Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Welcome to That's based Happy Saturday.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
It's the big Show.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
I'm your host, Caleb Salvator reporting from somewhere underground. We're
laughing our way through the end of Days, brought to
you by Outlaw Streamers Live three six y five on
Chris Baker Radio and our friends over at Blood of
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the upsides of these monsters and red bulls and all
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negative side effects. No more, how or at least for me.
I'm not a doctor. I can't guarantee it for me.
I switched from Monster to Liquid Freedom and then my
(01:30):
heart palpitation stopped.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
That's that's all I can say.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Okay, but if you got to drink blood at tyrants
dot com right now and use the promo code base,
you'll save ten percent off your order at to check
out okay stock calling me out, the red face of
white supremacy.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Is with us as always on this fine Saturday morning.
How's it going.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
Good?
Speaker 2 (01:49):
Good?
Speaker 1 (01:50):
It's uh, hopefully everyone had a happy Halloween last night.
You're not too hungover or you are hungover and you're
listening to me scream? What a better way to recover
from it? I have spent so we handed out candy
last night, and I decided to spend after the trigger
treats got done, so about nine to ten o'clock and
(02:13):
then all of this morning, spreading hysteria on next door,
claiming that with multiple.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
Accounts from different.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Upity looking middle aged white women as profile pictures, I
used AI to generate all of them, claiming anything from
razor blades to needles to fentanyl were found in my
children's candy and I have created. There's an episode of
the Twilight Zone where they go and.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
They think that these new nav these new people in.
Speaker 1 (02:47):
The neighborhood are Aliens and they burn their house to
the ground and it's all just like this military syop.
I am syopping my neighborhood right now to see who
they turn on first.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
I think, who do you think they're gonna flip.
Speaker 3 (03:00):
On people across the street?
Speaker 1 (03:05):
No, watch it backfires that come after us like they
are the newest ones here. That's now, that was a joke.
I'm not actually doing that. But we do have a
whole lot of stuff to talk to you about. This week,
we are going to go over the government shut down,
the EBT. Gavin Newsom has got a new persona. There's
(03:25):
every week we find a new side of Gavin Newsom.
I can't wait. Gavin Newsom's eventually going to come out
and start talking in an Indian accent by the end
of By the end of twenty twenty five, I guarantee
you Candace Owens.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
No, we're not going to talk about Candas Owens.
Speaker 4 (03:39):
Never mind.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
Maybe we will. We'll see if we can fit it
in Italy's.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
Got an interesting new law, We've got White House expansion.
Speaker 5 (03:45):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
The Democrat Party in Delaware and Maine is just absolutely
falling apart. Obviously, in Maine we had the Nazi guy
a couple of weeks ago, and now we've got some
more horrible news. And then Venezuela and the United States
appear to be on the brink of I wouldn't call
it a war, but some type of military conflict I
don't know. But before we do any of that, we're
(04:07):
going to get into the current state of the left.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
Excuse me, it's ma'am, all right.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
This week on the current state of the left, we
have got we've got three new contestants for everyone's favorite game,
which liberal most belongs in a mental institution?
Speaker 2 (04:22):
Now here's the rules. They're very simple.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
We've got three contestants, and as we know, all liberals
belong in a mental institution. But by rule, one of
them must belong in it more than the others. It's
just it's how it works. It's a matter of fact,
if you've got three hideously ugly people in front of you,
one of them has to be the most attractive. It
doesn't mean they're the most attract It doesn't mean they're attractive,
They just happen to be more attractive than the other two.
(04:46):
This is the same thing here. We're going to figure
out which one is the craziest. You drop a comment
on YouTube, rumble or that that's based with Caleb savat
our facebook page or the group where you can interact
with me directly and let us know who you think
it is. Okay, we've got our first contesting here, Mia,
take us.
Speaker 6 (05:02):
Away septim theory, the second theory that you guys are
just jealous that I am swag, awesome, gay, and yeah,
that's it. Really those are were the three things that
I am, swag, awesome, and gay.
Speaker 1 (05:25):
That's me.
Speaker 6 (05:27):
But for real, this septum theory shit is so fucking stupid,
Like sincerely, like what are where are we? There are
so many more important things to talk about here on
this fucking app right now, Like if you're commenting septum
theory under my posts, I'm blocking you.
Speaker 1 (05:47):
Mia, Do you know what the septum theory is? I
guess I should provide context. The septum theory is theory.
I think it started on either TikTok or Twitter. I
don't remember, But basically, what it boils down to is
that if you see a war with the septum piercing
about to give a hot take on a political, social,
or economic issue, it's going to be retarded and it's
(06:08):
not worth your time to listen to it. That That's
essentially what it boils down to. That video just kind
of proves the point a little bit further. Are you
jealous of whatever that thing was there? Are you jealous?
I'm so jealous, so jealous? I know I am too.
You know, as soon as I saw it, that was
the first thing that came to mind was, Wow, I
share am jealous? I sure am jail. What was it wearing?
(06:33):
It was like a bra, It.
Speaker 3 (06:36):
Looked I thought it was a bra at first, but
it had like there was something underknee, so it looked
like just like a weird top.
Speaker 1 (06:45):
Okay, I was about to pull out my card dress
for the body you have, not the body you want.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Well, now it's time for our second contestant, in which
liberal most belongs in a mental institution, and this is
a very special one. This is Jennifer Welch, a mother
and political activists from Oklahoma. Now we've talked about since
the election, not just us, but all over how the
Democrats need to find their Joe Rogan, which is hilarious
because they used to have a Joe Rogan and his
name was Joe Rogan, and then they ran him off
(07:13):
when he didn't endorse the Democrat that they wanted and
he basically gave him the finger. Well, Jennifer Welch they
think could be their Joe Rogan. How, I don't know.
We'll play a clip you let us know if you
think this sounds like the Joe Rogan of the left here,
That's what I'm saying, is that she's their Rogan.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
God.
Speaker 7 (07:30):
Finally, if you think the Zorn thing is happening just
in New York and you think people are waking up
only in New York City, you're mistaken. Look at this
clip of a wine mom at the No King's March
play the clip.
Speaker 8 (07:45):
Ord's name was Charlie Kirk Klem Yeah, him is horrible.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
Horrible.
Speaker 7 (07:49):
Charley Kirk is horrible.
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Yes, somebody's not here. You're glad he's dead.
Speaker 8 (07:54):
Yes, why would you say something like that?
Speaker 3 (07:57):
Master?
Speaker 7 (07:57):
He was horrible on the campuses, the college campus is
horrible person, you know, what I do the exact same thing.
Speaker 3 (08:04):
Would you be glad if I would die?
Speaker 2 (08:06):
Maybe I'd have to think about it.
Speaker 8 (08:08):
You should be ashamed of yourself, ashamed of yourself. Your
friend just that she'd be happy if I died.
Speaker 7 (08:19):
So listen, at Democratic Establishment. You can either jump on
board with this shit or we're coming after you in
the same way that we come.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
After Maga period.
Speaker 7 (08:30):
Stop taking a pac Many go on and that's all.
I'm sorry. I took a pack Many atonement tour. If
you want to stay in pact.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
That was the important part. What she said at the
end there. The message is for you, and it's what
I've been telling you guys all along, is that the
mob will come. The mob is constantly hungry. Its appetite
is never fully satisfied. It has to continue to eat.
It cannot stop eating. It has to find something. And
(08:59):
what it runs out of Conservatives in this theoretical world
where they've killed or imprisoned all the Magas and conservatives
or whatever.
Speaker 2 (09:06):
They're going to find a new target.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
And she just said the quiet part out loud there,
which is Democrat establishment, the Andrew Cuomos of the world.
Do you know these like who's another example, like Chris
Coons in Delaware. These guys that have been around forever.
If you don't get on board with the radical agenda
of just openly celebrating the deaths of people that you
disagree with, they're coming for you next.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
What is coming for you next? Mean, I don't know.
We're gonna have to use context clues.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
There.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
They were talking about Charlie Kirkin. Now, it was a
good thing he was dead. So why don't you put
two and two together and figure out what that means
they're gonna do to you next.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
That's how it always works.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
You think it's cool running with the mob, until the
mob runs out of people to go after and starts
eating itself from the inside out, until it sets its
tights on you. There is a song about it. There's
a band called Against Me. Yes, I know the singer's transgender.
Now he wasn't when the song came out. That was
in high a freshman in high school and this song
came out. Then a song called I was a teenage
(10:03):
anarchist and it was all about you know, he was
fighting for the cause to bring down the man and
stick it and you know, take the government down and
all this left of shit, and then he says, at
the end of the song, they get to the last verse,
he said, they set their rifle sights on me.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
The revolution was a lie.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
He realized that everyone that when they ran out of
targets to go after, they weren't satisfied.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
They had to keep going after Mia.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
We know someone like that who's just not happy unless
they're raging against someone or something. They've constantly got to
be at war with somebody or some institution trying to
sabotage them and ruin their lives. And it's a very
sick way to live. But that's how the radical left operates.
They will never be done, and when the so called
(10:49):
establishment democrats are gone, they'll just continue to move the
goalpost further and further to the left. So you may
feel like you're a radical of radical socialist right now,
and you may like maybe you're like you're a radical
right now right and you think it's funny that Charlie
Kirk died, but it's like, I don't think I would
go as far to do something like that myself. Well,
guess what, when they've gotten rid of all the establishment democrats,
(11:11):
you've become the new establishment, and they're gonna go to you.
That's why it's so unsustainable. It's lord of the flies.
They just burn the whole thing to the ground. That's
their Joe Rogan though. That's what they've got. This unemployed
housewife who's probably a functioning alcoholic, that has a little
Southern drawl to seem relatable to people, that celebrates the
(11:33):
death of political opponents as they have. She will never
go on a conservative show, she'll never talk to bring
anyone on her show that's to the right of Stalin.
But that's their Rogan. That's their answer, and they still
don't get it. They still don't understand perfect. Let them
dig their own grave. I don't give a shit. We've
got one more contestant for which liberal most belongs in
a mental institution, and this one might be the taker.
Speaker 9 (11:55):
I miss sing your face, well, I miss being safe.
There is violence in disease. Please tell me again how
you disagree with the scientific studies as you mock disability.
It wasn't hard for me to learn better and do better,
to understand that we all share air together, and that
to continue to center my own comfort and pleasure is
to do the work of the oppressor. You cave to
the pressure to uphold the status quo, to throw up
(12:17):
your hands and say, well, that's just the way things go.
When black or trans are their marginalized folks are disproportionately
becoming too sick to leave their homes. You post fuck columbus,
but your actions condone the very same practice as the
colonizers honed. And if it isn't enough to care about others,
the numbers don't lie. You are going to suffer. If
you don't want to listen, you can't say we didn't warn.
You may feel easy now to ignore and conform to
(12:38):
the normalization of chronic illness and pain, but it does
beg the question why do you have the right to name?
You complain about staying at home for a few months,
Meanwhile your children develop scar tissue on their lungs, while
COVID now higher in children than asthma, just more evidence.
We fall for their propaganda because they try to say
kids aren't harmed by the virus, But tell that to
myologic andcephalomyelitis. Every break in transmission prevents death and divisibility.
(13:01):
Is it really that hard to wear a respirator to
get groceries believe me. I don't want this to be
the reality, but it can't be ignored when it's spreading
so rapidly. If you wonder if you would have cared
during the AIDS crisis, you're doing it now, but it's
not too late to revise this.
Speaker 1 (13:15):
Do you like that little rap? I didn't know it
was a rap. Did you like the little hip hop
going on? This should have got a beat going.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
Yeah, I think it was like slam poetry.
Speaker 1 (13:24):
Oh see all the rhymeen and shit, that's what Eminem
would have been like if you would have just chose
mental illness over drugs.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
You know that's uh yeah, So.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
There you go. Black and trans people can't leave their
homes because they're getting COVID at disproportionate rates how I
don't know. Evidently the virus is transphobic. I never knew that.
I just became a big COVID fan.
Speaker 2 (13:48):
No, I'm joking. I wasn't aware. I just love.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
I'd mean, we're five years removed from this thing and
people are still on it brought to you by Pfizer.
We are We're five years removed from this thing, and
what's hilarious?
Speaker 2 (14:05):
You play the pfisor clip.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
But what's hilarious is that's the type of person that's
gonna go on on social media because you know, they
don't leave their house. And you know what, I really think.
I think this is an excuse because nobody invites them
to anything.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
That's really what I think.
Speaker 1 (14:20):
All these people that are still hooked on COVID, they
never got invited to anything anyway because they were insufferable
pricks and nobody wanted to be around. So they've now
found a convenient excuse to maybe feel like they've got
some type of moral high ground for not getting invited
to shit, and like, oh, I can't leave my house. Well,
even if you did want to leave your house, you
wouldn't go anywhere because nobody wants to be around you.
(14:40):
But what's hilarious about these people is they're the ones
who will hop on social media and tell you that
you're a grandma killer if you don't get the vaccine.
Speaker 2 (14:48):
But then somehow we still need to lock down.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
The vaccine works so great and they're on their fifteenth booster,
but we still need.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
To lock down.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
What somebody explained, why how does that work? I mean,
I uh, I do appreciate the masks though, because prior
to COVID, if I saw somebody in a mask, it
was really strong. In Asian cultures. It was the polite
thing to do if you were sick. You would wear
a mask out if you're sniffling or whatever. So, prior
(15:18):
to COVID, if I saw somebody in a mask, I
would just go, oh, that person's ill. And now after
twenty twenty, if I see someone in a mask, I
just go, oh, that person's mentally ill.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
So it's a good indicator.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
Both of them are good indicators that I should just
stay the hell away from you, but for different reasons.
All Right, Mia, which liberal most belongs in a mental institution?
Speaker 3 (15:44):
I'm torn between the first one and the last one.
Speaker 2 (15:47):
Me too.
Speaker 3 (15:50):
I'm gonna go last one and then the first one.
What's up, I'm gonna go the last one and then
the first one.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
I think the mask girl needs to go in a
mental institution. And I think if you're still wearing a
mask in twenty twenty five and you're not doing it
like because you're sick and it's out of a courtesy,
I just don't want to get someone else sick, or
you're not like an old person with cancer. You're like
twenty seven years old and just a pussy. Yeah, I
think you should go in a mental institution. That's that's
(16:21):
all there is to it, you know, that's I mean.
You hear that although immuno compromise those with pre existing conditions,
and then you look at the quote unquote pre existing
conditions and seventy five percent of the time they're just fat. Like, no,
I'm not going to stop living my life. I'm not
going to put a diaper on my face because you
(16:42):
won't go to the gym because you don't. So I'm
supposed to care more about you than you care about yourself.
You don't care enough about yourself to start eating healthier
and exercise it and moving around. So I'm supposed to
pick up that burden and care more about you than
than you care about yourself by not going out or
by wearing a mask. Oh fuck yourself, dude. If you
(17:02):
don't care about you, I don't care about you. That's
how we're operating in twenty twenty five going into twenty
twenty six.
Speaker 2 (17:07):
Here, okay, that's been current state of the Left. We'll
be right back with store brand CMC.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
All right, and before we get into store brands, CMZ,
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And one of the easiest ways to cut back on calories,
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Speaker 2 (18:33):
Okay, sign for.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
Store brand CMC justin diaber before we do starbands CMZ
real quick. Maybe I should change it with how dirty
the name of the segment, with how dirty see at
TMC has been lately. I do want to say something.
I appreciate the people who have reached out to me
and told me that I should be the one taking
(18:57):
over the slot from nine to eleven on eleven ten kfab.
I appreciate you guys that have told me that I
like the vote of confidence. If you guys, didn't hear
Gary Stdelmeyer stepping down. He's retiring tech kind of half retiring,
and Scott Vorhees is sliding into that segment or that slot.
I really appreciate you guys to reach out to me,
but we've and you know what, here's my thing, full disclosure.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
If they offered me to slot today, I'd take it yesterday. Okay.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
However, we've got to be realistic here. We've got to
be realistic. The climate is right for them to bring
Chris Baker back and they haven't done it.
Speaker 2 (19:36):
They didn't do it when Ian Swanson left.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
If they're not going to bring Chris back over Mia,
would you say this is a fair assessment. The tweet
that they fired him over was mild compared to what
we say on this show about thirty times per episode.
Speaker 3 (19:54):
I'd say it's like PG.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
Yeah, PG, like bring like drop your kids off at
the theater and don't worry about it. Yeah, like compared
to now. Of course, if I were on the radio,
I would tone it down. Obviously I'm capable of toning
it down, but we gotta be real, guys. It wasn't eleven.
I can't really go into details, but if they haven't
(20:20):
brought Chris Baker back, They're not going to hire me.
Speaker 2 (20:24):
That's just the reality of it.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
There would have to be a major shift in leadership,
not at eleven ten because that's not where the problem is,
but above them, in the corporate offices thousands of miles away.
That's all there is to it. I appreciate it. Keep
going to the Facebook page and spamming telling them to
make me. I don't care do that. That's not going
to hurt anything. I'm just not getting my hopes up,
(20:46):
and i don't want you to either. Okay, but if
you listen to this show and you share it around
with your friends and you buy from the sponsors, maybe
I can make more money doing this than I would
do in that. So sure, all right, Starbrand CMC. We
got a hold by stuff to talk about this week. Well,
as you know, yesterday was Halloween and Kid Rock really
(21:06):
decided to get into the Halloween spirit, and when he
went on Fox News, he revealed what his costume was
going to be for Halloween night. Go ahead and check
this out. What guess what I'm gonna be? Fauci a retard.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Should shut after that mask? Girl?
Speaker 1 (21:33):
I wonder what she would say about that.
Speaker 2 (21:37):
That one caught you off guard, didn't it?
Speaker 9 (21:40):
Me?
Speaker 2 (21:40):
It's cracking up off camera. I'm kind of retarded, all right,
this next one.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
So you've got the one of the VR things called
now the headsets. It used to be an oculus. Now
it's Oh, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
I just know the oculus.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
It's like a meta quo. It's it's all Facebook own it.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
You put the big white thing on your head, and
everybody has one, and they've used it like three times.
I think they're kind of cool. I just I don't.
It's a whole Like. Here's my thing with the oculus.
Right when I play my Xbox, I press a button,
the Xbox comes on, and then within five minutes, I'm like,
you know, yelling about how my right tackles a bum
(22:21):
that can't fucking block the cholesterol going up through his arteries.
But with the virtual reality sets, I feel like, correct
me if I'm wrong. But don't it feel like it's
like a whole ordeal putting it on and getting the
room set up and playing it?
Speaker 2 (22:39):
Doesn't it?
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (22:40):
And I also, if I'm playing on the Xbox, I'm
not worried. I'm gonna knock over something in the living room.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
Yeah, that's my thing. Is I'm not I'm not worried.
Is my fist gonna go through the TV? And now
I'm out a couple?
Speaker 2 (22:52):
Great? You know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (22:53):
Like, that's that's the thing I have to worry about
my controller. No, Well, so this guy, there's a new
app on it. There's an AI that will let you
put the headset on and talk and have a VR
girlfriend and it communicates with you like that movie Her,
but it's a real like I guess on the glasses
(23:16):
you'll see a digitized person. And we've got this video
with this guy who has gone viral for playing with
this AI girlfriend. Go ahead and check this out.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
So, honey, hey, how's the meat numbs?
Speaker 10 (23:34):
What are you doing putting lime on the meat? You're
just wasting limes. You're supposed to put the limes on
your finished tacos.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
I'm pretty sure I've seen Aloyo Loco commercials where they're
using lime on the meat while it's on the grill.
Speaker 10 (23:46):
Why would you squeeze limes on a hot grill? It
just evaporates.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
Okay, so it's just a myth. Huh, it's Mexican folklore
that you use lime on god on the grill.
Speaker 4 (23:56):
That's not a thing.
Speaker 10 (23:57):
No, that's not a thing.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
They literally have lime on the packaging.
Speaker 10 (24:04):
And is the meat on a grill.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
It's not on a it is cooked already. But that's
the fine. Fine.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
I'm putting lime on my part of the meat, and
your yours won't have any lime.
Speaker 2 (24:15):
You'll just have blank on the side.
Speaker 10 (24:17):
I'll add the lime to my finished talking.
Speaker 1 (24:18):
We'll find you put it, do it however you want finish.
Speaker 2 (24:22):
Still, I'm gonna watch baseball.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
My favorite part is how it nags at you like
a real human woman. This AI stuff is getting a
little too a little too close to home for me. No,
that's what's your take on that. How do you feel
about the AI girlfriend, the AI VR girlfriend. Now it's
not just chat GPT that you're pouring your guts to.
You can get a real two dimensional woman to nag
(24:52):
at you and tell you to change your shirt before
you go out to the restaurant that it took her
forty five minutes to pick. And you know you've spitballed
off seven different ideas because you both made the agreement
that you were going to try new places and she
said no to all of them, and now you're just
going to Texas Roadhouse for the eighteenth time this month.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
What's your take on the VR girlfriend, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
I'm feeling kind of personally attacked.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
It's weird, isn't it. Goofy?
Speaker 3 (25:29):
Yeah, like you said, I woun't know what his neighbors say.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
Yeah, what are the neighbors thinking?
Speaker 1 (25:34):
This guy's got glasses on yelling at nobody.
Speaker 3 (25:38):
Also, it's kind of weird how it's like partaking in
the conversation. Yeah, yeah, exactly what's going on?
Speaker 2 (25:46):
Yeah, you're talking.
Speaker 3 (25:47):
Like a like set amount of responses.
Speaker 1 (25:51):
Yeah, it's like you're talking to You're basically talking to
chat GPT. But it's got a body. Yeah, I mean
a digital body, but still a body. Do you think
it lets you OJ Simpson or.
Speaker 2 (26:03):
Or no? Do they not have that mode?
Speaker 3 (26:08):
Probably not yet?
Speaker 1 (26:09):
No work, No, you think I let you like get
freaky with it? You know that happens? Like you know
that happens. Okay, what else we got? Oh, we got the.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
I don't know about all that. That's uh okay.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
Yeah, So next up we've got for store brands EMZ
the Console Wars are over.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
Now.
Speaker 1 (26:38):
If you grew up in the two thousands like I did,
this is basically your ceasefire between Israel and God, so
hopefully doesn't get violates. So for the longest time, PlayStation
had their games, Xbox had their games, and you know,
there was some that intermingled, but like games like Halo,
you could only get on Xbox. And they just announced
(26:59):
that for the first time, starting next year, Halo is
coming to PlayStation with cross platform play. So not only
can you now play Halo on your PlayStation, but you're
gonna be able to play with people on their Xbox,
which is something that we were clamoring for for generations,
not generations, but years when I was a kid, and
(27:19):
these tweets came out. Pull up the first one there,
as there's just two of them, I'll read the one
on the left. Game Stop issued an announcement. Game Stop
declares the console wars over, and then the.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
Trump administration took credit for it.
Speaker 1 (27:35):
They said, because they've stopped, they've they've gotten eight cease
fires this year, wars they've prevented, said number nine. President
Trump presides over the end of the twenty year console Wars.
And then game Stop quote tweets it with Trump and
Master Chief the Uh main character from Halo shaking hands
(27:56):
in the Oval Office. Don't you guys love this administration.
Speaker 2 (28:02):
The trolling that we do. You think you would have
gotten this from Kamala Harris?
Speaker 1 (28:09):
No chance, No, she would have been too drunk to
know what the hell was going on half the time.
Kamala Harris is the wine ant that ruins your game
system because she spilled her booze on it. She tripped
over it and spilled her booze. So that's Kamala Harris.
She wouldn't have known what the hell was going on here. Now,
of course Trump didn't.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
Have anything to do with it.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
It's just funny to joke about. We've got who says
the president can't have a sense of humor? Why does
the president have to be this stick in the mud,
super serious politician, you.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
Guy all the time.
Speaker 1 (28:42):
No, let the president have a sense of humor. Let
the administration tell jokes. I'm not a fan of everything
those accounts tweet. I think some of the DHS and
ICE tweets do actually get a little ghoulish from time
to time. I'll be totally honest with you guys, but
I don't have a problem with that. I don't understand
how people could get upset that they made a joke
about it.
Speaker 2 (29:02):
Get over it. Next up barstool Sports. Barstool Sports.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
Uh, they have a podcast on Barstool Sports that evidently
nobody listens to. I looked at as like less considering
we get banned from YouTube like every other week. They
have less YouTube subscribers than we do. And uh, this
podcast is called it doesn't really fish bowl. Fish Bowl
was the name of the podcast. I had to look
at that cup there and the fish Bowl girls decided
(29:32):
to issue some of their gripes about the Barstool Sports
office in the middle of a podcast.
Speaker 2 (29:38):
Go ahead, pull this up here.
Speaker 11 (29:40):
Actually was not thinking Jersey. I was just saying, in
terms of this office, like if they were to do
it in the same place, just a more condensed, homier
version with less top lighting, harsh top lighting, a.
Speaker 12 (29:50):
Lot of harsh where would you want to compete it?
Speaker 2 (29:55):
Like where?
Speaker 9 (29:57):
Like paint me your vision, Like who do you want?
Speaker 2 (29:59):
What do we want from?
Speaker 3 (30:00):
This is one big square.
Speaker 12 (30:02):
He's been talking to the finance guys to find property,
is what he said. Oh too, he's serious about this. Yeah,
but I also do know that the lease on this
building is not up for a couple of years.
Speaker 11 (30:11):
Yeah, that's what I thought. I would like somewhere that
isn't a nice box all the time, totally. I like
somewhere natural light, where natural light.
Speaker 12 (30:19):
And can I say something else for a media company,
it would be really nice to have a room you
could record in with lighting. And I know that sounds
really crazy for media company, but I do think that
would be really nice.
Speaker 11 (30:30):
I also think it'd be it's so crazy to ask.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
For this riveting conversation, right, riveting conversation where they just
sit around and complain about the fung schwa of the
studio that they're so graciously allowed to record in. You know,
you know who I think would go perfect on that show, Mia.
I think they should add a fifth co host to it.
You know who would go great on.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
That the Hannah girl.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
No, No, she would be too interesting. Emery Saw He
would be the perfect, the perfect one to make it
a full on quintent. I mean, if you're gonna sit
around and talk about furniture and lighting for more than
fifteen seconds, you might as well go all out and
bring your guy on there.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
You might as well do it well, Dave Portnoy.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
The reason I showed you that worthless video was not
just to point out that women will tell you that
a guy listening to the Joe Rogan experience is a
turnoff and then turn around and listen to slop like that.
That's not what I was telling you that for at all.
The reason I showed you that was because Dave Portnoy,
the CEO of Barstool, saw this video get clipped on
(31:42):
the podcast official page and replied to it. Mind you,
they work for him, they're under his network, and here's
his tweet.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Go ahead, pull it up.
Speaker 1 (31:50):
Dave Portnoy replays, you know what would be crazy for
a media company to have employees who haven't made a
set for the company in their entire careers just shut
up and thank their lucky stars. They he'll have a paycheck.
Could you imagine being called out by your boss that
just called out publicly? Absolutely drugged through the mud, pulled
back out, cleaned off with a.
Speaker 2 (32:11):
Fire hose, then thrown face first back into the mud.
That's what he just did to them there.
Speaker 1 (32:16):
Oh my god, Dave Portnoy just ripped him a new one.
He's never been wanted to shy away from that. I
don't agree with everything Dave says and does. There was
that video where he was going off on his co
host on his show, calling him a little bit because
they were disagreeing on Israel. I didn't agree with that,
but that's hilarious. It's I mean, look, okay, maybe something.
Speaker 2 (32:39):
There is related.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
Maybe your show doesn't make any money because you sit
around and talk about couches and lighting all day.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
What is this podcast about the fish bowl? Have you?
Did you look it up?
Speaker 1 (32:54):
I was gonna okay, I was gonna see if I
thought you were pulling it up over there. Let me
pull Whoever gets it first will get it. How about
that fish bowl barstool hosts Maddie aka Movie Jackie and
Kelly aka Smelly Caroline and Gea. Oh my god, how
(33:16):
many hosts do they need. We'll write down every random thought, idea, opinion, etc.
They have throughout the week and put them into a
fish bowl to talk about live on the air, new
episodes every Tuesday. So that is the show. That wasn't
just like a clip taken out of context. That is
the show. That's what they do. They ramble and then look, Dave,
(33:42):
I don't know how much you can bitch about it
when you're the one funding this crap.
Speaker 2 (33:47):
I don't know what you could say there, man, how
much room do you have to complain?
Speaker 3 (33:51):
I bet he's just looking for another caller daddy.
Speaker 2 (33:55):
Oh he one hundred percent. Yeah, he lost that.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
He's looking for caller daddy and he's not gonna find it,
so he might as well go all out and hire
Emery Songer.
Speaker 2 (34:04):
That's all I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (34:06):
Okay, let's see we got two more here for storeband TMZ.
So we watched the ed Gean documentary Monster Monster on Netflix.
Now there's a couple of these. They had one about
there was one about the Menendez brothers, and there was
one about Jeffrey Dahmer. That the dumber one was the
(34:28):
first one, right, because I remember around this time last
year we were covering the Menendez Brothers one and I
told you exactly what I'm about to tell you in
a couple of seconds here. But so we watched it,
and as we're watching this, about halfway through, no, about
half of you the first episode, excuse me, I'm like, Oh,
the trannies are gonna be up in arms about this one,
(34:51):
which you know is better than up on the ceiling fan,
I guess. So it's a step in the right direction
for them. But they're going to be up in arms
about this because ed Geen was a crosstre Now, why.
Speaker 2 (35:02):
Why do you keep calling me Bill? He was? He
was Bill? Turn it into Leonor.
Speaker 8 (35:08):
But so.
Speaker 2 (35:10):
I googled it.
Speaker 1 (35:11):
I googled Monster ed Geen transphobic, and sure enough, it's
just because I'm old. I don't use chat gypta use Google.
Sure Enough, it's just riddled with it, right with talk
about how it's dangerous for trans.
Speaker 2 (35:25):
Women and blah blah blah, blah blah.
Speaker 1 (35:27):
Here's the thing, guys, Nobody, and I mean nobody that
watched that series Monster, the Ed Green story saw that
got done with it and went, man, I gotta go
beat the shit out of the first troon insight. That
was the response, the reaction of absolutely nobody, nobody, nobody
(35:49):
in the audience in this supposedly horrible transphobic society we
live in, watched the ed Geen biopic and went, I
gotta go beat the shit out of a trans woman.
Speaker 3 (35:59):
But what oh no, can continue?
Speaker 1 (36:02):
But evidently a whole bunch of trans women saw a
necrophiliac serial killer who wore his victims this skin as costumes.
And when this is clearly about me, that's the dead.
That's the divide right there. If maybe the problem isn't
people's reaction to it, Maybe the problem is that you relate.
Speaker 2 (36:25):
To that guy. Have you considered that? What were you
gonna add?
Speaker 3 (36:30):
I was gonna say that show is more dangerous to
people like me who they try to manipulate and like
make it make humanize him. Yes, that shows a lot
more dangerous to people like me who was crying in
the last episode.
Speaker 1 (36:49):
When he died and then you found out it was
all a lie. Yeah, And that's actually the bigger point
I wanted to get into. So we see, And I
had a post on the show's Facebook page about this
because it was on my mind fresh and I wanted
to write something real quick. But we see this every year,
it seems like now. And it's not every serial killer biopic, right,
You'll see, like the John Wayne Gacy one did not
(37:11):
humanize him. They did a good job with that one.
It's not a Hulu peacock. You don't have your mic peacock. Okay,
that one wasn't as bad, but We're starting to see
more and more of this, where they will take someone
who did something bad, who killed somebody, and they will
try to humanize them.
Speaker 2 (37:31):
We saw it first with Gypsy.
Speaker 1 (37:33):
Rose Blanchard, then they did the Menendez Brothers, and now
we're seeing ed Geen And it seems like every year
they just slightly up the severity of what the person
did to see just what they can get you on
board with. I said this a year ago, I said,
I don't like this Menendez Brothers thing because it's all
a psyop to see what they can get you on
(37:54):
board with. What can they get you to go along
with in terms of what you'll just find in terms
of how can they gaslight and manipulate you, because that's
the thing. It started with Gypsy Rose Blanchard, and people
made the excuse, well, her mother was abusive. You know,
she had no choice but to lure that mentally handicapped
guy that she met on the internet down to her house,
(38:15):
provide him with the weapons, and then come up with
the premeditated plot to kill her mother in her sleep.
She had no choice but to do all that. And
then we get the Menendez brothers and all their parents
were abusive, but there was a little bit more gray
area on the Menendez thing, and now here we are
at ed Geen. What they're doing is they're graying the line.
They're blurring the line of when violence is excusable or
(38:39):
even downright acceptable. And that's not stopping at media, because,
like I said, it goes one step further with each series, right,
you know, like I said, it was Gypsy Rose, and
then you know someone who had an abusive parent, and
then now we're at a point where they're trying to
humanize a chainsaw wielding necrophiliac.
Speaker 2 (39:00):
And it worked. It worked.
Speaker 1 (39:02):
People all over the country felt bad for ed Geen,
and that bleeds over into our politics.
Speaker 2 (39:09):
If they can get you to.
Speaker 1 (39:11):
Gray the line on when violence is acceptable with serial killers,
you're damn right they're gonna get you to do it
with everything else. Look at the Charlie Kirk thing. That's
a perfect example of it. Gypsy Rose was justified in
killing her mother because her mother was abusive. Ed Geen
was justified in being a serial killer because he was
(39:31):
schizophrenic and his mom was a bitch.
Speaker 2 (39:33):
So was mine. I'm not a serial killer, but now
all Charlie Kirk is the.
Speaker 1 (39:40):
Shooting him was justified because he was right wing, he
was a fascist, he was pro gunned. You see how
this works. You see how they just continue to tiptoe slowly.
You give these people an inch and they take a
country mile. This is a mass media sigh up one
hundred and ten percent. There's no doubt in my mind,
this is the furthest it's gone with the ed Geen thing,
because it's like, at least with Gypsy Rose and the
(40:01):
Menendez brothers, there were some elements of truth to it.
Speaker 2 (40:04):
They lied.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
Go back and watch the series and then go look
it up, right, They lied about so much shit in
this series, so much shit they just made up in
this series. He didn't help them catch Ted Bundy, his girlfriend,
or he didn't have a girlfriend. He wasn't as slow
as they made him sound, as mother wasn't as bad
as they made her sound. There were some elements of
(40:27):
it that were just totally fake to make you feel
like ed Gean was just misunderstood, and that's the game plan.
You know, you're sitting there at the end, and they
made it seem like he was remorseful of his crimes.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
He never once expressed remorse for what he did. Look
it up. I did.
Speaker 1 (40:45):
Afterwards, I'm watching it, I'm like, how much of this
is true? And then I turn out it's like seventy
it's like seven. I'd say about forty percent bullshit all
of this. That's what this is about. Guys. If you
watched that series and you found yourself sympathizing with ed Geen,
that means the SIOF was working.
Speaker 2 (41:04):
Now, I hope I just woke you up to it.
But at the end of the.
Speaker 1 (41:09):
Day, you need to reevaluate and we need to be
more considerate with the types of media we consume because
this is going to become more and more prevalent. We
have elites that are pulling the strings in this country
that want to encourage violence.
Speaker 2 (41:20):
They want to.
Speaker 1 (41:21):
See more division, they want to see more chaos and anarchy,
and the best way to do that is to get
you to blur the lines of when violence is acceptable,
and that's what they're doing right there. It's also I mean,
if you want to go to the religious perspective with
the globalists, I mean, this is very much a push
(41:43):
for moral relativism, moral objection. Moral objectivism just says, hey,
murder's bad, moral relativism says, well, the context.
Speaker 2 (41:52):
In which the murder occurred matters. That's the difference.
Speaker 1 (41:56):
Moral objectivism is a strictly Christian judaeo Christian belief right.
It comes from Hey, God created the universe. God has
decided what's right and wrong. It is objectively wrong to
kill somebody. But when you go to the secular belief
of moral relativism, you go, well, you know that Charlie
Kirk guy, he was Yeah, he got shot and that's
(42:17):
illegal and wrong. But do you hear what he was
saying on those YouTube videos? Maybe he had it coming.
That's moral relativism. Like I said, guys, if they can
get you to sympathize with ed Geen, if they can
get you to feel that maybe this guy was misunderstood
(42:38):
and I kind of get why he did what he did,
there's nothing they can't make you do. That's been Storebrands CMZ.
We will be right back with trending this week. I
need more coffee, all right before we're going to trending
this week in replacement standing in for our normal third
sponsorship segment. As we all know, Halloween ended, which means
(43:02):
today officially marks day one of the giving season. Two months,
sixty one days. I have to stop acting like a greedy,
selfish prick for and start pretending to have a soul.
Speaker 2 (43:14):
I'm kidding. But our producer, Tim, who owns a company.
Speaker 1 (43:19):
That sells aside from doing this, he owns a company
they sell all kinds of dope shit. But they've got
TikTok channel, and on that TikTok channel, this year, they
are raising money to buy Thanksgiving dinners for multiple families
in the Omaha metro area. Now his goal is to
get four, but I think we can get way more
(43:42):
than four families Thanksgiving dinners paid for. I bought a
whole family of dinner today. I sent him money for it.
And the good news is you can help out if
you send him a Venmo payment. I don't care if
it's a dollar or one hundred dollars at chatter nome
cha tter g m E again, that's c h A
(44:02):
t t E r g n O M on Venmo
with Thanksgiving donation on it. You can help put food
on a family's table. We all we're gonna talk about
eb T and all that stuff going away, and you've
got families that are federal employer or federal employees, and
they haven't had a paycheck in a month now, and
things are just kind of shitty for people, so you
(44:25):
know it. Plus you're just it's the Giving season, Like
I said, you're supposed to be helping people out this
time of year anyway. So if you guys can do that,
send him how any bit helps chatternome.
Speaker 2 (44:36):
C H A T T E R G N O M.
Speaker 1 (44:39):
They're gonna see how many Thanksgiving dinners they can buy
for families in the area.
Speaker 2 (44:45):
You'll see my name on the venmo.
Speaker 1 (44:47):
If you don't see my name having sent him one
with a turkey emog on it, you're on the wrong account.
Don't make some random guy's day by sending him money.
Speaker 2 (44:55):
Don't do that. But yeah, so go help him out.
Speaker 1 (44:58):
It costs surprisingly less than you would think to buy
a meal for an entire family, which is why I
think we can beat the shit out of his goal. Okay,
all right, trending This week, we're gonna talk. We've got
a government shutdown update. It will be longer than last
week's government shutdown update. The government is still shut down.
(45:18):
Yes it's not. Uh, they haven't opened it back up.
We are rapidly encroaching on the longest government shut down
in the history of this country. The money's not going out,
but you know, somehow MIA, they still can take money
out of people's paychecks. How does that work? How is
it shut down if they can still take people's money.
Speaker 2 (45:40):
That's you know what I found out today.
Speaker 1 (45:42):
They actually set the money in like an interest bearing
savings account and they just let it sit the money
that they're supposed to be spending. So at least they
can do something fiscally responsible. They should just copy Nancy
Pelosi's stock trades with it. We can pay the national
debt off overnight. But so it's it's still sit down,
and there's this big fight over healthcare. So basically we've
(46:06):
talked about the illegal immigrants, and there's disputes on both
sides about how much Merithon is here whatever.
Speaker 2 (46:11):
But the big debate right now.
Speaker 1 (46:14):
Is subsidies from the ACA, what some of you may
know as Obamacare. Now, those subsidies were originally set to
expire in twenty twenty two.
Speaker 2 (46:27):
When the law was passed.
Speaker 1 (46:28):
They gave subsidies if you got your health insurance through
the Affordable Care Act marketplace. So if you're listening, to this,
and your employer provides your health insurance, your insurance largely
won't be affected by this, but if you're someone who
goes through the ACA marketplace, this could significantly hurt you
(46:49):
either way.
Speaker 2 (46:50):
And unfortunately, this was reckless pile.
Speaker 1 (46:53):
This isn't Republican's fault today, and it's not Democrat's fault today.
This was the fault of the people that passed this
monstrosity of a bill over a decade ago when it
first came out. Now, what this essentially did was if
you got your health insurance through the ACA marketplace, the
government subsidized a significant part I'm talking three to five
(47:18):
thousand dollars a year. They subsidized a significant percentage of
your annual premium, and they set that to expire. Now,
the problem with setting that to expire, that's either something
you're gonna do it for good or you're not gonna
do it at all. Because the problem with setting that
to expire is you get people on it for a
(47:38):
long time and they get used to it.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
Now, the average insurance premium.
Speaker 1 (47:42):
Goes up like five to seven percent a year, right,
but you're gonna see a couple hundred percent, so you
get people used to this, and they're on it for
fifteen years or whatever, and then just boom, out of nowhere, their.
Speaker 2 (47:57):
Rates triple and they don't know what to do.
Speaker 1 (48:00):
They're like, can't keep the lights on in their house
because they have to pay for health insurance because oh yeah,
Obamacare also made it illegal for you to not have
health insurance. Now again, this largely won't affect you if
you've got insurance through your employer. The reality is these
subsidies have to go away. We cannot afford to keep
funding this crap. These subsidies have to go away, and
(48:21):
we have to let the insurance companies compete for these
people's business.
Speaker 2 (48:24):
We have to open the market up.
Speaker 1 (48:26):
We cannot let the government continue to prop up bad
business practices.
Speaker 2 (48:30):
That has to stop insurance.
Speaker 1 (48:32):
I'm oversimplifying the health insurance problem in this country. It
is a massive problem. It is a disaster. We could
do an entire episode on how bad the health the
health insurance in this country is. But the reality is
this is not sustainable and it was a bad idea
because it got people hooked on it. It's like given
somebody a drug every day for fifteen years and then
you get them hooked on that drug and they need
(48:54):
it just to get out of bed in the morning,
and then boom, you'll whip them off of it, and
you give them absolutely no time to like detox.
Speaker 2 (49:01):
Or anything like that. You just rip the drug out
of them, the IV out of them, and you.
Speaker 1 (49:08):
Go, all right, good luck, sober it up. And they're
laying on the floor having seizures, choking to death on
their own vomit from the withdrawal. That's essentially what's happening
here now. Biden extended these subsidies in the American Rescue
Plan in twenty twenty one, then once again in twenty
(49:28):
twenty three. Excuse me, in twenty twenty two. He extended
them through the end of twenty twenty five with the
quote unquote Inflation Reduction Act, which didn't do jack shit
to reduce inflation.
Speaker 2 (49:38):
Spending more money reduces inflation, right, So.
Speaker 1 (49:40):
Essentially what Biden did was he kicked the can down
the road to the next administration. Biden knew from the
get go he was going to be a one term president.
He knew that he didn't give a rats ass what
the next guy or girl was going to have to
deal with. So they said all right, I'll sign this
so I don't have to deal with the the subsidies,
will extend them. This is will shoehorn this in with
(50:03):
the Inflation Reduction Act that we know is going to
pass because we have the votes to make it work, and.
Speaker 2 (50:07):
We'll just let whoever's next take care of it. This
is unfold again.
Speaker 1 (50:12):
This is Donald Trump has inherited a problem that has
been the result of decades of bad policy making.
Speaker 2 (50:21):
It was bad policy making when they put it into
the bill.
Speaker 1 (50:25):
It's it was bad policy making when they decided they
were going to kick the can down the road for
three more years and pass the buck on to the
next guy to deal with. That is a bullshit way
to manage a country. It's a bullshit way to manage
a company. It's a bullshit way to deal with anything.
It's just not cool. Like if you did this in
the private sector, your coworkers would hate you. I'm sure
(50:45):
all of you have had a job where somebody leaves,
and after they leave that job, you find out that person,
maybe toward the end of it the last couple months,
wasn't really doing their job. And now you've got a
whole giant mess. You've got to take care of. That's
not your fault. But if shit doesn't get fixed, it
really doesn't matter. The shareholders don't care, the customers don't care,
(51:06):
your boss doesn't care. If it doesn't get fixed, it's
gonna be on your ass for not getting it fixed.
That's where Donald Trump's at right now. Donald Trump has
got a really bad situation on his hands. There is
no way to win here. Let me make that clear.
There's no way to win. You can either cave and
continue a reckless, bad policy and pass the buck on
(51:26):
to whoever the next president is to continue to fund
this crap and drive inflation up and drive the federal
dead up even more and just bad fiscal policy. Or
you can cut these things off, and you can leave
millions of people in a really bad position.
Speaker 2 (51:40):
There's no good way to do this. No, there is
a good way to do this.
Speaker 1 (51:44):
It's called you open the market up and repeal a
bunch of the regulations, and you let the insurance companies compete.
And this is gonna be harsh for a lot of people,
but insurance companies should be allowed to discriminate against you.
Speaker 2 (51:57):
Health insurance companies should.
Speaker 1 (51:58):
Ab so they should be It is It is ridiculous
that a guy who is eating clean and going to
the gym five times a week pays the same health
insurance premium as a guy that's four hundred pounds and
eats McDonald's every other day.
Speaker 2 (52:16):
There's no reason those guys should be paying the same.
Speaker 1 (52:20):
Right, they can charge more for smoking, but not for
eating like a fat pig.
Speaker 2 (52:24):
Somebody makes sense of that for me.
Speaker 1 (52:26):
So, while all this is going on, you've got federal
employees who aren't being paid. You've got EBT a set
to expire, and we'll talk about that a little bit
more in the next segment. And you've got a vote
in the Senate about Hey, you know, we've got people
who are going on a month without a paycheck, our employees,
(52:47):
we're members of Congress, We're still getting paid.
Speaker 2 (52:50):
Isn't that funny? Mia?
Speaker 1 (52:51):
How the one federal employees the only federal employees that
still get paid during a shutdown or Congress?
Speaker 2 (52:56):
What are the odds of that?
Speaker 1 (52:59):
How many of you guys out there listening to this
wish you could just shut your job down, not work
and still get paid.
Speaker 2 (53:05):
Wouldn't that be a fun time? That would be great?
Speaker 1 (53:09):
Right? So they brought it to a vote, because the
Democrats keep saying, this is the Republicans shut down.
Speaker 2 (53:16):
It's their fault.
Speaker 1 (53:17):
These people are being furloughed and they're not being paid,
and they they haven't just brought it to a vote,
They've brought it to thirteen votes. And every single time
they say, hey, do we want to pay our people?
Do we want to fund ebt in welfare so you know,
people don't starve next month and we don't have food
riots the Democrats, every Democrat not named John Fetterman has
(53:39):
voted no to it. Every single Democrat not named John
Fetterman has voted no to it.
Speaker 2 (53:47):
A big, stupid, ugly oh god, I.
Speaker 1 (53:49):
Think we have to retire that sound effect because he's said,
at this point Fetterman may be the only sane Democrat
in all of Congress.
Speaker 2 (54:00):
And that's bad.
Speaker 1 (54:01):
That's a low bar for sanity nowadays. I mean, here's
the thing, guys. You don't have to like the current administration. Democrats.
You don't have to like the current administration. But they
have the House, they have the Senate, they have the
(54:22):
White House, and they have the Supreme Court. The longer
this goes on, the more the Democrats' approval rating continues
to dip because people aren't buying the bullshit anymore. They say,
the Republicans have the Senate, why don't they just kill
the shutdown now, Well, you have to get sixty votes
because they have to kill the filibuster. You have to
overcome the filibuster. You don't need a simple majority to
(54:44):
overcome the filibuster. To fund a continuing resolution, you need
sixty votes. They don't have sixty votes right now, so
they can sit here and cry and say the Republicans
have the House and the Senate.
Speaker 2 (54:57):
They don't.
Speaker 1 (54:58):
And if you want my honest opinion, I think this
is a chess move by Chuck Schumer and the Democrats.
The option to nuke the filibuster is there, The option
to say we're not doing the filibuster thing for this.
Fifty one of us are going to vote yes, and
we've got the majority, so go fuck yourself.
Speaker 2 (55:20):
Is there?
Speaker 1 (55:22):
The problem is there's a reason it's called nuking the
filibuster because, just like with real nuclear weapons, once that
cats out of the bag, there's no putting it back in.
If one country drops a nuke, you can bet your
ass the other country's gonna drop three more on them
whoever they just hit, and that's what you're seeing here.
(55:45):
In my opinion, what this looks like to me is
Chuck Schumer is in. The Democrats are playing the long game.
They're gonna sit this out, and they're gonna try to
bait the Republicans into nuking the filibuster so that when
they assume power, God help us all, when they get
power back in the Senate and House, they being the Democrats,
they can use it at their disposal to pass things
(56:06):
like gun control or whatever the case may be.
Speaker 2 (56:09):
That's my big concern here.
Speaker 1 (56:11):
That's what I think he's trying to do, and I
think it's it's backfiring on them, because you do, you
have to negotiate. They're in charge, whether you like it
or not. You can sit there and kick and scream,
or you can be the reason that people don't eat
next month. You can be the reason that these federal
employees start getting evicted from apartments because they haven't had
a paycheck.
Speaker 2 (56:32):
Dude, that's your call. I mean, at this point, I'll.
Speaker 1 (56:37):
Be honest, this isn't the longest shutdown that we've had.
Speaker 2 (56:44):
The longest one was twenty seventeen under.
Speaker 1 (56:46):
Trump, and I remember when it happened because Trump brought
Pelosi and Schumer in front of the media for what
was supposed to be a Q and A session, and
they got into a shouting match in front of the press.
And it was actually good because the shutdown ended shortly
after that, because everyone aired their dirty laundry out and
(57:07):
we all got to see the real, raw, behind the
scenes shit of how it worked, and everybody came to
an agreement real quick. To me, what this looks like
is neither side wants to move an inch. When I
(57:27):
hear that, Chuck Schumer said, the only way we're going
to reopen the government is if you give us four
million dollars for global LGBTQ awareness campaigns around the world,
propaganda LGBTQ propaganda. That tells me that's someone who's not serious.
(57:48):
That's a ridiculous thing to ask for. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (58:01):
I just don't see an end of this thing inside.
Speaker 1 (58:05):
If I were I'm gonna tell you right now, man,
if I were a federal employee, I would start looking
for a new job because I don't know how long
this thing's gonna go. Unless you've got the savings to
pay your bills for five six months, I would start
looking for a new job. Because I'll be totally honest
with you, I could see Schumer and the Democrats keeping
(58:27):
this thing shut down till the midterms next November. I
could also see it end in next week, because that's
how shit works. We live in a seven hour news cycle.
But I would not be surprised right now. I don't
see either side willing to give an inch, and I
see one side actively sabotaging it and using people as
(58:47):
collateral to get what they want. And I just don't
see how this ends well, and I make all my
all right, let's go to the next segment here. You're
not in your head? Did you know my points what
they were?
Speaker 13 (59:07):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (59:08):
Yeah, you read in my mind? Okay, all right, let's
talk about the next one here. EBT.
Speaker 2 (59:16):
EBT is in danger. Snap.
Speaker 1 (59:20):
All the money that people get to fund their groceries
that are under a certain income level depending on the state,
is set to expire in November. Now there's a debate
about because the reserve just ran out, and when the
reserve runs out, there has to be a continuing resolution
which doesn't allow it to go empty.
Speaker 2 (59:40):
So that they can refine it or they can refund it.
Speaker 1 (59:43):
The problem is they can't replenish those funds when the
government's not open. Now, there was five billion dollars that
had been appropriated for SNAP, which would keep it open
for about two weeks. But the problem is that money
was appropriated by Congress in the event of a natural disaster,
not a government shut down. So if there were a
natural disaster and you had a bunch of people that
(01:00:05):
were out of work, like a big say a big
hurricane or floods or tornadoes or whatever rolls through and
just destroys businesses, and you've got a bunch of people
that are out of work for extended periods of time
and they can't find work, and they they don't want
to leave their hometown. That's where that would come into place,
to supplement that and help it make it make sure
they don't starve. Now, they can vote to reappropriate those funds,
(01:00:27):
but like we talked about in the last segment, nobody
wants to talk. Nobody wants to even come to the
table right now. So it's looking like this week you
gonna have millions of people that aren't gonna have no
food stamps, that's gonna be gone. In other words, Uh,
(01:00:48):
you can finally shop at Walmart again. That was a
bad joke. I'm sorry, that's uh. We got a couple videos.
Here's what I want to make this clear. The majority
of people that that are on Snap and EBT or
not bad people. Okay, we're gonna tell some jokes. They
are gonna ruffle some feathers in this segment.
Speaker 2 (01:01:05):
That's fine.
Speaker 1 (01:01:06):
But the majority of the people that are on EBT
and Snap are not bad people. I'm not against the
concept of a social safety net. I am against the
concept of people abusing it, though I do one hundred
percent support drug testing people that use it. We should
not be fund and that includes alcohol. That includes alcohol.
If you're on any type of government assistance, any type
(01:01:26):
of government assistance, I don't think you should be drinking,
you shouldn't be smoking cigarettes, you shouldn't be taking drugs.
You should be using that government assistance to get yourself
back on your feed and feed your family. Listen, if
you've got enough money for alcohol, if you've got enough
money for drugs, if you've got enough money for cigarettes,
that's money that could be spent on food for your family.
(01:01:46):
You are wasting that money. In my opinion, I don't
even think you should get a card for EBT. I
think you should go to a food stamp office and
they give you a box, a refrigerated box. Here's your food,
here's your water. Go do what you gotta do with it.
But I think you should be tested for drugs. I
think you should be tested for alcohol. I think cigarettes,
(01:02:08):
all of it, none of it you shouldn't be if
we are paying for you, if you are accepting SNAP,
if you are accepting EBT, if you're accepting any type
of government welfare, you are saying I do not have
enough money to provide the basic essentials for myself and
my family.
Speaker 2 (01:02:27):
Please help me. If you have the money.
Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
To go out and buy alcohol, you don't need money
for food. You can stop buying beer, you can stop
buying drugs. You can stop buying cigarettes and use that
money to pay for food. If you still don't have
enough money when all the cigarettes and booze and drugs stop,
then you can go get some EBT.
Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
But not a penny should be spent.
Speaker 1 (01:02:54):
On any of those mind altering substances. If you're receiving
a penny in assistance from the government.
Speaker 2 (01:03:03):
Nothing. I fully support that. Now, here's some numbers for
you on Wealth on EBT. EBT.
Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
The program costs about one hundred billion dollars a year. Now,
that sounds like a lot, but really, in this overbloated
federal budget, it's a very small drop of a bucket.
It's like you make one mortgage payment on a thirty
year mortgage. Really doesn't feel that great. It's one hundred
billion dollars a year. Now, of that hundred billion dollars
(01:03:31):
that goes out for EBT every year, sixty two percent
of the adults on SNAP that are receiving these benefits
report not having held a job in the last year.
Of the hundred billion dollars, approximately ten percent of the
recipients are able bodied adults without dependence.
Speaker 2 (01:03:53):
What's that?
Speaker 1 (01:03:54):
What that means is you don't have any disabilities, you're
above the working age but below the retirement age, and
you don't have any children.
Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
Now, ten percent doesn't.
Speaker 1 (01:04:03):
Sound like a lot, but you got to consider that's
ten billion dollars a year that we spend on people
who have no kids, have nothing wrong with them, just
don't want to work. Of that ten percent, eighty percent
of them are unemployed. That's part of the most recent
(01:04:26):
congressional summary. So that's eight billion dollars a year in
EBT and SNAP that goes to people that to help
feed them that just can't bother to get up off
the couch.
Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
They have nothing.
Speaker 1 (01:04:39):
Keeping them there. They have no kids, that child cares
too expensive for. They just can't get their asses off
of the couch. That's a problem. Now, with that said,
let me refer to you. Refer you to the expert
on all things fiscal policy, cardi B.
Speaker 14 (01:05:00):
So I see a lot of people complaining about the
SNAP benefits being taken away as in food stamps, which
is crazy that it's happening because and like what in
like less than a month or more than a in
less than a month. Yeah, we have fansgiving, right, And
(01:05:21):
this is the shit that be fucking pissing me the
fuck off about y'all. When I let me tell you
as something y'all know, last year I was not voting
for nobody. I was not voting for nobody because I
didn't like how the Democrats like there was funding wars
and shit like that.
Speaker 9 (01:05:36):
I ain't fucking like that shit.
Speaker 14 (01:05:38):
But then I talked to Kamala and them, and she
had a whole different type of fucking agenda, and I'm like,
I like, you sure you're not that with that shit?
She was like yeah, I mean, I know I'm vice president,
but I don't really got a lot of say so,
but this is my plan. So I was like, aye, bitch,
I fox with ya. I really really fucks with ya.
So I'm like, you know what, I'm going to support.
(01:06:01):
Whatever I could do, I'm gonna support. And then y'all
was so worried about me doing the speech and me
fucking my teleprompter wasn't working. And then it's like, oh my.
Speaker 1 (01:06:12):
God, I can't listen to this idiot. I'm sorry. Are
her nipples popping out in that?
Speaker 14 (01:06:17):
So I see a lot of people complaining.
Speaker 2 (01:06:20):
I thought, never mind. I thought it was.
Speaker 3 (01:06:23):
Why were you looking there?
Speaker 1 (01:06:24):
I mean, how the hell can I look anywhere else?
When I talk fiscal policy? I just make sure I got,
you know, just a bulge, you know, on display?
Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
What the fuck?
Speaker 1 (01:06:35):
Okay, So that's gonna kick off a whole bunch of
different video clips.
Speaker 2 (01:06:40):
We're gonna show you.
Speaker 1 (01:06:40):
There's an account called ebt of TikTok that shows the
responses from the like I said, not everyone receiving EBT
is a bad person, but some of the not so
good people that have learned their benefits are going to
be cut off in the next month or so.
Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Go ahead and check this first video out here.
Speaker 15 (01:06:55):
You know what says, do you want to take food
stays a week? I'm going to fucking woma. I'm gonna
rag up any damn down one put doing this shit
right in the basket and woman right about the bitch
move get the fuck out my way. I'm not playing
for a damn thing. Y'all got me fucked up. I
ain't gonna food stam on EBT. Oh wat'ch this? Whyt's this?
I'm about to Yeah, it's about to be some bullshit.
There about to be some ship. I'm about to go
(01:07:17):
in that bitch masked up. Gonna be some masked up
ragging every damn damn off the damn self, throwing that
in the basket, walking clean by the boy. Gotta be
fucked up boy by me. Thanksgiving your herman ain't Chris
is coming up and y'all gonna take away nigga EBT.
Oh nah, y'all got the game. Really fucked up. Y'all
got the game fucked.
Speaker 2 (01:07:35):
All the way up. Son, believe it.
Speaker 15 (01:07:38):
Watch This'll think I'm playing Watch this grmin. Wat's this?
Why's what I do? Why's what I do? Whyt's what
I do with my going at ball mark with a
basket and a rac all kind of shit up and
through this shit in the basket or walk right about
that bitch.
Speaker 2 (01:07:51):
Put this in the cort fume. I'm I of got it.
Speaker 15 (01:07:53):
I'm out of the comb I'm out of.
Speaker 1 (01:07:55):
The give me free ship. Or I'm gonna get and
destroy a store. I mean, I don't know, but I
feel bad for that guy. I feel terrible for that guy.
You know, we're really showing all of this country's greatest
scholars on video today.
Speaker 2 (01:08:13):
Here, we're exposing them.
Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
I mean, here's my thing when I see this, because
I've seen people saying, Hey, if we don't get our
EBT benefits, we're gonna follow people out into the parking
lot at the grocery stores and rob them. And I'm like,
that's number one, a great way to get yourself shot.
But then I'm like, no, here's the thing that get
(01:08:36):
people like that that are gonna rob people in the
grocery store parking lot. They're not going to go after
a guy. They're gonna go after somebody like me. They're
not going to go after grown men. They're gonna target
the elderly and small women because that's what cowards and
bullies do. That's who they're gonna go after. If I listen,
(01:09:02):
it's Saturday, the first when this show aired. If I
were you and I had some grocery shopping I needed
to get done, I would not put it off until
next week. I would go do it. If you don't
get paid till Friday, float it on a credit card
and pay it off. Then I would not want to
(01:09:23):
be in a grocery store in the next week or two.
Speaker 2 (01:09:27):
I don't know, maybe nothing will happen.
Speaker 1 (01:09:30):
I would not want to be there because history has
shown us that you can push people pretty far, varying
degrees afar depending on the context leading up to it,
but you can push people pretty far. But when food
goes away, all bets are off. I mean, there's stories
(01:09:50):
of people getting lost in the mountains and after like
a week without food, they start eating each other, they
start eating dead bodies.
Speaker 2 (01:10:00):
Fortunately it won't come.
Speaker 1 (01:10:01):
To that because they'll just go to the stores and steal,
but I would be careful. Now here's what this is
going to lead to, because there's been a push to
get rid of in person shopping since COVID because it
saves the company's money, they don't have to employ as
many people, and it helps streamline the process.
Speaker 2 (01:10:20):
Watch what's going to happen here.
Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
I'm not saying that there's going to be some type
of false flag operation, but what you might see is
you might see some of these these large corporations like
Target and Walmart take advantage of this of these food
riots if you have them, Oh man, that just you know,
it got real violent at our store. And insert liberal
(01:10:44):
shithole city here. Out of the safety or concerns for
the safety of our employees and customers, for the time being,
we will no longer allow.
Speaker 2 (01:10:56):
In person shopping.
Speaker 1 (01:10:58):
Everything must be ordered through an app, will have some
contractor bring the food to you, and at first they'll
sell it as temporary, just like Walmart did with the
no more twenty four hour Walmart things during COVID, and
then slowly it'll just become the new normal quote unquote,
and it won't be all of them, but a lot
of these big box stores that sell groceries like Walmart,
(01:11:21):
like Target are going to transition from an in person
brick and mortar shopping style to a full on Amazon
style warehouse. If there is violence over groceries, if there
is rioting, if there is looting, if their employees or
customers are getting assaulted in the store in the parking lot,
(01:11:43):
mark my words. You're going to see large box stores
in certain areas, in certain markets begin to transition to
a quote unquote temporary warehouse style online only shopping experience
and you can go pick it up, or they can,
(01:12:05):
Like I said, what's that app that you use the
other day?
Speaker 2 (01:12:07):
Shipped?
Speaker 3 (01:12:08):
Ship?
Speaker 1 (01:12:09):
They'll have shipped send it to your house. That's what's
gonna happen here. Rob Emmanuel said, never let a good
crisis go to waste. Corporations and government officials are fantastic
at milking bad situations to get their ultimate endgame. We
saw it with nine to eleven with the government. We
saw a lot of that happen during COVID, and you're
gonna see it again here.
Speaker 2 (01:12:29):
Okay, let's go to the next clip.
Speaker 1 (01:12:30):
Here, we've got more videos of people just letting you
know that the quality of individuals that you're funding in
this country.
Speaker 4 (01:12:38):
Good.
Speaker 16 (01:12:41):
I just learned that I don't get to eat this month.
I don't get my bootstamps this month because a motherfucker
in the White House and orange motherfucker in the White
House wants a ballroom for three billion dollars.
Speaker 8 (01:12:53):
I don't get to eat. What what my government is
supposed to help me, not hurt me?
Speaker 2 (01:12:59):
Why is it hurting me? Help you?
Speaker 8 (01:13:01):
Why is it taking the money that we have paid
into it to give us a ballroom?
Speaker 9 (01:13:05):
We don't have a king.
Speaker 8 (01:13:07):
Kings need balls.
Speaker 2 (01:13:08):
We don't.
Speaker 8 (01:13:09):
We're not where the citizens, we're public citizens. Why do
we need a ballroom? We're not invited. That's a king's room.
We don't need that. I need my food stamps. I
need my food stamps or something's gonna happen.
Speaker 1 (01:13:22):
Something's gonna happen. What do you think is gonna happen.
I think she's gonna buy another cat. Okay, that's another thing.
You're sitting here bitching about your free food stamps. And
I'm assuming that tattoo on your hand is not the
only one you've got. If you've got money for tattoos,
you don't need money for food. You've got pets. This
is gonna sound real harsh, real, real harsh. But if
(01:13:46):
you can't afford to feed yourself, you shouldn't have a pet.
Speaker 2 (01:13:49):
Period.
Speaker 1 (01:13:50):
You should pick, you should pick. That's real, real harsh.
But believe it or not, pets are a whole lot
more money than just food. Believe me, I know my
dog decided. My old dog used to pretend to die
like every six months. It cost me to her one
thousand dollars. Believe me, I know it is a sunk
(01:14:14):
cost owning a pet. And I sound like a dick.
How dare you, you monster, separate people from pets. Pets
are a privileged folks. I sound like a dick.
Speaker 3 (01:14:26):
I'll take this time to mourn my two fish the
other day. Gruesomely gruesomely, Yes, that just floated to the top,
but no.
Speaker 1 (01:14:37):
No, gruesomely caught in the filter. Yes the fish did die.
Speaker 2 (01:14:45):
But what's gonna happen if she doesn't get her food stamped?
That's my thing.
Speaker 1 (01:14:49):
I look at people like this, they're gonna rise up.
How you can't even rise up before noon to go
get a fucking job. How are you gonna rise up
when like are you're gonna start a civil war? Do
you understand with a civil war.
Speaker 2 (01:15:08):
And tie entails.
Speaker 1 (01:15:13):
You lacked the gumption to go to the gas station
and get a part time job. You're certainly not just
going to find it in yourself to overthrow the government.
It's not how this works. Also, why are they all fat?
How are they all fat? What are they eating? How
(01:15:33):
much food do they need? I know they buy garbage.
That's yeah, that was a rhetorical question.
Speaker 2 (01:15:41):
Well guess what.
Speaker 1 (01:15:42):
Now you get to learn how to budget and prepare
meals and make food last like everybody else.
Speaker 2 (01:15:46):
You don't get to stock your carts full of crap. Okay,
keep playing them.
Speaker 17 (01:15:53):
If I came in your house, face all my bags,
picking out all your food, de freezing snacks, your grandmama's
milk and everything, what you're gonna do? I'm curious what
you're gonna do. If I will to walk in your
house and go grocery shopping and your shit.
Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
I would shoot you. Next question, That's what I would do.
It wouldn't even cross my mind to do anything else.
If you came into my house and just started taking
my shit, I would shoot you, Yes, and I wouldn't
lose any sleep over it again. Another one with face tattoos. Look,
I got tattoos. I got tattoos too. I'm not anti tattoo.
(01:16:38):
I'm outside tattoos for people that can't pay their own
fucking bills without my help.
Speaker 2 (01:16:44):
I Okay, think about it this way.
Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
What if you're an eighteen year old and look, you
got a twenty two year old son that moves out
on his own, and he's like, Mom, I'm four hundred
bucks short on the rent this month.
Speaker 2 (01:16:56):
Can you help me out? So you give him four
hundred bucks. You don't loan it to him.
Speaker 1 (01:16:59):
You give it to him because son, and you'll love him,
and you truly you want to be a safety.
Speaker 2 (01:17:02):
You don't want to see anything bad happen to him.
Speaker 1 (01:17:05):
And he pays his rent, he doesn't get evicted, and
then a week later he's got a new tattoo.
Speaker 2 (01:17:13):
Wouldn't you be pissed about that?
Speaker 1 (01:17:16):
No, you can afford luxury items like booze, like tattoos,
like video games. You don't get government assistance period. In fact,
I think if you're receiving government assistance, all of your
finances should be on a debit card that blocks certain purchases.
Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
You don't get cash.
Speaker 1 (01:17:39):
You can go to stores, and if you try to
spend money on a video game on a computer that's
not work related anything, it blocks the purchase.
Speaker 2 (01:17:50):
You don't need those things.
Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
When they started welfare, when they started SNAP, when they
started EBT, it was never meant to be a permanent
replacement for income. It was meant to be a supplement
that you could use until you got back up on
your feet. My great grandma was a single mother that
raised nine children. She was on welfare for three months,
and when her husband left her and she got off
(01:18:15):
of it, she got back on her feet, busted her ass,
and got off of it.
Speaker 2 (01:18:18):
Because once upon.
Speaker 1 (01:18:19):
A time, people in this country had two very important qualities,
pride and shame, both equally important.
Speaker 2 (01:18:28):
You should have pride in being able to fend.
Speaker 1 (01:18:31):
For your family on your own, and you should be
a little ashamed that you're taking a handout.
Speaker 2 (01:18:37):
It doesn't mean it's the wrong thing to do if
you're really in.
Speaker 1 (01:18:39):
A pinch, but you should be ashamed if you continue
to do it. If my great grandma, the single mother
who was blind in one eye, with her nine children,
could get off of welfare and pay the bills, these
people can do it too. It's gonna require you to
make some uncomfortable budgeting decisions. But guess what, all of
(01:19:02):
us that are listening to the show, myself included, all
the middle class that don't get help from the government,
we all get to make those decisions every fucking month,
and nobody comes to the rescue when we're short.
Speaker 2 (01:19:14):
I guarantee you everyone.
Speaker 1 (01:19:16):
Are you listening to this show that's over the age
of twenty one in the last five years, has at
least one time been short on their money, go into
the grocery store or whatever and had to bounce either
groceries or some other type of bill on a credit
card until their next paycheck and then pay it off.
Then guarantee you that's happened. That doesn't happen to these people.
(01:19:39):
Inflation does not affect these people because when inflation goes up,
the government gives them a bump. When inflation goes up,
you guys, hope that your boss is generous enough to
give you some type of cost of living race. That's
the difference. No one comes to any of your rescue.
(01:20:02):
You don't that they don't have to worry about it.
And that's why you see this level of entitlement.
Speaker 2 (01:20:06):
People that have been given every you see like with
spoiled rich kids too.
Speaker 1 (01:20:10):
People that have been given everything their entire lives and
never had to work for it have a very very
unhealthy sense of entitlement. And it is damn near impossible
to snap them out of it in this lifetime.
Speaker 2 (01:20:20):
Damn near impossible.
Speaker 1 (01:20:23):
I think we should do this once a year, one month,
no welfare, cut them all off, let them figure it out,
hustle for a little bit.
Speaker 2 (01:20:29):
It'd be like an eb.
Speaker 1 (01:20:30):
A snap rum springer, like the Amish stew Okay, go
to the next video.
Speaker 18 (01:20:36):
And next week when millions of people are going to
have through his work to possibly stealing and order feet
themselves and their families, and the government complaints because they
will complain about the crime rate going up, even though
they're the ones who.
Speaker 9 (01:20:52):
Fucking did it.
Speaker 18 (01:20:55):
Make sure you point your anger at the system and
the people at the top, because they're the ones who
took the food away from the families and poor people
and serving children. The poor people just want to eat,
They just want to survive like the rest of us.
They just want to keep living like the rest of us.
So when you see them stealing, because you will, because
(01:21:17):
they're going to have to make sure your anger is
in directed at the individual.
Speaker 9 (01:21:25):
This goes so much deeper.
Speaker 18 (01:21:29):
It's hard to flip some fucking tables.
Speaker 2 (01:21:31):
How she gotta flip a table? Sit on it?
Speaker 1 (01:21:34):
Why doesn't she share some of her food with them?
That's the second one I've seen. They've almost all been fat.
That's the second one I've seen with dyed hair. Now again,
you can afford to go get your hair dyed. You
don't get welfare, sweetheart, or we deducted from what you're
getting or whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:21:51):
Do I sound heartless? Right? I mean? Do I sound
heartless right now? Or reasonable?
Speaker 3 (01:21:59):
A little bit?
Speaker 2 (01:22:00):
A little bit of both. Maybe that's what we need, though.
Speaker 1 (01:22:02):
We need someone to come in and be kind of
a hard ass, because that's the reality is. This incentivizes mediocrity.
And I'm not bashing everybody on welfare, but I am
bashing the people that have decided it's going to be
a lifestyle for them rather than.
Speaker 2 (01:22:16):
To pick me up. Do we have one more?
Speaker 12 (01:22:22):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (01:22:22):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (01:22:25):
Okay, yeah, they eat one? Yeah, play that one. We
saved the best for last.
Speaker 19 (01:22:31):
I just wanted to cumbro fascist to make this video
just to make something very very clear to the white man.
Black Americans do not care about your government shut down,
and Black Americans do not care about you taking away
our ebt and our government assistance because black Americans never
depended on the American government to take care of us
(01:22:52):
and feed us, because we never could. We were never
able to depend on the government in spite of what
you may say and what you may try to force
us to believe. So you can sit back and you
can mock, you can laugh, and you can think that
you're about to starve us to death. But I'm here
to let you know that we are going to eat regardless,
(01:23:14):
even if we have to hunt you animals down and
roast and eat you the delectable crackers and cheese. We
will make it happen. If we have to trust and
believe me, and if it takes this government shut down
for black people to finally come from under the government
(01:23:35):
and understand that we don't need to be paying our
taxes into this government. What we really need to be
doing is taking care of one another, buy land and
growing our own food, and building our own nation. If
this government shut down and starvation is what it's going
to take then let the party begin. It's black power, baby,
(01:23:56):
and we rise.
Speaker 2 (01:23:59):
It's like a modern Martin Luther King Junior. Right there.
Here's my thing now.
Speaker 1 (01:24:05):
Of course, when she says that, when she talks about
black people again, it shows the racism of the left.
Of course, not all, not even most black people are
on welfare. It's a ridiculous thing to propose to to
just associate welfare with being black. It's absurd. Monty Scott
and I have been sharing welfare jokes all week. He's
a black guy, okay. But here's the thing we talk about.
(01:24:29):
We're gonna start buying land and growing our own food
and making our own money.
Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
Why aren't you doing that now? If you can't do that.
Speaker 1 (01:24:39):
With the government assisting you, what makes you think you're
gonna be able to do it with even less money?
Speaker 2 (01:24:46):
Why don't you That's great, that's what she says to you.
Speaker 1 (01:24:49):
If you get rid of welfare, I'm gonna go out
and I'm gonna make my own money and buy land
and grow my own food. Okay, perfect, That's exactly what
I want people to do. I don't care what color
you are. I want everyone to make their own money,
grow their own food. And own their own land. You
(01:25:09):
just described my ideal society. Now, the part about hunting
and killing me because I'm white, I don't like that
too much. You're gonna get a little bit of a
shootout if you try that. But the last half there
at the end, I've all for it, yes, And that's
the problem is she just said the quiet part out loud. See,
(01:25:31):
when they decided to expand the welfare state back in
the seventies, what they are really back in the forties
with the FDR thirties and forties.
Speaker 2 (01:25:39):
Sorry, what they did there.
Speaker 1 (01:25:42):
Was they decided they were going to get an entire
generation to people.
Speaker 2 (01:25:48):
And it's not a racial thing. It's white, black, Hispanic,
all types of people on welfare.
Speaker 1 (01:25:53):
They were going to replace the father in the household
with the government. And you saw a lot in urban communities,
but it's all over the place. And she said the
quiet part out loud is what a lot of the
people that you've seen in these videos who are abusing
welfare and just sucking on the tit of the system
their entire lives don't realize is that money they're receiving
(01:26:18):
is not keeping them alive, it is holding them down.
If you give people enough to be comfortable, very very
very rarely will they ever go beyond that level of comfort.
Speaker 2 (01:26:35):
It is about creating a generation of.
Speaker 1 (01:26:40):
Government dependent serfs, slaves, if you will, and that's what
you're seeing. There's an old Roman quote, give them bread
and circuses and they'll never revolt. If you keep people
entertained and you'll let them eat, they'll leave you alone.
Speaker 2 (01:26:58):
Comfort is the most day was thinking.
Speaker 1 (01:27:00):
In fact, I asked Chad Gpt the other day, I said,
if you were the devil, how would you sink your
fangs into people? And it said I wouldn't perform blatant
acts of evil. I would provide people with comfort, with ease,
with accessibility. And that's exactly what the welfare system has
become in this country when it initially was, when it
(01:27:21):
was initially out, when they first came out with it,
it truly was to help people. And I think a
lot of the people that support welfare today, I don't
think they're bad people.
Speaker 2 (01:27:31):
I think they're misguided.
Speaker 1 (01:27:34):
Well, when I see videos like that, and when you
see videos like that where you see people saying, if
you take away my free shit, I'm gonna hunt and
kill you just because you're a white person, then I'm
gonna eat you. How on earth is anyone expected to
have sympathy for somebody like that? Now, if there's one
thing that brings us all together, it's music. And I figured,
(01:27:58):
in these trying times with snap and ebt it risks
being cut off next week, what people really needed to
hear was a new song. And I haven't you know
it's it's been a while since we've stepped on the
mic here at that space with Caleb Salvator. But I
thought it was time for me to come out of
(01:28:18):
my musical retirement and come back with a new hot
track and ladies and gentlemen, without further ado, we've got
the welfare anthem.
Speaker 4 (01:28:29):
Go ahead.
Speaker 13 (01:28:42):
Oh well, imagine as I'm pacing the aisles at my
local grocery store, and I can't help but to hear,
you know, I can't help but to hear in exchanging
of slurs, what the fuck do y'all mean?
Speaker 2 (01:28:56):
What the fuck do you mean?
Speaker 1 (01:28:57):
I have to pay for my own ground SWI what
a shame, What a shame you have to lift the
working poor.
Speaker 2 (01:29:05):
Pie shinin in with the habits of people. Ever heard
of kidding a gut tam job. No, it's much better
to face these kinds of things. Want contribute to society.
Speaker 1 (01:29:16):
I shined in, it's actually quit sampo.
Speaker 14 (01:29:20):
Just go down with Tea dot com or in your
mcle me packet house.
Speaker 1 (01:29:26):
Oh nohing.
Speaker 2 (01:29:28):
Well, in fact, I mean look at it this way.
At least now you can lose some weight. Switch fobster
with toast and no more champagne. The facts I really
don't go back to. You have to pay for marcros
in a new way.
Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
No cutting bush light in.
Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
The casino is a danger. I charged in with the habit.
Speaker 1 (01:30:03):
You people never heard of?
Speaker 20 (01:30:06):
Hen you goddamn but no even the retardiest guy on
the street from me, cause I that's.
Speaker 2 (01:30:12):
For forty bucks a week.
Speaker 20 (01:30:13):
I chined in, how did you people never heard up
by a.
Speaker 2 (01:30:17):
The slip nor road money.
Speaker 20 (01:30:19):
I don't really care how to pick the kind of things.
Speaker 2 (01:30:22):
Just stop all music. Sheer Una left. This is the
part where I'd throw a high note in if I
could hit it.
Speaker 20 (01:30:44):
I chimed in, never two people never heard of kidding?
You got your inside hustle. You could always just tried ball.
Who meets nobody's paying for that?
Speaker 2 (01:30:54):
Only there I chime to have.
Speaker 1 (01:30:57):
But two people never heard of this, hasn't.
Speaker 2 (01:31:02):
This is why I shop that Target. So who do
you think sings that song?
Speaker 12 (01:31:17):
Better?
Speaker 2 (01:31:17):
Me or Gerard Way?
Speaker 3 (01:31:20):
I'm considering considering it's not Gerard Way.
Speaker 2 (01:31:23):
I thought that was Gerard Way. Brendan.
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
I always get those two queers confused. That was uh
panic at the Walmart self checkout lane. I write sins,
not welfare checks. Little emo throwback there. I think the
last one we did was an EMO one. It was
the STOTHRT disc track if I remember correctly. All Right,
(01:31:48):
we got one more video to show you guys on
this and then we're getting out of here with with
this segment, we'll move on to the next one. This
is Delaware Senator Chris Coons once again saying the quiet
part out out about this whole thing.
Speaker 21 (01:32:01):
Republicans control the House, the Senate, and the White House. Frankly,
this is our only moment of leverage. And although a
very unpleasant tool to use, there.
Speaker 3 (01:32:12):
You have it.
Speaker 2 (01:32:13):
Leverage.
Speaker 5 (01:32:14):
That's what he sees the people who aren't going to
get their food stamps, as the kids who did not
ask to be put into these situations, he sees them
as leverage.
Speaker 1 (01:32:27):
Talk about dehumanizing rhetoric leverage. This is the problem, ladies
and gentlemen people. The reality is the short term fix
to this is something needs to get well. The short
term fix is if you can, if you've got spare
food sitting around, go drop it off at your food bank,
go drop it off at a church, whatever the case
may be, get if you can afford to do it,
(01:32:48):
give as much as you can. Because there are I know,
we played the crazies and those people deserve to be
cut off, but there are going to be people that
are hurt by this. There are people that are in
bad situations, specifically children that didn't ask to be raised
by shitbag parents that are going to be in bad situations,
and that's a problem and we should help those people out.
Speaker 2 (01:33:03):
That's the Christian thing to do.
Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
The long term solution is the one nobody wants to
talk about, which is we have to start phasing the
welfare out. We have to stop incentivizing mediocrity, and people
have to start becoming more self sufficient because the reality
of this situation is any government that can provide you
with all of your basic needs can take them away
(01:33:26):
from you just as quickly. And I hear all this
talk about how Trump's a monster and all this, why
would you want to give Donald Trump or insert leader
here that you don't like or potential leader, a monopoly
a kill switch over your ability to feed your family.
Speaker 2 (01:33:44):
Doesn't it just sound easier to go out and eat
what you kill.
Speaker 1 (01:33:49):
Doesn't that sound like a much much much more not
just I don't even want to say enjoyable. It sounds
like a lot more of a dignified way to live,
I should say, because that government, like I said, it
can provide you with everything right now. And that's why
communism never works is the government has total control over
(01:34:13):
all your resources. They can decide to cut it off
because you said something they don't like. It's why I
won't have a smart home.
Speaker 2 (01:34:19):
I'm not giving those people access to how hot or
cold my house can get.
Speaker 1 (01:34:22):
Get the fuck out of here, that's the thing. And
in some cases, as you saw in that video, your
government will use you as leverage. They will use you
as a bargaining chip to get health care for illegal immigrants.
Speaker 2 (01:34:36):
Because that's what this is all boiling down to. Now.
Don't get me wrong, I think it's a good thing
that we have safety nets.
Speaker 1 (01:34:47):
I think it's a good thing that we can take
care of poor kids and feed them and if people
truly do fall on tough times, that they have something
that's gonna make it so they aren't goetting just in
the streets. I truly think that's a good thing. The
problem is the safety nets were never meant.
Speaker 2 (01:35:09):
To be permanent.
Speaker 1 (01:35:11):
We have to get back to a point where people
see being on welfare as shameful, where they strive to
get off of it as quickly as possible. There has
to be an incentive to get off of it because
that's my thing. My government can't use me as leverage.
(01:35:35):
You could say, oh, you're a sucker, because you know
you're you're not getting all these free benefits from Uncle Sam.
My government can't take my families, my ability to feed
my family away from me and use it as leverage
to get back at the other party.
Speaker 2 (01:35:50):
That can never happen to me. That that alone doesn't
incentivize you.
Speaker 1 (01:35:57):
I'm not saying you gotta go start your own business
or anything, make your own living, though, earn your money,
pay your own bills. If that doesn't incentivize you to
get off your ass and get out and make something
of yourself. I don't know what will, but I'm moving
(01:36:17):
on to the next segment. I'm done preaching at you,
all right. Gavin Newsom. Gavin Newsom is a man of
many personas new scum, as Mia calls him. He's a
man of many personas and man in many faces. We're
not going to get to all our segments today. It's fine, though,
and Newsom. While on former NBA player Matt Barnes's podcast,
(01:36:42):
Newsom decided to roll out yet another skin to the chameleon,
his hip hop persona go ahead.
Speaker 22 (01:36:51):
But also, you know, it was also about paying the bills, man,
And it was just like hustling. And so I was
out there kind of raising myself, turning on the TV started,
you know, just getting obsessed, you know, sitting there with
the you know, the wonderbread and five stacks of you know, like.
Speaker 2 (01:37:09):
The white.
Speaker 22 (01:37:14):
Come every day every day in the backyard, just bouncing
the basketball, throwing the ball against the wall until the
ball is just like fraying, man, and you're talking to yourself,
that's it whole thing. So just and and then you know,
then this student that was shitty students in the back
(01:37:36):
with his head down all of a sudden started throwing
the baseball a little fashion than everyone else and started,
you know, make a few free throws because I was
sitting there practicing five hundred of them every damn night.
And in high school, I look up in the stands
my dad's back up there, and it's like man, and
then he's bringing his friends and your captain of the team,
and you're like geez, you know, and it just saved me,
(01:37:58):
and it got me into college.
Speaker 1 (01:38:00):
Underbread Newsome, I thought that was why we all did mia.
Speaker 2 (01:38:10):
Have you ever had wonderbread?
Speaker 1 (01:38:13):
Yeah, okay, that sounded all okay, cheap, white, cheap white bread.
Ye did that not sound like one of your mom
and uncle's reds stories? They're not red stories? Growing up story?
Speaker 3 (01:38:26):
Yeah? Over exaggerated.
Speaker 2 (01:38:29):
Yeah yeah, I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:38:34):
So, here's the thing about wonderbread is I remember getting
wonderbread as a kid, and then as an adult you realize,
like as you get older, you're like, oh, okay, now
I know when my parents had money and when they didn't,
because when they did have money, we.
Speaker 2 (01:38:49):
Would get Ropetella's, and Wonderbread was for when we were broke.
Speaker 1 (01:38:53):
Now I understand, it's like I understand having breakfast for dinner,
like it seemed like a treat at the time, and
it was literally, no, all we have are eggs and
milk right now.
Speaker 2 (01:39:03):
Uh no, I get it though.
Speaker 1 (01:39:04):
Uh wonderbread, Newsom, what that's it's what eggs, milk and batter.
That's all you need to make breakfast for dinner.
Speaker 2 (01:39:11):
Breakfast for dinner the other night. That's because I was.
Speaker 1 (01:39:14):
Too lazy to go to the store, not because I
was broke. There's a difference. I looked in the stands
and my dad was there, That's what he said. Well, yeah,
your dad probably wasn't there because he was out, I
don't know, defending his close friend, the billionaire oil baron
Getty family in court because he was their head lawyer.
Speaker 2 (01:39:33):
Maybe he was doing that.
Speaker 1 (01:39:35):
It's like Newsome went on tub not even Netflix tub
and watched a movie about a black teenager from the
hood and just took notes because he was going on
that podcast, and he's like, this is gonna be my
life story.
Speaker 2 (01:39:50):
I got the wonderbread and the mac and cheese. That's
the thing.
Speaker 1 (01:39:57):
And you ain't black, but that's the thing. It's so
interesting to me that he's willing to lie about something
when we have so many receipts that prove the contrary.
(01:40:22):
There's a picture from an old San Francisco chronicle in
nineteen ninety one with a picture of Newsom and three
of his friends. Three of his friends, two of whom
are the heirs to the Getty Oil, the Getty Oil
family thrown It says, children of the rich. Gavin Newsom
(01:40:46):
with Paul Moe and Andrew Getty and Billy Getty. December twelfth,
nineteen ninety one. This guy, like, and we talked about
this when he went on Sean Ryan. The way this
guy just lies about his upbringing, the way he bends
the truth.
Speaker 2 (01:41:03):
He's that kid.
Speaker 1 (01:41:03):
You didn't go to public school, so you don't you
don't know, you can't relate to this. But there everyone
had this kid in public school that like came from
a nice upper middle class suburban background and just wanted
to pretend to be poor. And it's like, yeah, my
house is really nice, and you know, my my parents
both drive Bentley's. But you know it's it's good. They're
strapped with debt. Man, we don't have money for anything else. Yeah,
(01:41:26):
ignore our seventy five inch TV. I mean, everyone had
that one kid like that and and that's that's what
Newsom's acting like right now. When they asked Newsom, hey,
your dad, When Sean Ryan asked him, said, hey, your
dad was you know, a lawyer for a multi billion
dollar oil tycoon, Like, how how did he not have
any money? And Newsom's comeback was, well, you know, he
just donated at all. He gave it all away. Oh, perfect,
(01:41:48):
that makes sense. Gave it all away, you know, in
cars and houses and his son's private school.
Speaker 2 (01:41:54):
Things like that.
Speaker 1 (01:41:56):
Right, I'll tell you the only thing about that store
that I believe is that Newsom was a shitty student.
I believe that one, no doubt in my mind, no
doubt Newsom was a shitty student, no doubt. Here's the
thing with Newsom. I don't think Gavin Newsom knows who
(01:42:18):
the real Gavin Newsom is.
Speaker 2 (01:42:22):
That's scary. It's not just that we don't know who
the real Gavin Newsom is.
Speaker 1 (01:42:26):
I think this guy has lived a lie for so
long that he doesn't know who the real Gavin Newsom is.
Speaker 2 (01:42:36):
That's someone that cannot take power.
Speaker 1 (01:42:38):
Because that's someone Tim Dillon put it perfectly, who stands
for less than nothing.
Speaker 2 (01:42:45):
You can stand for nothing that's something Newsom stands for.
Less than nothing. The man believes in less than nothing.
Do you know who he reminds me of me?
Speaker 1 (01:43:00):
Yeah, Dan Scott, it's the sleazy, slick talking politician you
can't kill dance the con man. I mean that, that's
really who he reminds me of. New scum hip hop
wonder bred Newsom. He's just hustling, didn't you hear him?
(01:43:22):
He's hustling. It's about paying the bills and hustling, oh man,
hustling to and from classes. That is, you know, five
thousand dollars a semester private school. Right, Oh boy, oh boy,
all right, I think.
Speaker 2 (01:43:39):
We got time for Oh fuck it, we got time
for one more.
Speaker 1 (01:43:43):
Go to the one about Italy because we still got
to do the positive news, and we'll do two more.
Speaker 2 (01:43:51):
So Italy is got a law.
Speaker 1 (01:43:56):
In the parliament right now where they're considering banning burke. Now,
burkas are the facial coverings that Muslim women wear when
they're out in public because their bodies are not to
be seen by anybody that's not their husband. And Italy's
talking about banning that and people are freaking out. Oh,
(01:44:18):
this is islamophobic it's xenophobic, gets wrong. How could they
do this?
Speaker 2 (01:44:22):
Blah blah blah blah blah.
Speaker 1 (01:44:25):
And I'm like, guys, look at the surface, I saw that.
I'm like, I don't agree with that. But then I
started to think about it a little bit deeper. Italy
does not have the same protections for freedom of religion
that we do here in the United States. Italy is
a homogeneous Catholic nation. If Italy wants to say, you
(01:44:49):
don't get to practice that religion out in the open here,
they can do that. Italy can say, hey, we want
to maintain our Italy is never been a melting pot
up until the last couple of years when they decided
to import the Third World. If Italy wants to say
we don't want to lose our culture here, Italy has
(01:45:09):
every right to do that.
Speaker 2 (01:45:10):
And I've told you guys this a million times. Tolerance
only works when it's a two way street.
Speaker 1 (01:45:17):
If you can't go to somewhere and to an Islamic
country in Africa or the Middle East and ring church
bells without being stoned to death, why on earth should
they be able to go do prayer calls in Europe.
If you can't put a cross around your neck in
Saudi Arabia or Yemen or somewhere without being hung. Why
(01:45:40):
should they be able to come to your country and
practice their religion in public.
Speaker 2 (01:45:48):
If you're a Christian nation, because you.
Speaker 1 (01:45:51):
Know, it's all fine and dandy that we can be
tolerant and welcoming of other cultures, and that's great. But
if they're not going to welcome you with the same
open in arms, then you have to start asking yourself,
what's the ulterior motive here?
Speaker 2 (01:46:06):
Why did they come here and demand.
Speaker 1 (01:46:09):
That we assimilate to their lifestyle, But we can't go
there and even practice our lifestyle.
Speaker 2 (01:46:15):
What's going on here?
Speaker 1 (01:46:16):
That's how you get flattened, That's how you get conquest,
and that's how you get a soft crusade like you're
seeing in Europe. And Italy's had a problem with this
for a year with migrants coming in there, and I
think this is a way of just telling them, go
do this somewhere else. We don't want you, We want
the crime to go away. I don't have a problem
with this. You couldn't do this in the United States,
(01:46:37):
but I think Italy has every right to do this,
and they should do it. I think these European countries,
and it's not racist to say this. I think if
these countries in Africa in the Middle East can have
their own homogeneous culture that doesn't welcome Jews and doesn't
welcome Christians and doesn't welcome anyone who's anything separate from
the Islamic regime that's in power, then we can do
(01:46:59):
the same thing. We can say no, we're a Christian country.
You can come here, you can do it in private,
but none of that public shit. No, you don't get
to do that here. We don't want to lose our culture.
Our culture, our religion, our faith is important to us.
(01:47:19):
You don't get to come here and push that bullshit
on us.
Speaker 2 (01:47:23):
I would support that.
Speaker 1 (01:47:25):
I think ita least right to do it. I think
more countries should adopt that in Europe, and more Christian
nations should defend their culture because until if we don't
start doing that, you're going to see this soft crusade
take over all of Europe. You know, these these wars
(01:47:48):
between Christianity and Islam that you saw, you know, a
thousand years ago, they never ended. Everyone thinks, oh, they
ended in a stalemate, and the Muslims went back to
their countries, and the Christians went back to their countries
and they just live their separate lives.
Speaker 2 (01:48:03):
That's not what happened.
Speaker 1 (01:48:05):
The Muslims regrouped and said, we got to find another
because their religion requires them to conquer, right, So they regrouped.
They went back to their home countries. They regrouped, and
they said, let's find another way to get at them.
We can't take them over with military force. The Jews
sain't worth the squeeze. Let's try something else. So they're
doing what you see right now, mass migration, soft crusade,
(01:48:28):
and by the time the Christian countries figured out what
was happening, Pandora's shipbox had already been opened and there
was nothing they could do about it. It's gonna take
some serious overcorrection and it's gonna take, I hate to
break it to you, it's gonna take leaders who have
the balls to stand up and aren't afraid to be
of being called Islamophobic, racist, anti immigration. That if we
(01:48:54):
want to save the Christian West, that's what's gonna have
to happen is leaders are going to have to step
up and not be afraid of the bullshit insults that
the media is gonna hurl at them. It's real, real
easy to do the right thing when everybody's on your side,
or it's gonna go unnoticed. It becomes real, real difficult
(01:49:14):
when you risk your professional reputation to do the right thing.
Speaker 2 (01:49:18):
And that's what we need.
Speaker 1 (01:49:19):
And you saw that exact shit with Poland's Prime minister
a couple of years ago. You saw they asked Paul,
you know when everyone was taking all the refugees in
from all over the world. By the way, when they
took Gadathi down in Libya, he said, if you take
me down, you're going. Gadathi basically said, I am the
last line of defense between Europe and the Third world
(01:49:42):
and the Muslim world, and if you take me down,
you will not be able to control the flow of
refugees across your border and you will lose your culture.
And sure as shit, the man was right. They killed
him when I was in high school, and he was right.
And even when I was in high school, I was
kind of like, Hey, isn't this going to create kind
of a vacuum, because yeah, he's a bad dude, he's
(01:50:02):
a dictator and whatnot.
Speaker 2 (01:50:03):
But those guys kind of keep the wolves. That's a
different part of the world.
Speaker 1 (01:50:07):
Those guys kind of keep the wolves at bay over there,
and they kind of sometimes you need a bad man
to keep the worst men away. And sure as shit,
I was right. In high school, I was right, and
we had no business. And that's guess what your tax
dollars paid for.
Speaker 20 (01:50:19):
That.
Speaker 1 (01:50:20):
Your tax dollars paid for the fall of the regimes
in the Middle East that led to the soft crusade
Islamic takeover of Europe.
Speaker 2 (01:50:29):
You got to pay for that.
Speaker 1 (01:50:30):
But when all those refugees were coming in all over Europe,
they asked Poland's Prime minister, they said, your country hasn't
taken a single refugee. Why And he said, because the
people here don't want me to. The people here's culture
is important to them, and they see what's going on
all over the rest of Europe where cultures are being
disintegrated before their very eyes, where people, you know, are
(01:50:52):
becoming a minority in their own home country that they're
native to, and they don't like that. And I said, okay,
it doesn't matter how I feel about it. My countrymen,
the people, my constituents, the people that I represent, don't
want me to bring these people into my country, So
I'm not going to it. Do you want to know
the only country in Europe during that time period that
(01:51:14):
didn't have a single terrorist attack?
Speaker 2 (01:51:17):
If you guessed Poland, you were right.
Speaker 1 (01:51:18):
Do you know I'm part Polish? Fun fact for the audience,
I'm part Polish. Okay, let's just go to the positive
news here. I want to get the fuck out of here.
What are we I don't want to talk about the
White House expansion. Yes, Trump built a ballroom. Oh boy,
go fucking cry about it. Candas Owens is having a
mental breakdown. Venezuela has oil, so we're gonna.
Speaker 2 (01:51:37):
Go to war with them maybe.
Speaker 1 (01:51:39):
And then Democrats in Maine and Delaware are pedophiles.
Speaker 2 (01:51:43):
You can look that up.
Speaker 1 (01:51:44):
It's all on the Debt Space with Caleb Salvator facebook page.
So what's going on with the positive news this week?
We're ending on a high note. This is our new segment.
What's up here?
Speaker 3 (01:51:53):
All right? So for this week, there is a little girl.
So her birthday was last Saturday, so a week ago now, yeah, yes,
sorry sorry, yeah. She is turning thirteen or she turned thirteen,
(01:52:18):
and she has like this rare disease like super rare,
like only her mom said, only like one hundred some
people have it.
Speaker 16 (01:52:29):
What is it?
Speaker 3 (01:52:30):
She said, what it was?
Speaker 2 (01:52:31):
I don't really is it Kawasaki? Never mind, that's it's
like super rare anyway.
Speaker 3 (01:52:39):
But so her mom made a TikTok just asking like
for some help. I wasn't going to play the TikTok,
but it was like seven minutes long. But she was
just wanting some help because last year for her birthday,
she had a party and no one RSV pede, like
no one went, and so she wanted to do something
(01:53:01):
really special for her birthday this year, so she asked
for She asked just like hypothetically, she asked her who
which celebrity she wanted to meet or like if she
could get like a message from any celebrity, like who
would it be? And she said Lindsay Lohan because the
daughter's name is the little girl's name is Lindsay And
(01:53:22):
she said Lindsay and.
Speaker 2 (01:53:23):
She shot for the stars.
Speaker 3 (01:53:26):
Well, she's like making a comeback, is she? Yeah? She
is because her movie came because Freaky Friday, Freaky or Friday.
Speaker 2 (01:53:33):
Came out, So she's like making is she off the sauce?
Speaker 3 (01:53:36):
Oh yeah, she's like sober, she's like back to normal now.
So yeah, she's like making it comeback. But yeah, so
she said Lindsay Lohan. So the mom made a TikTok
and she said that like if someone could like find
a way to get this to Lindsay Lohan so that
way she can like send her like a little message.
(01:53:57):
And she was like talking about the daughter and how
she is just like so nice, and she said that
she's kind of like a dog, like you can be
mean to her and she'll forget about it and like
she'll still be just like super nice to you, like
give you a hug. And I was like going through
her TikTok and like looking at videos of the daughter
(01:54:19):
and she was just so sweet, like she was so cute.
And so then she posted an update and she got
this video.
Speaker 23 (01:54:33):
Lindsay, we have a big birthday surprise for you. Okay,
do you remember what celebrity did you tell me you
wanted to meet? Do you remember who wasn't Lindy Lo Okay,
I have a very special surprise for you.
Speaker 3 (01:54:46):
I want you to watch the TV.
Speaker 23 (01:54:47):
Okay.
Speaker 7 (01:54:56):
I just okay, low hand, I just wish you a
very happy birthday.
Speaker 9 (01:55:02):
Are you, sending so God bless you.
Speaker 18 (01:55:05):
Wish you all the best wishes on your birthday.
Speaker 10 (01:55:08):
They all come true and having a great birthday.
Speaker 12 (01:55:13):
Love.
Speaker 19 (01:55:14):
I love it, you love it.
Speaker 2 (01:55:17):
Low Hand reached out to you.
Speaker 9 (01:55:19):
Will God bless you, bless wishes on your birthday they
all come true and have a great birthday.
Speaker 24 (01:55:28):
Love good Thank you with Windy low Hand, I love you.
Speaker 3 (01:55:43):
Oh and then here's the video that she said, Hi, Lindsay,
it's Lindsay lohand I just want to wish you a
very happy birthday. I am sending you so much love,
God bless you, wishing you all the best wishes on
your birthday. May they all come true and have a
great birthday, spend it with the people you love.
Speaker 2 (01:56:03):
Well, that's sweet. I don't even have a joke.
Speaker 3 (01:56:07):
And then people also made her cards and stuff and
send them to her. And then companies were sending her
gifts and stuff too, like American Girl, send her a
doll And then other companies were sending her gifts.
Speaker 2 (01:56:22):
Should we send her a make Asylums great again? Copybug?
Speaker 6 (01:56:25):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:56:26):
Yeah, but they send it back. What if when the
mom was like, hey, I got you, remember what celebrity
you wanted? What celebrity you wanted to get a birthday
wish from? And she's just like Andrew Tate.
Speaker 2 (01:56:43):
Just like the most absurd yea, the little girl wanted
Andrew date.
Speaker 1 (01:56:49):
Oh boy, Oh that's a good story. That that's better
than migrant rape Gang's good job. Okay, that's been our show.
We it's November. I said one more time. I do
want to give a shout out because it is a
good cause, and I'm a sucker for a good cause.
If you send a venmo to my producer chatter nome
(01:57:10):
c h A t t e r g as in
girl n O m E on venmo, it's all one word,
no underscores. His company is doing a fundraiser buying Thanksgiving
dinners for families all over the city. I bought a
whole family a meal today. You guys can send him
some too. It doesn't cost a whole lot. Any every
(01:57:32):
doll every penny helps Again, it's chatter c h A
t t e r gnome g n O m E
on the venmo. Just send it with Thanksgiving donation as
your little subtext on the payment you send him. That
would go a long way, especially nowadays when everybody needs help.
I think he's up to let me see. He texted
(01:57:52):
me an update on where they were at. He said, uh, oh,
they're at four right now. They're trying to get to ten.
Now they're trying to get to ten, so they've already
hit the goal in like a day. So you can
go out and help them out with even more. Cheat
on your taxes, not your spouse. See you on Wednesday.
Stay based,