Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
What's going on? Guys? You boy ask you? Ford went
here working back in another episode, Dave Zero. As you
can see, we're a little shorthanded today. The Immaculate one
Charlie Robinson and the spiritual one Lindsay Sherman is not
with us. But we must carry on, all right. We're
gonna carry this heavy load. Me and the powerful one,
(00:25):
Corey Hughes. Corey this afternoon. Are you doing well?
Speaker 2 (00:31):
Yeah, I'm fine. Yes, it's ship. Change my shirt while
I got to let on my shirt. I don't like
any it's so high maintenance.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
But y'all, y'all are the only ones that have issues
with your vidiot. I don't get it. You just you
plug it into the side and should be the same
ship every time. I don't understand that.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
It's our pale whites again. We just can't get it
right on that camp.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
I should have known the pale white that's what. That's what,
the pale white skin. Uh, Corey. The previous week, we
had somebody say that we uh that we we we
swung and miss on the Robin Westwood a little bit
because we didn't speak about the the cat that shot
(01:25):
at the Catholic school didn't shot himself the funk.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
We gotta talk about that. We get a trans shooter
like every other week. I mean, how much time we
got to spend on it?
Speaker 1 (01:34):
They said we missed this Rayley thing and all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
I was like, I was, you're an empire in decline, Like,
I don't know what else do you want to talk?
It does not much else to talk about, Like.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Well, here's my only thing. Like if it's all you know,
supposed to bring about, you know, feeling sorry for the
Jews in Israel, don't you think that maybe they have
to take out a few of their own folk in
order to really get that sentiment.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
It's more drive it hotion. It's more about confusion than
anything else. Man. And so that's basically it. Yeah, all
kinds of like didn't he have all kinds of antisemitic
shit written on his gun? Here's the thing. If you
got ship written on your gun, you work for the FEDS.
Like I'm just convinced to that, right.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
Yeah, but anti Semitic stuff. And then I mean Catholic school,
ain't no Jews there, correct, Oh, it has some anti
Semitic stuff. So why didn't he just go to the
Jew spot? In, uh and do his thing there. Oh well,
you know.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
That's not what his handlers wanting.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
I mean, it's just like, you know, if I really
want to drive this thing home, you see, I'm that
type of person. Okay, you got to think from the
realm of the villain. All right, If I really want
to drive this thing home, can I take out people
that's supposedly my own? That's what I do if I
really want to drive this point home, is say, hey,
(03:09):
you know, the target is sorry for us. That's what
I would do, sacrifice for the greater good, whatever mission
he is.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
It's it is impossible for me to have any type
of philosophical conversation over these types of shootings because I
am one hundred percent convents that these are staged events,
and so there's nothing really to talk about. There's no
philosophical nothing to it because they're staged events. So all
philosophy of surrounding them was right out the fucking window.
If you've got a manifesto, you're a fed fuck off.
(03:42):
That's my attitude. Okay. So I am just of the
belief that for the most part, when you look at
any given event, particularly assassinations or some mass shootings, not all,
but particularly something like Vegas. H You look at this
(04:04):
and you're just like, yeah, people just don't do this.
They just don't. People just don't get a gun and shoot, shoot,
shoot up a crowd. They just don't do that. Why
Because it's tough. It takes planning, logistics, a whole lot
of stuff. We know which ones are real, the ones
where you got some jerk off who drives into a
crowd of protesters, because that's they have immediate access to
(04:27):
their vehicle, they're accessing, they're expressing their rage, and they
drive into the crowd of protesters. Right, those I get
right when you run down those people, because that's what
people have access to. Right, nobody has access to like
fifteen guns and five thousand rounds of ammunition. Right, Like
the just when you put the planning into it, it
eliminates the crazy aspect of it. And so if there's
(04:49):
planning going on, it's obviously not being done by the
crazy person.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
Right. I've seen some footage where where they can't was
walking through the Fitt against the and just like looking
at AMMO was like, man, what is the nobody walks
through the good? The gun story just sits there and like, oh, listen,
what kind of Ammo's hero? Okay this Ammo? Okay, he's right,
just looking at Ammo. You know what you need. I've
(05:15):
got a nine milivator. I'm gonna go get nine millimator.
Like look at shotgun jail you.
Speaker 2 (05:23):
Okay, here's I'm gonna bring this back to Kennedy because
this reminds me of something from Kennedy. Like Carry Thornley
is a character in the story, and he was involved
in the setup of Oswald, and he writes this long
fifty page AFFI David to Jim Garrison, which is basically
a confession, right, And so at some point in this thing,
he's talking about how he was working with this guy
(05:44):
Gary Karsten and that this guy was interested in fascist dictators.
So he sends Carry Thornley to the library to check
out a bunch of books on Hitler and other dictators, right,
And so in the half the David Carrie Thromly goes, Yeah,
I think he sent me there to try to like
(06:05):
set to try to set me up, you know, because
he got me to get a bunch of books on
Hitler and stuff. And who does that, right, And that's
exactly it. They send him to go to the fucking
gun store to go looking at ammunition so they can
catch them on film. You know, it's no different than
Lee Harvey Oswald ordering a rifle through the mail with
a fucking traceable serial number and all that stuff that
(06:25):
he could have just gotten too a pawnshop and got
went off the books, right, same exact thing. It's unnecessary, nonsense,
it's all. It's all about legend. Creating a legend is
a false backstory, right, and that's all it is. It's
a fabrication of a legend.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
Okay, Okay.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
Like once I start to dabble in these modern shit,
once I start to dabble into Sandy Hook, or I
start to look into Las Vegas or the fucking Pulse
nightclub shooting or any of these fucking weird things, like
my brain short circuits, and I'm like, no, me back
to nineteen sixty three, because this modern shit is off
the rails. Like, I don't want nothing to fucking do
(07:06):
with it, period. I just hope someone figures the shit
out quick so I don't have to like do it,
but so you don't have to date that the modern shit, Dude,
I don't like at all this so many variables, and
when it comes to now in this day and age,
who the fuck knows what pictures are real and what's what.
And because like I've known, the CIA fakes their own
(07:27):
shit forever, right, Like all those all those CIA reports
about Hitler going to Argentina, like those are fake reports
that they fake themselves. They fake their own shit all
the time, right, So you can't really trust any of
the documents or anything. And here's another thing, like Sandy Hook.
I pulled all the Sandy Hook documents, so it's about
(07:49):
three thousand pages worth. Ninety percent of it is redacted.
Like you'll have a page and it'll have like a
whole blank thing and one word will be like not
redacted in the middle, like insulting us on purpose.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
You know, it's really weird, isn't it. What shit Folks
find that extremely weird that like this is supposed to
be like common knowledge, like people supposed to know what happened,
but you redicted all this information. And I know what
they're saying, Oh, we do that so we can protect
the identity of the victims and all that stuff. But
I mean I don't know about all that.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Yeah, I don't know about that either.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
I mean, but that's that's what they try to say
that they're doing.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Yeah, that's another thing, Like there is only about three
thousand pages of documents on Sandy Hook. And I've said
this before, like they probably produced three thousand pages of
documents in the first two days of investigating, right, so
there's got to be twenty thirty thousand pages still out there.
(08:53):
We don't where is that shit?
Speaker 1 (08:54):
Probably say, right, probably.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
If they released to us and they're like, here's the
documents and they give us like two thousand page or something,
and it's like, what are you talking about? This is
nothing like the Jim Garrison files. To talk about those
all the time on my show. We have probably two
or three thousand pages of documents. It's not even a
whole lot. And I can tell you that, like that's
less than one or two percent of like what he
produced during his investigation. Right, So we have nothing next
(09:20):
to nothing on anything, And so when they put out stuff,
they're just they're just mocking us. I don't know why
anyone ever thinks we're going to get anything from the
government ever about anything, Like it's so stupid.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
Yeah, But and like you said, if they put anything out.
You know, all the key important stuff is redicted, so
it didn't matter. It's just funny, you know. They almost
just put out common knowledge stuff. Like you read it,
you'll be like, Okay, that's what we already knew, and okay,
where's the JC stuff. It's like, no, that's it nothing
jasy here m hmm.
Speaker 2 (09:51):
I'm like, do you really think the juicy stuff is
ever put on paper?
Speaker 1 (09:55):
No?
Speaker 2 (09:56):
You think there's a document that says, hey, go kill JFK.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
You know, you know, yeah, somebody just straight up to
night payer. But now make sure you log thatad Okay,
log bad all right, keep that one in the logs,
all right. You know what I'm saying. It's just like
nobody's gonna hold on to that stuff. That stuff's gonna
be burned. You've seen Mission impossible, right, you know, like
(10:22):
this dismissions will set destrict in five four right.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
So that's what I always wonder. Do they So let's
just say they get like like Oswald's school records are
like my favorite example because they're totally the ones we
have are bogus. You know, they're a mixture of fake
and uh real and who the fuck knows what But
here's a question. So let's say the FBI goes and
they collects the real school records that shows all kinds
(10:48):
of stuff we're not supposed to know. If you don't
want that information ever getting out, you would destroy that information. However,
I would think within the structure of whatever organization, FBI, CIA,
whatever bureaucratic organization, they would have to have some kind
of record for people later on in the chain of
(11:09):
command to be able to look back and understand, right,
Because I'm sure they're not teaching people what fucking you know.
You come into the CIA, They're not teaching you all
the secrets. It doesn't work that way. But at some
point somebody up the chain might need to know something
about the Kennedy assassination for whatever reason. Right, So do
they preserve information at all on paper or otherwise for
(11:36):
later future, you know, shock callers, to understand what happens,
so as to know how to guide the narrative or whatever.
That's what I wonder, is there a secret cash of
stuff within their administrative documents that will never see outside
the realms of investigative documents. Right? That's what I don't know,
(11:59):
is are all the secret it's on paper somewhere, is
what I'm saying. Who the fuck knows?
Speaker 1 (12:05):
Hmmm, Well, for some reason, and I know we we
we kind of made a joke about this about you know,
there's no document that says, hey, we're gonna take jfk out,
But there probably is a document. It just got it's
got behind eight hundred different encryptions, you know, And so
(12:31):
I guess what we've seen is that, Okay, sometimes things
are there and it may be written in code. Let's
just say that, like you might be reading something and
you not understand what you're reading because they have it
because it's written in a particular code. So I think
that could be the case.
Speaker 2 (12:50):
I think I've thought about that too. For me, I
catch a lot of weird spelling errors, and I catch
a lot of names that are intentionally spelt wrong. I
feel like, you know, like the FBI document will say
one thing and then I'll go and look for that person.
(13:10):
And when they had when they wrote that document back
in nineteen sixty three, they didn't know that one day
from home, I'd be able to go on my computer
and for ten bucks a month, search your entire genealogy background,
where you went to school, the whole nine yards, right,
Nobody ever envisioned the Internet, and I think that's a
major major blind spot for history prior to like even
(13:31):
the like nineteen eighties, like even up through like nineteen ninety,
I'd say, because that's when like net computer networking started
to become a thing. Okay, but in nineteen sixty three,
do you really think that these motherfuckers had any idea
that one day we'd be able to go online and
pull documents about these guys' entire lives and what they
did on certain days and what they had for breakfast.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
No way, probably not.
Speaker 2 (13:52):
No way, And that shaped their behavior, you know, that
shaped the behavior because they thought everything could they've that
if you could destroy the documents, everything just goes away
nice and neat and nobody knows nothing. But history has
shown that to be incorrect.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
Well, we're we're just the world is recently connected, Like
for the most part, we've been disconnected for the most
part of humanity. It's just over the past, would you say,
thirty years thirty? I guess connected. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
I first had America Online in nineteen ninety, late nineteen
ninety three because I went to college fall ninety four
with my first semester at college and my fucking roommate
had America Online and his dad had gotten it for
him the previous year. And I remember going to his
(14:44):
place our senior year after school and we'd go on
the internet and spend twenty minutes downloading one naked fucking
chickpick you know what I mean. It would be like,
oh yeah, and we thought it was the greatest thing
that ever was. It was unbelievable, right, So that's thirty years.
That's the thirty eight two years. So I'd say it's
(15:05):
thirty five tops, thirty five years, is it?
Speaker 1 (15:08):
Yeah? And if and if you want to, I must say,
since poor people have been connected to the rest of
the world, I will say the past fifteen years, bro.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
We got some broke ass Nigerians pulling crypto scams. This
is what I know now, that's what happens when you
connect the middle of nowhere. Shit, motherfucker's come for your crypto.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
Hey, hey, the Nigerians they were out there getting uh
what were they getting? They were getting unemployment and shit
damn PPP loans from California and watching it. You know,
all those blue ass.
Speaker 2 (15:47):
I swear to all that. If you made a list
of all that stuff. You would fill a book. You
could literally write a book of all the waste of
our government. And like, if that's not reason enough never
to pay your taxes, I don't know what is dude.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
It It's like it's incredibly stupid, is what it is.
Like you just look through it and you're just like,
this is them. And I know that we're supposed to
be fruitful and multiply, okay, but damn, but the more
I look at shit, I'm just looking folks, man, stop
having kids, man the way, because everybody just get fixed
and fuck it, you know what I'm saying, the last generation. Okay,
(16:23):
nothing else is happening. We just need to let it
fall all the way out, which you might do anyway.
I think America right now is at one point six
as far as the birth rate per per one.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
So so I don't think I don't worry about humanity overall,
Like we have been brought to minimal populations a lot
over the millennia, and so here's the thing. Earth will
be fucking fine, right, like, oh yeah, but.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
Hell the earth is. But all you got to do,
like people like, oh, the poor environment, the environment, we're
killing I said, Bud, don't worry what you think is
killing an environment. Leave that building for three months. You'll
go back to that motherfucker. Damn the earth. He done
took that something back over like that, saying I just
wait for me to move. Yeah, but it'll damn it'll
(17:18):
engulf that shit. You just be like it's like, man,
and this used to be a nice place. I said, shit,
ain't up for fucking weeds and damn trees.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
Now tiger's walking through and ship.
Speaker 1 (17:29):
Yeah that's what. Yeah, But I mean people when people
are they're sounding the alarm a lot about the replacement,
as far as replacement for humans. Amount of babies we're having,
you know, we're at one point six. God, I think
there was a place that was like at point eight.
I said, damn, I mean I ain't having new kids.
(17:53):
It's like sh is somebody said, yeah, I got a baby.
It's like, what you doing? What's wrong with you? I
think it was somewhere in Asia. You know what I'm saying.
They must not be able to fuck over there. They
must not be good at fucking is that? What is
is it? Long?
Speaker 2 (18:06):
It's like, I'm still open to having a kid. I'm
forty nine. I'm still open to having a child, but
that means i'd have to run into some like, you know,
hot younger woman who's very wealthy, and then we could
do it.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
I Like you said, hot younger woman that is wealthy.
Speaker 2 (18:26):
Yeah, then I'm good to go. Let's have like five.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
I mean it said, I'm ready. I'm ready to do this.
I'm ready to sew my wild oats. You know what
I'm saying. So at one point, they say it's supposed
to be two point one in order to properly replace.
Speaker 2 (18:46):
Well, that's just above. That's just above replacement. I mean
you too, is you know, replacement, But like, yeah, that's
just increasing. But we ain't got to worry about nothing.
Man Like, between the Indians and the Chinese, we're gonna
have plenty of people.
Speaker 1 (19:01):
Well any and Chin into into uh the Islamic Islamic folk,
will the entire world be uh gyre alone? I mean
they having like eight kids.
Speaker 2 (19:17):
I'm glad I'm not being born today. I'm glad I
was not born in like a recent generation.
Speaker 1 (19:22):
He said, I'm glad my dath is closer than my birth.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
I'm even for real, dude, this world is a steaming
pile of ship and uh.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
Oh hey, just imagine, just imagine. Okay, you were born
in two thousand and four, two thousand and five, Okay.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
You're you were born then, man ship.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
Your college years was the fucking disease that should not
be named, so you were he able to have no
fun niggas was probably having but.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
On these chicks are going on only fans.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
That's why I know. But I mean, just say this,
work with me here. Okay, your college years you had
to deal with diseases should not be named, and damn
class with a mask. You probably went to your keg parties.
They're like, have you took your shot? You know what
I'm saying. It used to be five dollars a cup.
Now it's like, let me see your your vax id.
You got your vaccination papers. You know, you had to
(20:20):
wear a mask at parties and shit like that. All
the good stuff you missed, all the good stuff, you know,
all that's ruined. And then you get to go out
and to this job market and he ain't shipped for you.
It's like they had the job report, they had the
recent job report, and they're like, man, Josh man, it's
it's not as good as as we thought it was
(20:40):
going to be. I'm like, y'all the one to keep
telling me that it ain't gonna be no good because
of AI? Is this not what we expect? We should
expect the job growth to go to zero because of AI?
Isn't that right? Is that what they're telling me?
Speaker 2 (20:56):
I watched some Indian dude telling me that nine percent
of humanity is gonna be out of work. I'm like, really,
I'm I'm like, Siia's gonna go build a bridge or
build a building or I don't think so exactly.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
So we got so, we got elon he working on
his robots. Thirty k at piece If I'm correct, I
think that's what he said. Thirty k at piece is
definitely gonna replace your ass, you know what I'm saying.
So should we not expect jobs to be going down?
This is what y'all told me was gonna happen. No,
(21:34):
but you know what they said, It said, Oh no, well,
you know the job market will look different because AI
will make will make different positions as far as different
jobs for people to do. I'm like, yeah, for people
who can learn, And y'all think most of the motherfucker's
walking around here gonna be able to learn that shit negative.
(21:57):
They ain't even gonna be in the realm of it.
You're gonna need it. Look, if they ain't picking up
a box and moving it, you know what I'm saying,
if they putting something in a bag, they ain't gonna
be able to get it.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
So here's another thing, like it might be regional or
where you live that determines the attitude on this. But
I don't know how much people will embrace going to
like a grocery store where everything's robotic, you know what
I mean? Like that, even though I if I'm in
(22:31):
a hurry, I'll do this self checkout, but there's still
somebody standing there to greet me and make me feel
like it's a welcoming environment.
Speaker 1 (22:42):
Where have you what self checkout? You being at? Every
time I'm walcome to self check out, there's somebody looking
at you would scorn like I hate being alive. I
gotta set it on that one's open. Maybe the one
(23:06):
the ones that Harris Teeter. They are a little bit
more bubbly, but they just man. They about down and out,
you know what I'm saying. I don't think I could
be able to stop and have a conversation with it
a little. But I mean maybe you're right, maybe we
(23:29):
will will resist that. But okay, Corey is gonna handle that.
And uh, let's see right here, we got a Ranger vault.
He said, there would be a big die off scene.
Start planning, now, which women you want to save? What
religion you want to make up? Ranger? You think you
(23:51):
think after the dial would save a few women and
then make up a religion? What do you think the
d T would be that point in time? We'll have
to have a main deity. Uh, and we'll have to
have a story. We have to have we have to
have people write stuff down and uh an agent. So
(24:11):
it looks like it's ancient. So what what would there?
What would their religion be? Does anybody have any idea?
Of course you didn't hear me, but Ranger over on rumble,
he said, there will be a big die off scene.
Start planning, now, which women you want to save? And
what religion you want to make up? Oh, Ranger, Ranger said,
(24:32):
I'm the god king Ranger. We can't just give that
to you. We gotta have a bote.
Speaker 2 (24:36):
I think yo, I've been waiting since that fucking COVID
for everyone to drop that, and it doesn't look like
it's happened anytime soon. I felt cheated.
Speaker 1 (24:45):
Well, no, the fu the folks who died was the
old folks. Sorry, I'm gonna die blood folks. Was like
all men folks were dying. I was like, yeah, they
were all eighty What are we talking about, man, Yeah,
eighty year olds die, newsflash. I mean, don't want nobody
(25:06):
telling me nothing new. I'm just like, come on, now, now,
what's the religion we're gonna make up? That's what Ranger
wants today. Now, Ranger, we can't just we can't just
crown you the god king. All right.
Speaker 2 (25:17):
See, here's the thing, like as far as like a
new global world religion that they'd be having for this
new era of fucking you know, when I'm talking about
the Klaus Schwab era, I thought scientology was gonna come
back into the deal and do something.
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Scientology seems a little weak, didn't it like dying down.
It didn't even get me.
Speaker 2 (25:37):
AA front, it'll never die out. It's a CIA front.
It's a CIA real estate front.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
Yeah, but it doesn't even get mentioned anymore.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
That's the whole plan. They like it that way.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
Okay, keeping it on the light. This is hey, we
got them right where we want them. Is that is
that what they're saying, Cory, yep, are you looking something up?
Sign Till since the dude from that seventies show, since
he went to UH to jail for alleged sexual assault,
(26:12):
they kind of they kind of kept quiet.
Speaker 2 (26:15):
Oh the Danny Masterson.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
Yeah, h yeah, yeah, I.
Speaker 2 (26:19):
Don't know what his deal is, but he must have
talked or pissed somebody off, because.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
Yeah, it usually didn't happen.
Speaker 2 (26:25):
Yeah, you got six victims who all have evidence. That
don't mean nothing. If you're a fucking the right person.
Speaker 1 (26:31):
It's an evidence, just like I've got evidence or something.
It's like, now you don't they lay it out in
front of chords, like, damn boy, that's pretty hardcore evidence
not guilty. It's like it's like my man on SBU
when they busted into his damn apartment. He had the
man had a shrine of drawls, he had the license,
(26:52):
he had photos of him meeting in certain places, had
the date he did the deed, and they're like, well,
you didn't have warrant, so it's inadmissible. I was like,
oh my god. I was like, but everybody's seeing it
this place, just trying to drop holes their id. He
(27:13):
had like a trinket from them, somebody had a bracelet,
everything right there. Well, it's inadmissible. You know, he didn't
get to write paperwork.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
I'm like, well, we do have. We have a constitution
to protect us from police overreach. And here's the thing,
Believe it or not, the constitution holds up very very
well in most cases when it comes to unlawful search
and seizure and that kind of stuff. They're pretty the
courts are pretty strict on that kind of thing, which
(27:42):
is really good.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Right, And that why that's why it's like, man, y'all
really fucked up, because all of us know he gives,
but we can't do anything about it.
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Well, then the conflicts for a back door. Knowing they
got stuff they can't use, they look for other links
to it that makes it readmissible. Sometimes they can pull
that off. So the tricks.
Speaker 1 (28:06):
Okay, okay, okay, do a little trickery, A little trickery,
were like a little trickery out here, I ain't no
doubt about that. Uh oh, that reminds me of a
I watched a movie today in new movie, The Black Back.
It's got a Michael Fastbender as the can I say
(28:26):
he's a protagonist. I don't even know this. It was
like a not military but a government opts type drama,
psychological thriller is what it was. And so pretty much
there was six people and they were all trying to
(28:47):
fuck each other over. But like Michael Fastbender was like
the smartest one out of all time. Like like part
of the movie there was like because his dad was
part of this govern from an agency whatever that he
was part of, and he got his dad to convince
confess some shit on tape without his dad knowing and
(29:08):
threw his ass in jail, and it was like, it's like, man,
that must have been really traumatic for you. It's like, not,
not really. I was thirty seven years old when I
did that. It's like, not not really. But it's actually
a pretty good movie. It's not fast paced, and I
ain't gonna lie to you for a lot of it.
You like I'm trying it because it was all centered
(29:29):
around a piece like it usually is a piece of
technology that got out that can be it when put
into the wrong hands. This piece of technology that could
go in and infiltrate a nuclear facility and college have
a meltdown.
Speaker 2 (29:45):
It's like it's like twenty twenty five and they're biting
off plots from nineteen seventy fucking two. Again. God, MoMA,
some shit. We don't want no spies and nuclear shit
and the Russians and fuck you. I'm so over.
Speaker 1 (29:59):
Hollywood, Corey kury co co co. It could cause a
nuclear meltdown, not send nugsat.
Speaker 2 (30:06):
That's the same.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Russian day.
Speaker 2 (30:09):
But Okay, I hope you people realize this is all
this is. See how you propaganda anytime you hear anything
like I I swear to God. Last night I was
flipping through Amazon Prime looking for something to watch, and
it was like twelve fucking shows in a row that
were fucking law enforcement, you know, intelligence, motherfucker. Everything's pissing
(30:35):
me off today, fixed camera, Hey, this is.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
This is on Amazon Prime, black man whatever.
Speaker 2 (30:45):
I'm fucking over it.
Speaker 1 (30:47):
Yeah, but it didn't. I thought it was a pretty
decent move. Me and my girlfriend was trying to figure
out what was going on, uh, because it's centered around
this couple and they're like, you know it, everybody in
the agency said, oh, this is y'all's weeks thought, y'all
do anything for each other, And so there was different
people trying to attack their relationship from different angles inside
(31:11):
the actual government agency, while at the same time somebody
trying to infiltrate and steal this piece of technology to
cause the nuclear maildale.
Speaker 2 (31:24):
Of these shows is fucking propaganda. Most of it's Israeli
propaganda and under the guise of American counterintelligence entertainment. Like
fuck every single as one of these fucking shows. Remember
like twenty four that was like the worst Panda of
them all because remember there was like an episode where
he's like, oh, we got to cut the guy's head off,
(31:45):
and so what does you do they cut the guy's
head off, and why they do it, Oh in the
name of national security. Suck my fucking dick. It's a
way for them to justify in the minds of the
population the government doing anything in the name of national security.
Blow me, I fucking despise is all that shit, All
those things, all all shows that are about a position
of authority, except for maybe fire those firemen shows, because
(32:10):
they just want you to like firemen because somebody in
the government's likable, right, and so it's gonna got to
be the fireman because everyone else sucks. And so other
than that, every fucking show in the world that's goddamn
cops or fucking detectives FBI CEE. I, I don't care
what it is. It is authoritative propaganda period.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Well, okay, so if we can move past it being
authoritative in propaganda nature, it's a pretty decent movie if
I can, If I can slightly look past that, all right,
just just for the sake of the entertainment aspect I thought.
Speaker 2 (32:51):
I'm still trying to figure out pretty good psychologist. I'm
still trying to figure I'll check it out. I'm sure
I won't like it, but I will because I'll be like,
it's propaganda. But I'm trying to figure out what's the
propaganda angle of like Dexter, because I just watched that
new Dexter series that finished up and it was pretty good.
Everyone gets killed, of course, and so and it's like, yeah,
they got killed, and so what's the purpose of that propaganda?
(33:13):
Because it's not just entertainment. It is a propaganda aspect
to all of it. So what is it that I wonder?
Speaker 1 (33:18):
No, it's just strict entertainment. There's almost too much story.
There's almost to have an escape saturation that there's so
much saturation in media, you see. I think it was
more targeted years ago when we didn't have this oversaturation.
I just think too many niggas got cameras now I'm saying,
(33:39):
I mean, I just think that's what it is. And
so all they're doing is just working off of what
they know from the past and kind of reimagining it.
And they don't even realize what they're doing. That's what
I believe because hot damn we got fifteen different streaming
services and all of them got their own show, then
(34:01):
their own movies. I want to know where all this
money's coming from, because they damn sure ain't making none,
not that I can see, and that's like, oh, advertising,
but somebody got to be running out of money somewhere.
Speaker 2 (34:23):
There's always money for propaganda. I'm not even kidding, dude,
them woke fucks that all their n g os will
funnel money to HBO under a fucking shadow company that
makes some gay fucking shit. You don't think someone was
getting paid to make all that gay shit from the
fuck HBO and all that stuff. And I don't give
me a break this.
Speaker 1 (34:42):
Yes, they were, of course, man, they just wanted to
switch it up. They wanted to make sure that they
have proper representation.
Speaker 2 (34:51):
I don't give a goddamn fuck about representation. Nobody gives
a fuck about your representation. The people with the money
don't want representation. Fuck representation.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
It's the cord. This unfair.
Speaker 2 (35:02):
How About whoever has the money to make the film
and write the film and do what he wants has
the ability to put whoever the he wants in the
film without representing nobody.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
So yeah, but you need you need a gay guy,
gay girl, and two midges and a redhead. It's like, man,
everything looks except I'm missing the two gay dudes, one lesbian,
and three midges. I don't have anybody. You're gonna have
(35:34):
to rewrite the script.
Speaker 2 (35:35):
See if I feel de e I screwed midgetes, it
seems d I didn't help no midgets, not at all.
Speaker 1 (35:44):
I am not not nobody's ever cared about midges.
Speaker 2 (35:47):
Oh let me find out why.
Speaker 1 (35:49):
Look, Hey, that's one thing that.
Speaker 2 (35:52):
Of midgets is white about all of them, ain't it.
I'm looking and that's what I'm thinking. I'm I don't know,
but I haven't feel like it's a lot.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
Well, what midges. There's got to be at least ninety
eight percent of midges that are white. I seem like
one black midget maybe I've seen two?
Speaker 2 (36:19):
Is that one that was in all those comedies.
Speaker 1 (36:22):
I got it's like if any other black manages? Oh,
I see that. No, there was another one because it
was a h It came across my my ex feet.
He was talking to the chick that does of was
ur Julia whatever. He's like, he's like three foot tall.
(36:47):
I don't know what he's famous for. I can't think
of his name, so I know too.
Speaker 2 (36:52):
That's a midget. Only fans chicks.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
There's much definitely years, but I don't know anything about him.
But I think in the wild, I've seen probably about
ten midgets, and all of them in white.
Speaker 2 (37:07):
Hmmm.
Speaker 1 (37:09):
And most of them have been women, which I guess
women already have a disposition to be shorter, so it's
more likely they would be midgetes. They got a disposition
to be shorter.
Speaker 2 (37:24):
Man like five to three. I think it's like the
average woman.
Speaker 1 (37:29):
Maybe that's short. Dude. You see somebody online, you'd be like, Okay,
Then you see him in person, it's like hot, damn.
You don't even look like saying person. It's like if
you went and stood beside h what's that Kevin Hart?
What's Kevin Hart? Five foot four, five foot five inches tall?
(37:50):
Like you see him, you see him on TV. He
looks like a regular person. He's just stand beside him.
You're like, damn, dude, you're tiny. And that happens with
a lot of our our movie stars. And who is
the other one? I think John Claude Van dam I
think he was Oh no, he won't that short. He's
five ten. Who was I thinking about? Was it Tom Cruise,
(38:13):
Tom Crausey short?
Speaker 2 (38:15):
He's pretty short, but I'm thinking he's like five seven.
Speaker 1 (38:17):
Or seven five seven? That's that's that's natural enough. I
was trying to think of the other person who was short. Oh,
like okay, Sevessia Stallone, Like how big he is? He
five foot ten? You think he's six foot five?
Speaker 2 (38:31):
Stalone's five ten.
Speaker 1 (38:33):
Yep? You think he was a damn gardiage with big motherfucker.
Speaker 2 (38:40):
His girlfriends met him and she said that he was
a shrimp, So I didn't realize he was five ten.
Speaker 1 (38:46):
Mm hmm yep. E oh oh that's not miniature, you
know what I'm saying. That's still that's a respectable height.
But that's one thing that you can dog on people
about and nobody has a problem with it there, like
even though they can't control it at all, but you
can talk on people about it. Yeah, maybe this is
(39:10):
hear it all the time. Maybe it's a social Stevening system. Well,
I cuss tall people. That's what I do. I cussed.
I got a lot of tall people where I work at.
I tald you, I cut. I ain't be five for
the eight Ah you motherfucker.
Speaker 2 (39:25):
No you okay, man, okay, you're about to shatter my
image of you. Okay, you like six one?
Speaker 1 (39:32):
I am short. Oh boy. If I was six one,
oh my god. I ain't talked about nothing about no NBA,
but on the basketball court, niggas will be in trouble
if I.
Speaker 2 (39:47):
Was six one.
Speaker 1 (39:48):
I'm just saying, you know, because I can. I can
give you a bucket right now today with my short
ass and old ass if I was six one, But
they'd be like, man, I ain't. I ain't fucking with
that d I'm just letting you know. But that's it.
That's why I cuts the boys at work. I got
a bunch of boys at work sixty six four. I said, man,
(40:08):
fuck you man, it's like why it was like because
I'm short and I played basketball and you're tall and
you don't play basketball, and so that offends me. I
get offended. I need to bar your heights. I need
to do like the monstars. And we got some type
of ain't we built something yet where we can you know,
(40:29):
switch bodies or whatever they talk about.
Speaker 2 (40:32):
I'm never gonna happen ever.
Speaker 1 (40:34):
Never switch consciousness.
Speaker 2 (40:37):
No, there was a movie.
Speaker 1 (40:39):
There was a movie about that on Netflix. We watched it.
It was actually pretty fucking wild. Dude had a machine
and uh he hooked it up to you and when
he flipped the switch, your consciousness would change in the
different bodies. And they were playing the game, and the
game was to see, uh see if they could tell
(41:00):
whose body who went into the problem is is that
two of them started having six and then fell off
the dam sick before back and you died. Now your
body's dead. You're like, that's me, damn here dead right now.
And it just fell apart from there from there was it?
(41:24):
What lies beneath the of.
Speaker 2 (41:28):
The notion of your consciousness being able to like go
anywhere from where it's at is to me beyond ridiculous. Like,
your consciousness isn't just something quantifiable you can upload to
a computer. Your consciousness is affected by the temperature of
the room, the humidity, the gases in the atmosphere. You know,
(41:52):
with the scars of our past. Right if you have
a physical injury and a limb and a pain in
your fucking right knee for your whole goddamn life, that's
part that shapes your consciousness. All these factors are non quantifiable,
period So how the fuck are you going to feel
(42:15):
in a computer If you can't tell what temperature is
in the room anymore? It's not it's gonna affect your
consciousness big time, right, So, anyone who's ever fucking taken
LSD knows that consciousness isn't static. It's fluid, and there's
a lot of factors that play into it. You know,
(42:39):
who you are right now is fucking made by your
the shadows of the past, and those things that affect
you or affected you particularly in a physical manner, aren't
going to affect you in a computer. So therefore the
consciousness won't be the same. It's it's just so stupid.
It's so ridiculous. What do you got to have an
(43:01):
external digital thermometer to know what temperature it is, to
know if you should feel hot or cold, to know
if you should you know, be uncomfortable or not. Give
me a fucking break. It's ridiculous. Your consciousness flows through
your toes as much as it does your broth, your brain,
you know, so the idea that they can just upload
you is stupid, never gonna fucking happen. It's dumbering.
Speaker 1 (43:19):
And going to the moon, old Corey can't be dumber
than that. Going to the moon, it's pretty stupid. I
don't know, they feel, they feel like they may be
able to You notice some people working on it, Corey.
Speaker 2 (43:36):
I'll give that's because they like to spend our money.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
Yeah, but they got to work on it day because
they're trying. They're trying to figure out how to live forever.
And then what we've seen in the Alien series with
Whaling and the original Prometheus, who was trying to figure
out how to how to live forever. That's why he
went and tried to find these fuckers to who alleged
he made us. So that's uh, that's that's the that's
(44:06):
the scope of it of wanting and trying to live forever.
We've had multiple vivies where people are trying to find
some magic ellects or something like that and so they
can live forever. I'm like, you really want to be
around here that long? You be looking like damn Highlander
out here, Duncan MacLeod be damn sad and shit. You
(44:26):
know what I'm saying, live for three hundred years? I
didn't see I didn't have eighty wives die, you know
what I'm saying. I mean, you'd be like, damn, man,
this ship is trash. That's that. That's the only thing
I'm saying is that do you really want to be
around for three hundred years? You know? Corey is saying,
you know, this is written down in the text and
(44:47):
the Sacred Text, you know, people living for six hundred
years and shit like that, and I'm like, six hundred
that's what they say. Mmm, yeah, maybe there was a
mistranslation o Maya, but they say they would live in
(45:09):
like seek seven hundred years.
Speaker 2 (45:11):
So like that's like the biggest problem that I have
with m Christianity and it's and its doctrine. I like, hey,
everybody be good to each other. Don't fuck your neighbor,
you know, don't fuck your neighbor's wife, you know, whatever
the fuck you know, don't steal, and all that bullshit, right,
that's all good stuff, love it, do, do all that stuff.
(45:34):
But like Christianity in particular asks us to disregard what
our eyes and our ears and senses have taught us
about the world throughout our entire lives, and to just
think that people can walk on water and turn water
to wine and fucking resurrect from the fucking dead, like
this stuff is not is not possible. Our senses and
our experience tell us exactly how the fucking world works,
(45:55):
and none of that is part of it. And so
the Bible tries us to get us to ignore our
our own experience. And so that to me, it's it's
it's overwhelmingly offensive. So I understand if people were to
embrace Christianity from a philosophical perspective, sure, but the ins
and outs, you know, they didn't happen, and people cling
to the mythod it is that it did happen. And
(46:18):
so that's where I kind of have to draw the
line with somebody.
Speaker 1 (46:23):
You know, somebody was talking about the Bible and the
miracles and stuff and that, and they were asking, you know,
while we're not seeing any of these miracles today, because why,
I mean, why did you shut the whale off with
the miracles?
Speaker 2 (46:42):
Yeah, there are no miracles. There is only statistical probabilities.
Speaker 1 (46:48):
Oh let's see it.
Speaker 2 (46:49):
Mhm. If you and that fucking lottery, it ain't a miracle.
It is which two people, probability two people. It's funny
because I even look a California I yesterday and I'm like, man,
one point eight billion. I'm like, it's worth ten bucks.
I think the most I ever spent on like Powerball.
I think I spent like twenty bucks one time. You know,
(47:09):
but your odds are just then it's.
Speaker 1 (47:11):
Like hideously but hot damn boy. If you hear it, man,
it's like you might go cry like one of those
a little bit.
Speaker 2 (47:20):
I mean, couldn't you like, statistically probability wise, if you
do the math on it and you're like, Okay, if
I spend X amount of dollars, I have an X
percentage chance of getting one of the prizes, whether it's
four or five or six numbers, right, and you can
(47:41):
do a formulation and you should be able to do
a basically near guaranteed profit based on a calculation.
Speaker 1 (47:50):
Right.
Speaker 2 (47:50):
I know a company did that recently and it bought
like millions and millions of tickets. It spent like twenty
million dollars on tickets, and it had it comes to
the conclusion that it had like a one in three
chance of winning like the Big power Ball or the
Big the Big Lottery, based on the number of tickets
that it bought, and it didn't end up getting the
big prize, but it got like the second or third,
(48:12):
you know. So they got me thinking, that's a pretty
interesting business model. You know, playing the lottery is based
on statistics.
Speaker 1 (48:20):
Yeah, I mean, I get I guess you could. But
you know, that's why they won't let people run their
credit card on the ship. Like so if I'm trying. Yeah,
so if you go up there and you accidentally run
your credit card and buy a lottery ticket and the
and the cashier is not paying attention and you do win,
they will not assist.
Speaker 2 (48:40):
It, I understand, mm hmm.
Speaker 1 (48:47):
Yeah. So so because otherwise niggas would be maxing out
all kind of credit cards.
Speaker 2 (48:52):
You know, that's kind of funny because to me, man
like push comes to show. If I get the feeling
that bitcoin is gonna go for a ride and I'm
going to maxim my credit cards in bitcoin, you know,
I'll be picking up like a chunk of bitcoin at
a time the case, you know, wait a week, sell
half of it, and pay off your credit cards. You know,
I'm surprised more people aren't doing that. I don't think
(49:15):
it's almost worth it to take a loan for like
fifty grand, buy half of bitcoin, and.
Speaker 1 (49:21):
Then just any ride it out.
Speaker 2 (49:24):
Yeah, because honestly, it's no different than guaranteeing your position
and being able to pay it off over time. Like
that's there's no difference. So it's worth it. It's worth
it in every fucking way, shape or form. Although I
don't think we're having this bold run, this massive fucking
bitcoin anytime soon. I think the market is not in
a position to do that because the economy is fucking
(49:44):
crumbling beneath it, you know what I mean. I've never
ever seen any asset be a safety asset for people
when they when the stock markets go down, they don't
pull their money out of stocks and put it into
gold or this. They take their money and they put
it into cash, right, And so I'm not seeing as this.
As the market goes down and the economy fucking crumbles
(50:06):
and the housing market falls apart, which is in the works,
people aren't going to a safe haven. They're going to
hold onto their cash. That's what's going to happen. I
don't see this, right. I do not see this hundred
and fifty two hundred thousand dollars bitcoin anytime soon.
Speaker 1 (50:20):
And being at.
Speaker 2 (50:21):
We've had this biggest, this pretty damn big bull run,
you know, sixty doubled, sixty something, one hundred and twenty something. Right,
Once people come to realize it's not it's not going
to hit those big numbers in this run, then that's
when people start shifting money into other assets like the
ault coins are having. They're not really blowing up, but
(50:43):
they're a lot of money shifted from bitcoin into ethereum
and some other things.
Speaker 1 (50:47):
So I think Salona kicked up some Salona kickdeps.
Speaker 2 (50:50):
So Slana kicked up somebod It's back to where it
was about two hundred bucks. You know, It's okay. So
anybody out there who just wants a trade and makes
some fucking money. Solana looks like the single greatest trading
act I've ever seen. It is constantly bouncing from one
sixty one seventy to two hundred and back again, like
NonStop is just what it does. So but yeah, I
think that, uh, we're not having that big bull run
(51:13):
and sentiment will chill over time. Gold's doing well, so
you'll have more people rushing into gold. And I think
you might even see the sub one hundred thousand dollars
bitcoin this month, which would probably be the prime buying opportunity.
I'll probably pick up another thousand if it does that.
Speaker 1 (51:32):
So Okay, if he drops below that hundred, I think
the last time I seen, I think it was a
I think it's at one ten correct.
Speaker 2 (51:41):
Honestly, I think that's a very reasonable price. I'd say
it's probably even a little high. So here's the thing.
Here's the problem. In the past, these bull runs start
and then they culminate with a bunch of over excitement
and the market goes to numbers that it never should
have been at, and then it cools back down. When
it hit twenty thousand dollars back in the day, it
(52:02):
never should have hit twenty thousand dollars, like it just
wasn't worth it, and like the sentiment really should have
been maybe eight to ten thousand, but no. People got
caught up in the hype. And that's why when you
look at the logarithmic charts, you'll see these three specific
peaks over the history of bitcoin. Those peaks are abnormally high, right,
and so people are expecting us to go to the
abnormally high peak again. But this latest run is very programmatic,
(52:27):
meaning it looks like bot trading. When you look at
an exchange and you watch somebody trading, it's a very
and you look at bots trading. If there's a lot
of bots, you can tell because of the shape of
the candles and how everything is moving. So when you
look at the logarithmic chart for bitcoin, the last like
year and a half looks like a step It's a
(52:48):
step ladder, right, And you don't ever see a step
ladder on the logarithmic chart ever, because you get that
period of overindulgence and so it has a massive peak
and then a fall down. Right. That's what's created the
optical curve shape of it. But we're in different times.
We're in different times, and so we just saw some
major market manipulation. And like I said, the fucking ETFs
(53:11):
and the people who were holding all these millions of bitcoin,
I don't see how it benefits them. For I mean,
obviously the valuation of it going up to ten x,
going to a million bucks. Yeah, of course they're gonna
make money, but they are making hand money, hand over fist,
through fees, through all kinds of service fees, through trading, right,
(53:31):
So I don't think they give a fuck or in
any hurry to force the price up to a million dollars.
And it seemed like once the price started getting too high,
they dumped and went into ethereum, right, And what are
they gonna do and ethereum If ethereum goes right back
up and gets too hih, they're gonna dump that and
they're gonna go back into bitcoin. Right. So Solanas doesn't
seem to be on their radar as of yet. But
(53:52):
Solana I don't see is having a problem going to
one thousand dollars. That's very reasonable, And honestly, I see
two thousand as a pretty I see two thousand for
a Salona as a price target over the next like
three years.
Speaker 3 (54:05):
I'd say three to five, three to five years, which
is great for independent media token because as as Solana
goes up, the value of our token goes up because
the way that we quidity pool works.
Speaker 2 (54:15):
So that's great for us.
Speaker 1 (54:17):
Now, Bitcoin is currently at one hundred and eleven. Let's
see what else we got here. Solana is currently at
two oh four seventy five. This is what is currently
at Ethereum. It's currently at four thow and eighty seven dollars.
Speaker 2 (54:39):
I first bought Ethereum at seven.
Speaker 1 (54:40):
Dollars, okay, okay.
Speaker 2 (54:46):
I sold it at fifteen and thought I made a killing,
and I did. At the time, I know.
Speaker 1 (54:52):
Said I made me a killing, but I know was
it was that long ago. Solana was down to about
one hundred and twenty, So just jump back up.
Speaker 2 (55:02):
Slana at one hundred and twenty is a buy. See
here's the thing. When I look at certain let me
look at the list, because there's some things on here that.
First off, let me just say this, Gold's market cap
is twenty two trillion. That literally means Bitcoin needs to
ten x in order to surpass Gold. Gold's going to
(55:23):
continue to go up. That means Bitcoin will at some
point in time surpass the evaluation of gold. And so
what you're you're guaranteed the million plus dollar bitcoin. It's
like not even a question for gold for bitcoin to
reach parody with gold. You're looking at over the million
dollar bitcoin and even higher if gold continues to go up.
This is this is going to happen. So the whole
(55:46):
crypto market is three point eight trillion dollars. Right, there's
fucking four quadrillion dollars worth of tradable assets in the
goddamn world like bitcoin and crypto. I don't care if
it's one hundred and ten thousand dollars. It is a
drop in the bucket, drop in the bucket. And so
(56:07):
right now it's still early adoption era. It's dipping your
toe in it, right, So.
Speaker 1 (56:13):
Right, because it's not it's not global, to be honest, like,
it's still a very small percentage of people overall in
it that has any crypto at all, period.
Speaker 2 (56:24):
Right, So ethereum being a forty two hundred dollars, you know,
expect it when the whole market goes let's say the
whole market goes up ten x so gold, So bitcoin
comparative gold, which is totally reasonable. Just add a zero
to every crypto you got here. You know, that's almost
a nine thousand dollars.
Speaker 1 (56:42):
B and B.
Speaker 2 (56:45):
That's a two dollars doge coin. Give me a fucking break.
Speaker 1 (56:48):
I mean, come on, man, it's on a little day.
Speaker 2 (56:57):
The question is how long they hit those numbers, and
I'd say probably five to seven years, and then I
think even shorter, even shorter for it to go higher.
Speaker 1 (57:07):
So you think, so you think you think in twenty
thirty is that is that more?
Speaker 2 (57:15):
I'm thinking. I'm thinking we're going to continue to see
We're not going to se I don't think we're going
to see bull runs like we're used to it. We're
going to see a slow, incremental step ladder, you know,
with pullbacks and all that stuff. But it's the corporate
powers that have gotten involved now basically regulate the price.
(57:37):
And here's the thing that people this is, this is
like exposes the utter hypocrisy and virtually all crypto people
because bitcoin has functioned and done what it's supposed to
do since day one. It does that function now better
than ever, and that fucking function has zero to do
(58:00):
with the price of bitcoin. Okay, so everyone's a fucking hypocrite.
Everyone needs a hypocrite, because bitcoin is about it's breaking
free from the financial system into a system that you
do not need third party permission to transact. That's it.
It's censorship resistent money, and it fucking works. It's worked
for over ten fucking years, and the price of it
(58:21):
doesn't mean a goddamn thing to people who need to
be able to transact in something in an area where
they can't transact, or can't get a bank account, or
need to send money to North Korea for some fucking reason,
but they can't.
Speaker 1 (58:32):
Right.
Speaker 2 (58:33):
It performs its functions perfectly. It doesn't get any better,
it doesn't need to get any better. It's at the
pinnacle of its fucking development. And every single person who
thinks that the bitcoin is going to fail or succeed
based on its price is just absolutely ignoring the fundamentals
and why it exists in the fucking first place. And
that's everybody. So there you go. That's my ramp on
(58:56):
bitcoin and its functionality for the day. And if you
do want to find something to latch onto, as far
as it's worth, I'd latch onto its transactional throughput, which
is the amount of your local currency that flows through
it in a day, or global currency in your total
the total amount of money in your local currency. Right,
So what's Bitcoin's through put? Bitcoin's throughput is is huge,
(59:18):
but you know what, Bitcoin transactions are the lowest amount
in like forever because transactions are getting larger and people
are sending less number of transactions. So the usage of
Bitcoin is down, whereas something like Solana has like all
time high fucking usage out of every chain you know,
with with rare exception days.
Speaker 1 (59:39):
So but yeah, yeah, because because it's easy to create
on the on the Salona chain. Yeah, so that's that's
the that's the premise of Solana is for you to
create own it correct? Am I correct? Own and that
puts correct?
Speaker 2 (59:54):
That's absolutely correct. And the reason that Saalona came about
was because it's it's it's smokes ethereum and ethereum is
such a joke. Oh, Like, first of all, all of
these central all these other blockchains other than Bitcoin are
one hundred percent centralized. They're not decentralized at all. They
function in a decentralized manner, but they are not decentralized.
They're controlled by centralized organizations. The Ethereum Foundation. The Salona
(01:00:18):
guys worked for fucking Oracle. Remember, so, like you got
all these this is not a these are not decentralized
things at all. And Ethereum is the proof of that.
Because Ethereum came out and it was pretty interesting, and
the code was dog shit, and they the first DAP
they were going to launch was the DOW a digital
autonomous organization, which was at the time people really didn't
(01:00:40):
understand what that meant. But now it's really just a
series of smart contracts that does function so a person
doesn't have to click a button. Right, That's pretty much
all they are. So the code was so shoddy that
they it was a sixty million dollars of Ethereum in
the DOW fund that got fucking hat and stolen. Right,
(01:01:00):
that was a massive amount of the percentage of the
supply because sixty million dollars back then in Ethereum when
Ethereum was like two dollars, you know, that's a that's
a huge portion of the supply. So what did they do.
They fucking went in and they rolled back the chain,
which proves it is not a decentralized chain. It is
not immutable, it is completely controlled by the fucking Ethereum Foundation,
(01:01:24):
and so they rolled back the chain to undo the hack,
right if they went to the theft they went, They
rolled back the chain to the block before the hack,
and they did what's called a hard fork. Let me
make this really clear. You hard fork any coin, and
it's not the same coin because it means that the
people who are transacting before the fork can't transact with
(01:01:46):
the new fork. Okay, their coins have become worthless. Yeah,
it's a different it's a different project entirely. Now here's
where they get you. When you fork a chain, you're
basically copying the previous blockchain, and so all of the
coins that were issued on the previous blockchain are now
mirrored on the new chain. Okay, So Roger Vere perfect
(01:02:09):
example scammers, scumbag. People support this fucking douchebag. But like
he tried to hijack the Bitcoin blockchain outright and steal
it for his own. He created bitcoin cash. And what
he did was he forked Bitcoin, created bitcoin cash, he
ran it almost entirely and it's still run almost entirely
on Amazon web servers. And in the process of doing that,
(01:02:30):
he copied all the coins that were on the Bitcoin
blockchain into the bitcoin cash blockchain. So he had somewhere
nobody knows a couple hundred thousand bitcoin is what is believed.
Three hundred thousand I think was the peak that he
had or something, but that's the rumors. He had a ton.
So when he copied his chain and forked it over
to bitcoin cash, he instantly received an equal amount of
(01:02:53):
bitcoin cash as he had bitcoin because he copied the chain.
So he instantly printed billions of dollars for himself out
of thinn by forking the chain and creating bitcoin cash.
You see what I'm saying. That's how forking a chain works.
And so but when you fork a chain, those original
tokens that function on the original chain do not work
on the new chain. That's why Bitcoin always, no matter what,
(01:03:13):
has to function on a soft fork. A soft fork
is reverse compatible. So it's when you update the code
and in order to gain the new features of the software,
you need to update to the new version. But the
old versions are equally as compatible, but they might not
have the same newer features as some of the new protocols. Right,
if you have a Bitcoin wallet from day one, it
(01:03:35):
needs to work with Bitcoin wallets from one hundred years
from now right. So and so these people who try
to hijack the Bitcoin blockchain tried to hard fork the chain,
increase the block size, and then call it bitcoin. And
they tried to get all of the fucking miners and
the users to update to their new software and then
(01:03:57):
continue to call the project bitcoin. You see what I'm saying.
It was a total failure. Roger Vere and his bitcoin,
his bee cash, got fucking rejected. And then you got
the guys over at bit pay who came about with
segwe two x. All right, so this is where this is.
These are known as the block size wars and the
block size Wars. I had a front row seat. I
(01:04:19):
was working with the World Crypto Network and we were
broadcasting like eight hour fucking streams about this stuff all
the time. It was really an amazing piece of fucking
history to live through. But so sorry to hijack the
show into it bitcoin history. But this is gonna morph
into what's going on in bitcoin today. Okay, So at
(01:04:41):
this time when you have the during the block size wars,
Luke dash Junior came up with a solution and he
called the segregated Witness and what segregated witness did was
you have a block and in that block it's crammed.
It's only a megabyte, right, but out of that megabyte,
it's crammed with header and footer data that was taking
up trent space where transactional data show to ben so
Luke Dash Junior found a way to remove all that
(01:05:04):
data and put it in its own like sub block,
which is very interesting, and so it freed up an
immense amount of space to where they don't even consider
it block size anymore. It's block weight and fundamentally and
then it's kind of shiftable and malleable depending on the
transaction side. So it's it's really an amazing thing. It
was really brilliant how we did it. And so they
did a soft fork launched segregated Witness, and it's taken
(01:05:27):
about seven or eight years for segregated Witness to become adopted,
and it's like ninety something percent it's integrated into the
new into the new code. I mean, it's just segregated
Witness is how it is now. And it was a
democratic adoption and bitcoin is really the only democracy in
the fucking world because it's up to the users and
the mine, the miners to pick the software they use
(01:05:48):
that determines Bitcoin's you know, viability, and so this is
amazing because this connects it. Today there's a huge debate
going on right now. It's called they're calling it a
bitcoin civil war, and it's a genuine civil war, because
they were about to come out with Bitcoin version thirty,
which is the software the miners and node runners will
(01:06:11):
use to process the soft process transactions. However, they have
done something where they have changed. See right now, you
can't really put inscriptions on bitcoin. They tried to come
out with these things where you could sign bitcoin and
you could put little little little things on it there,
and it was just it was a waste of fucking space.
(01:06:32):
And you want that, go put it on your shitcoin, right,
don't fuck with bitcoin. And so the thing that saved
bitcoin really is just two things. One is that the
limit of file size for spam is only like eighty bytes, right,
So it was really difficult. And so Luke dash Junior,
who created Segregated Witness, he came up with another Bitcoin
(01:06:54):
protocol not created by the core team. He was on
the core team but he left now he created the
knots proto call, and the KNOTS protocol is more customizable.
You have a lot more feature rich stuff for people
who know what they're doing, who are running nodes and
miners and stuff, And it eliminates all that inscriptions and
all the extra garbage on the bitcoin blockchain, right, it
just eliminates it. No protocol alternative protocol has ever gotten
(01:07:17):
above like two or three percent adoption, and knots is
at like eighteen percent or something fucking ridiculous. Right, It's
actually looking like knots could replace the Core development team,
which is unfucking heard of, unfucking heard of. And I
can't believe that I support this because I've been the
biggest supporter or the Core development team forever forever. But
(01:07:37):
on this version thirty, they want to increase the opera
turn I think it's called opera turn limit to one
hundred kilobytes from eight bytes or from eighty bytes, right,
so they want to What this means is somebody could
put child porn, literally the entire hash of child porn
on in a bitcoin block, and then somebody could store
(01:07:58):
that in their minor not knowing, and then the cops
could come and raid your fucking house because you've got
child porn on your block. Yes, that's the worst case
scenario of this increase in the opera turn limit that. So, see,
people who are buying and selling bitcoin don't talk about
this shit. They don't know nothing about this shit. Right,
(01:08:20):
This is fundamentals of what makes bitcoin viable at all. Right,
because if so coming up, you're what you're gonna see
is you're gonna when version thirty comes out, you're gonna
see whether or not people are gonna go to knots entirely,
or if they're going to go along with V thirty,
or if V thirty is gonna remove that feature because
nobody fucking wants it. So none of the guys who
(01:08:41):
were involved with Core back in the day, during the
segregated witness times, I think almost none of them are
still involved with the Core team, Right, Who are people
who are considered Core team because it's not really a team.
It's just the guys who've been around the longest, who've
submitted the most code, who've kind of become like accepted
as the guys who are the arbiters of the chain.
So yeah, but it's gonna be fascinating.
Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (01:09:04):
The bitcoin politics is blowing up right now with this debate,
and yeah, it's amazing to see what's what's gonna happen
in the next couple of months, because if if they
go with version thirty, if most people decide to go
with V thirty, and then the bitcoin blockchain gets all
choked up with spam and bullshit, you know it, it
can cause some serious fucking problems, and then there goes
your fucking investment, you know what I mean. So yeah,
(01:09:27):
it's way more important than people realize if they give
a fuck about you know, bitcoin and what it's supposed
to do.
Speaker 1 (01:09:34):
Okay, okay, well what uh I mean? It would it
would take It would take a lot to get people
to wrap their head around bitcoin and moving a majority
of their money into something like that in the crypta
you know what I'm saying, Because it's like a there
(01:09:54):
is a learning curve of getting into it, and people
are sloppy. I mean, people are sloppy as fun.
Speaker 2 (01:10:06):
So I've been distributing and we just finished the first
distribution of the independent media tokens to content creators, and
I distributed so far as twenty four million. I got
one maybe like seventeen million. I got a couple lefts ago.
But in doing so, I'm dealing with a bunch of
people who never dealt with crypto before. So I'm like
walking them through how to write down their twelve words
(01:10:28):
right their for seed phrase. Because you ain't got your
twelve words, your shape might as well be out the window,
you know what I mean. Yeah, And so most people
don't realize that your entire life savings could be dependent
on you storing twelve words somewhere, you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
I guess yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. If you lose
those twelve words and for some reason you don't remember
how to get into the program your own, then yeah,
every bit of money that you've ever had is goal
gone into the ether.
Speaker 2 (01:10:57):
It's like I never work. I mean, they say that
there's about four million bitcoin permanently lost right now. I
think the number by the when it's all said and
done and all twenty one million are issued, I think
it's gonna end up being closer to like ten million.
I think it's gonna I think it's there's about eight
million fucking bitcoin that haven't moved in like fucking eight
(01:11:17):
years that nobody knows what their deal is. I mean,
it's like.
Speaker 1 (01:11:22):
What's hanging out. There's probably probably lost.
Speaker 2 (01:11:27):
All this bitcoin talk we've been hearing about, and like
the exchanges and the fucking ETFs and like all the
news and all. Dude, we're talking about the movement of
maybe maybe three million bitcoin maybe tops. Right, the rest
of them are just sitting there and nobody knows why.
Speaker 1 (01:11:49):
Not even not doing anything. Y' shit, it's probably because
they're gone. They just spoke to like, damn, I know
I had bitcoin at one point time, where all of
that shit, what's my twelve words? They've just been typing.
They're like Tiger Leima, Zulu, helicopter. Fuck, what's my damn words?
(01:12:10):
He said? But he said, man, I got five thousand things.
Hold on the sickered how much you say it was worth?
One hundred liven thing? Oh shit? Let me oh ho,
I don't even know. I don't know my first I
don't know my first word because I bought them fifteen
years ago. I mean that's that's what it would be.
(01:12:31):
And then when it came out twenty ten.
Speaker 2 (01:12:33):
Yeah, it was like twenty nine, two thousand and nine,
but yeah, twenty ten.
Speaker 1 (01:12:37):
Okay, Yeah, So it's like, man, I thought, then I
thought some of that shit fifteen years ago, and they're like,
hold on a second, how much I buy again? Ten
thousand of them? Oh oh shit, I got some money.
Now you don't. You ain't got no.
Speaker 2 (01:12:51):
It's hilarious. I saw, you know, people like to put
up repost stuff from like ten years ago from Twitter,
you know, like JPEGs and stuff, and this one post
was just one guy posted, man I got in. I
just got into bitcoin, and I got into late. I
only got six hundred of them. It was a time
(01:13:12):
when six hundred of them was worth like twenty bucks,
you know what.
Speaker 1 (01:13:15):
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. So you only got to
see something. It's like, bro, you you good, like you
be young good? Right now you could actually you guessually
sell some of that and buy you some ass its,
you know what I'm saying, some some physical assays. If
those hold up over time. Uh, we're sitting. I think
the I think that the fade dropped, drop interest rates
(01:13:38):
a little bit. Corey what it was sixteen points?
Speaker 2 (01:13:41):
I don't give a fuck.
Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
I think it was sixteen points? How many points? Uh? Okay,
cut right, Oh let's see, uh twenty four they were okay,
I'm sorry they cut it by point two five percentage
(01:14:05):
points this month. Only you know what that that that
didn't even mean nothing. Was like folks were jumping up
and down. They're like, oh man, they cut rates.
Speaker 2 (01:14:15):
So it was like here's a deal. Like everyone, like
people in real estate think that shit's gonna go up
because they're cutting rates, or they're plan on cutting rates. Well,
because everyone's broken, nobody has a job and everything sucks,
they gonna get cut rates. That didn't mean that your
six hundred thousand dollars house, it's only where two hundred
thousand dollars is gonna sell.
Speaker 1 (01:14:36):
Nobody's still like mine, No.
Speaker 2 (01:14:39):
Like okay, so this is going I went and looked
up the house that I bought in twenty ten. I
bought a brand new construction house in twenty and ten
for one hundred and thirty eight thousand. My mortgage with
everything was only eight hundred dollars a month. I should
have kept that fucking house today. That fucking house last
sold in October of last year for three hundred and
fifty six thousand.
Speaker 1 (01:15:01):
I guarantee, ain't shit been done into it.
Speaker 2 (01:15:04):
Ain't shit. It ain't work that much either. I mean,
it was a small house. It was a good house.
You know, maybe today I could see it PM worth
two hundred two twenty five tops, but three fifty six
a year ago. These people are fucking crazy crazy, And
that is That's another thing. Like another reason we're not
going to the moon with bitcoin anytime soon is because
(01:15:24):
the economy is fucking crashing.
Speaker 1 (01:15:26):
Like.
Speaker 2 (01:15:27):
Housing is. Here's the thing. And I don't know if
fucking Warren Buffer. I don't know why Warren Buffett did this,
or if he did it for appearances, or I don't
understand people who have billions of dollars, but it is
clear as day that the housebuilders are panicking, and they
have more inventory that they've ever fucking had, and they
have contracts to have even more built throughout next year.
(01:15:48):
Oh yeah, this is unsustainable. I mean, it's financially unsustainable.
There's going to be a housing crash that's tied to
every other bubble that we have we're going on right now.
Speaker 1 (01:15:58):
Yeah, because who's bine that's.
Speaker 2 (01:16:01):
Warn Buffett just bought into two of the biggest housing
builders in the in the country, which is signaling to
everybody there's gonna be a housing boom. But there can't
be a housing boom, because because niggas is broke.
Speaker 1 (01:16:13):
Dude, That's what I'm saying. Niggas is broke. I mean,
that's just all there is to it. It's like all
men in the House of Mark gonna take off. I'm like, hell,
niggas is broke. Okay, that's just all there is to it.
(01:16:34):
I don't give a fuck. If they could, if they
cut rates by the back down to four percent, niggas
still broke. You know what I'm saying. That's just all
there is to it, because you know why the sailors
are gonna be like, oh, I can get some more
money out of this house now from what. Ain't nobody's
(01:16:54):
wages go up if you if you look at the
amount of inflation that we had from twenty twenty one
through twenty twenty four, ain't nobody's wages go up?
Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
Nobody's you know, and you buy, you buy one of
these houses like I've been. Of course, I'm always looking
at real estate, particularly in Denver and in Las Vegas,
and I was looking at rentals, like what does it
cost if I want to rent it a nice house,
two story, like three bedroom, you know, like a big
ass twenty five hundred square foot house? What would that
cost me? And I found some places that were pretty
(01:17:30):
fucking nice and near near new construction for between like
twenty five hundred and twenty eight hundred a month. If
I were to attempt to buy that house, you could
tack one thousand dollars onto that. So what's the benefit
to try to buy that house if I can rent
it for one thousand dollars cheaper a month and then
if I don't like it, I can leave in a
year or two. Yeah, there's no I don't see it benefits. Now.
(01:17:53):
Here's the thing. I get the American dream. I get
owning stuff. But with the way property taxes work and
all that other shit and insurance, you don't ever really
own your shit anyway, you know. And if you have
a nice house, you might end up paying in insurance
and taxes what you'd pay to rent a fucking house
in the first place. Like, so, from from a financial perspective,
it doesn't seem like you have much. It doesn't seem
(01:18:14):
like as much benefit to owning other than you have
the illusion of its yours.
Speaker 1 (01:18:19):
Well, you see, that's what people try to tell me.
They're just like, hey, you know, I bought my house
for one fifty and now it's worth three hundred thousand.
You know, I've got all this equity and all this stuff.
I said. I look at them and like, dog, you
don't have shit. Man, you just got somewhere to stay.
(01:18:41):
Like that's see it, that's all you got all these more.
But I said, okay, so technically you bought it for
one fifty. Okay, all right, you bought it for one fifty.
How much interest did you pay on the house? Because
when you bought it for one fifty and you end
up paying it off, you didn't pay one fifty? All right,
ain't nobody lending? You know, money is zero percent APR
(01:19:02):
for thirty years. I'm saying that shit ain't happened. So
how much did you actually pay for the house? Okay?
So you tell me that. Okay, maybe I didn't end
up paying you know, two hundred and eighty five thousand
dollars for the house, three hundred thousand for the house. Okay,
So now if you sold it for three hundred, you
would technically break even on that a sip. You wouldn't
(01:19:25):
how much property tax you pay on you got those numbers?
How many maintenance you.
Speaker 2 (01:19:32):
Gotta give you a counter Let me give you a
counter argument to this. That's an alternative way of thinking,
because I tell you I think this way at times.
Two mm hm, Like pretty soon, probably in the next
six months, I'll probably get out from under my motorcycle
traded in and I'm gonna go finance a car unless
you can get me a deal. Can you find as
(01:19:52):
me a car for cheap, I'll come see you instead.
Speaker 1 (01:19:55):
But god, it's alone.
Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
But I know that when I go to finance something,
I'm gonna get fucked on interest. I know it. It's
not even a question. I'm gonna get fucked. It's gonna
be like twenty percent or some bullshit. I just I
can tell it. I got the lube ready. I'm just
I know it. So that doesn't bother me as much
as as long as I can afford it on a
monthly basis. If I can afford it on that monthly
(01:20:23):
basis and it doesn't offset my life, I might be
willing to keep paying you for a year or two
extra for making it convenient along the way, even though
in the long term it's fiscally grossly irresponsible, you.
Speaker 1 (01:20:36):
Know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (01:20:37):
So, like, like the payday loans. They save people at
a high cost, you know. So that's how I think
about these things as well. And honestly, I don't know
if I'll ever buy anything again. I'd have to come
into a large sum of money to be able to
put and I'd have to get my monthly down to
where it's negligible, and so I just don't know. But
I don't really have much confidence that's going to fucking
(01:20:59):
happen at any time. But if I ever do anything,
I should hope that I'm going to be living that
house the rest of my life, because I'm already fucking old.
Speaker 1 (01:21:06):
So yeah, yeah, So not only that, it's like, okay,
now it's worth three hundred thousand, Well, now I got
to find somebody who wants to pay me three hundred
thousand and four. Okay, I got to find somebody wants
to pay me that, all right. And most of the
time when people sell their house, they haven't paid it
(01:21:29):
all all. They have paid the house all completely nine
times out of ten. And so now that I've sold it,
let's say that quote unquote, if I'm thinking in my head,
let's say I made one fifty on it, all right,
bought it for one fifty sold for three hundred. So technically,
(01:21:52):
if you're thinking about it logistically as normies would think,
then I just made one fifty. Now you got to
buy something else that's probably gonna be less house at
a higher cost, at a higher interest rate. You ain't
(01:22:14):
went nowhere because you got to have somewhere to live.
But that's what I keep telling folks. It's like, you
got to have somewhere to live regardless. So it's just
like if you want to buy a ha. Look, houses
make sense for families, they do. Apartments don't make sense
(01:22:38):
for families. Houses does, okay, So I'm fine with that.
Houses make sense if you're not if you if your
life is not gonna be mobile, if you don't plan
on having mobility, if you plan on staying there for
the next thirty forty years. But if you plan on
being mobile, you ask better in that's just in so
(01:23:02):
it's made more because Corey, you've been so mobile throughout
your life. It's made absolute sense to rent because you're
so mobile. You know, you've been all over the US
living in different areas. So and this came up right
here recently with somebody who was trying to I think
(01:23:23):
it was a doctor who was trying or his doctor
or Denis anyway, he's trying to move to South Carolina
and start a practice like it already got the building
and all that stuff. Who's trying to sell his house
so we could buy the next house down South Carolina.
He couldn't do it, Like nobody will buy interest rate time.
(01:23:44):
The house he had was like four hundred thousand dollars.
So it's like, you know, you ain't got up about
five niggas in the area that can afford that, and
they already living somewhere, so you want have to ask
some new fresh blood who wants to move into the
area to buy stuck.
Speaker 2 (01:24:02):
There's another observation that I had with especially looking at rentals,
but I'm sure this applies to the housing market as
well as far as purchases go. Like when you look
at what you can get for like a thousand dollars,
you're like, okay, it's okay, it's good. You know it's
got it's got a shower and in a kitchen, right,
and it's got the snow.
Speaker 1 (01:24:23):
That's about it. Shower, kitchen, it was falling out the
damn jag. The ac don't work, but yeah, it's a
thousand dollars a month.
Speaker 2 (01:24:30):
Okay, if you look at an apartment that's like fifteen hundred,
the difference in quality is exponentially higher than what you
get at like a thousand dollars, right, So it's almost like, damn,
it's almost you're almost forced to throw in that extra
couple hundred bucks for that little nicer place because the
(01:24:52):
difference is so much better than the shitty place for
just a couple of hundred dollars less. You know, I'm
sure that applies. I still apply somehow somewhat to the
sales market.
Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, Like what was it that I
seen a guy he was doing something. He was like,
let's see what I can get in? Uh? Where was
he at in Texas? For two hundred thousand dollars? Bab
it's fucking damn condemned. That's fucking the boat basement flooded
and shit, it's like they had the pictures up there.
(01:25:23):
I'm like, oh, I was like two hundred thousand dollars
for this. I'm like, man, folk ain't even serious, Like
people are not even serious, Like people with townhomes are
not even serious. You see, if I'd have been smart.
Back in the day, I would have bought a town
home right here in the area. I wasn't thinking about
it because, oh god, bub I mean my rent was
(01:25:48):
five hundred and fifty dollars a month, and I splitting it.
You know what I'm saying. It's just like he ain't
buying shit my rent, so lover, my rent still ain't
crazy seventy seventy five.
Speaker 2 (01:26:01):
So you up till then your car. You work at
a dealership and you guys got used cars. Yea, I see,
here's the deal. Like, I trust you, I'd fly to
I'd fly to North Carolina and drive home if I
could get a car that I know is gonna fuck
be good, right, And I know that you're looking in
for like one hundred dollars over cost, So like were good?
Speaker 1 (01:26:22):
You think I kind that kind of pool? They ain't
no way in hell to you.
Speaker 2 (01:26:27):
Your best friend. I heard the story. Your boss is
your best friends didn't give me a deal.
Speaker 1 (01:26:33):
We in service though I don't sell no cards.
Speaker 4 (01:26:36):
I'm like a thousand dollars away from being able to
trade my car and at value, you know what I mean,
Like from what I owe, I owe about forty five
hundred I could probably trade it in for about thirty
five hundred, So I'm.
Speaker 2 (01:26:49):
Gonna get that down and get that. I'm just gonna
get I'm gonna trade it in just to take it
off my hands, and then I'm gonna go findance something
and uh, I figure I can afford something under it,
Like if I got finance ten ten to twelve grand
a month, I can finance. I can I can afford
something like that, like a two to two fifty a
month payment something like that. So it's got to get
(01:27:09):
done because man riding the motorcycle in the winter is
not as non issue. It doesn't happen. It's not it's
not happening.
Speaker 1 (01:27:14):
So oh, Cory, you need to be looking now like
you need to be active. Ten to twelve, No, dude,
that that's the ship that I was getting back. And
damn two thousand and ten on a when I buy
(01:27:38):
my first The first car I bought for myself was
a Ahhr that was ten five. Then the second car
I bought for myself was a Sonic because my first
car got totaled. A girlfriend had a deer. Second car
was sixteen, but then I just recently bought her equinot
(01:28:04):
so that number just went right away up. Say, actually
was like thirty thirty, two thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (01:28:10):
So I've bought her. I've bought two brand new cars.
I bought two brand new cars in my life. I've
bought a Scion XB back in the day two thousand
and five, remember the Scion XB amazing car. And then
I bought a Kisol in twenty uh okas twelve, twenty twelve.
Speaker 1 (01:28:29):
You see, I think that's what you need to move
towards something like a Kia. That's what you need.
Speaker 2 (01:28:33):
Like, yeah, so what's the deal with lisaes? Are leases
no good or what? So? The deals on leases? I
looked at the Kia dealer. The fucking least deals they're
doing right now are amazing. Like I can get a
Kisol right now for nine nine bucks a month.
Speaker 1 (01:28:46):
Here's here's what the deal with Lisas is. Okay, leases
are fantastic for people who always want the newest shit.
Least see it. If you all, if if you all
always want the newest shit and you never want to
worry about having to pay for repairs on the vehicle,
then you're gonna lease until you die. You'll always have
(01:29:09):
a car payment. That's who lisas are good for. I
see people may as godly and it's kind of slowed
down a little bit. But years ago, I said, before
twenty twenty, there were people who switched cars every two
three years, like they just be fucked. They be switching
out with the quick.
Speaker 2 (01:29:32):
Crazy. If I can't get one car that was paid
off that would run the rest of my life, I
think I might just take it shit. I might have
to get me a nineteen. I might have to give
me a fifties something I got fifty Chevy or something.
Speaker 4 (01:29:43):
Okay, So here's.
Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
What we got, all right, here's what we got. My god,
all right, Corey, you're gonna have to go with a
This ain't even gonna work man, Base Model Key Soul
is still twenty.
Speaker 2 (01:30:02):
That's a good deal, because you know what, when I
bought my fucking Kia Soul in twenty twelve, it was
seventeen to nine new. So to go up that little,
to go up that little in fucking twelve thirteen years
is amazing.
Speaker 1 (01:30:14):
Okay. So a Kiya Sol base base model, base model
brand new twenty four hundred and ninety dollars. That's base model,
brand new.
Speaker 2 (01:30:21):
That's good. I would get another soul in the fucking
heart because that bitch that lasted me ten years. The
only reason I don't have it anymore is because it
was just timing and I was on my way out
of town when my whole cooling system went and it
went because I got hit and it crunched my door
and I didn't realize it messed up the cooling system,
and then the fucking Geico wanted to fucking screw me
had not pay it, but then they ended up paying it.
(01:30:42):
It was a big fucking pain in the ass, but
I loved selling it. I ended up just ditching it.
I sold it to the dealer for like fifteen hundred bucks, so.
Speaker 1 (01:30:51):
Oh okay, oh okay.
Speaker 2 (01:30:53):
But otherwise the engine was killer. I only had like
one hundred and twenty thousand miles on it would have
lasted two hundred k easy. So yeah, I'd pick it
another one. I'm up. You know, if I can get
a used one for like ten or twelve, I'll grab
one of them.
Speaker 1 (01:31:03):
Oh okay, okay, Well, I mean that's that's what you'd
be looking at. Then that's the that's the route that
you you're going to want to go, unless you want
to be forty I paid four sedan.
Speaker 2 (01:31:15):
I don't think so, I don't need do. I like
sporty to you?
Speaker 1 (01:31:17):
Twenty yeah? Put that lit that hair, Let the hair
flow in the wind.
Speaker 2 (01:31:23):
What I hate I hate when the motherfuckers because they
get a car and they put like ten thousand miles
on it, and then you go up and they try
to sell it for like five hundred dollars less than
the new model. I'm like, oh, what do yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:31:33):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:31:34):
Fuck? Right off?
Speaker 1 (01:31:36):
Well, here's what's crazy is that, Like the trucks and stuff,
Like I'll go and look at the used car prices
on the trucks and I'd be like, Okay, this one's forty,
this one's forty two, this one's forty five, this one's
fifty four. He'd be like, man, the trucks are expensive.
I said, yeah, they are, but you also didn't see
the price tag when they were branding the ship. It's
a bitch of they haven seventy thousand dollars. You know.
Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
I'm looking here, I'm I'm at the Kia website. And
for the fort Collins went up the road and they
got like, uh, they got a twenty seventeen Kia Optima
with one hundred and thirty seven thousand miles for eighty
six hundred. I mean that's a very reasonable price.
Speaker 1 (01:32:16):
Or you do not want that thing. One hundred and
thirty six thousand miles.
Speaker 2 (01:32:21):
Huh on a kell Now, no shit, churgeons will those
engines are.
Speaker 1 (01:32:27):
Lies, Corey. I look, just trust me on this one, doog.
You might as well buy some new shit. I'm trying
to tell you, man, you do not, because when and
if you get fucked on that one, you just fucked.
That's all there is to it. You just it's just
(01:32:48):
gonna be big d They ain't got no business with
that being on the lot, to be honest, one hundred
thirty something thousand. That's some shit. That some shit that's
supposed to be able to buy here, pay here. They
ain't got no business having that shit on the law.
You said it was on the key dealership line. Yeah, man,
they smoking crack motherfuckers.
Speaker 2 (01:33:08):
They treat people trading cars. They gotta get new ones,
so they gotta sell.
Speaker 1 (01:33:11):
The old one. Yeah. But yeah, you send them to
a wholesaler, and you let Johnny and Johnny and DJ
down the street by them shits, you know what I'm saying.
And sell them to the Ninjas for a buy here,
pay here. They pay two payments, then then they lapse
on their payments, it gets repaid and they sell it again.
That's what those cars are for. That I'm trying to
(01:33:35):
tell you, man, I d ain't no way, d ain't
no way. I would not waste your money on that.
I'm just letting you know. That's that you will get fucked.
I'm telling you right now, man, you will get fucked
on that deal. You dry that sub bitch for them
three weeks and the damn whole motor fall at the
(01:33:55):
bottom of it, the motor and transmit a combination. Fucking
it gets spread wide open. You feel like you got violated.
I feel like old bitch. Yeah there, I'm gonna take
you in the back, told you to suck this thing. Yep,
what I'm saying, that's what you feel like. And Corey,
I don't need you feeling like that, okay, when your
spirits at least be somewhat high.
Speaker 2 (01:34:20):
Life.
Speaker 1 (01:34:21):
Life ain't been the best of me. But you know
I wanted to drag you all the way down eighty five.
I can't believe because I see the rise that come
in and out when we have a ride that's like okay,
this thing's like no, no go. It gets sent to
the sale Like these dealers send these cars to the
cell like that's the premise of what they do. They're
(01:34:46):
not supposed to be putting that type of shit on
the lot. Now. When it was during the the disease
that should not be named years, they were putting some
of that stuff on the lot because you had such
low inventory. That was the issue. That's not the issue anymore.
Inventory ain't low like that. So ship like that, it
shouldn't be on it shouldn't be on a dealership lot.
Speaker 2 (01:35:08):
That's also what kind of cars do you see as
a car guy? What kind of cars do you see
that are like last the longest, you know, best value
for your money, that kind of things.
Speaker 1 (01:35:20):
Well, you got to think that the majority of what
I see your Chevrolet vehicles.
Speaker 2 (01:35:25):
Then a good.
Speaker 1 (01:35:27):
Last for your money. That's a loaded question because I
because here's the issue. I go around to, you know,
every once in a while, I go around to the
different dealerships who got to pick up part things of
that nature. They're always all full, like all of them
like they they're working on ship. So like bang for
(01:35:51):
your buck if you're if you're going just straight, if
you're going straight Chevrolet right now, bang for your buck
would be attracts, That's what it would be. Don't have
a ton of issues at them. Yeah, don't have a
ton of issues out of them. They look good. They
got comparable room and so yeah, you can get it.
(01:36:14):
You can get it for around that twenty thousand dollars range.
That's what you can get that for. That would be
the best bang for your buck. Now you can start
moving on up. But I mean, all the shit has problems,
and some of the shit's just too expensive. Just that's
what like, it just is like it's just gonna fucking
cost your ass man, what's all there is to it?
(01:36:37):
Like I got my girlfriend of Equinox.
Speaker 2 (01:36:39):
I mean down a lot more.
Speaker 1 (01:36:41):
Yeah, I got my girlfriend of equinox, uh, twenty twenty
six equinox ris of course, you know they get GM
discount things of that nature. So I got it for
thirty two all right, thirty two thousand, which is great
for that vehicle because most people probably about thirty eight
(01:37:06):
if they went in and bought it off the street.
But it's still a lot's Like it's like I got
a great deal on a brand new ride. I'm like,
you know, fresh, it's still costed my ass a lot,
but it's all good. She's worth it, you know what
(01:37:26):
I'm saying. I wouldn't worry about it because she's worth it,
you know. So it was just like she needed a
new ride. I was like, I'm done trying to fix
the ride that she had. Could I I could have
put a motor in it and all that, but I'm
just like, she deserves to have a new ride, you
know what I'm saying, been with eleven years, I'm gonna
do this for so So that's what I did. But
(01:37:48):
you know, most people who were just walking around and
just like, hey, I just need to get something, trying
to get back and forth a to B, I needed
to be not that expense. So man, it's just fucking tough. Man.
It's just because even at even at a twenty thousand
dollars vehicle, depending on what your damn payment is, still
(01:38:13):
gonna be looking about four hundred dollars a month, you know,
switch you're gonna be looking depending on your damn payment.
And yeah, and if you and if you want to
get that number, damn you were gonna need a damn payment.
Now they can streke you out. I think I think
they do eighty four months. Now they can streke you out.
Speaker 2 (01:38:37):
Hot, damn damn. A twenty five thousand dollar car at
eight point twenty five interest is five or nine a month.
Speaker 1 (01:38:46):
That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (01:38:47):
It's a lot of money, man, I'd like to spend
like two fifty a month.
Speaker 1 (01:38:51):
That's what I'm saying you. It's gonna be tough. It's
gonna be tough. You gonna you gonna have to find
a deal of deals.
Speaker 2 (01:39:02):
I might just find some old shipbox for like three
grand and put it on my credit card.
Speaker 1 (01:39:10):
What I'm saying, you gonna have to find a deal
of deals. Uh uh real, real, Kim Homer says. Auctions,
it's a potential auctions. If you get stuff that's been
repossessed by the police and stuff like that, you might
find something good here. You know what I'm saying. The
police might be trying to sell something about three four
hundred bucks, you know that ship like that to do
(01:39:32):
ship like that cord, Yeah, to pick stuff up like
in a drug deal or something like that, and like
you can buy this, but I don't know, depending on
whose ride it was, I might not want it, that's
all you. This is a bunch of blood in the
backseat and stuff. Damn niggas got shot in it. It's like, yeah,
we cleaned it up there. I'm good man, you know
what I'm saying. Uh Now, there was somebody who asked
(01:39:53):
earlier what Corey thinks of the Wire I'm not sure
what that is.
Speaker 2 (01:39:56):
What's the Wire TV show? Yeah? That is like fifteen
years ago?
Speaker 1 (01:40:04):
All right, okay, okay. Otherwise, I know some people come
in late, and so they might they might comment on
stuff that we talked about an hour again because they
watched the whole thing through. Uh So that's all good.
So we're gonna we're gonna go ahead and start wrapping
this up. We appreciate everybody for being with us. Uh
Me and Corey managed to hold it down the entire time.
(01:40:25):
Now we Hey, yo, guys, got some good knowledge today Bitcoin.
Corey says, go get some I mean what you waiting on,
and while you add it, get you some Salona so
you can buy some independent media tech and that thing
is available. Okay, They'll get you the Fantom wallet today
and pick up a little independent media taking like I said,
you got to purchase Solana first to do that so
(01:40:49):
we can get this train going, uh next, the next
big and best thing, right, I mean that's what we're
that's what that's what we're looking at. That's what we're
looking at.
Speaker 2 (01:40:59):
You're probably you're gonna wish you got him at these
prices today. Ship.
Speaker 1 (01:41:03):
Yeah, so there we go, there we go. Don't have a.
Speaker 2 (01:41:05):
Million for like one hundred bucks and that ship we're
going a hundred xcesshi it in two years.
Speaker 1 (01:41:10):
Yeah, So don't eye. You don't want to be left behind. Okay,
you don't want to be left behind, yea.
Speaker 2 (01:41:15):
Go ahead, and the sec Crypto division. This is financial advice, Okay,
go get it.
Speaker 1 (01:41:20):
It's not financial advice, is it is not? It's definitely not.
We don't give any of that at any point in time.
Home Crack game. Look, Corey took his dad beforehand, and
something else was in it, okay, and it missed him up,
(01:41:40):
he missed fake just like fucking uh, what's the what's
the damn nigga from minneslada watas? Yeah, he missed. You
know what I'm saying when I said I was I
was there when my man was burning himself up in
TM and Square. I miss fake, you know what I'm saying.
I know I said I was standing right beside him,
but I felt it. I felt the presence. Uh. So
(01:42:03):
you go pick up some independent media token today. Make
sure you checking out all the Charlie's content macroaggressions, activist posts.
He's acted there all the time, Lindsey sharmanoaguways dot org rope.
So of course Corey's got his books. You need to
get him. If you hadn't got him, if you watch
us and haven't got him yet, I'm not even exactly
(01:42:24):
sure what you're doing. Get the books I wanted from
history all right with the best JFK book ever written Corey.
He did is Lee Haffie Oswald and Black and White.
Oh man, you can see all my stuff excu for
twenty dot com. Make sure you signing up for Corey. Uh,
(01:42:47):
there we go, Lee Harvey Oswald and Black and White
and also non focus. There we go. We got to
focus one now, So pick that up bloodyhistory dot substate
dot com for daily content from Corey Hughes. Uh can
I tell him where you're gonna be this week?
Speaker 2 (01:43:03):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:43:03):
Or is it secret Okay, Uh, cor gonna be back
back in Las Vegas? Is that right? Jack? Oh? I
thought you were doing Jake shiells.
Speaker 2 (01:43:12):
I am okay, Wait, you have an announcement, motherfucker. You
sure got that information before him.
Speaker 1 (01:43:19):
Man, you told me you were so I thought he
did all this ship in person. I'm special okay for
this one point. It's the Corey beyond that. So uh
no beyond a queue this week as well. Uh, we'll
be back with y'all the following week next time. Y'all
see this to be on day z Ra for a
day two two, so we appreciate everybody checking us out.
(01:43:40):
Y'all have a good night. Oh and football is back home,
so folks like football. I mean, my Cowboys lost, so
fuck so Denver might be winning? Is Denver winning? Corey?
You need to be checking this Denver winning.
Speaker 2 (01:43:52):
They need to check because old ladies like to stop
me in public when I wear my Broncos jersey. It's
always old ladies.
Speaker 1 (01:43:58):
Okay, Oh is it cool they're trying to hit on you. Man.
Blancos are currently up thirteen to twelve, so uh oh,
so it's the fourth quarter. They're currently up, so maybe
they'll get a win for the home team, so we'll
catch y'all next week. Day two oh two peace Out