Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
A nice way.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
No, what's going on, guys your place? Q four twenty
Here we got niggas taking one hundred milligrams be where
we go on day zero, day two hundred. Of course
we were gonna come in with a splash. We got
fuckers that are hire off our ass allegedly. I'm not
micro dosing only.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
I'm never high off.
Speaker 2 (00:27):
Well you see that every day. We got the powerful
one Corey Hughes, we got the maculate one, Charlie Robinson,
and we've got the spiritual one Glinsey Sharmon. What are
you one? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (00:44):
I am d one.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Uh this episode two hundred, Now, Corey was sitting here like, well,
technically it's not two hundred because we did election day space.
Those are specials. They don't count towards the number. I
tried to school Corey on this ship, but you know
he was trying to be difficult. Yeah, we are here, Yeah, yeah, yeah,
(01:07):
we are here. We're not queer, you know, So so
that is that's good. L g B t q A
affiliated unlike our recent shooters are recent school shooters or
any shooter. Yeah, all of them that are have a
little bit of an affiliation.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
We talked about it briefly on Beyond the Cube. I
want to uh get Lindsey and Charlie's input on the
Robin Robert Robert ben Bert, whatever he is.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
I love it first that they're like, he's not trans.
You don't have any evidence he's trans because he's wearing
a skirt and has like a push up brawn. He's trans. Yeah, yeah,
what but what else do you need? Well, he didn't
say he's a Well, now we know he says he's
trans and he's trans, But for a minute they were
just like, you will get to just decide that. I'm like,
I'm pretty sure when you see a dude in a
(02:04):
dress there at least a transvestite. That's literally what the
word means. So they're trans, right, Maybe they're not like
officially on the hormones at the whatever. I don't know,
but that's an interesting question too. I don't know if
we know that about this individual, but we know that, uh,
at least when female to male. I don't know about
male to female, but when female the male are taking
(02:24):
their testosterone, it makes them aggro, right, they get they
get rages.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Does that? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (02:32):
Yeah, you know you're already mentally unwell and now you're
taking something. They're probably on SSRIs too usually, and then
you are adding to the mix this. But hormones are insane, dude.
It actually doesn't even matter what hormones. If they're not
just perfectly balanced, like your whole shit is out of whack,
you can fly off the handle in all directions at
(02:53):
any point. So I'm not surprised that we keep seeing
shootings from these people.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Yeah, well, okay, so so here's the deal. Okay, Robert's
mother approved of the change in twenty twenty because Robert
was having mental issues. Okay, now, once he had the change,
his mental issues didn't go away, obviously. I mean, as
Corey says, he needs just make some money and get
some pussy that will take your psychological issues.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
For a woman.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
Make some money and he gets you back blown out,
you know what I'm saying, and for the most part,
you'll fit. You'd be okay, you know so, I mean money, sex,
you might want to eat some point in time, you
know what I'm saying. Watch up, But that will clear
things up. But we coninue to continue to see this
pattern of people thinking that they can switch over to
another gender per se, and that will all of a
(03:46):
sudden free their mind from the change of this world.
Whatever they feel the chains are so Charlie, what will
you think about the gentleman and the recent shooting over
there in Minneapolis.
Speaker 3 (03:59):
Well, it does not free them from any chains, that's
for sure. The loopron that they use to transition them
is the same chemical sterilant that they're used using to
castrate sex offenders in prison. So this is barbaric and
crazy and insane. And the fact that these transgendered people
(04:22):
are shooting up schools is or shooting.
Speaker 5 (04:24):
Up anything is not surprising.
Speaker 3 (04:27):
It's they're six times more likely to kill themselves or
three times more likely to wind up in prison. They'll
have medical problems forever, forever. It will never stop. If
they have to take testosterone, they'll have to take it forever.
They're honest, they're on the program and it doesn't end,
(04:49):
and it doesn't fix their sadness or their their emptiness
or whatever it is they think that they're fixing by
doing this. I think that in most cases they get
to the end of the road and they realize that
they're still fucked up. They're not fixed now, they're you know, now,
(05:10):
they're physically transformed and scarred and mentally unwell from the chemicals.
And it's like there's regret there, there's sadness. Look at
the Ellen to Elliott page. The light is gone. I
don't know how else to describe it. There's no life
in the eyes. And it's it's one of those things
(05:32):
that when you see it, you know it, and you
look at the before and after and you just go,
oh God, what have you done?
Speaker 5 (05:38):
Like why have you done this?
Speaker 3 (05:40):
You were so pretty before and maybe you were unhappy
or maybe you got molested, and maybe you're working this
out in some weird way, but like maybe you had to,
you know, go through the Hollywood bullshit and they sexualized
you and you wished you were a boy because then
they wouldn't do that to you. And you've got you know,
and it's all this stuff and I get it, like, oh,
to a counselor and talk it out, but don't go
(06:00):
to Reddit or some fucking chat room where it's normalized
and amplified and and idolized. And because there's a whole
de transition movement and if and those people are like
hunted down, like they are really repressed, uppressed, they are
they are hated, right, lindsay.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
Yeah, I mean, like they come out and then Twitter,
like you know, turns down their algorithm and you're not
allowed to talk. They get attacked relentlessly, and like you're saying,
don't go to these groups online because you find something
that most people are lacking, which is acceptance. Someone's celebrating
who you are. Everybody's giving you all this attention. I mean,
if there's one thing that all children and adults want
(06:43):
for the most part, except Type C personalities is attention.
Everyone's dying for it. So you get all this attention,
you feel so good and you're like, oh, I've just
cut my tits off. Great. But once you do, all
that attention goes away. They don't care anymore. Now they're
on to the next person who needs their help. So
you're back to feeling miserable. It doesn't fill the hole.
(07:03):
What is it like in the sixties, we gave you
to this conclusion, right wherever you go, there you are.
You can't outrun yourself. Here you are. Nothing you do
to your body will change that you're still there.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
It's like a weird form of self Munchausen by proxy. Right,
But I guess I wouldn't be by proxy.
Speaker 5 (07:19):
It'd be by by something by you, right.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
You You make yourself like a victim early on, and
you draw a ton of attention to yourself. But like
you said, once you go through with it, then you
become something else. And I think they have. I think
(07:43):
a lot of them have identity problems, rightly so. I
think a lot of them were unwell going into it,
which is not great. I think the doctors that incentivize
this stuff should be tried for their crimes. We know
that the Risker family, among others of powerful Zionist interests,
(08:04):
are behind financing this. It's not accidental. It's not being
it's not happening magically because of the winds of change
or anything like this. It's being financed into existence. It's
being done on purpose. This is end of empire shit.
This is the stuff you do when you have the
luxury of not worried being worried about actually being bombed
(08:26):
or marginalized or attacked or whatever. You get to fantasize
about how you're another gender or a fucking you know,
another species.
Speaker 4 (08:38):
Gender.
Speaker 3 (08:40):
Be so lucky to have the privilege in the luxury
to sit around and pontificate about this bullshit.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
You know that shit that made the frogs gay. You
think they made the frogs gay on purpose?
Speaker 4 (08:50):
Yes, atrazine and shit. Yes, I think there's no doubt
about they were like, what happens, Oh, it turns the
frogs gay? What happens if we give it to people?
So we found it in the water supply, right, is there? Jones,
He's almost never wrong. He's just crazy about it. He's
just soft and right the.
Speaker 3 (09:09):
You know, And this is the type of stuff that
Jeffrey Epstein was financing Martin Oak to investigate this evolutionary
dynamics population game theory and shit like that. This is
the what happens when you add atrozine to the water
guy you know who runs?
Speaker 4 (09:27):
I just was finding out too. Peter Teal and Epstein
are like working together on their transit or were or whatever,
on their transhumanist agenda. So I'm like, this gets creepier
all the time. Peter Teal, he's about to is that
how you say his name? He's about to do this
four part talk or something on the anti christ.
Speaker 3 (09:45):
I saw that.
Speaker 4 (09:46):
Yeah, his whole thing is like crazy. He's like, oh,
I'm so inspired by the Bible and you know, he's
like some sort of like new Christian or so, I
don't even know technocratic Christian.
Speaker 3 (09:59):
I think.
Speaker 4 (10:01):
Psycho. Oh yes, sure, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (10:05):
What's more ironic that Peter Teal is going to do
an examination of the anti Christ, considering he may very
well be the anti Christ? Sure that a sweaty, mumbling,
stuttering billionaire fuck is going to charge you money to
listen to him talk.
Speaker 4 (10:24):
I love when some guy asked him like, well, you know,
so you know, if we want humanity to survive and
he says something. He's like, wait, do you want humanity
to survive?
Speaker 2 (10:32):
And he's like that cause for way too long, that
eleoaded question. Question. It depends on when you ask me
the question, okay, as depended on what's what's currently happenings,
like do you be able to be here?
Speaker 3 (10:52):
I want I want my scientists to have a vested
steak in the outcome and not be childless homosexual Zionist
NICs like Peter Tiele and Alex carp and uh and
uh Ben Shapiro and all these uh guys, all the
guys that the wire, although well I guess they have kids.
Speaker 2 (11:14):
There ain't a stand up guy stand.
Speaker 3 (11:20):
Oh, being Shapiro that dude has. That dude doesn't have
dual loyalties. That's that's misleading.
Speaker 5 (11:25):
He has one loyalty.
Speaker 3 (11:27):
And we all know which country that's too. It's not
the United States. Because you were wondering he.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
Wears his hair. Don't he wear his hat when he's
a streammer? That lilias hate you putting on your skull
jewish hair? Is that what they called it? What's the
g had called dump? Yeah, yamka, Yeah, weird.
Speaker 4 (11:49):
It's like yard molk.
Speaker 2 (11:52):
Yeah yeah, cool, cool, Yeah it is.
Speaker 3 (11:57):
But look, the people, uh people do scientists should should
have kids. I'm not saying that everybody needs to have kids.
I'm saying the scientists that are in charge of the
future of the world, they should all have kids, like
(12:17):
like obviously going to the stream and making it very well,
I know, you know, like like he just have like
four kids and not be a fucking weirdo about it
and name them a bunch of crazy ship and do
it with you know.
Speaker 5 (12:34):
With liked he like trash?
Speaker 1 (12:37):
Did he not them chicks?
Speaker 3 (12:39):
I mean? And then there's that too, the fake and
like the insemination process. I don't know, maybe yeah, yeah, he.
Speaker 2 (12:49):
Didn't fuck him. No, he didn't fuck him. Yeah, I
think the only.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Dolls and he didn't get to him.
Speaker 3 (12:56):
Issue Ashley Saint Clair to knock down it. You knocked
up a spy for Israel?
Speaker 5 (13:08):
Oh my god, what you doing?
Speaker 3 (13:10):
Don't you know who these people are before you get
involved with them in this way? She was like, talk
into a trap you're gonna I mean, like you're already
a rich to take the take, take the power, and
the fame out. You're just a rich guy, stupid rich.
(13:34):
You have to worry about everybody's motives, right, and you
let some chick who's funded by the Israeli government infiltrate
you and get pregnant by you, or you inseminate her
mechanically or what else. I mean, I don't even know.
And you can't have a good idea to like, oh yeah,
(13:54):
there's no downside to this. I mean, I have to
question his fucking sanity. And I understand, like you're trying
to get laid, but bro, you're older than me and
I'm fifty two, Like, settle down a little bit. You
Why are you stepping on Rake's intentionally.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
Because he's a dinge that has told you about this
ship man, I know, I mean the power of they
that that's the answer.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
Really, I'm just giving you a.
Speaker 2 (14:29):
Yeah, he's a dude, but he can't get past it. Man,
as much as you try to run from it. But
it's just aky.
Speaker 3 (14:36):
It's called.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
Listen.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
I uh.
Speaker 4 (14:42):
I.
Speaker 3 (14:42):
I've had my moments of dude this.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
Yeah, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
You operating against your own self interest. Yeah, I suppose
I can understand some of that.
Speaker 2 (14:55):
But yeah, you downstairs.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
He never had four hundred million dollars, I would be
worried that someone's trying to knock me up and take
my money.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
And here's the issue. Here's the issue, is that a
lot of times you didn't. You didn't have a plethora
of chicks, you know what I'm saying, when you were younger.
Then you get four hundred bill and now all the
chicks are there.
Speaker 3 (15:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
But and you're like you.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
You you need you can coordinate that much too.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
You can't. I've seen I've seen too many motherfuckers through
their whole life away. It can't be done. If you
want too much.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
If you've got four hundred billion dollars and you want
to run through a bunch of a class A plus
class pussy. There are people in Hollywood that can make
that happen for you, and without getting knocked up and
without getting in lawsuits and without getting all this stuff.
(15:54):
If that's your intention, that can be arranged. Why he's
just trying to make up for lost time because he
was a total dork his entire life, and now he's
got a bunch of money. Like, I understand that, but
but be again, be strategic about it. Remember who you are,
understand like what unless you know, unless he is the
(16:17):
acty Christ, which.
Speaker 4 (16:18):
Is actually strategic. He's impregnating all these people but not
having in contact with him. He gets this like legacy
of some kind. He's like his genetic line, but he
also like has nothing really to worry about.
Speaker 3 (16:32):
I suppose in the one hand, I have to at
least give him credit for not being He may be
a transhumanist, but he's not a eugenicist apparently in the
sense that he is having more kids. He might not
be in favor of everybody else having more kids.
Speaker 4 (16:51):
He's a eugenesis, yeah, because he's like, my genes are pried,
his girls jeens are. He's not a.
Speaker 3 (17:00):
Let me rephrase that genesist without being necessarily a depopulationist,
because he's taught, he's expressed interest about the population collapse
and demographic collapses and things like that, whereas the others
never mentioned that because they're like, don't talk about that.
(17:21):
That's what we're still making it happen, you know, don't
give up the game. So so in that regard, he's
kind of an outlier in that he's got a bunch
of kids, but he can't even just do that normally.
He's got to make that weird.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
Have you seen the the story about the guy at
the fertility clinic who kept using his own semen and
he fertilized the whole town.
Speaker 6 (17:46):
Yeah, yeah, there's like he would take their fucking he
would take the guy's jizz and then he would like
just throw it away and use his own, and like,
oh my god.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
Yeah, the guy he ended up going to jail for
like three months and got probation. It was crazy.
Speaker 3 (18:06):
Ye, the story we're gonna say three hundred years.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
No, they got to snap on the fucking wrist, that.
Speaker 2 (18:12):
Big a deal.
Speaker 3 (18:13):
Three months.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
So god, yeah, they had to if I'm not mistaken,
they had to pass laws in this town that if
there's any chance you were born here and under this
guy and you're going to get married, you got to
get a genetic blood test to make sure you're not
fucking related.
Speaker 3 (18:28):
Did they slap him with child sport? Could that one?
Speaker 1 (18:32):
I don't think so that's a good one.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
That's hundreds of children to.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
Get into like twenty something. But then they genetically, by
through testing, found like ninety something at least, and like
they keep finding new ones through because people go on
because nowadays you go on ancestry or whatever, and you
got your DNA twenty three and me or whatever, and
you can see who your fucking relatives are. Oh my gosh,
Like he.
Speaker 3 (18:57):
Had to have known. Was he doing it still up
until like the point of arrest or was yes? Yes,
Because you've got to be going like it'd be one
thing if you were some lunatic fertility doctor uh in
the eighties, you know, and you and then all of
(19:17):
a sudden, ancestry dot Com and twenty three and me
come along and you're like, oh shit, But to do
put to be doing in modern time knowing that the
technology exists, now, that's crazy. That's reckless and stupid. Wild.
Speaker 4 (19:38):
This sex drive for men is really strong, but so
was the drive to have progeny and to have this
like legacy and like leave something behind. So I don't
know one stronger. I'm so distracted because, you know, maybe
forty feet away is the neighbor's house out this window,
and there's a beetle that's so large that I can
like watch it just crawling around all this house, and
(20:00):
I'm like, how this thing has to be like four
inches long?
Speaker 3 (20:03):
Like what would do this?
Speaker 4 (20:05):
It's so crazy?
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Alien beetle. Alien.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Well look, I'll go ahead, go ahead, cube.
Speaker 2 (20:12):
No, no, you go here, because I got something different.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
Okay, I do too, So I was gonna comment on
your beetle thing. That reminds me like I saw something
weird one night and I fucking just shrugged it off.
But the more I think about it, I'm like, what
the fuck did I see? I'm gonna explain to you
what I saw. I was living over on Maple Street,
so this was like a year and a half ago,
maybe two years tops, and I'm out back and it's
(20:37):
dark out and there's like a street light, you know,
between the houses, and so all you can see is
like that orange glow and on a nearby pole. I
couldn't see this thing, but I saw something move. I
saw the silhouette of this thing move, and I swear
to god it was. It climbed down the pole and
(20:58):
it at one time had an arm out stretched and
it looked like one of them sloths that you see
in those nature videos. And at the time I just
brushed it off, like, oh, it's a sloth or something.
But it's like, we don't have to be fucking sloths
wild in Colorado. And to this very day, I was
just thinking about it last week. I can't I don't
know what the fuck I saw that night.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
It was weird.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
Nope, it was not a raccoon. It had a long,
slinky body.
Speaker 4 (21:22):
Is it a ferret?
Speaker 1 (21:23):
It could not have been a ferret. It had an
outstretched arm one time it did like this like a
fucking like imagine like a sloth. I swear to god,
I thought it was a sloth. They don't have long arms.
Speaker 3 (21:32):
Like that bobcat.
Speaker 4 (21:34):
Is it a bobcat?
Speaker 1 (21:36):
No? But it just slinked into the darkness.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
What the fuck?
Speaker 4 (21:39):
Maybe it was someone's pet sloth and it escaped very slowly.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
I don't know, but I'm freaked out over it two
years later.
Speaker 4 (21:48):
So that's pretty creepy.
Speaker 2 (21:51):
Said I've still got nightmares today, said it had left
me my get a pet sloth. People need to stop
with that bullshit. Okay, so their it's slavs and tigers,
all this ship, panthers, everything that you want to go
pick up into fucking woods and bring to you hail,
We requit it. Okay.
Speaker 3 (22:12):
I love them.
Speaker 4 (22:13):
I don't think you should keep them in a tiny
box in a house. They should be in like tons
of miles of jungle.
Speaker 3 (22:21):
I learned. Uh. I was in Costa Rica and I
learned something about sloths that I didn't know and didn't
really want to know. But they had one there and
we got chance to touch him. Do you know, it's
super cute. But they said that they come down, they
go up in the trees and they're up in there
(22:42):
all the time, but they come down once a week
to take a seven pound dump and then they go
back up there.
Speaker 4 (22:51):
Oh that's nice of them to not just let it
fall from the heights like they're civilized.
Speaker 3 (22:57):
I was like, what they're weighing? But I don't know
if it's.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
Time out, Charlie, time out? Tom Ale who is weighing there.
She is like, man, bring this, bring the scale. That's
got to be at least they have been.
Speaker 3 (23:17):
So it's this guy. So it was at a place
where you can do ziplining, and and they lived at
the place, and on this property they had a rescued deer,
a baby deer, which was super cute. And I have great,
the greatest videos ever of this deer like running around,
like I sat down and like ran around like licked
(23:38):
in my ears, and it was so cute. It's like
the most adorable thing ever. And they had a sloth
that lived in the tree and would come down and
take seven pound dumps once a week. All right, that's
all I know. I don't know if it really happened.
It sounds mathematically impossible to me. Maybe he meant they're slow.
(23:59):
I don't know. I'm just saying that's what I was told.
So maybe just for language barrier and translation, but I
thought that was funny. So anyway, Corey, go check the
light pole and see if there's a big pile of shit,
and if it is, then you might have a sloth
(24:20):
up there.
Speaker 4 (24:21):
We have a giant giant buck in our yard this morning,
Like Johnny went out to do something and like looked
up in a buck was just like three feet from him,
and he's like backing up fourteen points. You know, this
is massive, hulking beast. He's eating all our tomatoes, all
our fucking charge. You're not allowed to shoot things within
city limits. This is the second time I've had like
(24:42):
a major problem with the fact that I'm not allowed
to shoot something. And the first time was to put
it out of its misery. This was like, get away
from my tomatoes, and also I'll eat you because you
look tasty. But no, we're on the other side. But
we're I mean, there's parks everywhere here and there huge,
so there's just we have this giant park with thousands
(25:03):
of miles of trails just like on mile from us,
so you know, we get tons of wildlife. We've had bears,
we can have cougars and stuff, but we get these
deer all the fucking time. There's deer everywhere. They're stupid.
They just walk in front of cars like they don't
care because no one can kill them because they know
they like they've been here so many generations and no
one's allowed to shoot in city of them, and so
(25:23):
like no one can shoot them, so they just do
whatever the fuck they want. Our fences are somewhat low,
so they come in and just like eat our whole
garden every fucking day. They eat our bird feeder. They
eat the bird feeder. There's stupid, horrible creatures. I love
them otherwise, but when you grow food, like you learn
to hate them. And but this thing the fun. So
(25:43):
I'm like, okay, I have to go check on my chicken.
So I'm like out there, like way as far away
from them as possible, because the deer can fuck you up,
especially a male with antlers, and even a female though,
can just like pummel you to death with her hooks.
And so I'm just keeping my distance, you know, like
checking on the chickens. And and I'm like looking at
him from behind. I guess I've never seen a male
deer from behind. Motherfucker has a huge package. Like I
(26:07):
didn't know that deer were hung like horses, like just gi.
I was like, oh wow, And so that was really fascinating.
Then he got like upset. He was like, you're crampy
my style trying to eat all your gardens. So he
went to like go jump over the fence. And the
motherfucker is so fat he like can't do it. And
then he gets pissed and he's like running and jumping
(26:29):
in circles, and I'm like, I'm screwed. This deer's getting
pissed off, and I'm like outside in a fenced area
with him, and finally he like jumps over part of it.
His bellyes like scraping this fence. Deer can jump like
eat eat if they want to, usually just straight up
and over like they're crazy. Not this guy. He's so
(26:49):
fat off of our food that he can't even get
out of the three foot fence. Stupid asshole. So that
was my deer encounter for the day. Yeah, if I
had a freezer, if I was allowed to shoot and
I knew how to process me, like, we'd be rich
in deer meat. They just come right through like all
the time. We'd have like twenty five deer in a week.
(27:10):
We wouldn't even have space for it. All y'all would
be getting venison air mailed to you.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
Choice sounds so good.
Speaker 4 (27:19):
You just.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
I mean, I have, but I mean it ain't something
that I'm looking to just you know, taking off to
go get it. But you say, you got cougars to
be coming up in a yard. Oh hell no, you
know what I'm saying.
Speaker 4 (27:31):
It's not common.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
It just can happen. The fucking the fucking big ass
cat around here. You can't have to die. Yeah, No.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
I I saw in my last house, just sitting I'm
just sitting at my desk like I am now, and
I could see out of the sliding glass door in
my office that goes out outside down. I could see
the path from outside going on down and I I
just can't help but see notice something. And I look
(28:01):
at them and go, oh my god. And I had
time to grab my camera and film and it was
just a gigantic bobcat.
Speaker 5 (28:07):
It was just walking down.
Speaker 3 (28:09):
My path, walked right by my door and just stopped.
I took pictures of it, and they popped up on
my wall. They walked across my wall.
Speaker 4 (28:19):
Was a bobcat or was it cougar? Bobcats are like
smaller like they're like the size of like a pit
bull maybe, and a cougar's like.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
A pan like this one was a bob cat.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Oh wow, They're still the animals very cute.
Speaker 3 (28:36):
We have mountain lions here and cougar Okay. Those are
the ones that will honestly like if they see you,
like they're they're thinking about it. Yeah, you're luck on
their situation, they're thinking about it.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
Do you hear about people who like escape from a
cougar mountain lion situation like hand no weapon, and they're
like fighting them with their fists And I'm like, how
did why didn't it of viscerate you? You're so lucky?
Speaker 3 (29:06):
Yeah? They just talk about how like I saw it
and then next thing I know, it was on me.
It was so fast I couldn't do anything. You're like,
it's like when people get attacked by sharks and I'm
a scuba diz. Oh god, I'm and I've I've seen
sharks but never had any sort of I've never felt
(29:27):
like I was in danger. But you are. You never know,
you don't.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
There's been a couple of people getting eat by shark
videos lately pop up on social media. Drag a shark
back into the water from the beach and he got
ate by it.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
Oh I did see that?
Speaker 5 (29:41):
Oh stop stop, No, no he did.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
He's trying to help it beached himself. You're fucking me right, No,
it bit him, and yes, yes, he was white.
Speaker 5 (29:56):
He was white.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
You need to ask.
Speaker 3 (30:00):
To help a fucking shark. I know my people are
we just insert ourselves into places that they don't belong
time the world.
Speaker 2 (30:13):
You need why folks.
Speaker 3 (30:23):
Sharks too. I have to grab the sharks when they
beach themselves. And then this guy just gets completely mulled.
And it's like a part of me is like, didn't
you ever read the parable of the of the frog
and the scorpion? Like what did you think was gonna happen? Man?
(30:44):
Did you think this shark was gonna swim part of
the way out, the turnaround, come back and rub up
against your leg and then and then and then you know,
why didn't you? He's gonna try and murder you in
each immediately. It's so dumb. And I love animals and
(31:06):
I love you know, diving, and I love being clothed
to animals there, but like, you have to also have
your head out of your ass. You have to recognize
what's going on here and go I'll pass. I'm not
gonna go out there and help the shark. I'm not.
I'll help the whale, the baby dolphin beaches, I'll help
that the shark.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
If you're swimming with the sharks, can't you just say
have a knife and like kung fu your way out
of it.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
But you have a knife that survives water over and
over again, Like that's a that's a badass knife. But
they exist.
Speaker 3 (31:41):
Yeah, you're very You want to stay away from you, yeah.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
The water.
Speaker 3 (31:50):
You want to look unappealing to them, and you want
to not look like a seal in a wet suit
where you look just like a seal that's bad, you know,
on a surfboard that's bobbing, which is really appealing, and
then you look like a seal that's up on top
of a.
Speaker 4 (32:09):
And then they bite you and they're like, oh man,
it's a fucking human again. And she has tastes like shit,
they're full of life. Essate, give me my seals.
Speaker 3 (32:20):
They dude. They attacked in the place where my uh
in laws go in Florida. They had crazy ass shark
attacks like two years ago where people get people died.
Speaker 4 (32:36):
They just got together and they're like, let's go fuck
up all those humans.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
It happened over the course of like a weekend. It
was like Jaws, except here it was Jaws is justices.
A bunch of them and there's like three attacks in
one weekend. Wow, and and my wife and daughter were
there for it.
Speaker 4 (32:58):
I was super creeped out. I didn't I was in Nice.
I was like sixteen years old, on the coast of
France and the Mediterranean. We're like, yeah, you're what the
old shit, And like we just get in. We're swimming around,
We're on inner tubes. We're like ey, and then like
at some point we just like saw a shark go by.
We're like, oh fuck. We just like run. We're like
we're king back in the water, like no one tells you.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
I guess zilla want.
Speaker 3 (33:23):
Water. I think the ski I think the scaredest I've
ever been underwater was one of my first dives, and
it didn't actually have anything to do with sharks or
anything like that, but it was going down. It was
freezing cold off the Catalina Island, which is off the
(33:44):
coast of La Dude.
Speaker 4 (33:46):
That's the craziest fucking place. Yeah, it's like a portal
for the wildest shit.
Speaker 3 (33:52):
Oh really, I want to talk to you later. I
did a dive in the morning, fucking boat dive in
the morning, down straight down into the kelp seaweed beds,
so you go straight down into that that dive. Ey,
(34:13):
that was scary. That was my when I was getting certified,
that was my Part of the requirement for me was
an open water two open water dives in Catalina and
one beach dive. And my open water dives we did
them into the kelp and it was terrifying. I was
I can honestly say, I was fucking shitty my pants.
(34:36):
This is awful, and I was so cold that you're
just you don't know whether to be scared or like
shiver or whatever.
Speaker 5 (34:45):
But we just did what we had to do.
Speaker 3 (34:47):
But there weren't there's because there's all kinds of all
kinds of fucking critters in there that you don't know
until you come right around the corner and they're just
like right there. So it's like a maze and it
it's super disorienting as well, so you have to follow everything.
Oh my god. Like after that, I was like, I
never want to do that again. Like, to me, that
(35:08):
is that's crazy. I would like to do a ship dive.
I've never done that. But the rest it's all like
paradise dives, you know, places that are super warm with
beautiful fish and white sand beaches.
Speaker 5 (35:23):
That's what I'm into.
Speaker 4 (35:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (35:26):
Now, once upon a time i'd have done all that
stuff and jump out of planes or whatever. But now
I don't even like freaking go on a roller coaster.
I'm scared of everything. It's gonna kill me, do you
not like.
Speaker 3 (35:39):
I did?
Speaker 1 (35:40):
Yeah? But now I'm like, have I seen too many
YouTube videos?
Speaker 3 (35:44):
I don't know, what's the worst roller coaster You've ever done? Corey?
Speaker 1 (35:50):
Well, I've done I mean all the all the big
ones at six Flags up till like, I don't know,
fifteen years ago, Broy the last time I went.
Speaker 4 (36:00):
I've never done a big roller coaster in my life,
not because I've just never gone anywhere where they are.
Speaker 2 (36:08):
No, you probably it probably wouldn't be good for your body.
You're not a candidate, but to be to be on
roller coaster, it's like Lindsey, Uh, let's get you on
something a little bit safer. We'll get you one of
those little trolley rides. You know what I'm saying. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
(36:30):
yeah yeah, that's something that would be more your speed. Look,
I've been on roller coasters, and every time I got
on one, I'm like, well, I'm on this thing like
like every time I've got on it, I'm just like,
this is dumb, Like when they take me up to
the top and now I look down and you're gonna
drop me down there. Ah, there goes.
Speaker 3 (36:49):
A roller coaster. Can I ask a roller coaster is
a white people thing? Uh?
Speaker 2 (36:55):
No, there's a lot. There's lots lots of black people
that get on roller coasters.
Speaker 3 (37:01):
I was just curious if it was cultural in any way.
Speaker 4 (37:05):
No, no, no, there's not a meme of the black
guy who was just staring at the guy behind him
on the roller coaster and like, no matter how crazy
it gets, he's just like dead pan, like he doesn't
even flim She's just like eye contact the whole time.
Speaker 3 (37:17):
It's great.
Speaker 2 (37:17):
Yeah, I had to, it wasn't. I got it the
one on King's Dominion. It shot you off at us
about sixty miles an hour from a Dace stop into
a into a dark building. You were just in a
dark building. You couldn't see anything that was the entire ride,
and so you didn't know if you were dropping, if
you were going left.
Speaker 1 (37:39):
But you were gonna be okay because you're in God's hands,
Because that was the Jesus theme park.
Speaker 2 (37:44):
Is it right?
Speaker 1 (37:47):
Everyone kings Yeah.
Speaker 2 (37:51):
I did. I didn't feel like it. I like everything
was gonna be all right. And I tried to tell
my dad. He was sitting there saying, oh man, let's
go in here. It's like this hit in the ride.
I'm like, uh, that that's that's definitely a roller coaster.
He's like, no, no, no, I ain't a roller coaster.
So my mom went in there with us and everything,
and using my dad and my sister, they always rode
all the roller coasters and me and my mom be
sitting there eating food and doing whatever. But we got
(38:15):
up there to the to write where they were letting
people up. He said, you see, it's not a roller coaster.
The leaded people in and then they shot off. I
was like, yep, there it is, he said M. He's
like M. And my mom just looked at him, like
you month because you didn't want to get on any
of them. But yeah, I mean, a regular heart attack
(38:38):
is not something that I'm looking to have, and that's
what I feel like I have. After I get off
of those, I feel like I'm a cardiac arrest. Will
some of them?
Speaker 3 (38:47):
I mean, will you ride some roller coasters? Or do
you have a line? Like is there a is there
like a line? Do the teacups? Will you do?
Speaker 2 (38:57):
Like?
Speaker 3 (38:58):
I mean like, I don't know what are you? What
are you willing to do?
Speaker 2 (39:03):
So what am I willing to do? Yeah, now that
I have a choice, none of them, None of them. Yes,
I get on I get on those I get on
those three D rides, you know what I'm saying where
they just see you at a seat and it just
moves you left and right, back and forth, and you
put your glasses on. And I feel good about that now.
I did when I went to Florida the previous year,
we did a three D ride, but it was a
(39:25):
little bit more intense than what I thought it was
gonna be. It's the Avatar ride at uh Anial. Now
I'm just telling people now, like you getting out, Oh yeah,
you put your three D glasses on. It ain't that bad. No,
It's intense. Like you're on the back of one of
those dragging things or whatever. And I took me as
member girlfriend in there and oh ship okay, and uh,
(39:50):
all of a sudden it's like all right, here we go.
And then we dropped straight down and you're you're on
like almost like a motorbike, and the platform that you're
on dip straight down to the floor and there's like
air that gushes by you, so you actually feel like
you're on a roller coaster. Oh and that fucked me up,
(40:11):
like and like you're going you're going through the water.
It splashes water in your face and all kinds of
sh like, like it's a good ride. My girlfriend cuts
me out afterwards because she's like, you know, I don't
like that shit. I thought it was a three D ride. Yes,
I didn't know it was gonna be intense, but it's
actually a pretty good ride because it's pretty immersive, Like
(40:33):
they've gotten really good with that three D stuff, like
you you literally feel like you're on the back of
this thing going through the jungles. Uh So, but yeah,
I I usually don't go to theme parks. Now i'll
do like the uh the water ride so uh like
at a water country. I'll do the stuff where you're
in the tube. Now, I won't do the stuff on
(40:55):
the slide anymore. No, no, no, not the slide anymore
because the slide is you know, I did a slide
one time and I came off with the water and
I was like, yeah, okay, there's nothing like yeah yeah,
so so in the tube. I'm in the tube, so
I feel like, you know, I'm in the tube, so
(41:16):
it's all good. So I'll do the tube rides. I
have no problem with day Is. I stopped doing the
slides because I felt like I was not protected. But
the roller coaster thing, I don't. I don't really do
the theme part stuff. When we go on vacation, we
just like shop and eat and I try to sleep
the ship. I need it, excuse the way I do.
(41:36):
But but yeah, I've I've probably ridden thirty forty roller coachs.
I've ridden them before because I was with a group
of people. But I don't know, it just it never
made my dick hard.
Speaker 3 (41:49):
It didn't.
Speaker 2 (41:50):
I never got on.
Speaker 3 (41:51):
But sometimes it's just because it's fair and you can,
so you do it like you're in Vegas. Have you
done the Well, we haven't been to Vegas. Have you liked,
you know, writing that the New York New York roller coaster?
Speaker 1 (42:08):
You crazy? You got that there top one.
Speaker 3 (42:11):
I did that on New Year's Eve and I was
freezing my nuts. Uf. I was more concerned about how
cold I was than how rickety. It was.
Speaker 1 (42:22):
I just look at that thing and I'm like, I
can't believe.
Speaker 3 (42:24):
That actually know what they did to us When we
were getting ready to go on that that night, we
get right up to the front and uh and like
I said, it was, it was. It was December thirty first,
and we were going to do this and then we
were on our way to a club and there's like
seven of us or eight of us or something, and
(42:45):
we were we were just so cold because the wind
was blowing and it's Vegas. In Vegas gets cold. And
they the guy I hear them talking to each other
and they're like, we got to stop the ride. They're like,
it's just too windy. And he's like yeah. He's like
he's right, yeah, it's if it's too windy, then you know,
then you know some I don't know. There's talking about
(43:07):
how bad it could be if it was windy. And
then the phone rings and he answers it and he goes,
oh okay. He goes, hey, they said turn it on.
There we go. I was like, uh, we all just
he goes no, I guess we're good. Then we're good.
Speaker 1 (43:22):
You guys are good.
Speaker 3 (43:22):
Come on, come on, let's get on and we're all
just like O. And we got on there.
Speaker 5 (43:27):
It was fine, but it was cold.
Speaker 3 (43:30):
And but I'll tell you what, if you're looking for
a scary ass ride, the scariest ride I have ever
been on in my life is also in Las Vegas,
and it is at the top of the Stratosphere.
Speaker 1 (43:46):
Oh shit, yeah, I know what you're talking about.
Speaker 3 (43:50):
It's the one that shoots shoots you up along a
tall cylinder. There's two rides up there, them as a
roller coaster that goes around and and and then there's
another one that dips you straight down and like drops
you down. I'm not talking about those. There's one that
shoots you straight at your strapped with your back to it.
(44:13):
Four people across, another four people, another four people another,
So you make like a square kind of around it
and that thing launches you straight up and then drops you.
It's the highest point in Vegas, and you, honestly for
a second wonder. There's part of it is like did
(44:33):
the Stratosphere make the payments? Are they going to really
maintain this thing? You know, like how well is this
taken care of?
Speaker 5 (44:42):
Like have they made a calculation?
Speaker 3 (44:45):
Yeah, we can afford if sixteen people all die at once,
like you could probably live with that, which but but
I mean, I'm telling you, I was like, this is
an a plus ride for people who want be scared shitless.
That's it because the view and you got to do
it at night, because you can see the whole strip
(45:07):
and you're right in the middle of it. Because if
you know the geography or where Stratosphere is, you're you're
in between. You're directly in between the Strip and downtown.
So no matter where you are, you've got a view
and it's you're already you're already starting to get like
sweaty palms once you get up there to get on it,
(45:27):
because you're in the observation deck and you're like, oh, man,
Like I think a lot of people bail out just.
Speaker 2 (45:35):
At the I'd bail my fate, my fate before.
Speaker 3 (45:40):
No I did it. Honestly, I can say it was
it was. It was uh uh. I was surprised how
scary it was, how fast it was actually how fast.
It's very distorting.
Speaker 2 (45:57):
But I don't know, all right, rang Jim, that says
something about the Medica. Where's that at? You don't know
about that one roller coaster? Oh yeah, Lindsay, Lindsay, I want.
Speaker 3 (46:15):
To roller coaster Officionado or anything like that.
Speaker 4 (46:18):
But you know, I didn't even know what Six Flakes
was until I was like thirty.
Speaker 5 (46:26):
Oh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 3 (46:29):
I mean I think I grew up going to Disneyland
in Anaheim as a kid, like that was the pinnacle,
like once every six years you.
Speaker 5 (46:42):
Get to go and you're just like, it's just the greatest.
Speaker 3 (46:46):
And there's plenty of roller coasters there, So I grew
up doing that, and then six Flags, yeah, and Fairy
Farm in southern California, there's one called not Sperry Firm.
It surprisingly had good roller coasters there. I don't know
universal city I've been.
Speaker 4 (47:09):
Even when I was a kid, I never wanted to
go to places that were hot and dusty and full
of massive amounts of people Like that never appealed to me.
So I've never want Even to somebody who's like, hey,
do you want to go to Six Lakes, I'd be like,
not really, can we just like get high and go
to do anything else that sounds way more fun to me?
(47:30):
Like I don't know, and they still am like that.
I'm like, I don't want to go to a fair.
I don't want to go to like a giant event,
Like I just don't really want to be around the time.
Speaker 2 (47:39):
To be honest, fairs fairs have changed, uh. I know
that the the state Fair here in North Carolina, like
it used to I feel like be about some of
the rides that they put up, but now it just
seems like it's more about the food there.
Speaker 4 (47:55):
Yeah, well, like we're gonna win today this weekend where
I'm at and there's like you know, there's there thousands
of people moving through, but it's like that's cool. It's
just a little of it. It's in like a river park.
There's trees and shit. It's nice. That's I can handle.
I don't mind being around people. I just hate being
like locked in this. I also hate shit. It's just
super artificial. So, like we were camping, we did this
(48:16):
whole tour of the South or whatever, all the way
around the tip of you know, Florida. We went through
Louisiana all this shit, and one of the campgrounds we
had to camp in just because it was the only
campground anywhere nearby and we had to stay somewhere in
this place, and that was the one was one of
those like KOA type campgrounds, and like that drove me
fucking insane. It's all like there's like literally astro turf around,
(48:36):
there's like fake trees around, and there's like water with
just like piles of bleach in it, and just like
it's just disgusting to me. I'm like, I'd like to
be in nature. So I just have never liked that shit.
Speaker 3 (48:49):
I thought about getting like a airstream trailer or something
like that and going out and doing your own thing.
Speaker 4 (48:57):
I mean, the van was plenty and has been plenty
for me, but especially like if we want to do
circuits of events, so you can like pick events and
just kind of like travel from event to event to
event and make it a long sort of tour. Like
I want to have an RV type thing, So.
Speaker 3 (49:13):
What about a.
Speaker 4 (49:17):
Big enough because we've got so Johnny's got just like
giant art pieces and then also tons of like prints
and just all the stuff that is selling, and so
you have to have somewhere to store it. So like
even a sprinter van wouldn't be quite big enough. We
need like at least a small RV or mid size RV,
which would be rat'd be perfect.
Speaker 3 (49:36):
I spent the summer after second grade in the RV
with my grandparents, and the summer after third grade in campgrounds.
It won in British Columbia, on the island of British Columbia,
and that's nice, yeah, And then the next year in Ketchikan,
(49:59):
Alaska for the summer cool and we just would wake
up and my grandpa had a boat, and he had
a motorcycle and he had a car on a trailer.
He was just one of those dudes man who like
worked for the company for thirty years, got the watch, retired,
rented the house out, bought an RV circle just drove
(50:21):
for like two years and they just.
Speaker 4 (50:25):
Lived that life. I want to be a camp post
from like fifty five on. That's my life goal.
Speaker 3 (50:31):
We and we would stay at Koa's and because we
had the map and my options and what I could
read in these hour, you know, nine hour drives in
the in the motor home up and down the California
coast up to British Columbia. It's only so many things
you can read. So I remember reading about Koa Campgrounds
(50:53):
a ton and staying at them and that was the ship.
But that was nineteen eighty.
Speaker 4 (50:58):
Were a kid because there's like maybe an arcade and
there's like you know, little games or something like there's
stuff to do. So it's cool when you're a kid,
but when you're an adult, if it's cool, if you
like that kind of camping. I want to be in
the forest. I want to not hear my neighbors. I
want to not have lights on all night. I want
to not just like hear everybody's fucking music. Like I'm
trying to be in nature, trying to like relax in nature.
(51:21):
We have peace.
Speaker 3 (51:23):
We did that. My in laws have an r V
and they have uh, like a really good tent, and
so we went camping in Colorado Springs up the uh
something god Garden of the Gods is that.
Speaker 4 (51:39):
Of the Gods is so fucking crazy beautiful it doesn't
even make sense. It's like right in the city and
it's just this like pretty historic like stone Struck.
Speaker 3 (51:48):
It's and we we can't we got to this play
this campground and uh and I went to the I
went to the front desk office whatever, and I had
an instant flashback to nineteen eighty because they had video
games in there, and I was like, I'm getting quarters,
(52:09):
I'm getting quarters. I'm getting quarters. I'm coming back in here.
I was in while we were camping in the trailer
and everything and doing all that in the tent for
like at least an hour. I was in there playing videokas.
I just had to I love it, old time sake,
because that was like the greatest, greatest thing. If one
(52:32):
of the if one of the campgrounds that we stopped
at had a had an arcade, I guess you know,
then I just was so, you know, it was like
the greatest luck ever we got to go.
Speaker 4 (52:49):
We went to Asheville a few years ago. They have
an arcade museum, so they have all these like class
like the oldest ship up to some of some of
the newer stuff, but every single era, every single game.
It was so cool. You just buy a pass so
you get to just play whatever games the whole time
you're there. And you're there for like an hour or two,
you have to have a time because it's so popular
that you have to kind of like come in and
(53:12):
but Ashville, Ashville, Ashville that is I don't know, maybe
still rebuilding after the horrendous floods, Like we got there
before that, so we were lucky.
Speaker 5 (53:23):
Oh, I would love.
Speaker 3 (53:25):
I love those old school nineteen eighties stand up video
game arcades.
Speaker 4 (53:35):
Some of them are like from the forties fifties, Like
there are old ones and some of them are really bad,
and you like understood why no one ever heard of them,
and they're gone now, Like, yeah, some of them are
super fun.
Speaker 3 (53:50):
Yeah, I feel like I remember finding a place in
California that old them.
Speaker 5 (54:01):
I was like, God, damn, I can't believe how cheap
they are.
Speaker 3 (54:04):
Well now, I just expected them to be way more
and I was like, I mean you could buy that
for like a game room, you know.
Speaker 4 (54:12):
Yeah, well now you can buy like the it's just
the it looks like it and it's got basically raspberry
pie and sign. It's got like ten thousand games and
you play any game you want.
Speaker 2 (54:21):
And yeah, you know, but there's.
Speaker 4 (54:23):
Something cool about like the retro the actual the.
Speaker 3 (54:25):
Actually something cool about having the actual Burger time in
your game room and track and field.
Speaker 4 (54:36):
Pac Man.
Speaker 3 (54:39):
Every time I take my daughter to her dentist, they
have a pac Man machine there for the kids. It's
it's a smaller version, but it plays the same And
while she's getting her teeth cleaned, I always have to
go in there and play until I get the high score.
Speaker 4 (54:58):
The kids are like, why is old man playing on games?
Speaker 3 (55:01):
There's never anyone. If there were any kids that wanted
to play. For the record, I would get out and
let the kids play. There's never been. I've never been,
but I'm always She's like, I'm done. Did you get
the high score?
Speaker 4 (55:14):
Like?
Speaker 3 (55:16):
What do you think.
Speaker 4 (55:18):
Every time?
Speaker 5 (55:20):
What do you think? I'm messing around here?
Speaker 2 (55:24):
We got a little bit of breaking right here.
Speaker 3 (55:30):
Yeah. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (55:30):
Rudy Giuliani, Yeah, seriously injured in a car accident in
New Hampshire, hospitalized with fracture vertebrae, multiple cuts. Now here's
the storyline. Mayor Giuliani was flagged down by a woman
who was a victim of domestic violence prior to the accident.
He rendered assistance and contacted nine one one, remaining on
scene until responding officers arrived to ensure her safety, and
(55:54):
then the accident occurred after he re entered the vehicle,
which was then hit from behind.
Speaker 4 (56:00):
High speak, he was trying to save the shark and
you got a bit story sounds like bullshit, I mean.
Speaker 3 (56:12):
And you got bit.
Speaker 2 (56:13):
I was sitting there. I was like he was hold
on so so this woman flagged him down. There was.
Speaker 3 (56:22):
The mystic.
Speaker 4 (56:25):
Ed I thought you were going to say. Then her
abuser came and like, that's.
Speaker 3 (56:31):
What you're gonna say too. I thought that's how it
that he came flying in and ran into him.
Speaker 2 (56:38):
No, man, that that kind of reminds me.
Speaker 3 (56:40):
I don't believe anything these lizard people are up to
when they tell us their stories. I just don't believe them.
I just Rudy Giuliani being the hero. I don't know
that guy left the bunker before Building seven went down,
just saying.
Speaker 2 (56:55):
Well, maybe maybe he just got looked. Yeah, is that
a possibility.
Speaker 3 (57:01):
Possible he gets lucky a lot.
Speaker 2 (57:06):
I mean, maybe that's a possible in the day one
is lucky day. What you know? That story kind of just.
Speaker 3 (57:11):
Broke so I don't know it. Yeah you got suit didn't, Yeah,
no need being in clean them out.
Speaker 1 (57:22):
There's a deal like when you get sued, you ain't
got to pay them.
Speaker 5 (57:25):
Well maybe maybe he doesn't.
Speaker 1 (57:27):
It takes like ten years.
Speaker 3 (57:29):
He was found to be guilty.
Speaker 1 (57:31):
Oh yeah, sure, they can put leads on your ship
and that'll take a decade to fucking get that ship
seize from somebody. Never pay a lawsuit fun that like, bitch,
all my money's in bitcoin, you can't have it.
Speaker 4 (57:43):
It's nice. So when people believe the threat and then
they just pay you right like I'm taking you to
small claims court and they're like, okay, fine here cool.
Speaker 1 (57:50):
That happened with the landlord once because when I left
fucking Vegas, I had paid like a twentys deposit on
this fucking house that I had, and when I moved out,
they gave me this like detailed fucking list of why
they stole all my money. Yeah, and I'm like, I
got pictures, bitch, and I said them like all the
pictures I took. I'm like where, I'm like a court.
This is never gonna hold him in court, and ended
up giving me back fifteen hundred bucks. I was like,
(58:13):
good enough, that's the principal and I won.
Speaker 2 (58:15):
Fuck off right well. I mean that that story right there,
to me, almost sounded like a movie. You know, somebody
flags you down on the side of the road and
you're like, okay, yeah, I got damn cover. You get
back in the car, and you get your head blown off,
you know what I'm saying. Like it's like I'm almost
like I said it. But at this point in time,
I mean, nobody would be trying to set up Rudy Giuliani,
(58:38):
would it. Then there'd be no purpose right now?
Speaker 3 (58:41):
Oh, I don't continue to embarrass himself time and time again.
I mean, you couldn't do anything worse to Rudy Giuliani
even allow him to continue being Rudy Giuliani.
Speaker 2 (58:51):
Right, yeah, but he New York's favorite mayor. No, oh,
okay that this way, that makes.
Speaker 3 (59:00):
Nine to eleven. He's not the favorite mayor.
Speaker 5 (59:02):
He's a fucking suspect.
Speaker 4 (59:06):
Donni is a favorite, right.
Speaker 2 (59:10):
What Allegendly it's a weird name, socialist.
Speaker 3 (59:18):
He's going to make New York great again. I think
he's going to try something. So when I was in college,
there was this dwarf uh freshman the same age as me,
(59:42):
Filipino dwarf, and apparently her pickup line for the guys was,
I want to try something different fare And so I
think that should be what his campaign slogan should be
for New York mayor. I want to try something different.
(01:00:06):
You want to you want to try socialism?
Speaker 4 (01:00:09):
Less food?
Speaker 3 (01:00:10):
You want to Yeah, you want to try breadlines and
the government run grocery stores and uh, the dumbest ideas
you've ever possibly conceived of implemented before your eyes with
your own tax dollars. I mean, I want to try
something different. This is the Filipino midget of mayors races.
Speaker 2 (01:00:31):
He needed, Yeah, he needs. You can't get one for.
Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
Is there a midget data service? It's got to be.
Speaker 2 (01:00:38):
It's it's on the dark way. It's on the dark
way of day. Be careful day to day. It's definitely
on a dark way. But what what trying to try
to know? Don't do it, don't know it, don't do it,
click off of it. That ship is going damn. Is
(01:00:59):
definitely a voxray. It's like, yeah, she is need Okay.
Speaker 3 (01:01:07):
The single little people you're in Washington look like little people.
Speaker 1 (01:01:13):
People the same size head.
Speaker 4 (01:01:19):
There. Their genitals are also the same size, right right
will Will?
Speaker 1 (01:01:24):
I guess they're all hung for their proportions, right.
Speaker 5 (01:01:27):
Good for them, man, it's difficult.
Speaker 3 (01:01:30):
I hope they find happiness. I'm not trying to shoot
on them. I'm just saying that that's that was her line.
And you know, you know, you know, you would be surprised,
or maybe you wouldn't. Maybe excuse would say you wouldn't
be surprised that how many dudes on the football team,
(01:01:51):
yeah said college.
Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
Well look well look look, mages look to be honest
mages when you all of them, all of them, all
of them got big booties and big tears.
Speaker 1 (01:02:05):
This thing is a little person.
Speaker 3 (01:02:06):
They do they do.
Speaker 4 (01:02:08):
I don't know why.
Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
I mean it just it just is what it is like.
And I know the same bad we objectifying the dance.
Speaker 4 (01:02:16):
It just looks dude, I'm like everybody else.
Speaker 2 (01:02:23):
But it's just like, hey, you just if you leave
a dude to his device is too long, he don't
do it. That's just all there is too Ain't gonna
look around and be like, ain't nobody looking it? Carr you.
It's just like, man, that's that's all we are. Man,
We're just instinctual animals. Man, let's see it.
Speaker 3 (01:02:44):
At the end of the day, I think I have
an idea where my my self imposed boundaries are.
Speaker 4 (01:02:55):
Yeah, you're right, you have to.
Speaker 3 (01:02:59):
It's not I look.
Speaker 2 (01:03:04):
If your boundary, Yeah, this this is true. Look and
boundaries sound good until your down bad. All right, morals
sound good until your down bad.
Speaker 4 (01:03:15):
You know, I have to live with myself. I have
to die alone. You know, everybody dies alone. I have
to dialon with all the things I've ever done in
my head, my heart, and I can't do I can't
do ship. I gotta I gotta stick to my boundaries.
Speaker 2 (01:03:31):
So you couldn't do to me.
Speaker 4 (01:03:33):
Oh no, I don't know, probably.
Speaker 2 (01:03:38):
What we were talking about.
Speaker 4 (01:03:39):
I thought we were talking about like random ship like
that I have ship.
Speaker 2 (01:03:42):
I can no no, no, no no no no no.
Speaker 3 (01:03:45):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:03:45):
We well we talked about you.
Speaker 3 (01:03:47):
Know, we are still still guys here. We're probably still
talking about.
Speaker 4 (01:03:53):
I had a boyfriend. I was not great at accepting
actual affection or love. I was really good with eyes
were pieces of shit. That was easy. But if someone
was going to be nice to me, like I got
awkward for me. Like I just didn't know how to
handle that. People would give me punk compliments and we
weren't even in relationships, and I would tell them to
fuck themselves. I like did not know how to have
positive things coming at me. So this was part of
(01:04:14):
my you know, horrible trauma. When I was young. But
I dated a guy who's actually, you know, really nice
to me. He was really cool, he's nice. It was
technically like a year younger than me, which was a
little bit weird, but it was cool. He was a
cool guy. He bought me ten or a dozen roses,
and all of a sudden, I was like, I hate you,
like I hate you, but with the reason why. Instead,
(01:04:37):
I was trying not to. I was trying to accept
good things, and I was aware that I had this problem,
so I didn't want to say that I didn't like
him anymore because he bought me roses. So instead I
was like fixated that he was like an inch and
a half shorter than me. So I was, I can't I.
Speaker 1 (01:04:53):
Know, next time, the bitch is getting a can of sardines.
Speaker 4 (01:04:56):
I'm saying, or just nothing. Nothing was easier for me,
Like don't even like say nice things to me. Well,
just like hang out and sometimes we'll have sex. It's fine,
but you know, but here we go. If I can't
even date a guy who's an inch time younger than
me or less taller than me than I definitely can't
date a mansion, that's for sure.
Speaker 2 (01:05:14):
This is true, and so it's so it's all good,
you know. I thought it was funny. Yesterday, Uh, my
girlfriend had a day date and we went out to
a mall in a different city, and uh, this guy,
young guy came up with his girlfriend and my man
opened the passenger door for him. I was like, oh, man,
and that week, I hope you can keep that up.
Speaker 3 (01:05:36):
Dog.
Speaker 2 (01:05:37):
You know what I'm saying. I mean, it looks like
you're in the first week of it, all right, Because
I'm gonna tell you right now, a year later, you
don't open that door, and y'all been having a road
pat You're gonna be like, well, you know you used
to open the door for me. She's gonna throw up
everything in your face that you used to do. I
told folks, you better hold out like it fold out. Look,
(01:05:57):
you need to go in there, and you need to
set the boundaries. Ever, here's who I am, here's the
ship I do, and there's nothing there's nothing new coming
around the car.
Speaker 4 (01:06:09):
Well, Johnny was the first one who opened doors for me.
And I used to be the person in Seattle where
somebody would open the door and I'd be like, what
what you get open my own door like an asshole.
So I'm at the point where I like, I was like, oh,
he opens the door. That's so sweet. He's still open
the store for me. He's still buy fliers for me.
We're seven years in.
Speaker 2 (01:06:28):
Okay, Well, there we go. He's able to hold out.
Speaker 4 (01:06:30):
I'm able to accept positive things.
Speaker 2 (01:06:32):
Yeah yeah, most people. Most people ain't able to hold out.
You know what I'm saying, Like, I mean that just
see is what it is like. So people to do.
Speaker 3 (01:06:41):
Stuff early on.
Speaker 4 (01:06:43):
That's just just like who he is.
Speaker 2 (01:06:45):
Oh yeah, I mean you just opened door. I'm talking
about like physically, like my man physically on the pasture's side,
opening the car door. It's like you know the old
school thing where oh there's a puddle there, so I
take my coat off and I lay it in the puddle.
I'm like, nigga, please what you tell you? Better walk
around that thing? I mean laying my coat in the puddle,
shif for real? Whatever that is? You know what I'm saying. Yeah, No,
(01:07:10):
you need you need to let them know who you
gonna be early on. That's all right, And I mean ay,
and then you ain't gotta worry about it. You can't
go tom to eight. I've been the same dude the
whole time, and most of us are the same dude
the whole time. You know, say we might might, we
might you know, develop some type of allergy to seafood
or something like that. Or they might want to buy
(01:07:32):
a corvette when we're sixty, you know what I'm saying,
for some odd reason. But other than that, but past
thirty d at nothing new coming up, dude.
Speaker 4 (01:07:41):
Seriously. It's like saying you have to believe people when
they show you who they are, Like, that's who they are.
Don't go looking for anything other than this. This is
who they are. They've shown you and they've told you
that's it, that's it.
Speaker 2 (01:07:55):
Well don't we don't we see that with our politicians,
Like they show you who they are and then people like,
well not, you know, they could do something different here.
It's like, well, what makes you think that they're going
to do something different? Like the politician you've been voting
in office for thirty years has done nothing for you.
You can't fit, You don't feel any better about your
life with dmbing in there, but you're like, man, I
(01:08:18):
need to get them back in there. It's like, did
you see.
Speaker 4 (01:08:21):
The Gavin Newsome chain of twenty two years of him
saying we're going to do something about the homeless? Popularly, Yeah,
that's great, over and over. Clearly you're not going to
do shit about it.
Speaker 3 (01:08:35):
No, no, no, no. I Well, they're going to make
sure it remains in play increases. Yeah, yeah, they're going
to make sure that it never gets fixed. They're going
to make sure there's always money for it, and that
their friends manage it, and that a lot of it
goes into bullshit and and it just it's just part
(01:08:59):
of of like the high speed rail project.
Speaker 5 (01:09:05):
Yeah, same thing.
Speaker 3 (01:09:05):
Billions of dollars in this trained in nowhere.
Speaker 4 (01:09:09):
That's why you can compare people's i don't know, addiction
obsession like team sport, playing with politicians to people who
are in abusive relationships. It's like the same dynamic and
you're like, oh no, it's going to get better, it's
going to change. You don't really understand who he really is, Like,
it's all the same exact mentality.
Speaker 2 (01:09:31):
I did something wrong. That's why it's like this, you know,
And that's what they were doing because the only time
that I've seen these needs is take some real action.
Whereas during the damn disease that should not be named, Hey,
they were ready right then, they were ready, you know,
and you know what you heard from people it was
the abuse or mindset it's like, well, the reason that
(01:09:51):
has happened to go on is because people are not
adhering to the rules.
Speaker 4 (01:09:54):
I'm like, you brought this upon yourself.
Speaker 2 (01:09:58):
I'm like, is that what you astu believe? And they did.
They did. They were the ones being abused, and they
loved it, like people loved it. They love being told
what to do.
Speaker 4 (01:10:20):
Coming out.
Speaker 2 (01:10:22):
Yeah, I mean, that's that's the whole thing. And then
they were ready, well they weren't ready to jump no men,
but they were ready to jump women, which was absolutely
fucking weird. There was like a woman in the store
with her child and then like you see a group
of people like gang up on her. It's like I've
seen that big burly dude walked through a minute ago.
He ain't had no mask on neither. Y'all ain't jumping
(01:10:43):
And what's the deal?
Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
People? They didn't try me? I would have killed a
bitch around when it comes to like my fucking body.
The autonomy like, she's just like you try me, And
so they didn't. But I did. I like walked right
(01:11:07):
by a girl and she was like, excuse me, miss,
you have to put on a mask to come in
the store. And I just kept going, and she followed me,
and I made her go down like this aisle and
over this sile, and the whole time she's like, miss, miss, miss,
excuse me, you have to put on a mask, and
I just kept going and going. Finally, Oh, I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (01:11:23):
What I got kicked out of a fucking a hardware
Like right when I ship jumped off the people the dude,
they fucking followed me over to my section where I
was looking for boxes because I was moving and they weren't.
They made it very clear I had to leave, and
we had what if police would consider a verbal altercation
(01:11:44):
in the store and then obviously left.
Speaker 3 (01:11:47):
You didn't even get any free popcorn?
Speaker 1 (01:11:50):
Yeah, nothing, And fucking fuck those people. Like God, if
i'd had a job at that time, I'd have had
a nervous breakdown, yeah, because it's no fucking way I'd
have been going to work wearing a fucking mask. We're
not going, dude. That was the worst shit ever, Like
as it was happening, and I remember in March when
they're announcing the pandemic, I'm like, I fucking saw it
(01:12:12):
all coming, like right then and there. It was fucking painful.
Speaker 4 (01:12:15):
I feel so lucky that I left teaching like like
two years before this all went down, or a year
and a half or something like. I just skated out
and then this all came and I was like, I
wouldn't have been able to deal with it either. I
wouldn't have been at work.
Speaker 1 (01:12:30):
All these years later. And there's no consensus even from
the conspiracy types on what happened during COVID. Really there's
no consensus. Some people like COVID's totally fake, other people
have other opinions. There's no real consensus.
Speaker 4 (01:12:44):
But they're still testing everyone's shit. They're still testing the sewers,
and they're still telling you which strains are going around
and who has it, like how many people, and like
like damn, you guys are committed to this, like it's
never going to end well.
Speaker 1 (01:12:56):
The original tip off was. The original tip off was
when they when you looked at the when they started
tracking and putting up the CCC death numbers, The fucking
death numbers attributed to COVID some days were sixty to
seventy percent of all the deaths in the country on
that on those days.
Speaker 4 (01:13:15):
I still believe that shit.
Speaker 1 (01:13:17):
I have all that shit screenshoted. I should dig up
my COVID archive because the devil is in the details,
and I have a feeling the truth is in those
early numbers. Those early numbers tell the tale. I think
a bunch of people died from the bio weapon that
they released sometime around October or November.
Speaker 4 (01:13:35):
And then most of the numbers were attributed to it.
And weren't it like George fucking Floyd was a COVID death.
You're like, you can't have it both ways. You can't
say this motherfucker killed him and he also died of COVID,
You assholes.
Speaker 1 (01:13:48):
Right, But they did the swap a root with the
flu numbers because that year was the highest reported flu
numbers to the point where they were censoring them. With
the number they ended up releasing, I think at the
end of twenty nineteen was fifty five thousand flu deaths,
but I saw other documentation that show the number was
closer to eighty five thousand flu deaths. And then this
(01:14:09):
number disappeared and became like six thousand, like overnight, they
masked all of those COVID deaths, all the flu deaths
that were coming up that were higher MATT were masked
as COVID deaths. That's part of it. I don't know
what the other parts are.
Speaker 4 (01:14:22):
Well, they were some murdered people. I mean they literally
just murdered them. They were like, let's just intubate them
and inject them with roum Desi beer, Like you're gonna
die if that happens to you.
Speaker 3 (01:14:30):
Well, you you incentivized the hospitals with this crazy structure
where you start saying, we'll pay you this much money
for COVID death versus this much money for this, And
if you put them on rem desavier, you get this,
and if you put them on an event, you get that.
And you you know it. You know some guy looking
(01:14:51):
at spreadsheets all day long who says, why wouldn't it
be great if these people came in and they had
all of these things.
Speaker 4 (01:14:59):
Yeah, it doesn't cost us anything.
Speaker 3 (01:15:02):
Yeah, and maybe sometimes we do it. Maybe sometimes we
say we did it true.
Speaker 2 (01:15:10):
I mean we're still bill for it.
Speaker 5 (01:15:12):
Either way.
Speaker 2 (01:15:14):
People didn't believe that they were doing that. They do
not like people like if you tell somebody, if you
tell somebody that today that was all a fanatic about it,
that Hey, you know they were paying them extra money
to use certain protocols it's like that's a lie. What
but they they released it that they were doing it.
Speaker 4 (01:15:34):
Yeah, they weren't even hiding it. Yes, it's like your
people were the ones saying all this. Fauci and Burks
and all them are the ones saying all the ship
that we say. Now they've all said it. That people
are like, no one ever said that masks didn't work.
I'm like, Fauci said it, Berke said it. Your people,
the people you love said it. I don't even like them,
(01:15:55):
but they said it, like you asshole.
Speaker 2 (01:16:00):
Yeah, so the abuse of relationship just like, keep abusing
me because it's my fault.
Speaker 4 (01:16:06):
It's my fault.
Speaker 3 (01:16:08):
Also, I think this goes back to Yuri Besmanov's four
stages of demoralization. And that's stage three, which is a
crisis that lasts six weeks or longer. And and that
was COVID six weeks to flatten the curve. Uh and
and and they he said, in the fourth stage, the
(01:16:31):
normalization phase, I can drag them to the Soviet Union,
take them there myself. I can shower them with authentic information.
It won't matter, it won't change their mind. They have
been demoralized.
Speaker 2 (01:16:44):
Yeah, exactly, that's exactly are now Now we've got some
uh the people from the CDC they cutting up now
now that uh the young lady who was in there,
was she in there for a month and then she
resigned quote unquote right after RK.
Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
Closed it and said I'm out of here. I don't
want I'm not interested in all these skeletons.
Speaker 2 (01:17:15):
Yeah, that was it, that we have people from the
CDC there out there boycotting the people that work for him.
It was just like, y'all guys out there cutting up,
like I give a fuck, Like it's y'all the same
people that told me if I followed this arrow in
the grocery store, I won't get cod COVID. You know
what I'm saying?
Speaker 3 (01:17:38):
Who's protecting what? Who's protecting who? In this.
Speaker 2 (01:17:43):
The CDC they're protesting against RFK Jr. Because they believed
that he had a hand in the lady who was
over the CDC being ousted or her resignation.
Speaker 3 (01:17:58):
He did, didn't he? Yeah kind of Yeah, yeah, I
would hope so I would. I would like, So, why
is is that scandalous that he had a say in
her firing when he's her boss?
Speaker 4 (01:18:11):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:18:11):
Like, who cares?
Speaker 2 (01:18:13):
I don't know. I guess they feel like he have to.
Speaker 3 (01:18:17):
I don't know. I'd say, you know, then I had
to say, and you know, what do you want from
me to get out? I gotta go.
Speaker 2 (01:18:24):
Yeah. They just been like, you know that that she
was done wrong?
Speaker 3 (01:18:28):
Mm hm, who cares? Yeah, yeah, she's just like he's
titled to She's not entitled to a job. She works.
Speaker 4 (01:18:39):
You know, like.
Speaker 3 (01:18:41):
The CDC is like they take government money, but they
also have private interests, like they they own patents and
make five billion dollars a year from the patents they
own on the vaccines, and then they set the vaccine schedule,
which I don't know, sounds like a little bit of
a conflict of interest to me. So set the vaccine schedule,
(01:19:05):
and then magically some of the vaccines that you have
the patents on are on schedule and they're mandatory, which
is like me putting my latest book and saying it's
mandatory by seventy eight copies.
Speaker 2 (01:19:19):
Of it.
Speaker 3 (01:19:23):
To put good, high quality material in here, or how
much you want to bet that it would just be
filled with dick jokes for well, one thing, five empty
blank pages.
Speaker 1 (01:19:35):
One thing that really bothers me that nobody's discussing in
regards to that relationship is that that takes us out
of the realm of capitalism and we move into a
realm of what's called state capitalism, which is how Russia operates,
where the government has a direct role in corporations and
(01:19:56):
corporate decision making and everything. And we're seeing this expansion
now with Trump getting what ten percent of Intel. The
US government now owns in ten percent of Intel. So
here's the thing.
Speaker 2 (01:20:12):
For me.
Speaker 1 (01:20:12):
The jury's out on how bad of a system this is.
It all depends on who's in control of the government.
Speaker 2 (01:20:17):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:20:17):
If you if you don't like the people in control
of the government, you're not gonna like what they're doing
with your capitalism. But if you do like who's in
the government, you might agree with what they're doing. Right.
So it's one of those double edged swords. But everyone
needs to realize we are moving into uncharted territory with
government acquisitions of private business in regards to operating them,
not in a transitory way.
Speaker 3 (01:20:38):
I just this morning recorded a Macro Aggressions episode called
American East India Company about that about how this is
actual fascism, the blending of the state with big business
for the benefit of the state, or if that's or
(01:21:01):
if it's to benefit big business, you call that corporatism.
We're both right. This is alarming. And I did sort
of an explanation about what the East India Company was
that later the British East India Company, and how massive
it was and how it wound up folding into the
(01:21:21):
state at some point.
Speaker 1 (01:21:24):
And I think the thing that's scarier is the thing
that's scariest about it is like, let's just say you
own a business and you're behind on your taxes, and
then the government comes in and says, oh, well, that's fine,
we're square on the taxes, but we now own twenty
percent of your company. Right m that's the that's the
overarching implication.
Speaker 3 (01:21:42):
That's a problem. That's a problem. And and but here's
here's the one component of it where that I think
provides a slight dilemma, and that is considering what our
government normally does with the money, which is essentially lighted
(01:22:04):
on fire. At least we're getting something in exchange. And
I don't even and I make that argument half heartedly
because I don't want the government owning any of these companies.
I think it's a bad idea. But Trump is a businessman.
He's just as a business and he's you know, he's like, hey,
(01:22:26):
like you know, why don't we or or if we
want to go like full tinfoil hat. He's trying to
shore up some microchip processing resources in advance of a
bigger war, maybe even something with China where chips are
(01:22:49):
going to be needed. Access to them is going to
be essential, and the Taiwan's chip manufacturing facilities are going
to be targeted for either capture or destruction. So like
maybe it's a preemptive move. Maybe they're shoring up resources.
(01:23:14):
If this is, I mean, I guess it depends on
what they do after this. If this is a one
shot deal, which I doubt it will be, then whatever.
But if if you if they put together a portfolio
that they own, it will then be worth reviewing. You know.
If it's if the portfolio is like Lockheed Martin, you know,
(01:23:37):
then they're gearing up for something. Yeah, I don't know,
I don't know what it'll be.
Speaker 5 (01:23:43):
I guess it depends on on on.
Speaker 3 (01:23:46):
The anarchist in me is like get them away from
owning private businesses in any way, it's already murky enough.
Speaker 5 (01:23:53):
I don't want them involved in it.
Speaker 3 (01:23:56):
But then you you go from a practical standpoint, well,
at least like worst case scenarios, you've got like equity
in intel, which is gonna be worth a lot. I mean, actually,
after you put your thumb on the scale and rig
it so that Intel benefits. Because you're the government and
you're a criminal enterprise. What if the.
Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
Government can raise enough revenue from owning stakes and businesses
to they don't have to collect taxes from us anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:24:24):
Well, that would be That's an interesting concept to ponder.
Speaker 1 (01:24:33):
It definitely, it grows government control for sure. But I
think the problem is that we've only had governments that suck, right,
and so we don't know what it's like to have
a good government who gives a fuck about it and
is willing to do shit for us.
Speaker 3 (01:24:45):
Well, you usually the peoples in the government, the people's
interests in the state's interests are opposed to one another.
Typically if you were to ever get them in alignment,
then maybe right, like if the state has but but
(01:25:07):
but you you start when you start saying the state
has a stake in companies, it just sounds like fascism
to me. It may sounds like fascism. It just like
it doesn't sound like uh an investment in the future.
(01:25:28):
It sounds like fascism. It sounds like the next thing.
I know, there's gonna be anybody who's got a small
and medium sized business in that similar industry, they're gonna
get crushed. They're just gonna create regulations and just fucking
crush them because they can, and it benefits them, and
it benefits us as American taxpayers. Benefits us to crush
(01:25:51):
the small and medium sized businesses, put them out of
business so that we can have a monopoly and with
Intel and then only have that because look, fuck ten
percent stake in this thing, man, don't you think we
want to have our share price go you know, ten
x on this stuff? Of course, why why wouldn't we?
So we start getting into all these really shitty incentives
(01:26:13):
where the state has like a vested interest in companies.
Certain companies is excelling and certain companies disappearing, and I
fucking hate that. That scares me, man, because it's it's
just organized crime. And if you allow them to organize
(01:26:36):
it with these companies, it's just going to happen. You know,
we contracts instead of like machine guns.
Speaker 2 (01:26:48):
He had the breakdown of the you know, lady, miss Susan,
monory is I think this is how you say our
last thing. But here it is. It was a Wednesday evening.
She was fired by the Trump administration after she refused
to resign under pressure. Okay, it says right here when
(01:27:12):
the CDC director Susan refused to rubber stamp unscientific, reckless
directives and fire dedicated health experts. She chose protecting public
over serving a political agenda. For that she has been targeted.
Speaker 1 (01:27:28):
So she was grandstanding, is what I'm hearing. She probably
rubber stamped the COVID vaccines to fuck her.
Speaker 5 (01:27:39):
Oh, I'm sure.
Speaker 2 (01:27:41):
That was it, Yeah, because I was from what I
was hearing, they were like saying, that can't give it,
the young can't get you know, to the younger people
and all that stuff because of what they've seen and
and of course you know that's not in the in
the agenda. I'm assuming Pfizer's still making something that's some
I'm I mean, that's the only people that's still making it.
(01:28:03):
I don't think Madern is making anything already. I haven't
think they're all.
Speaker 3 (01:28:08):
Pivoting to cant mRNA cancer drugs. Okay, I think that's
where the money is. Is that just such an unbelievably
gigantic market.
Speaker 2 (01:28:22):
Yeah, for them not to get nothing done, Like, like,
I get it. I understand that what people are saying.
It's like, maybe I want to stop cancer death, but
it's just like, but they're not going to it's not
profitable to do.
Speaker 3 (01:28:37):
Say, well, I'll even go a step further and say
that they created industrial cancer. They started the American Cancer
Society in nineteen thirteen. It's called something else, but they
changed it to American Cancer Society, and the Rockefellers financed it.
It was to profit and steer the future cancer into history,
(01:29:00):
into the pharmaceutical industry, right into their right, right into them.
And that's what it did. And so the American Cancer
Society has been was created, funded and controlled by the
Rockefeller since its inception, and it started the same year
(01:29:22):
as the Federal Reserve, the I R S and the
ad L. Nineteen thirteen, the most important year in.
Speaker 2 (01:29:29):
The coincidence right coincident the.
Speaker 3 (01:29:33):
Bank they're the banker's stole America.
Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
See America has been a Jewish takeover in slow motion
kind of culminating with Kennedy and the rest has been history.
Speaker 2 (01:29:46):
So these foundations are nothing more than they am embeasilment.
I mean, you know what I'm saying. It stealing money,
tax shelters.
Speaker 3 (01:30:01):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, oh for sure, yeah yeah. It's
so the the rock. When Standard Oil got busted up,
they had really bad PR and they created the Rockefeller Foundation.
Somebody suggested that, I forget who it was, and they
created that and they funneled a bunch of money into
it as a tax shelter, and then they used that
(01:30:23):
as a PR mechanism to buy themselves better publicity, and
from that they realized that they had that having a
foundation was great because you could just say, you could
always say it's not me, it's a foundation, you know,
but it's like it's your money that goes in there,
and then it's it's there's tax benefits to it. And
(01:30:46):
then you can use that to operate outside of the
view dip sort of in and out of government when
you need to.
Speaker 5 (01:30:56):
With these foundations, and some of them are.
Speaker 3 (01:31:00):
Are most of the big ones that are in some way,
shape or form involved in eugenics too, like the Ford
Foundation and the Rockfower Foundation, in the Hewitt Foundation and
all you know, Carnegie Foundation. It's all it's always I mean,
because you can't just start a company advocating for murder,
(01:31:23):
but you can start an NGO that talks about population,
contraceptive devices and things like that, and that's essentially mass murder.
And so they run everything through that, and so if
anybody ever gets in trouble, it just comes back on
an NGO. It doesn't come back on a government, doesn't
(01:31:45):
come back on a person necessarily, And that's how they're
doing it.
Speaker 2 (01:31:52):
Yeah. Yeah, I looked into that one foundation I think
Biden had a few years back, and like they they
went through the books on it and like no money
went to cancer research. I was like, oh yeah, like
this guy got a few me and that guy got
a few me, and I was like, well, where's the
(01:32:14):
research a it. It's like, well we didn't quite get today. Yeah,
we might get around today.
Speaker 3 (01:32:22):
It's it's a money won't wash in operation. It's an
influence pedaling operation. It's dirty. It's to be expected. Same
thing with the the concert for the fires. Did you
guys see that this last week the fires that they
were they had the big concert and all that money
(01:32:42):
that was supposed to go to help fire victims surprise
magically disappeared, didn't wind up there. Nobody got any of it.
Speaker 2 (01:32:52):
I mean, it's just like, well, how long, how long
you gonna keep getting deep before you be like, I
don't want to second now, I know, I guess it
doesn't matter. I guess you just keep getting deeped into infanity.
Speaker 3 (01:33:02):
You just get to keep Lucy keeps putting that football
out there, and you keep convincing yourself this time. It's different.
Speaker 2 (01:33:12):
Generationally, get deep your kids, your kids, their kids, it'd
be they generations work for people, just do. It's just like,
oh yeah, you know, let's go down there and let's
give them more money. It's just like dog, I mean,
you know that money is going directly into their pockets, right,
Like they're not helping anybody. They're helping themselves to your money.
(01:33:34):
That's what I do know.
Speaker 3 (01:33:36):
But people like to they give money to Goodwill because
they think they're doing the right thing and they're giving
money to a charitable organization. They get an old piece
of paper that can write it off their taxes too.
That doesn't hurt. But also like I'm giving it to
Goodwill and it's like, well, you know Goodwill is selling it.
Speaker 5 (01:33:53):
They're like, well, yeah, I know they're selling it.
Speaker 3 (01:33:55):
Do you know they're selling it in inflated prices? They're like,
well how inflated? And you go in there and look
and you're like, oh my god, like this is kind
of crazy. It's like, did you do you know that
their CEO made five million dollars last year? You're like what, so,
like thirties are polluted too, you know? Correct, you want
to do it right, you want to like get so
(01:34:16):
so you start giving stuff away to these these groups,
thinking like you're doing the right thing, and you know,
maybe that maybe that's all it takes is for you
to think that you're doing the right thing. That's good
enough for you. Like what happens with it after this?
Speaker 4 (01:34:33):
Now?
Speaker 2 (01:34:33):
You don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:34:34):
I can only do what I can do. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:34:37):
It's like when you're seeing that hungry African twenty two
cents a day, right to help them get some drinking water,
and you know, and some reason.
Speaker 3 (01:34:44):
How much that's going to drinking water? Like how much
that's going to private jets?
Speaker 2 (01:34:52):
Like he like, well, I mean are they fadege it?
I mean? Did he get some brand and some water.
It's like we're working on a steel working roofties that.
Speaker 3 (01:35:01):
Put together these charities, are you genesis groups trying to
feed anybody, They're trying to murder people. They just they
just want you pay for it. This is this is
kind of the kink in that is that, uh, the
person getting fucked is uh the poor serving people. But
(01:35:22):
they don't care because it's part of the plan. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:35:28):
And I'm just like like, so when I go somewhere
and they're like, hey, don't you want to donate to
such and such, I'm like, I don't. No, I don't.
I do not because I know it's not going to anybody.
Speaker 5 (01:35:41):
They know either, I don't. I don't have a problem
saying no.
Speaker 3 (01:35:45):
Some people are very like susceptible. My wife is very susceptible.
She's very nice.
Speaker 2 (01:35:52):
Like if if I'm not able to go, like you
see somebody in the you go and you know, you
buy groceries for two weeks for me or something like that.
You know what I'm saying. It went directly to them.
I know they got it. They received it there it
is my goodness. Oh well, you know, uh, donate to
this foundation and then we'll do that. I'm like, uh,
(01:36:16):
let me just let me just take the money and
do it myself. If I feel that in my heart,
you know, if that's what I want to do, I'd
rather just do that and know that the people got
it that needed it.
Speaker 4 (01:36:32):
So.
Speaker 2 (01:36:32):
I mean, but they've been running this racket for a
while now and it just became just something that's running
a meal. Oh yeah, don't you want to donate a
dollar or such and such. It's for a good cast,
you know, they say it is for a good calls.
Oh yeah, cool, for good calls and anybody like, hold on,
did anybody get did those those teams get any new
(01:36:54):
uh new mints for baseball or anything?
Speaker 3 (01:36:56):
It's like, you know what I I did which I liked?
Speaker 4 (01:37:01):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:37:02):
You know Pasta Jardullah. You know him, don't you, Corey?
Speaker 1 (01:37:05):
Yeah, well you know we've never actually met.
Speaker 3 (01:37:08):
Oh okay, well I've hung out with him in Vegas
and in Nashville. He's a super duper guy. He will
do these charity trips to He was living in uh,
South Florida for a long time, and he would do
these charity trips where he'd go to Cuba and he
would ask people Hey, do you want to donate donate
(01:37:31):
some money to me. I'm buying baseball equipment. I'm buying
a bunch of used you know, balls and bats and
gloves and you know, cleats and things like that for
all these Cuban kids that love baseball but don't have
access to any of the gear, And would you be
interested in contributing? And I was like yeah, man, So
(01:37:52):
like I like cash stapped him money for stuff like that,
because like that that I'm totally great with. Like I'm
gonna give it to Pasta. Pasta is gonna go buy
this stuff. Pasta's taking suit Duffel bags with him with
all this stuff and he's distributing it. And then he
(01:38:13):
took pictures with the kids in Cuba with all the
stuff like that, right of one hundred thousand percent on
board with right. Right.
Speaker 2 (01:38:22):
We did the same thing at our job with the
when Ashville got hit, We got up a bunch of
resources together and a guy from work loaded up on
the trailer and actually took it out there too, So
it was like booe, cool there it is as supposed
to a Red Cross or whoever the fuck was out
there at that time, you know, Oh yeah, donate to
(01:38:43):
us and then we'll we'll handle it.
Speaker 5 (01:38:44):
You go look up.
Speaker 2 (01:38:45):
It's like, yeah, we gave each of each one of
them two hundred dollars apiece. I'm like two hundred, I say,
but I mean appreciate it. But damn, I mean they
lost everything. You know what I'm saying. Any more than
two hundred dollars do don't get it. Day you got
a job or nothing, right now everything's wiped out. They're like, oh, yeah,
(01:39:06):
we gave two hundred dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:39:09):
The Anarkopulko crew did a really fantastic job when the
hurricanes came through helping out.
Speaker 5 (01:39:15):
They did such a good job that the city.
Speaker 3 (01:39:17):
Actually recognized them and gave them an award for their
contribution to it. They were raising money and they were
running twenty four hour shuttles services six hours at one way,
six hours back, and they had three trucks that were
going and they were just constantly going and bringing stuff in.
They were going to the closest big city to the
(01:39:39):
costco there and there, and Jeff was getting donations. I
think Jeff raised like three hundred and fifty thousand dollars
of in crypto for it, and they bought generators, and
they bought food, and they bought chainsaws to clear everything out.
Like they just bought everything that they could get their
(01:40:01):
hands on and distributed it throughout Acapulco on motorcycles because
everything was torn down, Like the city had to acknowledge, Like,
you guys were fantastic when this happened so twice actually
because it got hit by two hurricanes back to back
and back to back years and they did it both times.
Speaker 2 (01:40:22):
So yeah, and somebody in the in the chat over
Rumble said Elton John and Sharon Stone couldn't cure AIDS,
but they sure had decades of parties raising money for it.
And that's what they usually do. They usually get somebody famous,
a celebrity, uh, somebody that you know people like to, uh,
to be the face of it, and so people feel
(01:40:44):
even better about donating to these causes.
Speaker 3 (01:40:47):
Yeah, when it's.
Speaker 2 (01:40:51):
Really really not benefiting the people that you believe that
it would benefit. If if you think that folks are
out here actually wanting to do something to help people,
I mean they might be trying to help them to
the grave, you know what I'm saying. I might be
trying to help them in that fashion you know what
I'm saying, to get them all up out of here,
(01:41:12):
but you know, help as far as nourishment, because we
see it all the time. Thirty years later, if you
were a loved when drunk water from this river that
came from this river in the past, you know, thirty
years you're eligible for for for coverage call this note.
It's just like, well, hold on, how long y'all know
(01:41:33):
y'all were dumping the ship there? Oh, we knew, We've
been dumping it there for fifty years. It's just like,
I mean, that's it. Yeah, man, we give you, We
give you a few thousand dollars.
Speaker 3 (01:41:48):
Felder, you're a loved one, took the twenty twenty COVID vaccine,
you may be entitled to a claim for your services
of yours still alive.
Speaker 2 (01:42:02):
It's just like, and then what they give you, I
mean they was saying, can you give me what they
were giving back during that time, which was a what
was it?
Speaker 3 (01:42:11):
What was it?
Speaker 2 (01:42:11):
My man wanting to get a hamburger and some free
donuts when that lady was trying to give up there
in New York.
Speaker 3 (01:42:17):
Well, Bill de blogs you it was yeah, and there
were there were donut offers. There were donut offers, there
were Talladega Speedway laps that were offered, there were lap
dances offered. It was there was a lot going on,
lottery tickets. Then then they started, So that was the
(01:42:39):
carrot portion and then the stick, which was we're gonna
have Osha shut down your company. We're going to make
sure that you don't get to go to work. We're
going to make sure that you're an employer or your
coworkers rat you out. If you haven't taken the vaccine,
we wish you a winter of death.
Speaker 1 (01:42:57):
I have to comment, the fucking attempt to backdoor the
COVID vaccine through fucking Osha was the single most tatalitarian
act that's ever occurred in fucking American history.
Speaker 3 (01:43:11):
We should hang the people from Osha. They should have
all been taken out and hanged at the town square.
Speaker 1 (01:43:18):
So I got this new thing that we could sell
a ground zero version of this. Okay, the back in
like the Peloponnesian Islands, I think it was, they would
take a person and they would take a hollowed out log, okay,
and they would coat this person in fucking honey and
they would encase him in the log and just float
him down the fucking river and he would be basically
(01:43:41):
eaten alive by fucking insects. And that's what they need
to do to these people.
Speaker 3 (01:43:45):
Okay, all right, I'm on board. That would definitely be
against h cod Oh.
Speaker 1 (01:43:52):
And they would force speed you this stuff that made
you shit all over yourself, and that would attract even
more bugs and shit time.
Speaker 2 (01:44:03):
It is war time crimes or something.
Speaker 1 (01:44:05):
Them savages back in the day thought of some fucking
wicked means of exterminating people like your fucking the Iron Maiden.
Put them in the maid. Yeah, that's some.
Speaker 2 (01:44:16):
Ship right there. The Yeah, they were ruthless. Well they
had the time, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (01:44:21):
Yeah, you need them. Yeah, there's no Internet. They were.
They were pondering, you know.
Speaker 1 (01:44:31):
Maybe do soft a society man like you know, you
do some fun up ship. We should like inflict suffering
upon you.
Speaker 5 (01:44:37):
How do we get in?
Speaker 2 (01:44:41):
Yeah, Corey, a variety of.
Speaker 3 (01:44:51):
Day zero guillotine, a day zero honeylog, m mm hmm,
a day zero uh noose said right, Okay, oh, I
got it.
Speaker 1 (01:45:07):
I can build us the Day zero superstore that's got
all these things on it, and they can buy them,
but the fine print is that these will turn into
donations and you're never going to receive your.
Speaker 2 (01:45:25):
You didn't you didn't read the fine print at the bottom.
It's like, hey, look, everybody scheme and I just need
to get in on my skate game. Yeah, closer, you
appreciate everybody for being with us. On episode two hundred
a day zero, Uh go check out Lindsay's all the
(01:45:46):
Lindsay stuff, Roaguways dot Org. Uh, Charlie, let him know
what you what you got working in? Uh right here
over the next week, a couple of weeks. If he's there,
why are you still there? Mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (01:46:04):
Uh oh, hes have issues.
Speaker 3 (01:46:09):
I'm here.
Speaker 5 (01:46:10):
My othernet just went walking.
Speaker 2 (01:46:14):
Okay, try to let me know what you're working on.
What you got, what you got coming up?
Speaker 3 (01:46:19):
I have my interview with t Snyder. It came out
today on Macroaggressions. He's the guy. He's the Canadian filmmaker
who followed me around for five months doing the documentary.
So you can go check that out Macroaggressions also Activist
Post and I'll be I'll be out next week, next weekend,
(01:46:41):
I'll be in l A. I'll be coming back going
to oasis.
Speaker 2 (01:46:46):
May man be in LA, may be out there with
the and the fags. Yep adam.
Speaker 3 (01:46:57):
Oh god, they create, they started the whole trend. Are
you kidding me?
Speaker 2 (01:47:04):
Okay, there we go there gay, Uh of course. Coryhees
dot org, I wonder from History JFK Book, Lee, Harvey
Oswald and Black and White and Bloodyhistory dot subsetact dot com.
Uh of course, I'm ex four twenty Q four twenty
dot com. For everything I do. We will catch y'all.
And next week on Daisy Road two oh one Peace