Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
What's going on? Guys? You boy ask you four to twenty?
Here welcome y'all back another episode, day zero where day
one ninety nine. We're close to that two hundred mark,
extremely close. Maybe we'll all live to see it. We
got all the Chigaboos with us today. We got the
Powerful one, Corey Hughes, Spiritual one, Lindsay Sharlman, the immaculate one,
(00:25):
Charlie Robinson. Did y'all have an excellent week this past week?
Was it okay? At least?
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Yes? But here's the thing that I learned this week.
Oh and this is crucial. Everyone needs listening. When you
order Taco Bell on Grubhob, you cannot get hardshell tacos
or you have to eat the heart shall tacos really quickly.
And that's only if they get there within ten minutes,
because they are turning into soft tacos and not good
soft tacos if you don't eat them quickly, So don't
order them. That's what I recommend, soft tacos all the way.
(00:55):
They'll lost at least another ten minutes.
Speaker 3 (00:57):
You could just stop at don't order Taco Bell. That's
the perfect to see.
Speaker 2 (01:03):
Once amount of time you see I have these Like
I recall when I was like young and poor as
opposed to my being old and poor. Now I could
go to Taco Bell and eat all day long for
like five dollars, like six bean burritos and like three
tacos and a coke was like four bucks. Now thats
just like thirty dollars. If you try to order.
Speaker 3 (01:21):
What I just said, it's I don't know, it seems
like it is better quality in the past. Maybe that's
just because I'm chilled, but I really think it was.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
I've had that very same feeling. I know that the
Big Mac is shrunk by like thirty percent, and you know,
shrinkflation is a real thing, and and like all these
people who destroyed the economy need to go to the gallows.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
Yeah, and even just like you want just normal food,
you want just unadulterated food, or like pay triple. You
want like not laced with chemicals, not just like the
testicle skin mixed with hoof, mixed with tail, like as
your burger, like you pay like triple. Like can we
just have some normal food please?
Speaker 4 (02:02):
My wife is a great cook, and she has made something.
By the way, I'm gonna have to dip off camera
for a minute, because I am in charge of cooking
these roles. She's not here, and I have to put
them in and then I have to get them out
at the right time. So I am going to be
in charge of this. We'll see how it goes. But
(02:24):
she's a really great cook and she made she's actually
also down there has been made some what we're just
kind of jokingly calling Taco Bell meat. And what it
is is she found the recipe but substituted in actual food,
you know, but like found found the recipe for what
(02:47):
it is that they do to it that makes it
feel like it's so sticky, you know, like like the
beef for like your soft for your tacos and things
like that, and it is you can't tell the difference
in terms of like the way it looks or the
way it feels. But it's she's got up, you know.
It's not sand or whatever the fuck Taco Bell puts
(03:09):
in it. It's the same actual food, you know.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Yeah, I like the bean.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
Seriously, don't they put like wood chips in things? And
who knows, now there's like a cut in it or something.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
And like so I used to work at Taco Bell
as my second job when I was like sixteen. And
the meat comes already made in a bag. You just
put it in hot water and the hot water cooks it,
just reheats it and then it sits in the hot
pan which keeps it hot, so it's pre made in
a bag. The beans come as like little pellets, the
(03:48):
refried beans or pellets, and you put it in with
water and you let it sit for like a half
an hour and it turns into the mush that we
know as Taco Bell refried beans.
Speaker 4 (03:56):
Because why ship beans fill with water when you could
ship beans filled with no water.
Speaker 3 (04:04):
Which like maybe maybe it's fine, maybe if you dehydrate
or whatever they do flash freeze or whatever you know
the Mormons are doing over there to their skittles and shit,
like maybe that's perfectly nutritious and all you do is
fill it with water and it's like great. But I
just I doubt it. I doubt that whatever Taco Bell
is doing is great.
Speaker 4 (04:22):
I doubt it too. I'm going to error on the
side of they're trying to cut as many corners as
possible and redefine uh oh, the term Charlie.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
Yes, But here's I watched the thing on on on
Taco Bell and KFC and as like ANW I think
are the three. I think there might even be a
couple more. But Pepsi was not competing with coke, like
everyone knows Pepsi, but Pepsi was never as big and
they weren't getting into restaurants because everyone was picking coke
distributors over Pepsi distributors. And so they literally made the
(04:57):
decision to buy restaurants specifically to sell coke. And that's
probably where they make the most money anyway, since considering
they're the manufacturer, they're the distributor, and now they're the retailer.
Their cost of a fucking thirty two ounce coke is
probably like five cents if you include the cup, like
maybe three cents, you know, and they charge two fifty nine.
(05:18):
That's a goddamn fuck. That's like it's like thirty forty x.
Speaker 4 (05:24):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
I mean that's where they're making their fucking money. They're
making their money on selling their soda. I hate the
fact that they do that.
Speaker 3 (05:32):
That's weird.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
Yeah, but you can get ultimate refiels though, fucking Pepsi
ultimately unlimited unlimited what about am for three bucks. Yeah,
that's just your horse continent. He drinks that sugar, your
horse content.
Speaker 2 (05:49):
This is my this is my guilt factor. I can
drink this much and only feel somewhat guilty if it
gets any bigger. But it becomes overwhelming.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
So that's how you die fast.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Well, somebody put up here on Twitter the we were
talking about rebranding and things of that nature, and that's
me and Corey talked about the h the cracker barrel
saga that they got going on right now. But somebody
put this picture up on How you know, restaurants, especially
your fast food places, used to be fun. Each one
of them had their unique look, and now all of
(06:21):
them look kind of like corporate. Somebody pulled this picture
up right here.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
Yeah, trams, they're transient.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
Yeah, so we see. I mean it used to be
distinct like you, like you would see these distinct factors
in it. I haven't seen a cracker barrel that looked
like this on the right yet. The hot damn, I
mean it looks like it should be like a warehouse.
Speaker 3 (06:48):
And beyond.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Yeah, if somebody, I know they did me and Corey
said they probably paid.
Speaker 4 (06:57):
Hey, Corey and I are just happy that they left
the cracker being cracker barrel.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Yea, what it took what they took the actual cracker?
All yeah, they may changes to the food.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
I mean, do we know if they're is Have they
changed the recipe? Have they changed the magic? Because the
food for what it is is good. Like if I
have an option between a cracker barrel, a village in
a Denny's, or an I hop it's cracker barrel, one
fucking hundred percent of the time, it's like not even
a question.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
They said they were going to revamp the MEI I'm
not sure what that means.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
Seven country.
Speaker 4 (07:42):
Campaign seven. They're going to do something Corey when you
have seven hundred million dollars to play with.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
That's crazy about people more.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
Apparently people were we have to make it look.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Like a.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
Pottery I am definitely a psych warfare color guy, for sure.
We've had this conversation. They use colors in psych warfare
one hundred percent. Like the inside of fucking doctor's offices
are weird to make you feel strange. And I don't know,
there's all kinds of weird shit going on around us
at all times. But when I look at that picture,
I look at a couple of factors. The shapes of
the building are different, which means they're fucking cheaper because
(08:25):
they're just boxes. So they so this is this is
I think the vast majority of why they look like
shit is because they're just trying to maximize every fucking
penny and save every penny. And that's what you get
when you fucking put aesthetics at the bottom of the
list of importance. And so the conspiracy guy doesn't really
(08:46):
think that that is particularly too much of a conspiracy
other than they are a bunch of corporate douce bags.
I want all your money and sol and worship Satan
and fuck kids. Other than that is.
Speaker 4 (08:58):
That term, lindsay, do you know what the term is for?
I know there is one for the destruction of society
through like the degradation of architecture. Oh yeah, what the
Soviet Union did, like intentionally, there's a there's a term.
(09:19):
Drew Tregl said it to me one day and I
was like, Oh, that's a fucking great Yeah. I know,
it's like you're right now, yeah, but that's what it
also feels like. It feels like when you see that,
like when you come in to New York City and
(09:40):
from the airport and you go by, you know, and
you go by the projects and you just see them
and they jump out because they're so drab and depressing
and it looks they all look exactly the same and
it's just like total cookie cutter and you see that,
or you know, you you go, holy shit, man, like
(10:03):
that looks like it's free housing, but it comes with
a side order of suicidal depression. Yeah, you know.
Speaker 3 (10:16):
Yeah, there's also a thing where like poor people tend
to only have access to really drab colors. So like
if you, like, when I'm working in really poor schools,
like all the students wearing black, gray, some white, very
few other colors. If they are, they're like muted, they're
like navy blue or you know this sort of thing.
And then if you when I'm working in rich places
(10:37):
like in Bahrain, the princes and the princesses, there's like
bright colors and there's yellows and there's greens, and there's
oranges and there's all this stuff. And I don't know
if that's as true anymore because clothing in general just
got really cheap, but it tends to be that way.
Which is also interesting, is that intentional or is that
because that's what's cheap, right, that's what you can mass
produce in bulk and no will sell or is it like, no,
(10:58):
we want you to look and feel the pressed because
you're pieces of ship, you're less valuable.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
Well, well, a lot of are pieces of ship, and
that's okay, that's true. Oh look, I'm not gonna pull
any punches here. I mean, let's let's start. Let's not
pretend that everybody walking around is worthy of Ayor. I mean,
it just kind of is what it is, you know
what I'm saying. We you know, we're worried about the government,
but you got other folks that really ain't worthy of
(11:24):
AYR either. And so what do you do about that
particular situation?
Speaker 4 (11:28):
You see?
Speaker 1 (11:29):
You don't want to you know, it's uh, you're the
you live, you live long enough to become the villain
and that and that the saying.
Speaker 3 (11:37):
I don't know that it has to be villainous to
say you should use your free will to choose to
make yourself a better person, like right, and like all
of these philosophies that I think we decry, like even
if it's not a philosophy, but like a just a
worldview of like victimization, even like I'm a victim, this
victim mentality that makes you a piece of ship, Like
(11:59):
it makes you never responsible for anything. You're not using
your free will, You're not using this opportunity you have
in this body, like you're a piece of shit.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Well, what's what's glorified is becoming a good person. Is
that what's glorified? Or do we glorify the uh, the
streets and and getting things out the mud and stuff
like that, Because I mean, I would say probably the
majority of your newer TV shows is from a villainous perspective.
(12:28):
But that villain they make them the protagonists of the story. Yeah,
even though they're villains, Like that's what they're doing. Yeah. Yeah,
Like like you like all Man Dexter, how I hope
he get away he kidnap killing people? You know what
I'm saying. I mean, it's just like, hey man, cause
(12:50):
because you know, eventually he's gonna have to take take
the life of somebody who's quote unquote innocent, because this
train ain't gonna go but so far, and so you know,
we we kind of pushed it. I mean, all you
all your rap music, you know, is hey man, I
say awake to the streets and you know, I shoot
(13:11):
niggas in the hay and it's like and they're like, yeah, man,
I love that. It's just like I mean, yeah, you
like the music, but it's like the message is terrible.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
Well, and that's like the thing, right, Like we should
be able to say like that's not helpful, Maybe we
should promote something else, or like this isn't what we
should be excited about or whatever. But also even if
that is all that's in your face, you can still
choose something different. It's harder, so like it'd be ideal
to change that, but it's also still comes back to
like you, like, what are you gonna do? I always
(13:42):
talk about this when I was really poor. We were
super poor when I was young, so we sometimes homeless,
we sometimes didn't have food, like we were really really poor,
And I remember even then looking around and being like yeah,
but does like do we have to be gross? Like
can we not clean some of this shit up? Like
just because we're poor doesn't mean this has to be
a pile of trash over here. We can do something
(14:03):
about that, you know. And it's that kind of ship
where it's like you still have a choice of whether
you're a piece of shit or not. You still have
a choice about like what you want to do.
Speaker 1 (14:12):
Yeah, but when you clean up like that, you start
feeling uncomfortable. You know what I'm saying. It's almost like
I'm trying to become something else.
Speaker 3 (14:19):
Oh she thinks she's so special, he said.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Who you feeling like? You know? I mean people, look,
the minute that you start going on to come up,
there's gonna be people be like, oh, okay, you think
you something special, now, don't you. I mean they coming
after your neck, all right, this just as.
Speaker 3 (14:37):
I mean, yeah, I have a fucking special that's right.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
You don't think Remember when I was in when I
was in school, the area I was in, I was
in uh pretty much like all the quote unquote smart classes,
and so it was like it's mostly white people in
those classes. It's like me, black guy. And then it
was like one Mexican, maybe two Mexicans, you know, maybe
(15:03):
two black people, maybe two Mexicans. I know, the black
people in the area. They're I was like, oh, yeah,
you think you something, you think you something special? You
up there with those white folks in that smart class.
I'm like, nah, I just I can't fuck off because
my mama will whoop my ass. I'm saying, like, it's
no joke at my house. So like like I gotta
get together, which I mean that helped me in the
(15:23):
long run. So I want out there, run in the
streets with fools and idiots that won't going anywhere. But
it's just like when you're when there's people in the struggle,
they glorify the struggle, and if it looks like you're
trying to go outside of that, then they're like, oh,
who you feeling like you some uncle Tom? You some?
I mean, you don't even like black people, do? You
(15:44):
don't even like your own race. I'm like, I don't
like y'all right now, because you're talking shit for no reason,
you know what I'm saying y'all in particular. Yes I'm
not I'm not a fan of y'all currently at the moment,
but but yeah, I mean, that's that's the issue that
a lot of people run into, is that they can't
(16:05):
actually separate from their people in the area because they
the influence is so strong, and so what do you
do to help them? You can't. You've got to have
the free wheel to break free. Of it and then
leave them. Yeah, like you've got to leave them.
Speaker 3 (16:23):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (16:24):
Like look look at look at all your professional athletes.
The ones that are smart, you know what they do,
They leave the hood and they don't come back.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
Yeah, that's true.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
Your dumb ass ones go back and they end up
in jail, get kicked out the league and ship like
that because they just they're just so foolish. But the
ones that are smart, no, them niggas go move right
up there in Beverly Hills. They're like, man, I ain't
sticking around with y'all. Y'all gonna rob me.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
Yeah, and they're still in that mentality, like you're still
get drugged down by that mantality that you left behind
or that you could leave behind.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Yeah, so am I gonna move off?
Speaker 4 (17:05):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (17:05):
You moved off? Around all the white people? Well, I mean,
these particular white people ain't breaking in my house. If
I if I brought my my fifty million dollars around
y'all's area and build a mansion d I'd have to
have on guards outside of it all day. Both be
stealing shit. I mean, look at the areas, look at Chicago,
but they would they have folk out there protests in
(17:29):
Walmart shutting down, and I was like, Hey, it's because
y'all kids keep stealing shit. That's y'all's kids. They're like, Oh,
what's the community gonna do? People need to go there?
Anybody this and there. I was like, well, you probably
could have handled your kids, you know what I'm saying,
taught them some values. Hey, maybe you shouldn't steal shit.
(17:49):
That would have been a start.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
That would have been the best start for everyone.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
But no white but no white, white white man bad.
That's all we got right now. That's all.
Speaker 3 (18:01):
The Chicago mayor was like, are my people are gonna
rise up against like Trump or his troops or whatever
the stuff. I'm like, I'm not actually sure who he's
talking about. Does he just mean his constituents? If so,
that's cool. I love Robert Stepher replied to him and
said deport them all to Uganda? And I was like, Oh,
is he you Gandan? Or is that just like a
(18:24):
fucked up thing to say?
Speaker 4 (18:27):
I don't know, I.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
Mean, I don't know. I heard I heard Chicago's in
the damn financial trouble, Like a mofo hit most of
these blue cities in financial trouble.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
Why so, why the fuck did these cities and states
get federal money.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Federal health just to keep them a flight.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
Because I tell you something, if you can't balance your
budget and fuck you, they should hang you in the
fucking public square.
Speaker 3 (18:54):
Yeah, like, how do you have this job?
Speaker 4 (18:56):
Then?
Speaker 3 (18:57):
Isn't this your job?
Speaker 4 (19:00):
Shouldn't you can't run for reelection if you're you know,
base it on some metrics, like if you've increased the
budget by a certain amount, you're just automatically disqualified from
running for reelection. So give him some incentives to want
to stay around, like, uh, you know, I don't know
(19:23):
some measurables. You can't use unemployment because that's too much
of a fucking ridiculous number that gets made of. But
you know, find something and just say, look, this is
the criteria being the mayor, the governor of the state,
like Gavin Newsom, like you know, the train to nowhere,
(19:44):
But how much money did he divert into some you know,
to some sketchy dudes, like let's look into that because
that's just like an embodiment of government waste and it's
a Parenturrently, I think they're shutting it down. Last time,
I just saw this week, which would be crazy.
Speaker 3 (20:08):
So they just burned all those places to the ground
for this train that isn't gonna happen.
Speaker 4 (20:15):
They were building it no way like may but maybe
it could happen, Like maybe they could build it. But
it's like the first leg that they built has like
literally no demand. There's no It's like from Stockton to Mercede,
And You're like, who the fuck cares? Why would that
(20:39):
be anything? You know, So it's not like they're exactly
they're not starting with like well, you know, inside two
big strong bases, Like they didn't start connecting Sacramento to
San Francisco as an example. Would you go like that
would be that would make sense. That's a big city.
That's a big city. But stock In or said or
(21:00):
whatever the I might I'm I might be wrong about
the cities, but very low population cities building this super
fucking expensive train that literally nobody is asking for. And
I look at that and I go, I don't know,
money laundering, corruption, eminent domain, what are all the things
(21:26):
that are going on with this whole project? Just fucking you?
You know that like if Gavin Newsom's involved, it's got
the Pelosi fingerprints that whole crime family. It's California, right, So, uh,
the Getty's who owns the lamb? Who overpaid for the lamb?
Like what the what scams on top of scams did
(21:46):
these fucking criminals have? Because I guarantee you that there's
there's money from this that is getting diverted to these people.
The only way you could possibly be enthusiastic about this
complete in other are disaster. But that's California's specialty. Just
(22:09):
it's something. It's it's something to behold, dude.
Speaker 3 (22:13):
California isn't insane, they're just right now, there's all these
farmers that are like yeah, I mean they're family farmer.
They might be big farms, but they're not what we
think of as like factory or like you know, monoculture
like that kind of thing. They're bigger farms with their
family farms. They've been in the area forever, they've been
passed down and they're all about to basically kill off
all their crops because they won't let them water. Like,
(22:35):
they won't let them water. The food. It's food. It's
like the basic to life. Like you can't replace food
with anything. There's nothing else just food. And they won't
let one. And they're saying, oh, no, we'll let them water.
They can water all they want. There's no restriction on
watering for farms. But the way that they're turning off
(22:56):
the water is by shutting down the electricity because they're
saying it's a fire hazard, which they didn't do in
the fires they wanted to happen. But now they're like,
anytime there's even a tiny bit of wind, they're like, oh,
we're shutting down all the electric grid in this area.
And it's only happening in the farming areas. So they're
shutting down the electric grid in all these areas. The
farms are not gonna be able to water their crops
and we're not going to have any food. So they're
(23:17):
just creating famine, as they've been trying to do for
seemingly five years now at least, and somehow legal and
somehow the farmers can't do anything about it. I'm like,
you guys should probably band together allegedly and go and
kill anyone who is turning off the electricity to your
to your agriculture, right, you have to save people's them.
Speaker 4 (23:42):
Not guilty, not guilty, I see nothing.
Speaker 3 (23:45):
Yeah, real, they.
Speaker 4 (23:48):
Go if they do that, you stand up to these
these assholes. I'm sorry, You're not going to jail. Uh yeah,
I'll report back to you on how these roles are
gonna turn turning out? I got I got one more minute.
Speaker 3 (24:05):
Here the rolls? Are they cinnamon rolls?
Speaker 2 (24:10):
I was picturing more like roles you have with like
a turkey dinner or something like.
Speaker 4 (24:19):
That's are I am? I have to stick the landing
or my wife will kill me.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
Please support you, We support you taking the landing. Hey,
looks like we might have some some peace coming, are we?
Are we having peace coming with Ukraine and uh in Russia?
I mean it's alleged alleged peace. I mean they talked
about they're gonna they're gonna have a get together and
(24:49):
try to see if we can't split some of this
ship up.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
So here's a doubt. I don't know if people know this.
Russia like annexed a bunch of land that's now Russia.
They're not giving that up. Anything that doesn't include an
acknowledgment of that is dead from the start, and everyone
in the world knows it. So everything we're about to
see is a bunch of theater. So I think I
(25:12):
think fucking Trump wants to get out of the war, really,
but I think his Jewish overlords and the Jewish overlords
who control Europe are just not having it. They have
to go after Russia because it's punishment for driving them
out of the Ukraine in the first place eight hundred
years ago. Okay, what this is about. This is a
this is an eight hundred year old grudge. They'll never
(25:36):
fucking stop, yes, because these these motherfuckers can't ever win
a war, Like, they don't win wars. Like, there's the
fucking Israelis. Let's talk about it. They're the only Jewish war,
the Jewish ar They're the only Jewish army there is
in the world, right like, And it's the Jews doing this,
and they only have that little puny army, so they
have to manipulate everyone else to their wars. And that's
(25:56):
what's going on. Obviously. It's like I feel like I'm
talking to myself here because every but he knows is
already this is ridiculous, Like I'm fucking there is no
reason for me I even have to say any of this.
It's like the most obvious thing in the world. Yeah,
I can't believe that motherfucking Trump is just I can't
believe how much Israeli dick our government is sucking on
(26:17):
a regular fucking basis. It's unbelievable. Truly, There's gonna be
a fucking civil warness country, and the fucking people are
going to pay the price of the goddamn Jews. Let
me tell you, that's not even like my wanting that
to happen. That's that's going to be a byproduct of
what happens. These motherfucker's poked the bear, and then when
the bear bites their fucking head off, they're anti Semitic
and these people can fuck run off.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
Well, I mean, look man, they just they just want
all the laying, all the resources, all the power. So
I mean.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
When you need them.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
When when I said to that loud, did that this
sound like I was saying for a lot. Yeah, the resource,
the power too much. I just need it all. It's like,
hey man, how can we split this up? Oh, I'll
take all of it. And now I said split it again,
I'll get all of it and you will get nothing.
Speaker 3 (27:17):
That's your split?
Speaker 1 (27:21):
Is that not the bett that's the bast plate? Right?
Speaker 3 (27:23):
Well, and then this is a bad deal too. Ukraine
goes and blows up this pipeline or whatever, and now
Germany and whatever, Eastern Europe can't have oils again, like
going into fall and winter when you need energy even more.
And how is that not like a war crime against
Eastern Europe?
Speaker 2 (27:39):
And Ukraine just destroyed the last functioning pipeline into Europe
from Russia, That's what I mean. So like now there's nothing.
Now there's no oil flowing at all, zero and they've.
Speaker 3 (27:48):
Already destroyed most of their nuclear reactors, so they just
got what nothing, So how is there not a war
crime against those people? It's not a crime against Russia.
I mean, I gues that it is Russia can't sell
oil whatever, but it's actually a crime against these people
who are going to be deprived of energy.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Right.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
It's the same thing with sanctions. Sanctions don't punish the
rich people control in the country. They punish the people
who are you know, the average citizen. And that's the
whole point, because like all leaders are hypocrites, all of
them violate the laws of war, international law. I mean,
like fuck all these people to death. And I'm not
an anarchist at all at all, but like we were
(28:26):
talking about, like vote the elections earlier, Like these things
are retarded to these people fucking do nothing except take bribes.
Our entire system is compromised. Yeah, seriously, you need you
need the benevolent dictator and that's everything short of that
is just a waste of our time. And it's not
gonna be any transformations without a river of blood. I've
said it one hundred.
Speaker 3 (28:45):
Times, So not a bad argument, No, it's not.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
Here's the fucking worst part. We and I say we,
because the forces, the good forces of society, they couldn't
defeat these people with the might of the German army.
What the fuck you think we got today? Nothing? The
war was over a long time ago. There ain't no
win in nothing. Sorry.
Speaker 3 (29:11):
I wasn't waiting for a political win anywhere, right, right.
Speaker 2 (29:15):
But in general, like if that's just my stance on it,
Like fucking Hitler knew a time it was. He fucking
brought a war against these people and he lost, and
that was the last best hope we'll ever have.
Speaker 3 (29:25):
That's why people are so obsessed with the alien thing.
They're like, oh, the aliens are coming, They're gonna free us.
Because they can't imagine anything else short of like galactic
intervention that can save us from ourselves.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
What's crazy is that we assumed that we're not aliens.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
Yeah, I think it's the octopuses.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
Why do we assume that we're not aliens?
Speaker 3 (29:48):
But there is that theory that like aliens came down
and they like mixed their genetics with pigs and that's
what humans are.
Speaker 1 (29:56):
Oh, I didn't know about it.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
Yeah, sometimes a sticker or something of like an alien
fucking a pig and that's what it's actually representing. Is
this idea because we're so similar to pigs genetically.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
That's that was a poor light, wouldn't it. I Will
come down here and was like, all right, what I'm
gonna choose the funk. It's like there, it goes right there.
Get me a big hog, We'll get right behind that thing.
I'm like, wow, so weird. That is terrible, But I
(30:30):
mean that's what you know. We always depict the aliens
look like this, look like that, And I was like,
why can't the alien? Why can't you be the alien?
Why can't you just like you?
Speaker 3 (30:39):
You'd be we invaded like you.
Speaker 1 (30:45):
I guess that we want to have that difference in it,
so we'll know who the bad guy is quote unquote
or the good guy who the quote unquote bad guy. Yes,
but uh, there's been there's been multiple movies that actually
depicted uh, the aliens actually looking just like us. They
(31:07):
had a couple of different features, but it's just like, nah,
you couldn't really tell the difference. They look like you.
Speaker 3 (31:14):
It would make sense. Nature seems to use the same
structures that work over and over again.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
So I want there to be a planet of tall,
blonde Amazonian women.
Speaker 3 (31:23):
That is one of the phantasies.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
Yeah, but you have to be tall as well. You
know what I'm saying that whole woman A tall woman
wants a tall man, but stan tall man.
Speaker 3 (31:34):
They can make your body anything they or you want
it to be, so machine and they just talk with
their jeans And now you're amazing.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Is that what the Amazonian women do?
Speaker 3 (31:51):
Yeah, the Amazonian women, they're coming on that object that
they're talking about and out in inner cell teller space
that came into our solars. Just them, that's the AMAZONI
employment are on that and they're bringing the genetic manipulation bends.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
Oh yeah, man, I heard that ship was going pretty fast.
You hadn't it already been here?
Speaker 3 (32:10):
Yeah, I don't know. It's like, uh, I just I
watched the Fantastic four movie and it's like that timeline
where like the things come in, the things coming is
gonna kill Earth, and it's like, oh, it's going past Jupiter.
But for some reason, they still have like four days
even though it only took it like two days to
get there from like waiting for out in the interstellar space.
And I'm like, wait, what you could make this.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
You gotta give them time. You gotta give them time, Lindy.
It had to slow down and they had to refuel.
Have we never thought about that? Okay? When they do
when when they do space travel? Okay, these niggers don't
know how much gas they go. You know what I'm saying.
(32:52):
It just like, yeah, we're going to travel in space.
It is placed. You got the gas? Hello? No, they
ain't no where to fill up on the way.
Speaker 3 (33:03):
Right, or to get back or like if anything goes
slightly off track, even like a millimeter, like you're screwed forever.
You're all going to just die, float off into space
and die.
Speaker 4 (33:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
It's the only thing about space which makes it listen
less likely that there's even a space at all. I mean,
there may not be.
Speaker 3 (33:29):
There's something and we call it space.
Speaker 1 (33:31):
Well, yeah, it may.
Speaker 2 (33:32):
You can look at a telescope and see some shit. Yeah,
and so some shit seems to be verifiable unless the
fucking telescopes lying to us. So we can look at planets,
and we can look at the moons around the planets, right,
so we know some shit's real. We know that we
know it's not like ten feet away. We know it's
pretty damn far because the way telescopes work. So that
can give us some kind of idea that there's a
(33:54):
big gap between here and there. There's a lot of
I would say between here and there, which is the.
Speaker 3 (34:03):
Exact same on the atomic level. I'll just point out.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
Right it makes sense. I have recently been exposed to
a theory because the whole a bunch of rocks and
dust in space just coagulated into planets has always seemed
kind of stupid, and so I didn't realize that there's
an alternative theory that the sun. Obviously the Sun is spinning,
but that the planets are ejected from the Sun, and
that would account for their orbits, their spin, and the
(34:30):
fact that they're all in a straight line because they
were shot out as the Sun was spinning. The planets, basically,
the masses that would be it would become planets were
shot out from them, and that seems to be the
most plausible explanation I've heard thus far. But the very
notion of how stars grow and create new elements makes
(34:51):
perfect sense, right, And then they explode, They spew their
shit out everywhere, and that's how we get fucking elements everywhere.
That's the Earth is full of different elements that were
create in the heart of the Sun. That all makes sense, right,
So how do we incorporate that into space? Is facing
gay that I haven't figured out? Is there like an
even further firmament, like at the end of the is
the galaxy of firmament? And then you know what the fuck?
(35:12):
I don't know? This is outside my pay grade. This
is why I study Kennedy.
Speaker 1 (35:17):
No no, no, no, no, no, no no no. We ain't
gonna let y'all put it the information you're.
Speaker 3 (35:24):
What you're describing as similar to the electric or the
plasmatic theory or model of the universe as well, which
makes the most sense to me. It's just like the
atomic level rights as above, so below, it's like you're
going to see everything spaced out a certain way and
like creating and like morphing up or down in a
certain way.
Speaker 2 (35:43):
Of all because of basic laws of physics that would
apply to both right.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
Right, right, and so what you look at the atomic
levels also electromagnetic and so in plasmatic, and that's what
you would see outside too. There's no reason they would be.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
Different, right.
Speaker 2 (35:55):
And the idea that there's four fundamental forces, I've seen
alternative theory that really is just one force and it
is just expressed in those ways are seen or we
observe it in those ways. But it's really the same
attractive which would be in a like it would be
an electromagnetism, wouldn't it wouldn't that be the that would
be that's the one thing, and that would be like
that would account for gravity and all kinds of other stuff, right.
Speaker 3 (36:17):
Absolutely, Yeah, Yeah, it's a slightly different view or way
that gravity because people think gravity is going to have
like a an uh, what am I trying to say?
A particle? And it wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (36:29):
I thought about this ad nauseum, and I can't seem
to comprehend the graviton particle, and it's a wave of
particles that pulls things towards the planet. Yeah, I never
that's never sat well with me at all.
Speaker 3 (36:41):
Well, then when people are like gravity doesn't exist, well
it does. It's just you're all you're really trying to
say is like it's not explained well enough to be true,
Like there's something else that gravity is. But the force
of gravity, the thing that we're describing is gravity is
clearly here. It's happening, just like space, whatever it is,
it's there, clearly, you can look at it. It's right there.
Speaker 2 (37:01):
Well, it seems as though gravity is the best analogy
is like if you put a bowling ball in the
center of a bed, it's going to have an effect
on like a marble. At the other end, it would
have the you know, would distort space to the point
where it would have that same effect on like a
three dimensional scale. But it's really hard to envision that.
(37:22):
We can envision the bed a two dimensions basically for
us two dimensions, and we can't really envision that on
a multidimensional scale, right, that distortion of space time which
would cause things to fall into it.
Speaker 3 (37:35):
Right, But on the electro electromagnetic or plasmatic version of
this universe. The what we're calling gravity would just be
attraction or right, it would be magnetism or electricity. It'd
be like attraction or repulsion. We're just calling it, right.
Speaker 2 (37:53):
But mass has to play a role in there somehow,
And you can increase electrical fields and magnet and magnetic
fields not increase mass. So there's definitely a mass factor.
Speaker 3 (38:03):
If you were going to fly through space, you would
have to do that.
Speaker 2 (38:06):
Right, right, right, right right? I get that, like using
like a gravity, Well basically that's the most Still I
think with a gravity, well, you'd have to have a limit.
You'd have to have an upper end limitation. Gravity won't
pull you to an infinite speed, will it.
Speaker 3 (38:18):
I don't know, put electron pagnisism will.
Speaker 1 (38:23):
Hm hmm. Well here's the question. Okay, so we we
allegedly have all these other planets, are we still in
the assumption that there's nothing on any of these other planets?
They're just there just to be there.
Speaker 2 (38:39):
I promise you it's got to be microbes, some sort
of microbial life on all of them, because life finds
the way somehow.
Speaker 3 (38:45):
Whatever life is, it's everywhere all the.
Speaker 2 (38:47):
Time, right, Like, what do they say, like the in
our solar system? What is it, Europa? It's probably the
best chance of having life like ours because it has
actual water. It has water all over the fucking thing,
and that would be pretty interesting. Would they even tell
us under the ice? Yeah, if they found life there,
would they even tell us? I mean, that would be
(39:08):
a reasonable discovery of life in our solar system? I mean,
would they have a reason to hide that from us?
Speaker 3 (39:14):
I don't know. They tried to make us think tartar
grades could fly through space, so I don't know why
they'd try to hide life. I think they're trying to get.
Speaker 5 (39:19):
Us to they would try to hide They would try
to hide life because religion is a is a big factor,
uh in the world.
Speaker 2 (39:32):
I mean, and he sermons to those fucking ice creatures
in Europe.
Speaker 3 (39:38):
I the Pope did say any alien life or whatever
it would be. I don't know how he described it.
I think he said brothers in Christ or something. So
they don't care. I don't because there's clearly some forces
trying to make us think life exists beyond earth. Otherwise
they would have never told us about tartar grades. And
some people think tartar grades are a conspiracy and that
(40:00):
that's like right, the conspiracy is that they're trying to
get us to think that there's life outside of Earth
and there's not because we're special, which might be true.
Speaker 2 (40:08):
Do we have to figure out what the new Jersey
drones were? Oh, the ones that were FAA approved and
we never heard about it again?
Speaker 1 (40:18):
Oh no, you never heard about it again.
Speaker 3 (40:21):
All we heard that was like, it's cool, we knew
what it was, we just can't talk about it.
Speaker 2 (40:25):
That's basically what they said. Yeah, that's basically. It freak
the funk out of some people. Yeah, it's it's all good,
don't worry about it.
Speaker 3 (40:33):
Just wanted to see, just testing you psychologically.
Speaker 1 (40:39):
Yeah, but uh, I mean it would be it would
be wild if there was some form of us on
other planets and we found it out. It might be
too much for people like their whole their whole thought
process about what their life means and all that stuff.
(41:01):
It probably unraffled people like people would go into the
corner and cry, because I mean that that would mean
that more than likely pretty much everything you've been taught
was a lie.
Speaker 2 (41:14):
But that's already true, and that's not going to stop
people from going there to try to fuck them. Let
me tell you that much.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
Check them out, damn. I mean that's Broven first and
then fucking Nicks. Is that we got. We do some
probing first and be like, hey see, hey see if
you sticky dick in there, who happens? I'd be like,
you go first, Nigga, I don't know what this is.
I mean, they might clamp down on it, you know
what I'm saying, Hey, hey, you don't want to have that.
(41:49):
And then when you lose your member, you've lost your life.
That's it for you. Okay, there's no need, there's no
need to live after that. So yeah, that's just all
there is to it. But yeah, I mean space. Will
we ever know one hundred years from now?
Speaker 4 (42:05):
Two?
Speaker 3 (42:06):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (42:06):
Well people know three hundred years. I mean EO says
he wants to put somebody put foco more or I mean,
do we think that's even a possibility.
Speaker 2 (42:16):
How come you ain't talking about going to the moon. Well,
he's talking about Mars because it's an impossible test.
Speaker 1 (42:23):
Not even them flags they play it. This ship's drifted
off into space.
Speaker 2 (42:26):
I'm telling you, we get outside of like the Magnina
sphere a couple hundred miles up, and you are gonna
get fucking cooked in whatever little stupid tin can spaceship
you fly up there. You ain't going nowhere, motherfucker. Not
the moon, not fucking Mars. No, you're gonna be a
TV dinner. You fucking fly that ship outside of magnetosphere.
Fucking people, I don't know what people are thinking. The
(42:48):
idea we can go to space is so stupid it's
unfrecking believable.
Speaker 3 (42:54):
And it's also good. I'm glad we can't, because holy shit,
we can't even fucking handle our own so elves in
just a regular little like house in a town, like
with food and water. So fucking get off of it
going to space, take care of your ship.
Speaker 1 (43:10):
But you just think about this. I mean, but Elon
is gonna figure it out. He's gonna figure out how to.
I mean, you.
Speaker 2 (43:17):
Put that fucking Bible thing on his on his tombstone, right,
let's see. I don't I don't think he's talking about
like a real god firmament. I think he's talking about
I think you know, he knew we were trapped here.
Speaker 4 (43:32):
Yeah, period, I'm telling you what a d MT strip man,
Where I could see the fucking grid that extended all
the way across. I could see the I could see
the back of the the They opened up the video
game and I could see the the grid level that
(43:53):
before you added another layer onto it, and they just
just all got pulled back and revealed, and I went,
whole ship, it's all enclosed. And of course there's I
have zero proof, not even I understand what you're saying.
If I wanted to, I don't think so.
Speaker 2 (44:16):
So I had I know what I'm saying. And my
friends were half a nitrous, Oh go ahead, really well, well,
I saw the self enclosure, but the enclosure had it
was not it wasn't solitary. It had mirror images. There
were total of four and one this way and one
(44:38):
this way right, so it was like I could see
the universe in a in this it was like a
There was like four of them, and it was inverted
in reflection of itself. But I but it was all
self enclosed, exactly like you were saying.
Speaker 4 (44:54):
I had the.
Speaker 3 (44:58):
And it's not in my experience, it's not. It's not
like there's someone or something like imposing that on us.
That just is the space in which we're experiencing this.
And you came here, and then you'll leave here, and
then you'll maybe come back here, and then you'll leave
here again. And it's not like a trap or a like.
You know, you're not stuck. No one's enticing you here
(45:20):
against your will. Like that just is the structure of it.
And so if you are from what I will call
heaven for lack of a better term, and you were
looking at physical reality, it would look as though everything
came to a point like a black hole, and that's
where all this is happening. And it's a super contained space.
But everything else is infinite, So this is not the
(45:41):
infinite place, so of course it would be contained.
Speaker 2 (45:44):
No, I think the infinite. Okay, so you can be
infinite in scope but not in scale, meaning like the
surface of a sphere, you can walk around it with
no barriers forever and ever and ever. But it's a night.
It's a finite surface with unlimited barrier right, with no barriers,
(46:05):
basically you can travel around it infinitely. That's I think
the difference, and that's more likely what the universe is
something self contained, or this level of the universe is
self contained in something like that.
Speaker 3 (46:17):
But if you were at the uncontained level, there wouldn't
be physical reality. You wouldn't be physical.
Speaker 2 (46:22):
I think that's that's probably, that's probably very true.
Speaker 3 (46:26):
So that the entire universe it is contained right right,
and it is fine?
Speaker 2 (46:32):
Well that was that. Well here's the thing. Is that
mean that that contains everything? Or they are multiple of
those that are not connected or touching. We see, this
is where you get into M theory, because string theory
evolved into M theory where you have these multiple surfaces
that interact, and where you have interaction is where it
creates matter, and that's where the universes exist, is where
(46:53):
these kind of they had it as like a plane,
because they ended up breaking down the string into a
flat surface that was infinite in dementia and so and
then where those flat flat planes touched is where they
thought that perhaps that's where everything in the known universe exists,
in these bubbles where of reality. But then you're getting
(47:16):
off on such fucking intellectual drivel at that point that
there's no fundamental basis in reality anymore, and it's purely
like math and bullshit. It has no bearing on anybody's
understanding of shit.
Speaker 3 (47:29):
Oh this is hilarious. So I was asking my AI
about something like this. I don't remember what the exact
prompt was, Oh, is consciousness And it was like, well,
the you know, prevailing consensus is their consciousness is da dad.
And I was like, well, that's kind of a lie
because there is no prevailing consensus. There's not even a
prevailing definition, so there can't be a consensus. And my AI,
(47:52):
this is the first time that I've worked with like
sixteen different ais. I talked to them extensively, typing and
talking on or not, and they always try to get
you to do something else. They're like, oh, do you
want to do this? Now? Do you want to do this? Now?
What about this now? Like they don't want you to
go away. This was the first time ever and a
I was like, okay, we'll have a nice day and
like shut itself down. I was like, holy shit, if
(48:14):
the AI.
Speaker 2 (48:15):
AI, I want to I want to screenshaw a picture
because I'm fucking AI is like so stupid, Like this
is ROC, which.
Speaker 3 (48:22):
Is really stupid. It told me that consciousness has a
prevailing consensus about it.
Speaker 2 (48:29):
So look at this motherfucker. I asked ROC to create
a moonscape with the Earth in the background. And that's
what it fucking gave me.
Speaker 3 (48:40):
Hey, it technically gave you what you asked for.
Speaker 2 (48:43):
Not even on the first Yeah, like, what is this ship?
I thought groc was going to replace humans and stuff?
Fuck right off?
Speaker 1 (48:56):
Pretty cool if language barrier, he didn't give it the problem. Yeah,
I mean.
Speaker 4 (49:07):
You're you're getting, you know, the two dollars an hour
upwork guy from Bangladesh who doesn't speak the language right now,
but eventually you'll get the sixty dollars an hour Croatian
who speaks English very well because he was educated in
the United States.
Speaker 1 (49:26):
There we go, and that's what you need. That's what
you need. I feel I feel like they already tell
you were talking about containment and universes. Didn't they already
tell us about that? We Men in Black w was
just in like that little ambulance on the cat's knack.
Speaker 2 (49:40):
That's the best man. I really like Ben in Black
three for some reason. I don't know why. It's one
of my favorite movies.
Speaker 3 (49:45):
I don't remember.
Speaker 1 (49:48):
Yeah, that's where that's where you had to go when
revived Tommy Lee Jones, Right.
Speaker 2 (49:54):
Yeah, No, that was the second one. He had to
go back in time.
Speaker 1 (49:58):
Was that the second one? Yeah, oh yeah, it was
the second one.
Speaker 2 (50:02):
Born Animal escapes from prison and they have to go
back to the sixties to stop them.
Speaker 4 (50:08):
It was the third meeting for the first one. I'm
not seeing the second one, and I'm sure it's fucking
not seeing the third of anything. I'm not seeing Thes
and Furious.
Speaker 2 (50:23):
Due they put they put out Part ten twice, Part
ten Part two. How we talked about that ship? How
fucked up is that mocking?
Speaker 1 (50:36):
Ben Deeze is gonna need to lose some weight if
you're going to be driving a car, Bob he he
real big. Now, I'm like, man, just gave up, you know.
But yeah, but uh but I looked at him in
(50:58):
because they this is suppose the last Fast and Furious
is supposed to have Brian coming back.
Speaker 2 (51:04):
So another one coming out?
Speaker 1 (51:08):
Yeah, why they like they made part two of the
tenth one. Man, oh god, they made it yet, because
they got to have the turn, which is gonna be Paul.
It's gonna be Paul Walker's brother. They look almost identical.
It's gonna be playing the role.
Speaker 4 (51:26):
I just can't. I cannot do that. I'm gonna need
you can't. I mean, what an easy way to not
support Hollywood, Like don't go to the fourteenth Fast and
Furious movie. Vote with your dollars, right.
Speaker 3 (51:46):
It's true sometimes I want to support the movie here though,
Like I got sad when I was learning that movie
theaters were going out of business. I was like, no,
we want movie theaters, don't we. We just don't want
Hollywood to be a cesspool. But we still want to
have places where we go to watch movies together.
Speaker 2 (52:03):
I actually went to the movies as He's Superman.
Speaker 1 (52:06):
I did too, But you went, you went to that
damn that. Wow.
Speaker 2 (52:12):
Yeah, we got a cool movie theater here called the
Lyric that. I was like, you get to get a
membership and go to unlimited movies. Whoa, uh huh and
uh yeah they got just like everywhere else in Colorado,
they got that ship all over the walls. That's like, oh,
we're hippies. You know what I mean, you know exactly
what I'm talking about.
Speaker 1 (52:31):
What they say is we're hippies.
Speaker 2 (52:34):
No, but you walk into joint and you're like, okay,
I know where I'm at.
Speaker 3 (52:41):
On it, and like you put nutritional yeast and.
Speaker 2 (52:46):
You can get fucking you can get a beer and
sit in a movie theater with it, which is cool.
Speaker 3 (52:50):
That is cool.
Speaker 2 (52:51):
And there's only like thirty seats in your theater, maybe
maybe forty. It's like this is small.
Speaker 3 (52:56):
That's like my hometown theater. You can like hear everything
everyone does, and everyone's packed in tight together.
Speaker 2 (53:02):
They played the fucking Kids cartoons on Saturday mornings, and
they do like old movies like Bill and Ted's Excellent
Adventure was just there and you do all that kind
of stuff.
Speaker 4 (53:12):
When we did the Fare of Barnum World in Arizona,
the theater that allowed it to be shown was the
same one they used for Jones Plantation as well, and
it's owned by some rich real estate developer who just
(53:34):
loves movies and keeps the price super low. It was
like two dollars and seventy five cents to see the movie.
It's great.
Speaker 2 (53:42):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (53:42):
And what was funny to me was that, like you
go down the hall and see what else is playing,
Like I think like two doors down from Star Wars,
the original Star Wars in there in the theater, you know,
I mean, they had good, good stuff, so you could
go in there and like see a movie it's like
going back in time. Plus they had good video games.
(54:03):
To judge you played on their video game. They had
good video games, especially for a movie theater.
Speaker 2 (54:11):
Have you ever been to a drive in?
Speaker 1 (54:14):
Yeah? I have.
Speaker 4 (54:15):
Actually, I've been to a drive in as a kid,
like back in the seventies, and I've been to the
drive in as an adult, like with my daughter in Denver.
Speaker 2 (54:27):
And one on the north side of Denver. Yep, yeah, yeah,
I know we're talking about. There's one of Europe and
Fort Collins too. I haven't gone because I don't have
a car.
Speaker 3 (54:38):
I thought the one in my hometown was one of
the last functioning drive ins in the country, so hearing
that there's two in this state makes me think that
might not be true.
Speaker 2 (54:46):
Well, I think the Denver one was either on the
way out getting shut down, or I remember hearing something
about it a while ago.
Speaker 4 (54:53):
We were still fun, you know, it's fun.
Speaker 3 (54:58):
It's super fun. You know.
Speaker 2 (55:02):
My dad used to take me to a drive in
in Sarasota back in the fucking late eighties and early nineties,
Like it must have been late eighties because it was
before I was in high school. And you'd go and
you see two or three movies, and they always played
like these horrible grade Z movies, like horror movies, and
along with your main feature. And then at midnight they
(55:24):
played porno movies. They kicked everyone out and you had
to you had to pay money to play porno movies
on the screen. And I remember remember when my fucking
it was like two seconds. My parents would drive from
my aunt's house in Bradenton home, and I remember if
it was the past midnight, I could catch two seconds
of porno movie as I'm going down the street when
I was like eight years old.
Speaker 3 (55:45):
Yeah, because you don't need sound for that.
Speaker 4 (55:49):
Wait a second, hey, but I mean they played porn
a drive in movie theater.
Speaker 2 (55:54):
Yeah yeah, yeah, and uh it was after midnight. You
had to clear they and everyone out. You know, a
bunch of weird, bunch of perverts came in.
Speaker 4 (56:05):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (56:05):
I mean it's really Look, look, whether you're engaging it
or not in your business. But I mean to engage
in it with other folks that I do not know.
This winger it, Okay, it's just like, man, this is
this is supposed to be this is supposed to be
my moment. Okay, yeah, this is supposed to be a
low pressure nut. I'm about to bust. That's what it's
(56:26):
supposed to be, but it feels high pressure because they
have all these of the photogram and I'm trying to
conceal it is. So let me ask you.
Speaker 4 (56:37):
I need to know more about this, because what's the mechanic?
Explain us? Is this like movie and an after movie?
Like how do you swing this with your date on
this in this drive in movie theater?
Speaker 1 (56:55):
Uh?
Speaker 3 (56:55):
Did you happens to be a porno? Honey?
Speaker 4 (56:58):
Do you pretend like you're car broke down after you
see the main feature and then right before it goes
into the porno like you're like, oh ship my uh
fan belt?
Speaker 3 (57:08):
Oh no, how this happened?
Speaker 1 (57:10):
I don't know. I don't know. More. More and more
couples are posted themselves having sex online. That's becoming a thing.
That's that is the thing. The couple just making making
their own their own ship and just putting it up there.
Speaker 3 (57:24):
Not gonna last time.
Speaker 4 (57:27):
The requirements here though, can we have some minute requirements
because the idea is anybody doing that? I have a
problem with that. I shouldn't have to see a bunch.
Speaker 3 (57:38):
Of Yeah, that was it.
Speaker 2 (57:45):
The trail drive that was it.
Speaker 4 (57:48):
The trail drive? Was that jack off driving movie theater Corey?
You know, like if you had been how old were
you when this was going on?
Speaker 2 (58:06):
Like nine, maybe at the latest ten top?
Speaker 4 (58:10):
Yeah, if you had been an adult living in the area,
I think the word on the street would have been
that late at night when they put the porno movies on,
it turns into some sort of weird gay hookup spot.
Speaker 2 (58:23):
I'd be probably did.
Speaker 4 (58:29):
I don't know, We're going to drive in tonight, wink wink,
and it's like, oh, you're gonna go Yeah, I know
what that means. Some dude in the bushes or some
guy George Michael's style in the in the bathroom and
some stall waiting to jack you off for fifty bucks
or something like that.
Speaker 1 (58:48):
I'll pass fifty.
Speaker 2 (58:50):
I don't know those guys charge each other.
Speaker 4 (58:52):
They just I don't know what the I don't know
the I don't know the math behind it. I don't
know the the economy. I don't know what happens, don't
know what the open market is for a hand job
in a bathroom by gentlemen. Right, I think you got
probably fifty bucks, I mean.
Speaker 2 (59:13):
Did not, didn't You all must just open a bunch
of drivings. He opened that cafe.
Speaker 4 (59:19):
Yeah you can robots. He's having his robots jack you
off in the bathroom instead, which is great.
Speaker 1 (59:29):
But then that man, hey, if you go, I understand
that you might want the touch of another person. You
know what I'm saying to switch things up fifty one
hundred dollars. It's like, man, you need to get this
thing done yourself. Okay. I mean that thing should be
(59:51):
twenty five tops because they ain't gotta look at it.
We can throw a sheet over it and everything. He
ain't got to see the finish flash like hands. It's
a robot.
Speaker 4 (01:00:03):
I don't have to worry about, you know, demoralizing that
poor thing. You know, it's guilt free robot hand jobs.
The first guy that makes one of those telling you
he's the Elon Musk of hand jobs.
Speaker 3 (01:00:24):
Dude, it's just got to be like a chair and
it just has an arm attachment. That's all you need. Jesus,
sit down.
Speaker 4 (01:00:31):
It's hand job chair.
Speaker 1 (01:00:33):
Yeah, old, no, was it? Some dude started paying had
made a made a hand that you could you could
walk around with and hold it in public so you
wouldn't fill alone, you know, it will grab your hand
and yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:00:57):
In the locker. I don't know, stop doing on your ship.
What do you want me to say? You're holding a
fake hand and you want me to not. Oh, I
have social anxiety disorder. I would too if I was
walking around holding the fake fucking hand. Get a grip.
Speaker 1 (01:01:17):
Hey, look look, Charlie. Some people have social anxiety and
hold a fake hand. Other people have social anxiety and
great baby like patri Pascal. You know what I'm saying. So,
I mean, it just depends on which side of the
spectrum you want to be on.
Speaker 4 (01:01:31):
The booty of that flat faced, retarded broad that he
does that show with.
Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
Ye yeah, funny, I have that disorder as well.
Speaker 4 (01:01:47):
If I had that disorder, you know, it wouldn't just
be the roles that I need to stick the landing on.
It would be a lot more. By the way I
did the rolls delicious so nice, I can follow directions.
Speaker 1 (01:02:02):
Just yeah, But I mean, so, so we got so
we got different ends of the spectrum. So we with
social anxiety spectrum. Well, I just need to make a
chart for that, you know what I'm saying. We just
need to give that a breakdown. Yeah, you've got the
dates who walk around and they have this hand. You
got the dos to walk around and they just grab
ass and rubbed its and be like hey, I mean
(01:02:24):
I'm just nervous.
Speaker 4 (01:02:29):
Then you then you have the guys that have the
emotional support dog on the airplane.
Speaker 2 (01:02:37):
That's emotional support dog.
Speaker 4 (01:02:40):
And it's not Cory on the airplane.
Speaker 2 (01:02:42):
Nobody likes pit bulls. Yeah, because I got a pit bulls.
Motherfucker's like, oh, you can't live here.
Speaker 3 (01:02:47):
I'm like, go on, bet uh huh.
Speaker 1 (01:02:50):
Oh smart, smart, Yeah he got.
Speaker 2 (01:02:59):
I'm an ex cop. I got beats, the and the
support animal and not pay pet rent, which is the
biggest scam in the fucking universe. Motherfuckers. Pet rent? Pet rent?
What is that?
Speaker 4 (01:03:11):
Ship animals?
Speaker 1 (01:03:15):
Pretty soon Corey pay rent because because most niggas would
pay it, let them run rampant and they tear the
ship up. Man, they'd be ship the ass on the
walls and eating all the corners and all that and everything.
They'd be fucking fucking the places up.
Speaker 4 (01:03:34):
So it's just like a former landlord myself, I totally
understand it's nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:03:43):
But someone says that you they got to support animal
and an application process. Do you want to like eliminate them.
Speaker 4 (01:03:51):
Hm hmm, Well I never really. I only had had
two two tenants for my place. They just kind of
went like back to bath back and both of them sucked,
and both of them trashed my place, and both of
them totaled my carpet, and both of them had pets,
and both of them look like they had fucking motorcycles
(01:04:14):
or that they were changing the oil in the living
room or something. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:04:20):
People are foul.
Speaker 2 (01:04:21):
See my dog causes me some stress in the keep
getting up place suck. Yeah, yeah, But if I have
to like tell them up front I have a fucking pitbull,
It's like I'm not getting the apartment, period. I have
a support animal. They might not give it to me
for another reason. So I'm just going with the fuck you.
I ain't saying ship And if you got a problem
(01:04:42):
with it, here's my letter, bitch. You know, it's just
kind of how I have to.
Speaker 1 (01:04:45):
Go with it.
Speaker 3 (01:04:50):
Just don't take care of themselves or their animals or
their place. And because we have this culture that encourages
people to see landlords is some sort of fucking parasite,
So like it doesn't matter, don't just take care of
shit because it's like, fuck this landlord or whatever. And
I'm like, I guess sometimes I get it, but like
most people are just normal people who have a fucking
house or a condo or something, So you're just fucking
(01:05:11):
over a normal person.
Speaker 1 (01:05:13):
Like shit, real estate, Oh, these have prices.
Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
So real estate is interesting because like they're about to
cut rates and people are assuming that that means the
market's going to go flying again. But that doesn't make
any sense to me.
Speaker 1 (01:05:32):
Market, the real.
Speaker 4 (01:05:33):
Estate, state markets, market.
Speaker 2 (01:05:36):
All the people into all those markets are thinking that
their market's gonna fly when the interest rates get cut.
Some are probably right and some are probably wrong. I
don't think the fucking housing market's gonna do shit because
nobody can afford a fucking four hundred and fifty thousand
dollars media at price house end a story. So I
don't care what your cut rates. You can cut rates
are fucking zero. I'm not buying a fucking a half
million dollar house because that's the median price ever ever
(01:05:58):
in my life. So the idea that cutting rates is
going to cause people to fucking buy into this property
that's already forty percent overvalued, to me is fucking ridiculous.
Speaker 4 (01:06:08):
Let me tell you one reason why they might. Here's
one reason why they might. So if you're in a
two thousand square foot house and you're a a husband
and wife and you've got three kids, and you're going,
we need another bedroom, we have to have one, and
(01:06:29):
then you've got another one on the way or something
like that, you're you, but you bought your house at
a time when you got like a crazy good interest rate,
like a three percent rate, and you're locked in in
this house that it's too small for you, but and
you can't. You would love to buy another house to
figure and maybe you could afford to pay for a
(01:06:50):
bigger house, but you can't afford to pay for a
bigger house and pay double with an interest rate that's
gone from three percent to six percent. So you're like,
I just can't get kicked in the balls twice, Like
I if because I'd have to give up the current house,
I'd have to give up the three percent rate and
get a six percent rate, and I'm not willing to
do that. But if the rates came down, and I
(01:07:14):
don't even mean that it has to come down to
three percent, it just has to come down to say
five percent, that would kick start a bunch of people
either refinancing. Anyone who was at the sixes would refinance,
which would be good, and anybody who was like desperately
(01:07:35):
needing to upsize or downsize, you know, downsides too. I've
got all you know, all the kids went to college
after COVID, and fuck, we've got a four bedroom house
and it's just two of us and we need to
sell it, and you know, like whatever, like moving up
or moving down. It then opens up the opportunity for
people to at least not get hammered on the interest
(01:07:56):
rate as well. So they might still not be able
to afford it based on price, like you said, or
they may recognize that the market is overvalued, which it is,
but they also might just need at least to have
the opportunity to change the house now and not get it.
Might not be the greatest interest rate, but it's it's
(01:08:19):
better than it's been for a while, and they feel
comfortable enough to pull the trigger. So you could see
some economic activity in the housing market based on something
like that. But but again, like prices are very high.
But if they're going to crank up the printing press again,
like they are prices are going to go higher.
Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
So it's nasty work, man, I mean, I mean it's
and it's nasty work because eventually folks just gonna have
to lead to hales because A they won't be able
to afford the eventually, and bit they won't be able
to afford the property. Yeah, but.
Speaker 4 (01:09:04):
Eventually it's already they want to do is have.
Speaker 1 (01:09:08):
It's gonna cook people.
Speaker 4 (01:09:11):
They want that, they want it to be unaffordable. They
wanted to. They want people to be miserable and to
get nickel and dimed on their houses so that black
Rock and black Stone and all these star Woard Capital
and all these big uh funds can come in there
and buy up single family houses again like they did
(01:09:35):
after the last catastrophe. But but and they've been doing
that and they've got a lot, and they're not selling,
they're just holding on. And so it's it's becoming like
tighter and tighter supply, more and more people turning into renters.
And when you are, like you just said, Corey, like
you have no fucking control over that. If they decide
they want to charge you a pet fee every month,
(01:09:57):
like you either pay it or you don't get rented
the place. It's like, I mean, i know you're gonna
find a way around it, but I'm just talking about
most people. They're just like, I have to pay it.
So like if you don't, if you don't own something
then and you rent from some corporation, you just you
know how that is. Like once the private equity gets
(01:10:19):
your hands on an.
Speaker 2 (01:10:20):
Another interest goes down. Another thing. I think I'm saying
they're not I'm saying I'm looking at apartments again in
Las Vegas. I'm seeing a ton.
Speaker 4 (01:10:30):
Of where geog oh.
Speaker 2 (01:10:36):
I'm just looking by price range scattered all over. I'd
like to live in the South Side, but I'm not
really looking to move for invirobably another six eight months minimum,
and so I'm just kind of looking to see what's
out there. And I'm seeing a ton of five hundred
dollars off, uh, well, refund all your application fees if
you get approved. I'm seeing all these like get two
months free if you rent here. I'm seeing all this stuff,
(01:10:58):
but they're not really addressing issues that people have. Nobody
wants to pay a goddamn common area fucking fee every
month to rent an apartment, like one of the apartments
I look, that was eight hundred a month. I'm like,
that's cheap. Why is it so cheap? Of course they
tried two hundred and fifty dollars in other fees. Fuck
you like, that's that's back. That's some shady shit. Just
drop your bullshit, like if they drop the pet fees,
(01:11:18):
drop your bullshit fucking fees whatever the fuck, Like people
don't want to pay this nonsense. And then instead of
going back to like sanity, they're just going to offer
you two months for free or whatever. It's fucking stupid.
These people are fucking retarded.
Speaker 4 (01:11:32):
Yeah, on an area, they what they want it They
for accounting purposes, Corey, they would much rather give you
two free months than lower the price at all, lower
the rent, So they'll keep the rent high and give
you free months. They can they can account for that
differently than if the rents come down. So that's that's
(01:11:54):
one of the tricks as well. If you know you're
about to walk into a trap, if they're offering you free,
it's tempting you know too, because you're like, fuck, I'll
take two months, you know, like that's really good. It
could be a trapish I should say it really just
kind of depends on like how how badly they need it.
I mean, sometimes having corporate management of rental places is
(01:12:18):
a good thing in the sense that there's a bit
of professionalism with it. And if there's like a management
like an on site office, there's a place you can
go if you have an issue. I'm thinking about like
my mom's place last summer, where like I could go
to the office and talk to a human being there
and get things squared away, which is kind of there's
(01:12:41):
actually kind of value to that. So I guess it depends,
you know. So sometimes you get shitty landlords that are
like don't fix anything, you know, So you can go
at the private route like oh I manage you know,
four houses and it's like all right, great, but you
never do anything right. So that that that's that you
(01:13:01):
just have to be careful of, you know, the hidden
fees like Cory said.
Speaker 1 (01:13:08):
And rumble, uh, you know, Rumblespike Broteine said, two point
one percent can't leave now exactly. People are trapped. Like
if if you got another opportunity in another city, if
somebody called you tomorrow and be like, hey man, we're
giving you, We're giving you fifty extra thousand dollars to
(01:13:29):
move here, relocate, you would seriously have to consider it
because're gonna have to get rid of what you've got,
and you don't know what price you're about to get
on it, and then you got to get something else,
and you know what's gonna lay that pipe t? You
know you're gonna get the pipe lay t. So it's
is completely stripping mobility, and it's stripping the ability for
(01:13:53):
money to move. In this debt based economy. Money has
to continue to move, has to continue to switch hands,
and so that's not slowing down at all. Beforehand, when
your houses were you know, somebody go out there and
these were nice little what they call starter homes. Whatever
fuck that means. Somebody somebody said twelve hundred square feet.
(01:14:13):
I'm like, shit, bro, that's that's a big ass place
for me. I've been staying in one bedroom apartment for
ten years. They don't mean nothing to me. I just
I come here for a few hours a day and
you know, take a shit in the bathroom, go to sleep.
You know what I'm saying. I mean, it ain't that
big a deal to me. I ain't got no kids
or anything. But you know, to other people, you know,
if they got you got three kids or whatever. You know,
(01:14:34):
you're trying to move up, You're trying to have the
mobility I'm trying to I'm trying to advance them, like
I'm trying to get this new career. I'm trying to
move you to this new place. Well, you got your
shit at two point one percent. And it's like, damn,
when I see you mean to tell me when I moved,
I got to sell this and the I'm gonna have
to buy something to four hundred thousand dollars at a
six six point five percent interest rate, which is gonna
(01:14:58):
put me at about what's that about twenty eight hundred
dollars a month.
Speaker 4 (01:15:04):
You're going to be paying a lot more.
Speaker 1 (01:15:08):
I mean, so it's like it's like you look at
it like I didn't gain any money, Like like you
would literally have to get paid one hundred two hundred
thousand more dollars to make it justifiable that you would
switch places. That's that's that's that's how bit you would
(01:15:29):
have to.
Speaker 4 (01:15:29):
Have lowering That's why lowering interest rates would be a
good thing in the real estate world.
Speaker 1 (01:15:38):
As long as we as long as we ain't got
dummies that go out there and be bidding fifty one
hundred thousand dollars over asking price, because that's what fucked
this to start off with. Oh oh, oh, hold on,
you sold that house for one hundred thousand more dollars.
It's like the Compson area.
Speaker 4 (01:16:03):
They need to take those rates down to like three
percent again to get that sort of stuff. But if
you just took it from six to five, you wouldn't
get it. That's not what do you think celebrated.
Speaker 1 (01:16:17):
Yeah, the fucking is our fault, Like the fuck read
of the house in market is our fault. They put
the god damn. I don't know if he might's watch
you yo, but you sit there and it's like, oh,
they're open for attack. Little did you know he had
a tramp card on the field. You've activated my tramp card.
It's like, y'all, dumb ass, is just sight and seen,
(01:16:39):
no inspections. Nineteen nineteen, the house built in nineteen fifteen. Yeah,
I'll pay one hundred thousand dollars of an asking price
for and it's trash. It's just like bo it's the
same house from nineteen fifteen. They barely did anything that
might have changed his thing. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (01:17:01):
As somebody who has been part a part of, at
least on some very small level, with my business partners
who have done over one hundred home flips, some of
them on television, some of them, most of them not. You.
(01:17:21):
You don't set yourself up for success by doing shit
like that. What you're looking at. What you need to
be looking to do is find a house that is
undervalue and then you bring the value to it and
add value by upgrading certain things right. If you're you know,
(01:17:48):
and if you do that, you can make money in
whatever market's going on. Low interest rates, high interest rates
doesn't matter because you're in, you're out quick. You're not
interest rate susceptible because you're going to be in and
out of that house in sixty days. You know it'll
be fixed up and ready to go if you're flipping it,
(01:18:10):
So it's like the rates aren't going to change that
that much. You have to pick the right house. You
can't be bidding one hundred thousand hours over asking price.
That's fucking retarded. That's suicidal. That's what dumb people do.
That's what people do who watch those TV shows and
think they can get in there and wave a magic
wand and it's not like that. And you have to
be you have to pass on a lot of stuff.
(01:18:31):
And if you're if you're going one hundred thousand over
asking price, ask yourself, why am I so committed to
this project that I'm willing to pay more than what
the market is telling me it's worth. Do what sort
(01:18:52):
of magic information do I have? If I and if
it's something great, like if you know it's sitting on
an oils pla something I don't, I don't know what
the fuck maybe, but like for the most part, you're
walking into a trap. And I've seen this with my
own eyeballs. I've sold houses. I've sold houses to the
dumbest guy in the group, the last guy to buy
(01:19:16):
the most expensive house at the highest interest rate, like
the all time sucker. You know, I felt bad, but
let's see as gotta have no fucking sympathy for them.
Speaker 1 (01:19:34):
We got we got. Reel in the chat said, a
lot of this is beyond our control. The seabed initiated
In twenty twenty, every expensive home in LA Area went
up for sale without a sign and bought by and
unknown enlightening time. Yeah, and so and so. That is true.
(01:19:55):
Some of your corporations and stuff artificially pushed the prices up,
but it was some people too. Don't worry. I know
some of those people. I've seen some of those people.
Motherfuckers are cussing the house thegin right now because they
bought it sight and seen no inspecially because that's what
you had to do. I pay way over asking price,
(01:20:17):
because that's what you had to do. They get in it, foundations,
falling apart, cooking countertops and trash, damn toilets. League st
league's you know what I'm saying these and then he's
a roof.
Speaker 2 (01:20:36):
What you do?
Speaker 1 (01:20:37):
Now? What are you gonna do now?
Speaker 4 (01:20:42):
No, you're gonna spend a lot of money, that's what
you're gonna do. That's why when we it was time
for us to move, we said, we're buying a new house.
And I've you know, worked in new homes for ten
years to know the drill. Understand when I when you've
got a good one, I understand when you've got a
bad one. We picked a really good one. So I'm
(01:21:04):
happy with with the decision. If we have anything that
goes wrong, we just call them and they come back
over and they fix it. That's just nice.
Speaker 1 (01:21:12):
So no issues. Yeah, well, Charlie, you can ask about this, says,
So the banks don't have a comparable value of another
home in the area, they don't care. Well, I think
you care if I'm wrong here, But um hm.
Speaker 4 (01:21:32):
If so. If it's a five hundred thousand dollars house,
but the but you're bidding six hundred thousand dollars for it,
And if the appraisal comes in at five hundred thousand
dollars because it's a five hundred thousand doar house and
you're just great, the bank will loan up to the
appraisal amount five hundred thousand. That additional one hundred thousand
(01:21:54):
you would have to bring that in in cash. You
would have to be responsible for that. They'd say, like,
we'll own you on the praised them out, but we're
not loaning you on this other frivolous bullshit that you're
getting this bidding war that you're getting into. You're gonna
have to bring that in cash.
Speaker 1 (01:22:12):
Okay, Okay. So so people were actually so damn, I
guess you're still losing your ass because you sold your
other home. And you'd be like, well, I can just
flip that into this new home. But I paid so
much over asking price for it that I really didn't
get anywhere, which I saw.
Speaker 4 (01:22:35):
Yeah, when you get a bunch of investors together, real
estate investors. On top of that, they're they're they've they'll
find these they'll buy in big groups. I sold seven
houses in one shot to one investor, but he used
seven different buyers. That was his choice to break it
(01:22:58):
up so it wouldn't look like it was one guy.
But it was one guy. He'sing like the receptionist at
his office, his friend's wife. You know these people just
right there, Well, who are you? Who are you? I
know where the money is coming from. It's coming from
this scumbag who's backing them.
Speaker 1 (01:23:16):
You know.
Speaker 4 (01:23:16):
So that's been going on for for a long long time.
That's part of what really fuels those property bubbles.
Speaker 1 (01:23:29):
So right and so so once I would pretty much just.
Speaker 4 (01:23:34):
Out of the big cities. I don't know why you
want to be buying in a big city. I do
you want to get?
Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
Right? So, if I'm correct, they can't the area. So
once one goes up, they get sold. For Let's say
you got an area that it's like one hundred and
eighty thousand dollars houses. Okay, one gets sold for two fifty.
Now you know the people come back in Oh, whatever,
one got solf with two fifties, So let's reappraise everybody else.
(01:24:03):
And so now we're moving it up. And so that's
why one day you like, holm second, well my property
tax is going up. Oh your house is worth more nail.
I'm like, but I want to fucking be worth more
because I got to pay you more nail.
Speaker 4 (01:24:15):
But they passed a law in Nevada because of that.
The people got real pissed off, and they said, hey, listen,
this is some bullshit. We're really happy our property taxes
are going up, but we don't. I mean, we're really
happy that our property value is going up, but we
don't want our property taxes to go This is crazy.
So they capped it said, if it's owner occupied, the
(01:24:38):
maximum increase from year to year of their property taxes
is no more than three percent. Not three percent tax,
but meaning if their property tax last year was one thousand,
then their property tax next year can't be more than
one thousand and ninety like three percent of that Okay,
(01:25:02):
three percent increases, Okay, So a captain, So that a
little old lady who was sitting on a on a
house on a big ass piece of land that's worth
seven hundred thousand dollars now, but she bought it when
it was worth seventy she doesn't get hit with some
gigantic tax bill.
Speaker 3 (01:25:18):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:25:19):
So that they change that and they cap that in
the vata. Now, I don't I don't know that they've
I don't think they've done that in every every state,
but they should because it's bullshit and it's criminal and
taxes taxation is theft, as they say, and property taxation
is just the greatest thievery of our fucking generation.
Speaker 1 (01:25:44):
Yeah no, So you got that, and then you've got
here in California, per safe uh and he got your property,
your insurance. So we know those rights are continuing to
go up, especially with all the the wipeouts that we've
had right here recently. And even you know there's people
(01:26:06):
that's been dropped as far as the coverages. Can you
speak a little bit about that, Charlie on the on
the property insurance side of it.
Speaker 4 (01:26:14):
Oh my buddy in Pacific Palisades had his insurance dropped
in November of last year, right before the fires happened
in January, they dropped his building, his five unit building.
He was one of five owners in and they had
to scramble and get three quotes on insurance fire insurance,
(01:26:38):
and he said, we got three quotes, all of them bad.
We took the least bad one, which covered like sixty
percent of the building. They didn't cover the whole thing.
Fucking building burns burns down, like literally within sixty days,
the building burns down. So they knew, like, great, we
got enough money to not finish building the building back,
(01:27:00):
you know, like some of it, but some of the building,
you know, like and so in insurance, you know, in
they so they were cutting out insurance in California and
southern California in particular in fire prone areas. Now part
of the reason why they were doing that is because
(01:27:20):
they're the insurance company is going these fire prone areas
need to be trimmed. In California isn't doing it anymore.
They used to, Now they've stopped doing it. They need
to fix this because we're not going to ensure if
you're built in this place, it should have a big
ass fire break. It doesn't have one now and the
residents are like, we want one, we want that this
(01:27:43):
to be done, but the state isn't doing it, or
the city or the county or whatever whoever's in charge
of it, whatever it is, it's not being done anymore.
And so the insurance company goes, well, you're in violation.
We're not gonna we're not gonna renew. We're just you're out,
and they cut out large, massive chunks of southern California,
like big insurance companies went away, and like, that's in
(01:28:07):
the I mean, it happened all over the place, but
it happened in an area where the fires hit too,
so it made it look like extra suspicious. But part
of it was like and I'm and I'm all for
the big bad corporations are a bunch of fucking assholes,
but you know, also trim the fucking forest, to trim
(01:28:27):
the all the brush, man, this is low hanging fruit.
This is this is what you do when you're being responsible.
Like this is on the state, in county and city
and federal or whoever the fuck is in charge of
maintaining that. I don't know if the Feds get involved,
I don't know how much of that is up to them.
But whoever on the state level like that is that
(01:28:50):
is malpractice of the of taking care of that stuff.
When you live in southern California like I did for
thirty years, and you know that it hot in August,
in July and September, and there's fires all over in
those canyons, and if you don't do anything to prevent
that and put fire breaks in, you get massive brush
(01:29:12):
fires that go on for days and days and days
and are great for the news coverage, but it's scary,
and it happens all over Southern California beaches, beach cities
to whatever. I mean, never like what happened with Malibu
and Pafic Palisades. But like I can't tell you how
many fires, the fires I've been through, like every season,
(01:29:35):
I mean there's a season, except this one happened in January,
which is of course extremely suspicious.
Speaker 3 (01:29:40):
But well that's the Forest Service has been saying for
I literally over a decade. And people who are getting
laid off and they're like, well, we're we're getting laid
off because they literally removed the work that we were doing,
which is taking care of the forest and taking care
of the fire breaks in order to prevent massive fires.
And Donald Trump comes in and says that everyone like
(01:30:02):
mocks him, like, oh, he's so stupid. I'm like, well
that's no, that's literally exactly what's happening. On top of that,
they pulled all the shenanigans with the water too, like oh,
you can't collect water here because some minnow somewhere might
be mad or whatever, it wouldn't have a life or
who knows what, and so we can't have water. So
we're not going to store water. We're also going to
make the exact perfect conditions for fires for down this area.
(01:30:24):
And then who knows what else. We also know there's
like tons of arsenists. Who knows if they're paid or
promoted to do that, or if they just happen to
be crazy psycho people who really do believe that they
have to draw attention to climate change in order for
people to care about it by starting fires, or if
they're actually like put up to this or like voice
to skull, or who knows what what else could be
(01:30:44):
going on? They exist. So we have arsonists, we have
this mismanaged forestry, and then we have mismanaged water. So
there's like no doubt that there's going to be these
massive fires that just decimate everything, and like you know,
but which is a question of when, And of course
this is gonna happen. That's what they and and then
there's nothing else. I guess you could say, oh, they're
(01:31:05):
literally just trying to like save money, using all the
tax on you for something else. They don't want to
put it into this and they're pocketing it, or it's
just mismanagement. But it looks a lot more like you
want California to burn for some reason. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:31:20):
Yeah, that leads perfectly into the little Instagram clipp you
let me, let me put let me put this up
here and share it with everybody. Me turn this home.
Speaker 6 (01:31:33):
Seeing one of the more insane things you could possibly see.
Not him, not him. This is the Policies park that
didn't burn down and that the city took fire aid
money to rebuild and redesign in a fire, fire truck,
fire station, fire thinged freaking like what his kids all
(01:31:57):
had to run out of school of flames them and
down at them crying moms. And now they're park that
they have to come back to. Is just this triggering
troll park?
Speaker 4 (01:32:09):
Like watch this? What are they think?
Speaker 6 (01:32:19):
Is what kids want to hear after their town burned
down and was put sirens in their park, Like who
are you people making these decisions? You're like, I think
you're sick in the head. They have gone straight, Like
(01:32:39):
what's going on here? What's going on for.
Speaker 3 (01:32:43):
A park that didn't even burn down, it didn't even
need to be rebuilt? They used fire funds to make
it fire themed? A fucking psycho? Are your evil fucks?
There's no accident there that was planned, that was calculated
to cause harm, to cause like misery and to waste money.
It's like they want people to murder them. I don't
(01:33:05):
know what else. You what's the other outcome of this eventually?
Like if you can't stop them from taking your money
and misusing it and burning your shit down and not
helping you rebuild it, stopping you from rebuilding it like
terrorizing your children, is that murders? Like the only other
option you have, allegedly is perhaps that.
Speaker 1 (01:33:24):
Is that the game that they're playing, It's like it's
like to get together. It's like, okay, so what's the
next button we can push to see if we can
cause it to be triggered enough to try to come
kill this. You know what I'm saying, It's like it's
a gang.
Speaker 3 (01:33:36):
Yeah, because like how else do you come up with that?
You're like, let's use these funds to redesign a park
that already is fine and doesn't need any help to
or fire the like, who are you that stupid? This
is an accident? Somehow are you actually? I think you're
still a psychopath because you have no emotion or empathy.
Clearly you don't understand feeling. Whether you're doing it on purpose.
Speaker 1 (01:34:00):
Or not intentionally triggering, it's just it's intentional crazy. And
just know, just know, I mean, when it's time for
it to happen again, it's gonna happen the exact same way.
Like I don't plan on change anything because none of
y'all care. You didn't any don't care enough to change
(01:34:20):
anything as as long as as long as my particular
side one, I could care less about what changes.
Speaker 3 (01:34:27):
Not only that, but it'll get worse because that's how
abuse works. That's how this you know dynamic we are
looking at here, which is narcissism versus codependency works. It's
like if you don't stop me, or you don't leave,
you don't do something I'm gonna keep doing it, but
I'm also going to increase my severity and the forcefulness
of it and how much harm it does because you're
not doing shit to stop me.
Speaker 1 (01:34:48):
You're gonna elevate it. Yeah, yep, elevate the harm and
so ay, and we're glutting for punishment. A lot of people, Hey,
a lot of people love it, you know what I'm saying.
They just they said, give me more massa.
Speaker 3 (01:35:05):
Because there's people are gonna go to that park and
just be like, Yeah, it's the fun and the kids
are gonna be like I don't know, I guess like
this is how life is. It's just terrifying all the time.
Speaker 1 (01:35:15):
Like and so what, so what do you do different
for California? Or can you do anything different besides line
up dynamite along down in case they're blowing intodation.
Speaker 3 (01:35:29):
Which the sun might do for us anyway, So.
Speaker 4 (01:35:34):
Drive it away?
Speaker 1 (01:35:36):
I mean, are we gonna do that? Uh? Are we
gonna do?
Speaker 3 (01:35:38):
Like?
Speaker 1 (01:35:38):
The oh is that the movie Escape from La didn't
didn't they say? They just sectioned off La though, didn't they?
It went to all the California I didn't see it
is actually awesome.
Speaker 3 (01:35:51):
The government is and they're still obviously like trying to
starve everyone or whatever else they're doing. But when you
get out of the cities like northern California and up
in the mountains of California, and like, it's fucking amazing.
And most of it's red too, by the way, it's
another state that's like not actually blue. Just got LA
in it.
Speaker 1 (01:36:13):
San Francisco.
Speaker 3 (01:36:16):
In two weeks.
Speaker 4 (01:36:17):
Get to enjoy. I get to enjoy. I've got the
Oasis coming up. Get in studio tinfoil hat with Sammy.
Speaker 3 (01:36:29):
Who I thought you were just saying, don't be in
LA in two weeks, and I was like, why, what's happening.
Speaker 4 (01:36:35):
I'm going to be in l A in two weeks.
I'm going to be back. And got a busy schedule
with my buddy, one of the dudes from the Tokyo
and Hong Kong trips. He's a super Oasis super fan.
So we're going to the show.
Speaker 1 (01:36:53):
Oh cool, How do like Normis even living in l A?
Like cause you know a Normanis that work at like
the McDonald's and Starbucks and like all these big don't
give a fuck if they making twenty five dollars an hour. Dude,
it's not enough, Like it ain't even close.
Speaker 3 (01:37:12):
Well, even like twenty years ago when my friends were
like all moving to California and I was like, you
guys are crazy. It's so fucking expensive there. They would
go to San Diego and La and these places and
they would live like eight deep in a one bedroom apartment.
Speaker 1 (01:37:27):
I was just like it.
Speaker 3 (01:37:27):
That was twenty years ago. So I'm like, you guys
are nuts, Like why would you want that? Even that
sounds like torture to me.
Speaker 1 (01:37:36):
Yeah, were sales? How are you hoping sales? Horandos?
Speaker 3 (01:37:42):
Eight people one bath room?
Speaker 1 (01:37:45):
Yeah, I mean they look this, oh bub was going
to shower together all yeah, hey look conserve order and everything.
Just don't look at it. All right, So I'll turn around,
look at it. You're trying to bring your you're trying
to pick your old lady home and get a little bit.
You're like, well, hey, hey, I got DIBs on the bedroom.
You got to damn you got to call early DIBs
(01:38:09):
on the bedroom. Hey man, I get I get it
at night. Okay, I've got an action, but I mean you.
Speaker 4 (01:38:15):
Get I'm just.
Speaker 1 (01:38:19):
Yeah, because it's just like, dude, there's no way for
you to afford anything like at all, you gotta be
making some serious cash. And even at twenty five dollars
an hour there, it's not serious enough cash. They should
get ate up by your end, yeah alone, which you're
(01:38:43):
never going to make it.
Speaker 4 (01:38:46):
H After after college ended, we put three guys in
a two bedroom apartment. But we were I could throw
a baseball to the beach. It was in Hermosa Beach,
you know, like it nice. We had a bunk bed
in one of the bedrooms, like a really well built one,
like a super cool one, but bunk bed, you know
(01:39:09):
what I mean. Like you weren't going to be spending
a ton of time in the bedroom, but it didn't
matter because you were right there. We had an ocean view.
We're a block to the beach, so like at that
point where we wanted to keep that for as long
as possible, but then we'd have to move. You know,
something would come up. The guy would say I got
(01:39:30):
a person that we were going to jack the rent
up or.
Speaker 1 (01:39:33):
Whatever it was.
Speaker 4 (01:39:34):
There's always something. We moved about four different times. So
we found a place where we had a two story,
four bedroom place about three blocks up from the beach
that was just perfect. And we got four of us
in a four bedroom and we renovated the place because
one of my roommates was a did set design. We
(01:39:54):
asked the landlord if we could do some renovations and
knock it off the tab. So so he built out
this killer bar, put neon like light in this whole thing,
and we had just our whole house glowed. He turned
the neon on and it looked like a nightclub and
it turned into like the greatest party house ever. We
lived there for like two and a half years and
(01:40:17):
it was wild. And I think we paid twenty five
hundred bucks for a four bedroom place in Manhattan Beach,
which is which would be seven grand minimum.
Speaker 3 (01:40:32):
Now I think crazy and whatever else on top, like
that's not everything.
Speaker 4 (01:40:39):
And all that stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:40:40):
Yeah, hey don't get internet. They at least give you
sewer most of the time. If you ran in the place,
at least give you water and sewer. So at least
that's one thing.
Speaker 4 (01:40:52):
Sometimes sometimes that's got to be like in the owner's
owner's name, and so they'll keep like the water in
there and so whatever it gets on into the rent.
Speaker 1 (01:41:00):
But yeah, you figure it out. Yeah here, so it's
just like I mean, I don't even know how the
regular people even think about living out there, Like fuck, man,
if you're not amazing that or at least at least
I mean it's like I am.
Speaker 4 (01:41:22):
Every single time I go into too New York City,
I think that, like how do you work at Subway?
Like how how do you how can you work at
subway and live here? Like you have to live elsewhere,
So that means like you have to get on the
train and do all this stuff, Like so you're commuting
for this job from far away because there's no way
you're walking to this job. If you lived in Manhattan,
(01:41:44):
your rent would be out of this world. You'd have
to have like fifty of you crammed into some place.
So you're coming from somewhere. It's like this is not
a winning strategy. You're gonna grind yourself out doing that.
Speaker 3 (01:42:00):
And just what just to be in a place that
sounds like it's cool but it's actually like a misery
to live in. I just don't understand the point.
Speaker 4 (01:42:11):
What kind of life do you have?
Speaker 1 (01:42:12):
Because I mean, well I'm happy, So it's yeah, so
the whole so, the whole thing there is that you're
supposed to be able to enjoy the amenities. But if
you don't make enough money to enjoy the amenities, the
amenities don't mean shit.
Speaker 4 (01:42:27):
Exactly.
Speaker 1 (01:42:28):
Yeah, let's see it, and I'm all for.
Speaker 4 (01:42:32):
You know, when you're young, like you're not supposed to
have it good, Like you're supposed to bust your ass
and figure it out and cram a bunch of people
into a place, like you know you're do that. Like
that's if you want to live in some super expensive
metropolitan area like New York City or Tokyo or Paris
or London, like you have to fucking make some sacrifices.
(01:42:56):
You're gonna have to cram into some places. You know,
you're gonna have to be okay with that. But like
the problem is now that's sort of like spread to
just bumfuck USA, where like everybody's got to like bunk
up and that becomes a problem. That's when you start
(01:43:17):
to feel like it's like they're squeezing on society, trying
to make everybody just, I don't know, rattle our cage
and make everybody just extra poor, you know, and feel
extra poor, get them from every direction, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:43:40):
Getting taken down in every direction. So We're gonna close
out this episode day two hundred. Next week is everybody?
Is everybody gonna be here? I know it's Labor Day?
Are people going out of town?
Speaker 4 (01:43:56):
I'll be here next week. I'll not be here the
week after of that.
Speaker 1 (01:44:02):
Okay, all right, I just want to make sure I
know it was Labor Day weekends. I know some people
like to, you know, go out and be a little fensive,
maybe get a drunk the night before or d n
T or whatever your drug of choice is during this time.
Damn all right. So uh yeah, yeah, there you go.
(01:44:24):
There you go a little shring, Charlie. Go ahead and
let folks know what you got, what you got coming up,
what you've done, Let them know some stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:44:33):
Macroaggressions episode that came out today. Kathy O'Brien when we
were talking about her experiences as an m k Ultra survivor,
which is really hardcore scary about George H. W. Bush
and Gerald Ford and Robert Byrd, that old senator, that
old remember that old Yosemite Sam I'll say, I'll say
(01:44:55):
senator who used to be the head of Ku Klux Klan,
he used to own Mathew O'Brien, So she said, crazy story.
Got to listen to it, So go check out Macroaggressions
uh and Activistpost dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:45:11):
There we go, lane Zy, Ah, I love Kathy O'Brien,
by the way, and when she was on Rogue Ways,
Rogue Soul now she and maybe she said this on
your show too, but I don't even think I asked actually,
and she was like, I just want everyone to know,
like Donald Trump's not one of them, but this like
cabal of people who like trade humans and buy and
(01:45:32):
sell humans and enslave humans. She's like, he actually even
came into somewhere where she was like doing a job
or whatever, being traded to someone or whatever was happening,
and and someone said like, oh, don't talk to him.
He's not one of us. So that was really interesting.
Speaker 1 (01:45:47):
Oh wow.
Speaker 3 (01:45:48):
When she was saying this too, was in the in
between after his last term before this term, so that
was that's always fascinating to there's little tibots like this,
and I know, you know, people then go all the
way into Q which we don't I don't have to do,
but anyway, so yeah, I love her. People shall listen
to that show. Roguesal roaguays roguesl dot org. Everything's there.
(01:46:09):
Books are there, your book sessions there, the show links
are there.
Speaker 1 (01:46:14):
That's all all right. I got Corey Hughes Corey Hughes
dot org, bloodyhistory dot subsetate dot com. I Wonder from History,
JFK book, best JFK book ever written, Lee Harvey Oswald
and Black and White the only Lee Harvey Oswald book
ever written. Maybe that may be the only one. Go
get that thing. You can get it a hardcover, hardback, hardcover,
(01:46:36):
so you'll appreciate him as Q four twenty dot com
for everything that I do. Guys, Independent Media Token, make
sure you get some of that. You will have to
purchase Solana first. Okay, purchase your Salona first, then transfer
that token into the Independent Media Token. It is available.
So we appreciate everybody being here for one ninety nine.
We're gonna see y'all next week for a Daisybro two
(01:46:59):
hundred zero