run a scam long enough to where I could make
out and be good for the rest of my life.
That's what you're really thinking about, all right, Look like
(01:21:10):
it's like I mean, and I know that sounds bad,
but that's the way life is, all right. Who runs
the more elaborate scam, all right and profits? All says, scan.
Speaker 6 (01:21:22):
Doesn't even matter. It doesn't matter if it's even profitable
or if it's a big loser, because as long as
it creates more debt for the the most struggling segment
of the consumer market, then it's a win because it
just enslaves them even further.
Speaker 2 (01:21:43):
Such a debt.
Speaker 1 (01:21:47):
M I guess you're right.
Speaker 6 (01:21:51):
If it makes profit, that'd be great. But if it doesn't,
at least we also just created a and of new
debt for these people. And they can they can just
you know, be on the payment plan.
Speaker 1 (01:22:06):
Okay, on THEO. So you're saying, so you're saying the
premise of it is the saddle dim With enough debt,
the word generationally, they would be subdued forever.
Speaker 3 (01:22:18):
System social funding programs as well as like you they're like,
oh look we got you hooked. Also, you're paying for it, right,
Like the lowest classes are paying for the other lowest
classes to get hooked into the system that enslaves them
and disincentivizes them from ever taking care of themselves.
Speaker 4 (01:22:37):
Or getting free from this system.
Speaker 3 (01:22:40):
You pay for your own enslavement in like every possible way.
Speaker 6 (01:22:45):
And the debt is disguised as a life raft that
they've thrown to you.
Speaker 4 (01:22:50):
We're hoping.
Speaker 1 (01:22:53):
Life jack with the hole in it. So so it's
kind of like when it introduced welfare the same price exactly.
Speaker 6 (01:23:01):
Yeah, why would the state you hate your fucking guts,
ever give you anything for free. It has to have
conditions attached just by the nature of their behavior. It
has to there has to be some stipulation. And so
(01:23:23):
if you're getting free welfare, you become dependent on the state,
and they are the epitome of like the greatest Ponzi
scheme ever, except they don't necessarily need more dollars though
they love that. They need your attention. They need a
constant source of attention coming in. And what better way
than to get every then get a huge segment of
(01:23:44):
the population hooked on the government, on the government heroin,
and you put in all these rules where like they
can't work and they can't like and you disincentivize upward mobility.
But by saying wow, if you do, I mean then
it'll just all this goes away. You go, ah, I can't,
(01:24:05):
like we're I'd love to work, but like I can't
work because then all this goes away. And that's a
calculation I gotta make.
Speaker 2 (01:24:11):
And so you're like I should I guess I'll do nothing.
Oh I'm just neuter segment.
Speaker 3 (01:24:18):
That's exactly why I never I could have got disability
since I was like mid twenties, and that's why I
never have because I know then I'll just all get
hooked on that, right, Like, oh, I want this money,
so I can't work. And when you're not working, you're
not moving, you're not doing anything productive, like you're dying.
Don't fool yourself like you're your sole your mind, your
your heart, your body, they're all just crashing slowly.
Speaker 4 (01:24:39):
So I don't want to tell you what I go on.
Speaker 5 (01:24:40):
I go on to I go on the government teat
for twenty grand a month. That's deal, just take it, dude.
Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
Done, may maybe give me twenty grand a month. And
I it's like I'll go on there this that I'll
hook your body was nice in the post.
Speaker 6 (01:24:58):
Your body was breaking down, but you didn't compromise your values.
Speaker 4 (01:25:02):
Yes, and I'll be.
Speaker 6 (01:25:07):
Yeah, maybe that's why you're able to walk.
Speaker 3 (01:25:11):
It is, I seriously can't. It was so weird too,
the first time I heard of someone who had the
same surgery and I was disabled. Her name was also Lindsay,
and she was also born the same year as me,
and she was just like on painkillers and like never
moving and like slowly dying and the same age. Right,
But I do. I think it matters significantly what your
(01:25:32):
values are and what your morals are, what you're doing,
and that you believe in it. Think about that people
die within a few years of their significant other almost
all the time, would no matter their health situation. And
it's like, if you feel like you have something to
live for, it'll keep you alive, motherfucker. Like, no matter
what your body's doing, do you feel like, oh, I
have grandkids and I have to take care of them,
or I have to walk the dog every day, or
I've got to do this or that, Like it totally matters.
(01:25:54):
So mine never matters a thing. I can't apparently stop
myself from having these problems, but you know, I can
feel like pretty good, it'd be pretty productive despite them.
But I was thinking to the other day I was
watching somebody was saying, like, oh, it's so unnatural. We
have to like work eight hours and then we have
to like get home and we only have a few
hours for ourselves and most of it is preparing for
(01:26:16):
the next day so we can do it again. And
how awful is this? And I was like, well, it's
not actually that bad. If it was like it used
to be, where that eight hour a day job got
you like a house and like a car, and you
had a spouse that was like at home for you,
making all your food and like taking care of things,
so when you got home you actually could just be
(01:26:37):
like at home and free. But we all went for
the like women's liberation thing and like put women in
the workplace too, and like got rid of that system.
So now it does fucking suck. You are just in
it alone and you are just taking care of yourself
and you are just like wasting your life away miserable
most of the time.
Speaker 1 (01:26:54):
You know.
Speaker 4 (01:26:55):
But we didn't have to go that way, Like we
did that to ourselves.
Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
The crazy thing about the liberation part is that they
want it, but then they don't want it. So I've
seen these chicks go out and there're like, oh, I mean
I make my own money, this and that and this
and that. It's like, but I ain't gonna date no
guy who don't make make more money than me. I
was like, second, So so you went out and you
did all this boss baby shit and you still want
(01:27:21):
to need to make more money than you.
Speaker 6 (01:27:23):
I'm like, I'm like, damn, well, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
And the one thing I hear people talking about, well,
I've got my standards. See you know what I'm saying,
and this is what I deserve. I'm like, oh my god,
I said, who are you? That's what I want to know.
You think cause you make five hundred thousand dollars a
year that you deserve something. Oh, you don't deserve nothing.
You're a sack of shit. It's like, but you're a liar,
(01:27:53):
you're a thief. People can't hang around you. You're a bitch.
It's like, what are we talking about. It's like, Oh,
I'm not gonna lower my standards. What are you talking about?
What standards? The only standard you're talking about is some
dude making a bunch of money, which your motherfuckers don't
want your ass, no way. They want the girl that
McDonald's who ain't gonna say ship. You know what I'm saying,
(01:28:15):
that's what they want. I mean, straight up, it's like
she hot, So that's what I want. Dudes. Just dudes
want something that looks good and the ain't gonna give
them my headache. That's it. I mean, I mean, that's
that's that's it. I mean, it's it's simple.
Speaker 4 (01:28:33):
Hm.
Speaker 5 (01:28:34):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:28:35):
So it's just like I bring this and I bring that.
Speaker 2 (01:28:39):
Yeah, she's gonna getting touch screens.
Speaker 1 (01:28:54):
Yeah, but I mean people be talking about the Yeah,
they'll be talking about the standards and ship in this
post like ass and you know this is what I'm like.
It's like, don't nobody know who you are? And so
like you're not even like a good person, you know
what I'm saying. I mean, you cheat it on every
dude you've been with, you know what I'm saying, You've
(01:29:15):
been through the care ofsel You're a bitch most of
the time. It's just like now they're ready to say
what makes you think you deserve somebody?
Speaker 2 (01:29:24):
They're ready to sell.
Speaker 1 (01:29:26):
You know why you ain't got shit. Now, it's because
it's what you deserve. That's what you deserve because you've
got this thing in your mind and.
Speaker 3 (01:29:34):
Taking care of yourself and making yourself as someone who
deserves to be wanted, can't.
Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
I mean, it's just like and for chicks, I mean, now,
there are there are the select few chicks who unfortunately
like they don't have much of a chance just because
like they look that bad, and you know what I'm saying,
that's few and far in between. But for the majority
of women, they ain't no reason why you shouldn't have
(01:30:02):
a man by your side. Zero, all right, zero unless
you just waited way too late. But it's just like,
because it's the game ain't hard. Not for the women.
The game ain't hard, but they try to make it
(01:30:23):
harder than what it is. We ain't got to overthink
this thing. Okay, you got somebody you're attracted to and
they're not a piece of shit, bam. You know what
I'm saying, Man, we can run with this. But they
look up there and it's like, oh, well, you know,
gud the chick you got up there and said, I've
been married to the dude for ten years and something's
(01:30:43):
been missing the whole time. I'm like, how the whole time?
So you're telling me that this dude can't put you
through the mattress, that's what you're telling me if you've
been with him this song. I remember my previous boyfriend,
but he but he peeing me down. You know what
I'm saying, devoured destroyed this guy, little lane. That's the
(01:31:06):
only thing I think She said, good guy, great father.
Yeah yeah, good god, great father. Uh, supportive, emotionally available,
just like I didn't hear that about no good dick.
Her zero about good dick. So it's just like you
just you searching a thrill and the thrill was never there.
So my question is, were you ever attracted to him?
(01:31:30):
They said that attraction's got to come number one. But
if he ain't attracted, eventually, the damned ship's gonna sail.
That's just all there is to it. And I don't
care how much money is involved. The ship's gonna sail.
Speaker 4 (01:31:43):
God, everyone crazy.
Speaker 3 (01:31:44):
I feel like women who were happy all of a sudden,
like wearing the clusterb mentality, and they realize that they
can get away with fucking anything if they just claim
it's like female empowerment or men are oppressive or anything,
and they can be like, I want to leave my
family on my kids. I just don't want to take
care of people anymore. I just want to be on
my own. I just need to go to Italy and
(01:32:05):
like eat pizza or something. And then everyone's like, oh girl.
And I feel like it's that. I feel like they
probably are still attracted to their husband. They're just like
they just don't want to anymore. I just want a
new life.
Speaker 4 (01:32:17):
Behind them. Run off cluster be.
Speaker 1 (01:32:22):
Man. I don't know, bud here. Here's what I do
know is that I've seen chicks out there with good
dudes and and they want they want thug the ship out.
And then I've seen the chicks out there with pieces
of shit dudes. But bo, they are hot in the
bridges for him and them dudes know how to fuck,
and it takes it takes the act of God to
(01:32:45):
get them away from them. You know what I'm saying.
They'll get their ass kicked, they'll get cheated on, they'll
get ship stole from them, they'll pay for all this shit.
But I'm trying to tell you, man, digmatized, It's a
thing I'm saying it's a thing. So I mean, well,
(01:33:08):
everybody's out here telling people that you deserve. It's like
as much as oh, well, you know, you know, if
you would do you ain't getting no forgiveness. If you're
a white dude, forgiveness is not on the table. Okay,
(01:33:30):
that's just all there is to it. I mean, look
at joe Look at old Joey swollen. Now he came back,
he came back to the internet. But the man slipped up.
He was up there talking. You know. He was talking
about Hulk Hogan and how you know when he was
a kid. You know, Hulk Hogan kind of got him
into his bodybuilding and stuff, and people like, oh man,
Hulk Hogan's a piece of ship. I was like, and yes,
(01:33:54):
most people are pieces of ship. You know what I'm saying.
Most people be walked back, passed by every day. Both.
I mean, the folk, you god fearing people at church
meant to be going home talking shit. Today's spouses, underhanded doing,
not paying bills, fucking people over. I mean, yeah, but
he's talking about Hope Hogan the entertainer, not Hope Hogan
(01:34:16):
the person outside of the entertainment. He said, I seen
the guy on the screen. I was like, hey, man,
I want to be a bodybuilder because I wanted to
look like him. He inspired him to do something not
nothing involved in his life with his his child Brook
when Hope that Hope Hogan, that won't her the damn
(01:34:36):
date of black guy and all this other shit. Man
the man was seventy one. Okay, Man, he grew up
in an era where he was taught that shit. I
don't hold that against people, like I don't hold I
don't hold against old white folks if they don't like
black folks. And I don't hold it against old black
folks when they don't like white people.
Speaker 4 (01:34:56):
Don't Okay, sure what he means? Did he mean?
Speaker 3 (01:34:59):
You know how some people are Like, Oh, I'm not
talking about all black people. I'm talking about people who
act in a certain way or whatever. And if that's
what he meant, that's a totally different thing too. I
don't give a fuck what the word is, Like what
did he mean? And then like maybe it's actually okay?
Also right, like if he doesn't want a certain type
of person, no matter their skin color, and he has
a word you don't like that he uses for that, Like,
(01:35:20):
but it's okay for him to have standards for his
daughter of like how a person should act or how
they behaveor like what their lifestyle is.
Speaker 4 (01:35:27):
Like that's okay. I don't know what he meant. I
wasn't there.
Speaker 1 (01:35:32):
Yeah, and you and you also don't know. You also
don't know the full story, right, I literally don't because
you know what you know what's you know what's put out. Well,
all of us know what's put out in news articles
and things of that nature. We're not into the fine
details of when people are alone in their houses and
they're speaking about stuff, because anybody can get up there
(01:35:52):
and say whatever, yeah, at any point in time. Also,
it's just like.
Speaker 6 (01:36:00):
Of white dads that are going that story sounds terrible.
Speaker 4 (01:36:06):
Yeah, I mean it looks.
Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
It's just a different times. I would probably say that
if you, if you're a millennial on up, man, don't
even talk about no racism all that other stuff, man,
because she ain't really been through it. The last ones
that were really getting talked the shit deep were probably
was that gen X. What would that be like you're
(01:36:34):
nineteen sixties seventies.
Speaker 4 (01:36:38):
Like broke free mostly.
Speaker 1 (01:36:41):
A little bit, but they were probably still just to
touch they were right there on that cusp, depending on
the born x yeah stack, depending yes. So can people
break out of a cycle themselves? Yes, It's very difficult,
especially depending on the community you're in, the people you
(01:37:03):
interact with. And also, I mean a lot of people
they follow their parents leads, whether they don't want to
be their parents or not, a lot of times they
end up becoming a version of them. You know, some
of that stuff rubs off those childhood experiences.
Speaker 3 (01:37:23):
What community, and you know, I grew up in a
really rural, mostly white place. A lot of people were racist.
I don't even know that we were. People were, so
I learned that. I was like, oh, that's weird. And
a few black people ever moved there or came there,
and the very few ones that did get horrifying things
just like reinforced this stereotype unfortunately of black people being
(01:37:47):
like violent and horrible or something. And so all the
racist people got more racist because just a few people
came in, just those few good, horrible things. It was
really fucked up, right, And I'm not saying that they
have an excuse for big racist, but you can also
kind of understand, like your your ignorance really does create
this worldview.
Speaker 4 (01:38:06):
That isn't accurate, and you run with that. Is it's hard,
not too for some.
Speaker 1 (01:38:10):
People, right right, All these conversations are nuance, So you
can't go and talk to people about them because they're
just they're stuck where they're at. It's just like, no, man,
there's nuance to all this shit. Y'all want something that's
black and white, and there's We're forever in the gray.
Everything we do is in the gray. People go in
(01:38:30):
there and they're like, even godly, you see this. In business,
somebody comes in, it's like, yeah, you you got to
pay one hundred and sixty dollars an hour. You on
the other hand, I know who you are. You cool,
I'm only charging you one hundred dollars an hour. Stuff
happens all the time. People are like, oh, that's not right.
Nobody gives a fuck about what's right here. Okay. It's
what you know, what you know, who you know. Okay,
(01:38:53):
I mean that's that's pretty much what matters. So we
all live in the gray at all points in time,
and everything everything's new. Once people like, well, that's not fair.
It is life's not supposed to be fair. There's nothing
supposed to be fair about Okay, that's not fair. You're
supposed to create. Yep, you're supposed to create. You're supposed
(01:39:14):
to create the relationships. They give you an advantage. That
is the premise. If you're not willing to create relationships
they give you an advantage over somebody else, then you
will fail. That is it.
Speaker 3 (01:39:29):
I was just talking and I was like, why am
I not rich all these really amazing things.
Speaker 4 (01:39:33):
I should be really good at all things. I should
be rich.
Speaker 3 (01:39:36):
And I was like, oh, I actually, if I look
out at the people in my life who are rich.
They went out into life and said how can I
make money? And I went into life saying how can
I not hurt people?
Speaker 5 (01:39:48):
I know, Man, you make the wrong choice, right.
Speaker 4 (01:39:51):
So I'm like, oh I did this to myself.
Speaker 1 (01:39:54):
So man, I should have been hurting people the whole day.
Speaker 2 (01:39:57):
They all have the right pack.
Speaker 4 (01:40:00):
M Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:40:01):
So so Joey Swollen got up there, you know, he said,
you know, there was some colored athletes and and folks
went crazy with color. Boy. They were like, oh man,
you're supposed to say person of color. I'm like some antics. Well,
I mean, boy, I tell you what, man, it's just
like you wanted to duck and dodge. Just think to
(01:40:21):
you at work, I've got I've got two shuttle drivers,
and I called somebody up. Your car is ready, and
they'll be like, okay, can I get a ride back? Yeah?
Did you get a ride this morning? Yeah? I did?
I know that. Yousally don't get the driver's name unless
they've been, you know, get rise from us a whole lot.
Was it the black guy or the white guy?
Speaker 6 (01:40:45):
It was the notice.
Speaker 1 (01:40:50):
This black guy. I'm like, are you okay? Then it's right,
it's okay. They start whispering black. I'm like, are they
black people around you? I mean, are you okay?
Speaker 5 (01:41:06):
Are the.
Speaker 6 (01:41:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:41:14):
There you go back to your cop days, the black people.
That's the way people act people. So it's so stiff.
I'm like, man, stop being so stiff. Man, you know
what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (01:41:28):
Color, I'm like, so you just ignore everyone all the time.
It's so self absorbed.
Speaker 3 (01:41:32):
You can't notice some of his hair color, like the
slant of their pigs, or like that's fucking crazy.
Speaker 4 (01:41:38):
You're a crazy person.
Speaker 1 (01:41:42):
We were about it.
Speaker 6 (01:41:44):
We went out to a Halloween party at this all
with this cowboy bar in Orange County, California, like in
the nineties, and our we had a group costume for
Halloween and we were it was I had nice jerseys,
made basketball jerseys, and we had we all had the
(01:42:06):
same shorts and socks, but the jerseys were the Honkys.
And we had like goggles and wristbands and really like
weird wigs and everything. And I was standing in line
for the bathroom and the dude in lying behind me
was a black guy, and I was like looking around
looking for my friend. I'm looking at this dude, and
(01:42:27):
this dude looks like he's about to burst, and and
he's got his head down and I just go, hey, man,
it's okay if you laugh, and he just went, o,
you fucking guys are killing me. He's like I didn't
want to be offensive to him, Like, dude, we're the Honkys,
Like it's cool, like were he was, so he was
(01:42:49):
he was trying to be respectful. But I was like,
it's okay, you can be disrespectful to us this one night,
and the rest of.
Speaker 2 (01:42:56):
The night you can't. Other nights you can't.
Speaker 1 (01:42:59):
People.
Speaker 2 (01:42:59):
So it's just like Cowboy bar too. By the way,
you look lost.
Speaker 1 (01:43:05):
Yeah, man, need they just need to loosen up. Man, Oh,
that's a person of color. It's just like sh is dumb.
Like the more the more I hear POC, the dumber
it sounds, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 5 (01:43:18):
So I never noticed all of these terms are at
best isolating, they're separating the person being described from the
larger group. African American. Oh you're not an American, You're
an African American. Oh you're not American, You're a person
of color. Right, all of these things that are supposed
(01:43:40):
to be nice are the most insidious fucking labels in
the world because they ostracize you from the greater society.
Speaker 3 (01:43:50):
That keeps you from making connections with people, which is
your actual lifeline.
Speaker 4 (01:43:54):
Actually connecting to each other.
Speaker 2 (01:43:56):
Right, what the else is going on?
Speaker 1 (01:44:00):
All right? That to a te So, guys, if you
didn't learn anything from this episode, Uh, you can't say
colored on the internet if you're what what's name? Nazi?
Nazi Nazi propaganda, Sydney Swing.
Speaker 5 (01:44:21):
Beautiful.
Speaker 1 (01:44:23):
Oh yeah, And folks are coming out and saying joe
Joey Swollen. I said, oh yeah, I know, Joey Swollen
at the house. He says, nigger at the house. I'm like,
I man, y'all, are y'all are like crazy? I mean,
are y'all? It's just like I mean, if he does,
he can say it all day. Hell, he can stamp
it on the wall, write it down. He said, I
(01:44:45):
just got to get it out before I walk out
the house flying with me. Let it rip. You know
what I'm saying, you at your crib ain't hurting me.
And if you said it out in public, I'm also
not gonna be hurt by it. Dog for what, But
y'all have let that fucking word conquer you. The word
is conquering any any little any little word is conquering
(01:45:08):
to black people. I don't get it. Like they just
get in fixated and in a fuss and a tizzy.
Speaker 6 (01:45:15):
I'm like offended, offended by everything, offended by everybody and everything.
Speaker 1 (01:45:22):
It's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (01:45:24):
Ship, Why.
Speaker 1 (01:45:29):
That's the premise? I was like, man, you keep giving
away your agency and your power. Liked who says any
little word?
Speaker 4 (01:45:37):
Uttering a word that's insane? You should probably let's see it.
Speaker 1 (01:45:42):
One word. I ain't gotta I ain't got to even
I ain't got to hit you that one word and
make you fold up. I don't get it. I don't
get it. Appreciate everybody for being here. Guys. Independent Media
Token it is out. It is about get you some
(01:46:05):
now you do. It is on the Salona network. Okay,
So you got to get you a little bit of
Solana and then purchase the intermediate token with Solana. That
is how it works, right. I made sure I tell
the people right. Well, I hope they got Salona. It's
like that DAMNQ gave it the wrong info. From my understanding,
(01:46:28):
that's how it works. So yeah, you do have to
purchase it with Solana. So Solona needs to be your
first purchase in the Independent Media token be your secondary purchase.
So go ahead and start getting on board with that.
Hope to uh hope we get that market cap up,
get some people out there, get out and about Corey
said it's gonna be better than bitcoin. Okay, so in
(01:46:51):
Corey we trust, all right, In Corey we trust. So guys, yeah,
there we go. Guys, go ahead and tell them a
few things. Let's start with lands lindsay telling a few things.
I heard.
Speaker 3 (01:47:01):
Go to roguessoul dot org to find my books, my shop,
all of the things in it, the show, everything else,
I do.
Speaker 4 (01:47:08):
It's good.
Speaker 1 (01:47:10):
And Lindsay is whale at this point in time, so
that's always a good thing, whaling with us. So she'll
be rocking out her shows daily. Charlie, Charlie, What we got,
What we got? Nick?
Speaker 6 (01:47:21):
I got Doc Mallick on this week on macroaggressions. He's
a UK doctor who lost everything during COVID and uh.
The mini documentary that Tease filmed comes out tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (01:47:33):
I've seen it. It's very uncomfortable to watch.
Speaker 6 (01:47:37):
Myself in that, but it's coming out tomorrow, whether I
like it or not. No puppies are in the Union
of the Unwanted one. The puppies did not make did
not make the cut in this one. My cats did though.
My cats made the cut, which is which is great.
So and you can see me, you can you can
(01:47:59):
watch me smoking buffo.
Speaker 3 (01:48:02):
Whoa just crazy? Watch I guess we don't get to
see what you see?
Speaker 2 (01:48:10):
Uh, just watching. Yeah, it'll be out you can.
Speaker 6 (01:48:15):
I think you'll be able to go to conspiracy synergy
dot com and find his YouTube channel that way h T.
Snyder all one word on YouTube. By the time you
hear this, it'll be out.
Speaker 1 (01:48:29):
Yeah. Yeah, So there we go and activist place. Make
sure you're going there, suppose absolutely, Yeah, check all that stuff.
I appreciated Charlie. Uh mister heaves new book.
Speaker 5 (01:48:41):
I gotta say something. Yeah, I got my.
Speaker 1 (01:48:43):
New book, man.
Speaker 5 (01:48:48):
Beside you fucking don't. I moved it for some reason.
I don't even know where.
Speaker 1 (01:48:51):
Oh my goodness, Lee Harvey Oswalden Black and White. Okay,
get it.
Speaker 5 (01:48:56):
Get the book the next one. I figured out all formatting,
and everything is gonna go a lot quicker. Last time
I had to fucking craft every page individually, like every
page individually. Fucking sucked.
Speaker 1 (01:49:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:49:11):
Now this time, this time, that's just formatted. I got
page numbers already, I got my header already. I'm good
to go. She'll be done in like two months.
Speaker 1 (01:49:18):
Okay, okay, Bloodhrestory dot substack dot com. Also Corey Hughes
dot org as well of course me. It's Q four
twenty dot com for everything I do, and we appreciate everybody.
Speaker 2 (01:49:31):
Being with us.
Speaker 1 (01:49:31):
We will catch you all next week the day one nine.
And for the people who don't know it where it's
on a new page. It's the same people day you
need to go to uh XQ on Rumble and it's
it makes you showing. It's on YouTube as well, so
XQ fourtanned with you, like, oh no, it's not bold,
(01:49:55):
not YouTube's okay now, I mean actually.
Speaker 5 (01:49:57):
I actually got like, uh, I'm only I only need
you know, one hundred and fifty people to subscribe to
my YouTube for me to monetize it. So there we go.
Speaker 1 (01:50:05):
Okay, there you go. Oh yeah, you get on that,
get on that. And uh yeah, we showed the shows
on Twitter as well, and it is also on Twitch,
which I don't know why Twitch hadn't keep me off
yet because we've said some wild shit, especially on Beyond
the Cube. So uh, we appreciate everybody being with us.
We catchall next week, day one, he said,