Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:22):
All right, welcome to That's Bassed.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
I'm your host, as always, Caleb Salvator, reporting from somewhere
on a ground.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
We're laughing our.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Way through the end of the days, brought to you
by Outlaws, Dreamers and our friends over.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
At Live three sixty five on Chris Baker Radio.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
I'm gonna lead the show off with the charity sponsorship tonight,
just because that's the kind of guy I am. Our
producer Tim is raising money and I'm shaming you all
at the beginning, so it's fresh in your minds now.
Our producer Tim is raising money to help buy Thanksgiving
dinners for various families in the Omaha metro area this
(01:00):
this November. You can donate money. It does not cost
much to send this guy some money and buy dinner
for a whole family. As it turns out, it's Venmo
chatter c h A t t E r gnome g
n O m E all one word chatter nome c
h A t t E r g n O m
E on Venmo. You can send him some money and
(01:22):
help out the hungry kids and adults. There's enough people
that are struggling nowadays. We talk about it live on air. Well,
rather than talking about it, well, I guess you guys
don't even talk about it.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
You just listen about it.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
You can be about it and you can actually uh
affect a positive change out there for people. Rather than
listening to me belly ache, you could you do something
productive with your time and money for once?
Speaker 1 (01:47):
Stock on mea.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
The red face of white supremacy is here with us
as always, Mia, what do you want to say.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
To the viewers? I didn't just drive away by insulting.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Hi, She's here. She's here.
Speaker 2 (01:59):
We got a whole whole bunch of fun stuff to
talk about. We had two great interviews that aired this week.
We've only normally been doing two shows a week, but
we up to three just for this week. We had
Chris Baker on Monday. He's running for Douglas County Board,
kind of talking about what went down with the whole
tweet of death and where he's going next. And then
we had Rico Saint Cloud, a candidate for lieutenant governor.
Speaker 1 (02:19):
I don't Ohio.
Speaker 2 (02:20):
He's actually a Democrat, and he's talking about how he's
been blackballed from the Democrat party. If you're interested in
seeing the way that the other side thinks this guy
will give you a great insight to this. He was
straight up told, straight up told by a party chair
and I quote, I don't like veterans and I never
have end quote. That's what they told him, and that's
(02:40):
why they weren't going to support his campaign. You can
go check that out that aired Wednesday, wherever you get
your shows. You're listening to this right now. I'm not
going to tell you where to go to hear that one. Okay,
We've got plenty of stuff to talk about this week.
We're gonna talk about Epstein, We're gonna talk about the shutdowns.
We're gonna talk about Trump's new free money plan that
I think is a disaster. Some New York City fallout.
(03:04):
We got a girl calling churches up and then they
can't leave the big, titty, sloth eyed girl alone, Sydney Sweeney.
I don't know what the animosity is toward her, but
we're going to talk about that. But before we do
any of that, let's hop into the current state of
the left.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Real quick, excuse me, it's ma'am all right.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
This week, for the current State of the Left, we
have four contestants. Four contestants for our favorite game, which
liberal most belongs in a mental institution? Now here's the rules.
They're very simple. As we all know, all liberals belong
in mental institutions, but by rule, one of them has
to belong in there more than the others. So you,
the audience, are going to help us. We're going to
(03:42):
play four of them. You can only vote for one.
You can drop a comment on YouTuber rumble. Tell me dud,
just drop comments on YouTube. It helps with the algorithm.
You can call me ugly. I really don't give a shit.
But if you go, if you drop a comment on
YouTuber rumble, let us know which liberal you think most
belongs in a mental institution. What are you gonna say?
(04:03):
No one's gonna call you. You see, when they insult me,
they don't even go for your appearance because they know
nobody's gonna buy it. They'll say that, like you pretend
I'm someone else when you kiss me. That's literally one
of the comments we got. That's that's one of the
comments we've gotten.
Speaker 4 (04:17):
I do I pretend to JD?
Speaker 1 (04:19):
She pretends I'm JD.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
Vance.
Speaker 2 (04:21):
Though, on the bright side, in like fifteen years, she's
not gonna have to pretend because that's probably what I'll
look like. Okay, let's uh, let's go to the first
contestant here. It comes from none other than mister Dean Winters,
the TikTok streamer. You can fight them all over TikTok
Live where people will call in to debate with them,
and a lot of the times it just devolves into
(04:41):
an Xbox Live lobby, but it's still funny to watch.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
Anyway.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
He went on a podcast and he was talking about
his disdain for traditional gender.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
Roles, and I felt, you guys would appreciate this.
Speaker 6 (04:52):
I think the idea that men need to protect women, right,
if you believe that, you're kind of stating that women
are more valuable than men, like, for instance, no.
Speaker 7 (05:02):
You're stronger, therefore here to.
Speaker 6 (05:03):
Defend my phone case is more is uh?
Speaker 8 (05:08):
Is uh?
Speaker 6 (05:08):
It protects my phone, and my phone is much more
valuable than my phone case. So when you make the
argument that men need to go and protect and defend women,
die for women, you're just saying that the woman is
a very valuable individual and the man is less valuable
and should give up an expensive.
Speaker 9 (05:24):
Say not what I'm saying at all.
Speaker 1 (05:27):
Yeah, So I I do disagree with that.
Speaker 6 (05:30):
I think that's kind of like the male's role as
being genetically stronger that you have to and that's kind
of like, I mean, what are you gonna do?
Speaker 1 (05:37):
You want to have your your girlfriend offend you?
Speaker 6 (05:39):
Oh, you know, I'm totally I'm totally fine with if
you're just making the argument you're right, right, I'm total
I'm totally that you're making the argument that right about
the fact that, Yeah, maybe I guess at the end
of the day, who's who's more valuable, the Secret Service
or the president.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
Yeah, he figured it out. He's figured to answer that question.
He does want his girlfriend to defend him in a fight. Yes, absolutely,
that's what he wants. Have you seen the way they
fuck with him?
Speaker 1 (06:07):
Mia?
Speaker 2 (06:08):
Have you seen that guy before? So somebody suck clip,
somebody called into his little TikTok stream, and uh, Dean
was just disgusted by this guy, like from the get go.
And as it turns out, the guy right before calling
in had jerked off on a picture of Dean, busted
(06:34):
a nut onto the picture, and.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
Then sent it to him. That's the kind of harassment
this kid gets, not a sexual thing, just a dominance thing.
So that that's what he's going at there. So Dean
does not listen. Uh, I'll go out.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
Yes, you're correct, I do value my wife over myself. Yes, absolutely,
I do value my wife over me. That that's kind
of part of being a man. That's just unfortunately, whether
it's protecting them physically from predators, prowlers, whatever you want
(07:10):
to call him.
Speaker 1 (07:11):
Which I had to do not too long ago. I
didn't even have to do anything.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
Just the presence of a little extra encouragement got the
guy off the porch. But that's neither here nor there.
That's a pending legal matter. And I do you think
it was related to the show? Do you think it
was someone mad about something we said on the air.
For sure, probably he kind of looked like a liberal,
I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
He looked a little left leaning, so it could be.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
But no, I mean, whether it's I mean, that's just
part of what we deal with this man. And I'm
not going to go on too long with a dietrib
about this because I've talked about it before. But you know,
we hear all this stuff about men's mental health, men's
mental health, men's mental health, and you know what, sometimes yeah,
if you're a guy that wants to blow his head
off because he's seen some traumatic shit and war or what.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Absolutely, but that's not what we're talking about, and you
guys know it. We're talking about the guys that can't
shoulder the weight of being a man, the guys.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Who just want to sit there and cry. Look for
too hard And I just wish I could cry in
front of my What.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
No, you don't get to cry about how hard your
life is in front your dog dies, your mom dies,
grandma dies. Okay, you can cry in front of your wife.
You do not get to cry in front of your
wife about how hard work was. Do you understand me.
That's not something you get to cry to her about.
She will not respect you for it. She may not
intentionally not respect you for it, but subconsciously you will
(08:30):
chip away at the block of respect that she has
for you in the back of her head. That's just
a fact, and that's the way it should be, because
that's how genetics work.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
That we are men. Yes, things are hard. Yes we
have to go out and pay the bills.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
Sometimes we have to do things we don't like, but
we shut the fuck up about it. And that's part
of protecting our wives. That's how it works. Yes, I
do value.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
Them more than me. I value them more than me.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
That I would my wife more than me, that I
would take a bullet for her, and I value her
more than me, that I would go out and mix
and earn income in a really really shitty way and
not fucking cry to her about it because it's not
her business and I don't need to push that burden
onto her.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
That's one hundred percent how it should be.
Speaker 2 (09:07):
And if you disagree with me, you're a fucking pussy
and you're not ready to be married. That's all there
is to it. Low t faggot. Okay, let's go to
the next one here. Now I'm pissed. Was that funny?
Speaker 10 (09:18):
But John here?
Speaker 2 (09:22):
Sorry, I got me a little worked up. Let's go
to the next contestant, in which liberal most belongs in
a mental institution.
Speaker 7 (09:28):
Murderers don't go to jail? Well, first off, not all
murders created evil.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
Should murderers go to jail? Or no?
Speaker 7 (09:35):
If we're noting about somebody actually like responsible for an
actual murder, yeah, I think we need something better than jail.
Murders have gone to jail and then come back out
and murder somebody else.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
I don't know, but.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
How many murderers have gone to jail and come back
out and murdered somebody else.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
That's why we should keep them there longer. You idiot,
What is this girl?
Speaker 2 (09:59):
Why do she looked like et right when he died
at the end of the movie.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Keep going anative.
Speaker 7 (10:08):
I think you should look for your history books for that.
Just tell me through millennia of existence without the modern
prison system.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
Pause time we went through millennium of existence without the
modern prison system, sweetheart. We were in Chicago two months
ago and I had time to kill, so I went
to this place called the Museum of Torture, and they
showed all the different ways they disposed of people. Guess
what they didn't show putting them in jail, because that's
(10:39):
far more humane than what they did in those quote
unquote millennia throughout history. Like, one of the things they
did was this thing called blood Eagle, where they would
nail your arms to a cross and make you face
inward toward the cross, and then they would take a
knife and they would cut right down your spine, rip
(11:03):
your back open, pull your lungs out, and make you
breathe through the air until you suffocate it on your
own blood. We could do that instead. I mean, there
are some people that would probably actually prefer that happen
to some of the criminals in this country as compared
to just sending them to jail. So if we're gonna
talk about some of these, uh, some of these quote
(11:26):
unquote more humane punishments throughout history, then I think that
should be on the table. There was also one they
had where if you were every time you got drunk
out in public, they would make you wear this like fifty.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
Pound metal around your neck.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
They would have called me Michael Phelps back then with
all my medals. That's all I'm saying. Okay, keep playing
this dipshit. We're not gonna make it a full five minutes.
We'll play a little bit more of it.
Speaker 7 (11:50):
We do with them, we sort of justice systems like
we used to.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
But what's the solution.
Speaker 7 (11:55):
I'm not giving you an entire criminal justice lesson.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
Just tell me. If you don't send them to jail,
where do you send them? Huh, you don't send him
to jail? Where do you send them?
Speaker 7 (12:04):
Where do you send them? Why do we need to specifically.
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Send them or they shouldn't be on the streets after
they've murdered somebody.
Speaker 11 (12:10):
Surely it depends, No, murders shouldn't be on the street.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
It doesn't depend at all.
Speaker 7 (12:18):
I think it depends.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
I don't think it depends at all. If you kill somebody,
you shouldn't you should be in jail. I think it's
not self defense.
Speaker 7 (12:28):
I think I might be too radical for you to
be talking to you.
Speaker 1 (12:30):
Disagree with that premise?
Speaker 7 (12:31):
What that murderers should not be on the streets, that
murders should murderers are on the streets right now?
Speaker 1 (12:37):
What do you think we should make so they're not
on the streets.
Speaker 7 (12:40):
No, I believe in resorting to let them walk free.
Tunan justice does not do let them walk free.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Let them walk free.
Speaker 7 (12:46):
Then, I don't say that there shouldn't be any consequences.
But I don't think that incarceration is the right one.
But let them walk free, let them walk free with restrictions.
But ye, murderers walk free.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
Murderers walk like they do.
Speaker 7 (13:01):
Not murderers well for you every day? Did you know
that you have chance of getting away with their first murder?
Speaker 1 (13:08):
I don't care. My promise is that murderers should go
to jail, they should be removed from the streets.
Speaker 7 (13:12):
You disagree with that, My premise is that our current
way of handling murderers and our punitive justice system does not.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
Work because you think you don't agree with sending them
in jail.
Speaker 7 (13:23):
Well, okay, do you know what?
Speaker 1 (13:24):
We're going in circles?
Speaker 2 (13:25):
And I'm losing brain cells the longer this conversation go, like,
I could literally how long did that?
Speaker 1 (13:31):
Did we get into that? Because it was a five minute.
Speaker 4 (13:32):
Video, I think about two minutes.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
I could have sat here and huffed paint lead paint
for two minutes and lost less brain cells than I
just did watching that video.
Speaker 4 (13:44):
My question is, is she.
Speaker 8 (13:48):
Like looping all murders like in one so like self defense?
Is she looping that in No, with murders.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
Like well no, because he specified not self defense at
the beginning, and and no, she's talking about how she
doesn't think it's effective and doesn't think it protects the
community to put somebody who goes out and murders someone
in cold blood and jail, that there are other ways
we can handle that person. Restorative justice what that means
what we just watched. I keep going back to the
(14:18):
stupid documentary. But it's still a biopic, but it's so relevant.
We just watched the ed Geen thing. Mio, what do
you think that we could do with ed Geen if
we didn't lock him away from society?
Speaker 1 (14:29):
What about somebody like John Wayne Gacy? We watched that one.
Speaker 2 (14:32):
What what would be a better thing to do with
John Wayne Gacy that doesn't involve prison or a mental
institution or putting him somewhere he can't get to those
around him. Any ideas are you?
Speaker 4 (14:47):
He could make him work in a meat.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
Packing plant, a meat pat he'd probably like that. Yeah, Oh,
Ed Green, I was talking about John Wayne Gacy.
Speaker 4 (14:57):
Oh, I was talking about gen Yeah.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
I mean, what are you gonna do with John Wayne
Gacy that doesn't involve removing him from society? I mean
me personally, I think her and I are so far
radical on this criminal justice issue that it's probably a
horseshoe theory thing.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
She doesn't believe in jail because.
Speaker 2 (15:15):
She wants the people to be walking out among us,
because she thinks if we just hold the murderer's hands
and we're nice to him, they'll be nice to us.
I don't believe in jail for these people, because I
think once they're convicted, we should just shoot them in
the back of the head and save the taxpayers millions
of dollars in the process.
Speaker 1 (15:35):
Sounds reasonable to me.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
Okay, let's go to the third contestant, in which liberal
most belongs at a mental institution, and this is the
mother of the year. Ladies and gentlemen. I'm gonna give
you some context on this woman before we play the video.
This woman was a mother of a man male to
(16:00):
female transgender teenager who swapped up genders as a miner
and then kill theirmself. Excuse me, female to male transitioner,
swapped up genders as a miner, started hormones, and then
five days before Christmas, killed herself. Now you'd think that
(16:26):
if the thing you probably pushed your child into kind
of kicked him into the whole suicide thing, you would
just shut the fuck up forever about it. But not
this woman. These people are so self righteous. Here's what
she had to say about it.
Speaker 12 (16:40):
And for some of you Trump supporters out there that
are so big on making sure that children that are
transgender leaves their medical rights, why is this your hill
to die on? I had a transgender self that I
(17:01):
loved and nurtured for twenty five years, who had been
out for it, and of course who went through tons
of counseling and had to jump through all sorts of
hoops before he could start any kind of hormone therapy.
And I, as a parent, think I am a damn
good parent, and anybody who knows me, I defy you
(17:25):
to tell me that I am not a good parent.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Defy you to tell what.
Speaker 12 (17:31):
Why is this your hill to die on? It is
very obvious why this is my hill to die on?
But why is this your hill to die on? Mind
your own fucking business now.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
I'm not shitting on parents whose kids commit suicide. A
lot of the time there's mental health and subs and
stuff that's out of your control.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
That's not what I'm saying here.
Speaker 2 (17:53):
However, if you push your child, which let's be honest,
based on her tone, she probably did, into a lifestyle.
We know forty one percent of the people in it
conservative estimate attempt suicide at some point. I don't think
you can call it and then that kid commit suicide.
I don't think you can call yourself a good parent.
I would go as far to say, if your kid
(18:15):
is actively going toward a lifestyle where forty one percent
of people commit suicide, and maybe you didn't push them
to it, maybe you didn't help them along the way,
but you sit.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
Idly by and watch and do that.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
I'm just supportive, like they're going out for the baseball
team or something.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
You still don't get to call yourself a good parent.
Speaker 2 (18:34):
That's like watching your kid shoot up Heroin and go, well,
I just it's his life. I don't want to interfere
with it, and never trying to intervene. No, absolutely not.
It's your fault. It may not be entirely your fault.
You played a role in it, though you are not
a good parent. The fact that she is so outspoken
and pro all of this garbage tells you that she
(18:55):
didn't try to stop it. If my car is driving
towards them by a kid that's walking out jaywalking in
the street and I don't at least try to hit
the brakes and I run him over and kill him,
I played a role in it. That's all there is
to it. She didn't try to hit the brakes. She
played a role one way or the other. Okay, let's
go to the next last one here, Mia, You're gonna
get really jealous of our fourth contestant for which liberal
(19:18):
most belongs in a mental institution. So I want you
to brace yourself. It's gonna be it's gonna be rough
for you. Okay, I don't want you to get too upset. Okay,
go ahead and.
Speaker 13 (19:27):
Let me say something else resentfully. Sis, women think they're
gonna give me tips. Sis, women think they're gonna give
me fucking tips. Your husband's are dming me in the
middle of the night, and you think you're gonna give
me tips. I walk in the room, all eyes are
on me. You couldn't pay people to pay attention to you,
and you want to give me tips. When we stand
next to each other, I look like an eight foot
(19:48):
tall goddess and you look like one of the seven Dwarves.
And then you bitches want to act like we want
to look like you, and nobody wants to look like you.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
Girl, No one wants.
Speaker 13 (19:57):
To fucking look like you. You are all jealous of us,
and your husband who's dming me.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
He's ugly.
Speaker 13 (20:03):
I wouldn't even fucking for charity.
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Why are they always so angry whenever we play the videos?
They're always just yelling and swearing and making threats. And
you ever notice there's a lot of resentment toward I'm
not going to use the word cisgender, toward normal women.
They hate and the only people that trans women hate
more than actual biological women are themselves. And you can
(20:31):
see it every time we play that video. Are you jealous?
Speaker 1 (20:34):
Miya? Very Yeah? You know that the street I.
Speaker 8 (20:41):
Do agree with her. I probably would look like a
dwarf next.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
To her because she's a dude. You look like a
dwarf next to me because I'm a dude. Yes, men
tend to be like four to five inches taller on average.
You would be yes, you would be sleepy, all right?
So which liberal most belongs in a mental institution? We've
got some good contestants here.
Speaker 1 (21:08):
I vote for the second girl, the murderer girl. Yeah,
I think she's the winner. Yeah, I'm going with the
murderer girl as well.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
If you disagree with us, drop a comment on YouTube
and rumble or that that space with Caleb Salvator facebook
page and group and tell us why, tell us who
you think it was. But I think we had some
good contestants, but one of them was just head over
heels better than the rest of them in my opinion.
All right, that has been current state of the left.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
Stay tuned. We got store BRANCMC coming up next to him.
All right.
Speaker 2 (21:38):
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it's time for store brand TMZ. Justin better this week
(22:26):
on store BRANDTMZ. We got a whole bunch of stuff
going on. First and foremost, we have to give it.
I think a congratulations is due to uh New England
Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs as a paternity test just
confirmed last week that Stefan is the father of Instagram
model Eileen Leperra's soon to be baby girl now or
(22:50):
excuse me, baby girl. Stefan Diggs is also expecting a
child with his girlfriend, Rapper cardib Now this means that
Steffon actually has it. Doesn't just stop at Carti and Eileen.
He's actually got four children on the way with four
(23:10):
different women. Look winners, win Man, winners, win the guy
just hey, he just signed a sixty three million dollar
contract to play a game. He can do what he can,
put his dick wherever he wants to. Okay, he can
afford the kids, all right. Stefan is out there doing
what you childless cat ladies that rage listen to this
show art. He's picking up the slack for you. Okay,
(23:34):
He's going out there. He's creating lots of single moms,
which means that one of them's going to raise a
basketball star.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
I don't make up the rules. That's just how this works. Okay.
I love it.
Speaker 2 (23:44):
I love Stefan Diggs and Cardi b are Like. I'm
a new England Patriots fan. I love having our own
version of Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce, the the ratchet
celebrity couple.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
I love this. I'm a big fan of this.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
Right, let's go to our first video here for store
brand CMZ. Kanye West is back in the news. Have
you been following Kanye's recent events? All right, Well, you're
not gonna believe who Kanye sat down and had a
conversation with this week.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
God, check this one out.
Speaker 14 (24:17):
I feel really blessed to be able to sit here
with you to day and just take accountability.
Speaker 1 (24:22):
And specifically a little bit. I was dealing with.
Speaker 15 (24:29):
Some various issues, gable, bipolar also, so it would take
the ideas I had and hadn't taken them to an
extreme where I would forget about the protection of the people.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
Around me or and myself.
Speaker 14 (24:53):
So I wanted to come and take accountability sometimes with
you know, people aren't that knowledgeable about the bipolar and
the uh, the cause or what causes it, and the
way you act when you have this disease. So it's
like if you left the house, even if your kid
(25:15):
at the house, and your kid went and messed up
the kitchen and mess up the garage, mess up the
living room. Now when you get back, it's your responsibility
because that's your child. And that's the way I look
at it.
Speaker 16 (25:29):
It's like, I gotta go clean up the kitchen, clean
up the liberal room, I gotta clean up the garage. Yeah,
And it's a it's a big deal for me as
a man to come and take accountability for all the
things that I've said. And I really just appreciate you
embracing me with open arms and allow me to make amends.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
And this is the beginning and the first steps.
Speaker 2 (25:51):
That is Kanye West apologizing for his anti Semitic past.
One of his several meetings last week with prominent New
York City rabbi Rabbi Pinto, not Rabbi butt Rabbi butt Plug.
I don't think Rabbi butt Plug is going to meet
up with Kanye West anytime soon. That would be my guess.
(26:12):
Do you think Kanye is being serious this time? Or
is this just another swing of the whole bipolar ped Like,
what's going on here?
Speaker 9 (26:20):
Me?
Speaker 2 (26:20):
Is this another swing of the bipolar pendulum? Or is
Kanye finally coming down for good? Maybe he realized what
a disastrous job his baby mom is doing with his kid,
so somebody has to step up and not fail as
a parent.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
Could it be?
Speaker 4 (26:33):
That could be? I don't know.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
Did you see he is on his EDGs? Did you
see that she posted her new piercing.
Speaker 4 (26:43):
Northwest?
Speaker 2 (26:44):
Yes, at twelve years old, she got one of those
piercings that goes through the middle finger. You've seen those,
you know what I'm talking about. They pierce through your
middle finger and then they stick like a like the
shit that the chicks put in their nipples, except they
put it in your finger, one of those little bars. Yeah. Yeah,
you're looking at it on your phone right now. Yeah,
she put that on her finger at twelve years old.
(27:05):
She got it done twelve for the love of god. CPS,
you're watching it. You're watching it in real time, CPS,
go get her.
Speaker 1 (27:18):
I mean, listen, I have friends that are social workers, right.
Do you know how many of them wish the children
and parents were celebrities that they're dealing with that would
just broadcast their stupidity like this to the national media.
It would make their jobs so much easier. Go get them.
(27:39):
Why is this hard? All right? This next one here,
this guy.
Speaker 2 (27:44):
Went on a date on one of the apps that
I don't know. There's too many of them. I don't
know what they're called anymore. One of these guys went
I wanted. This guy went on one of the dating apps, though,
and he wound up leaving the date early because the
girl was homophobic. And I'm proud that this guy stood
on business. Here, go ahead, check this one out.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
He was homophobs homophobey.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
You're saying a guy can't wear makeup on his face
and that's how attracted, but.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
A girl can do it. I'm not saying a guy.
Speaker 4 (28:12):
Can't wear makeup on his face.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
I'm saying that I personally don't want to date a
guy who's wearing Yeah, So I left huge bullet dodged. Wow.
I didn't even realize that people still thought like that.
After BLM and COVID pay attention to red flags.
Speaker 17 (28:28):
Guys, they're real.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
So what's weird is the date was going well, for
those of you listening too bad, I'm not going to
tell you what it was. You'll have to go watch
on YouTube and rumble. Oh well, uh, next and final
last one up here?
Speaker 2 (28:49):
Okay, there, there is a new top of the Billboard Hits.
There's a new top of the Billboard Hits. And I'm
telling you I've been I heard this song the other day,
and uh, I am just I love these like rock
goes country or vice for whatever. They are, like the
covers where they'll take classic songs or pop songs, they'll
(29:10):
give them like a modern rock twist.
Speaker 17 (29:12):
Right.
Speaker 2 (29:13):
And I saw this on YouTube the other day. I'm
really excited. I listened to it and I fucking slaps.
I'm not gonna lie. We'll play the song for you,
play clip from the song for him here, go ahead
and pull it up there. I was just thinking the
other day, it's been a while. That's our rick roll
on this show. It's been a while since I pranked you.
Speaker 8 (29:32):
I was actually I had that song stuck in my
head during dinner yesterday.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
Good now it'll be stuck even longer now for real though.
Here is the actual song. So this is a cover
of the Kenny Rogers song The Gambler, and it's a ride. Listen,
we'll play like a minute of this. We're not gonna
get copyright flag for it. I'm not worry about it,
and then we'll go into the deeper story.
Speaker 11 (29:52):
Here.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
Go ahead, check this song out. It's a banger.
Speaker 18 (29:56):
Song, even a train bell.
Speaker 19 (30:00):
Oh.
Speaker 18 (30:01):
I met him with a gown blue. We were both
too tired to sleep, so we took turns of staring
out the window at the darkness till bortom Over took
us and he began to speak.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
He said, Son, I made alive out of reading people's faces.
Speaker 20 (30:22):
And knowing what the cards were by the way they
out their eyes.
Speaker 3 (30:26):
So if you don't my say, and I can see.
Speaker 20 (30:30):
You out of face for a taste of you.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
It's pretty good. Right. Do you like that stuffy? That's
not really your style of music, is it?
Speaker 9 (30:40):
No?
Speaker 4 (30:40):
But it kind of sounded like Daughtry.
Speaker 2 (30:42):
It did kind of sound like Daughtry, except it wasn't Daughtry.
It was Ai Ai. That was a computer. There were
no human beings involved in that at all.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
Yeah, yeah, go ahead, play it, skip forward in it
a little bit again.
Speaker 18 (31:00):
Home Son is evening on a train bounce and nowhere
I met him where.
Speaker 19 (31:06):
The gown blue.
Speaker 18 (31:07):
We were both too tired to sleep, so we took
turns of staring out the window at the darkness till
bortom Over took us and he began to speak.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
He said, son, I made alife out of reading people's
faces and knowing what the cards were by the way
they out there are.
Speaker 20 (31:30):
So if you do' my sake and I can see
you out of faces or a taste of your whiskey,
I'll give you some advice.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
So I handed him love, What do you hear it that?
Speaker 2 (31:46):
I really don't If someone didn't tell me that was ay, I,
I wouldn't know. No, Like you could come up and
be like, hey, this is this new band's side effect,
and I'd hear, I go, this is a fucking banger.
What do these guys go on tour? Oh they don't.
They go on to her on YouTube. Yeah, so that's creepy.
I remember we played AI music a year ago on
(32:09):
the show or was it too whatever, It was a
year or two ago, and it sounded real, But you remember,
you can kind of tell there was like an uncanny
valley thing. You can't tell unless I told you that
I heard a song on Spotify the other day. I'm
sitting here listening to it, and I'm like.
Speaker 1 (32:25):
This is good. I like this.
Speaker 2 (32:27):
So I look up the artist and I go, uh oh,
all his album art artwork on Spotify is like AI
generated slop? What's going on here? So I google them
and then there's a link to a Reddit page and
I'm banned from Reddit. So I have to go on
my VP and everything because I keep trolling them, and
come to find out the artist is AI.
Speaker 1 (32:48):
I got got. I had no idea. Now. The reason
I bring.
Speaker 2 (32:53):
This up is because Breaking Rust is a country artist
with a song Walk My Walk, that just hit number
one on Billboard's Country Digital Song Sales Chart. The only
problem is that Breaking Rust is not a real person.
Breaking Rust is an AI generated country music singer that
(33:17):
just hit number one on the Country Music Billboard and
people had no clue. That's I mean, that's how fast
this stuff has come along. Like actually, like that cover
of the Gambler that we just played you, I refuse
to consume music that I know is AI though. I
(33:38):
don't think that's right. I don't think there's heart and
soul that goes into it. Like, Okay, so here's my thing.
I think when they do the covers and they're like
Taylor Swift covers Tupac hit them up, I think those
are funny, right, Or when you see the videos of
Hank Hill singing Florida Georgia line, I think those are funny.
I think it's fine when you do something like that
(33:59):
with it, But when you're at a point where you're
making up bands and you're making up actual music and
just deceiving people, and it's already hard enough to be
a real artist to be for musicians to actually make
it in the industry, you're making it even harder for
them by just flooding the zone with garbage, so that
(34:20):
real people that are pouring their heart and soul into
music rather than just a computer algorithm is doing all
the work for them, can't make it.
Speaker 1 (34:26):
It makes it even harder for them to get to
the top. I have a problem with that.
Speaker 2 (34:29):
I actually think that Spotify and Apple and Billboard and
Title and all these companies, I think they need to
start cracking down on it. I'm not saying you necessarily
ban it, but I think you should specifically label this
is AI because I would be interested to see how
many drop a comment on youtubeer rumble if it would
affect or Facebook, if it would affect whether or not
you would listen to a song. Yea, if a song
(34:51):
popped up and it said right on it, there was
like a little memo like on your Spotify that said
this song is AI generated.
Speaker 1 (34:57):
Would you listen to it? Would you save it? Or
would you move No?
Speaker 8 (35:00):
I'd move on because I like the personal aspect of songs. Yeah,
hence why I'm a huge swifty.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (35:08):
Like when Josie Scott wrote that song about how he
wanted to stab and shoot the new members of Saliva.
You know that came from the heart. And then when
he said if I were you, I would beef up security.
I won't leave the I won't rest until you leave
this world bleeding.
Speaker 1 (35:24):
You know that came from the heart.
Speaker 2 (35:28):
And somehow his producer greenlit that being released, that terroristic
threat being released commercially.
Speaker 1 (35:36):
You know what, We're back to the days where musicians
threaten to kill each other. That's all I'm for. We're
back to the nineties hip hop days. No more of
this of you know, like when Taylor Swift and Charlie
XCX were beefing and writing songs about boring Barbie. When
the Kochs get no, shoot each other, shut up, shoot
each other, or shut the fuck up. We don't want
(35:57):
to hear you write poetry. You each get one diss track,
and then if the bullets start, don't start flying.
Speaker 2 (36:04):
We're done. The beef is over. That's the rule from
Music Beats. We're going back to the nineties. Baby, all right,
that's been store brand TMZ. We will be right back.
We got a whole bunch of stuff to get into
you think all right and trending. This week is brought
to you by Blood of Tyrants. If you get a
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Speaker 1 (36:37):
That's right, you failed. You failed.
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If you bought it and you liked it, just know
it's your fault because you didn't buy enough. That stuff
was getting me off of my six cups of coffee
a day because it was the only thing that wasn't
incredibly strong, but still gave me the upside of my coffee,
and you took it from me because you didn't buy enough.
Speaker 1 (37:00):
I want you to sit there and let that rest
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Let that marinate what you've done to me and what
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use the promo code base, you'll save ten percent off
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being the grim reaper of small businesses. Yes, this is
your fault. I'm acting like Biden. That's all Biden did.
Biden would just come out and blame people. Oh, you're
not doing too well economically, Well, it's your fault. I'm
just doing the same thing the former president did. Okay,
(37:48):
let's go to the first story here. We've got all
these Epstein emails just came out and that the House
Democrat Oversight Committee leaked them out, and you know, my
frustration with the Epstein thing. I've told you I wasn't
going to cover it until we got actual news because
I'm not gonna sit I'm on air twice a week.
(38:11):
I'm not gonna waste my time coming on here yelling
about the same thing over and over again.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
We're gonna have to move on from it.
Speaker 2 (38:18):
But I told you, if we saw real stories come out,
we would of course cover it. Now, the House Democrat
Oversight Committee released these emails that were found allegedly on
Jeffrey Epstein's server. Now here's what it says. This is
a message from Epstein to a reporter where it says,
(38:39):
I want you to realize that that dog hasn't barked,
or excuse me, I want you to realize that the
dog that hasn't.
Speaker 1 (38:47):
Barked is Trump.
Speaker 2 (38:48):
Victim it splotted out, spent hours at my house with him.
He has never once been mentioned, police chief, etc. I'm
seventy five percent there, the guy replies, I've been thinking
about that, Epstein says Victim mar A Lago, Trump said
he asked me to resign. Never remember ever, of course
he knew about the girls. He asked Julaane to stop
(39:09):
Michael Wolfe. The reporter replies back to Epstein, I think
you should let him hang himself. If he says he
hasn't been on the plane or to the house, then
that gives you a valuable pr and political currency. You
can hang him in a way that potentially generates a
positive benefit for you, or if it really looks like
he could win, you could save him generating a debt.
(39:29):
Of course, it is possible that when asked, he'll say,
Jeffrey is a great guy and has gotten a raw
deal and is a victim of political correctness, which is
to be outlawed in a Trump regime. So here's my thing.
I don't think any of this necessarily incriminates Trump. It
proves what we already knew, which is that he had
connections to him. This Michael Wolfe guy who's a reporter.
(39:50):
I think the big story here is that this guy
was actively collaborating with the known pedophile on how to
sabotage a political campaign and blackmail somebody. That's the big
story here to me that nobody's talking about.
Speaker 1 (40:03):
Now here's the thing on the Epstein deal, all right.
Speaker 2 (40:06):
The victim that's been blotted out was Virginia Geffray. Now,
the Democrats are the ones who released this. Virginia Giffrey
is the victim that was on the record multiple times.
She killed herself recently. Actually we covered that story a
couple months ago. She's been on the record multiple times though,
saying that Donald Trump never touched her inappropriately, was never
(40:29):
inappropriate with underage girls or anything like that. So I
find it interesting that that name would be blotted out.
They've shown absolutely no respect to anybody else's confidentiality throughout
this process, So why they chose that one kind of
tells me there's a little bit of an agenda here
with that set. With that set, mister president, I know
(40:51):
you listen to the show. I do my best to
take your calls. I can't always get to them. But
the next time you call me and ask me for
advice on public relations, here's what I'm gonna tell you.
Speaker 1 (41:05):
You can make this all go away overnight.
Speaker 2 (41:08):
Your DOJ has the files, your FBI has everything there
is to know.
Speaker 1 (41:17):
Let them go. That's all you've gotta do. You release
the files, you make this go away. And here's why
I think Trump.
Speaker 2 (41:28):
Is implicated in I don't think he's a child monster,
but why I think he's somehow implicated in this, whether
he had ties to him, he took a loan, he
laundered some money, he turned the other eye or turned
a blind eye to it. Something went on. That something
went on, because if Trump were as squeaky clean as
he claims, he'd release these files in a heartbeat.
Speaker 1 (41:48):
He would. I mean, think about it.
Speaker 2 (41:50):
If you were being accused of stealing from your job
and you had security footage that would prove that it
wasn't you who stole from the job from your job,
you would be the first one go into your boss,
pull the fucking tapes. Let's go look at this. Come on,
let's do it. If your wife was accusing you of
cheating on her and you weren't cheating on her, you'd
(42:11):
throw your phone at her and.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
Say go ahead and look. So why is he so hesitant? Here?
Speaker 2 (42:18):
There's something, Here's what I think happened. Here's my honest prediction.
And I don't know anything. You know, I've only been
privy to a couple of these meetings with Cash Ptel
and Pam BONDI, where I've sat in and looked at
the evidence that hasn't been made public. Here's what I
think happened. I think Trump had some connections to Epstein.
(42:39):
I think those connections, based on what Epstein has on
or what Epstein either has in communications or his black
book or whatever.
Speaker 1 (42:48):
Leave gray area.
Speaker 2 (42:51):
What I mean by that is they leave room for interpretation,
so somebody could see it and go, well, maybe you did,
maybe you didn't. What I'm saying is, if we got
the full the Trump Epstein connection, we would probably leave
with more questions regarding it than we initially came into it,
with more questions than answers.
Speaker 1 (43:09):
That's what I think here.
Speaker 2 (43:11):
That's what I think is going on here, because if
you notice, I mean they were getting kind.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
Of shifty about it.
Speaker 2 (43:18):
They made a big public spectacle out of it, and
then all of a sudden, just it was like a
switch flipped when they handed out those binders those influencers
at the White House. Something changed that day. What changed
was I had to stop doing cocaine, so I quit sneeze.
I'm kidding, drug free, drug free over here. Caffeine is okay,
(43:40):
all the drugs, but that.
Speaker 1 (43:41):
One I'm free of.
Speaker 2 (43:44):
If you notice, they made the big public spectacle, they
had all the conservative Twitter influencers come in with and
they gave them the binders and they did the photo ops,
and then we never found out what was in those
by I think the binders were like a coloring book
or something, activities, some crossword puzzles, some mazes, just stuff
for them to do with their Maybe they were just
(44:06):
checks in the binders.
Speaker 1 (44:09):
Maybe they open it up and it was just a check.
And in the memo line it said shut the fuck up,
and it was like a fifty thousand dollars check for
each of them. Maybe that's what it was. Would you
take a fifty thousand dollars check to shut the fuck
up about Epstein?
Speaker 21 (44:23):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (44:23):
Yeah, yes, I mean what am I gonna do? I
gonna get to the bottom of this? Are you kidding me?
I'm gonna come out here and give the same theory
I have to save about of information that you guys have.
Speaker 4 (44:34):
I take a ten thousand dollars check to shut.
Speaker 1 (44:36):
Up about one hundred and fifty depending on the week,
one hundred and fifty bucks. It depended on how my
week's going. How'd I do with the casino last Friday?
Oh I lost five hundred bucks. I'll shut up about
Epstein forever. But if you Notice the conversation about Epstein
(45:05):
got real, real quiet right after those binders came out.
You know, they cock teased us, right, they put their
lips right on the tip of it. Maybe you'd rub
your balls a little bit and you think it's gonna
get going, and then boom her phone rings and you
got the car started up to not drive it anywhere.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
That's kind of what they did to us with the
Epstein thing here when they released those binders to those
social media stars. Because shortly after that, Trump and Elon
Musk had their public breakup or whatever the fuck that was.
Speaker 1 (45:43):
Lots of drugs were involved in that on Elon side,
in my opinion, and.
Speaker 2 (45:49):
People right around that time, if you remember, people were
getting really frustrated about the lack of movement on the
Epstein thing. We were told that the files were right
on Bondi's desk, and then all of a sudden, it's
just curtains and then Elon Musk drops that bombshell and it,
you know, accuses Trump of being on the list, and
(46:11):
that's why the Epstein documents haven't been released. And then
right I'm talking within days of that accusation getting dropped,
cash Ptel's flat out out there saying, hey, this investigation's done.
You know, it's over my head, above my pay grade.
We're not talking about it anymore. And just like that,
it was over. And the timing was just impeccable, the
(46:32):
timing of the allegation, and you know, compared to when
they dropped the investigation is just too big of a
coincidence for me to.
Speaker 1 (46:43):
Overlook, way too big.
Speaker 2 (46:46):
The only way that they can save face on this
is to release the documents, release them all massive PDF
file and let people figure it out for themselves.
Speaker 1 (46:55):
Now here's the thing.
Speaker 2 (46:57):
Congress is going to vote on it next week, and
what that's gonna lead to is a six month long
court battle. You know that's probably gonna go up to
the Supreme Court to decide, and you know, who knows
how long it'll.
Speaker 1 (47:08):
Take if the which side note.
Speaker 2 (47:12):
I mean, when I am innocent of something, I always
try to go to court to keep it from getting
released too.
Speaker 1 (47:18):
I don't know about you.
Speaker 2 (47:19):
I spend millions of dollars suing in court to keep
documents from being released that would not incriminate me. Wouldn't
you do the same thing if there were documents that
I knew I was not in and I had no
connection to it, no wrongdoing. I would also waste tons
of time, money, and effort and energy trying to prevent
(47:43):
them from being released, because that's that's what we all do, right.
Here's what's gonna happen when these documents get released. If
they get released, the drop's gonna come out. People are
gonna scan it through chat, GPT and all the AI
because they're too fucking lazy to read it themselves. They're
gonna hit control to find the keywords they're looking for.
Speaker 1 (48:02):
Here's what's gonna happen. Though, people on.
Speaker 2 (48:04):
The right are going to draw their conclusions to demonize
the figures on the left and vice versa.
Speaker 1 (48:09):
The reality of this is, though, is.
Speaker 2 (48:11):
Whether it's Trump, whether it's Clinton, whether it's Obama, it
doesn't matter who it is. There's not going to be
a smoking gun for any of them.
Speaker 1 (48:21):
There's not.
Speaker 2 (48:22):
There'll be anecdotal evidence. There'll be things you can say, ooh,
that's suspicious. There might be people talking in code, there
might be well, why was he here doing this with her?
And blah blah blah blah blah. There's not going to
be anything like. These people are not that stupid. These
people are not like never mind, these people are not
(48:43):
going to email. You're not going to see an email
from Trump to Epstein saying, hey, that was a great time.
I really love plowing that thirteen year old girl at
your house last night. That's not gonna happen that. You're
not going to see that smoking gun print. Like the
guys in uh well righteous gems don'ts the emails where
(49:04):
they were talking about the hookers with their wives in
Atlanta or cheating on their wives the hookers at Atlanta.
Speaker 1 (49:08):
You're not gonna see anything like that.
Speaker 2 (49:12):
So just be prepared for both idiotic sides to make
it an idiotic political issue when it's not. This is
like the one thing that the elites on the right
and the elites on the left in DC can agree on,
which is that they all like to fuck little kids.
Speaker 1 (49:28):
That's the one. But that and bomb them. They either
like to bomb little kids in foreign countries or fuck them.
They're gonna blow the kids up, or they're gonna have
sex with them. That that's what the what both saw,
both parties in Washington, d C.
Speaker 2 (49:42):
Can come just can find some common ground on that.
Those are the two things right there. Oh, and wasting
and stealing your money. Of course that goes without saying.
But I'm not holding my breath.
Speaker 1 (49:56):
On any of this. I'm not. Uh well, we'll just
have to wait see next week. Don Pakin said he's
gonna vote yes on dropping the files. Don could be
the swing vote in Congress on dropping them. How many
glasses a bourbon did it take to get him to agree?
Speaker 2 (50:11):
There's my question. That's the that's what we should be
figuring out here. Okay, let's go to the next segment here.
Speaker 1 (50:19):
The government shut down is over. The House, the Senate,
the President all decided they got the sixty votes in
the Senate they needed. They got a couple of Democrats
in the House. Jump ship. It's over. Congratulations, government employees.
Speaker 2 (50:37):
You can now go back to getting paid for doing
nothing rather than doing it on your own time.
Speaker 1 (50:43):
Really happy for you, guys.
Speaker 2 (50:46):
Yeah, it took so the Democrats obviously freaked out about this.
Gavin Newsom called it pathetic. Go over to Blue Sky.
They're losing their minds Now. I don't know what these
people want, because all we were hearing for the last
month and a half was how horrible Trump was. Because
you've got all these government employees that don't have a
paycheck and they've been furloughed, and how are they gonna
pay their mortgages.
Speaker 1 (51:07):
Well, they'll get a fifty year mortgage. We'll talk about
that in a little bit.
Speaker 2 (51:10):
And then we heard about how the snap benefits were
going to expire, and you monsters are gonna your you
un Christian monsters, you're going to starve these poor kids.
And then they find eight Democrats, well seven in an
independent Angus king in Maine, to go, yeah, you know what,
let's extend the you know, let's fund the government through
the end of January and next year, and we'll make
(51:31):
sure that the government employees can go back to work
and they can pay their bills, and we'll make sure
that the poor kids get fed, which were the two
biggest gripes they had supposedly. And then when they do that,
they're talking about how they.
Speaker 1 (51:44):
Want to primary these guys. They're calling them traders.
Speaker 2 (51:47):
You sold us out what I thought you were the
Party of compassion. I thought you were on the side
of empathy, which you overuse. And you really don't understand
the meaning.
Speaker 1 (51:56):
Of what happened. Why are you upset that people are
getting paid and children aren't going to starve. I thought
that was all you cared about. You threw it in
our face over and over and over again.
Speaker 2 (52:07):
Trump was this horrible monster that was starving children and
keeping people from being able to pay their bills. Then
the eight Democrats jump on board with the fifty two
Republicans and go, yeah, let's let's let's stop this. This
We can fight and we can negotiate, but let's at
least buy people some time.
Speaker 1 (52:22):
This is not these people's problem. We don't need to
make it their problem.
Speaker 2 (52:26):
Let's let's go ahead and extend these programs and we'll
figure it out.
Speaker 1 (52:29):
And you guys spurged out about it. What do you want?
What did you want them to do? This whole fight
goes back to the ACA subsidies. The ACA subsidies.
Speaker 2 (52:41):
So when they passed Obamacare and turned out twenty eleven,
excuse me when they back. When they passed Obamacare, they
only had a simple majority, And the reason they could
pass it through with a simple majority was because it
was considered a budget bill.
Speaker 1 (52:56):
Now the ACA subsidies.
Speaker 2 (52:58):
Because of this, because they didn't have the sixty vote
filibuster breaker in the Senate, they were not able to
make these permanent.
Speaker 1 (53:05):
So they said, we're gonna make it.
Speaker 2 (53:07):
The subsidies that artificially keep the price of health insurance
low for people who are on the ACA marketplace.
Speaker 1 (53:13):
We're going to make those a.
Speaker 2 (53:14):
Ten year deal in twenty twenty one, will revisit it,
negotiate it whenever we got to do twenty twenty one
rolled around the Biden administration, like I said, kick the
can down the road for a couple of years, said
we're not gonna be here in four years at.
Speaker 1 (53:25):
Least, I'm not.
Speaker 2 (53:27):
I'll pass the buck on to the next guy or girl, right,
And now Trump gets to clean up the mess. The
reality of this is it's not sustainable. It never was.
We can't afford to make these cuts permanent. It excuse me,
these subsidies permanent?
Speaker 1 (53:41):
It was. It was bad policy from the get go. Guys.
Speaker 2 (53:45):
That's the kind of thing. You don't put it in
a bill unless you know for a goddamn fact you
can make it permanent. And they didn't do that because
a whole bunch of people get screwed over. I mean,
the people have, the people that are on this ACA
market that are receiving these subsidies, these people were in
like middle school when this thing got passed. They don't
(54:06):
know about subsidies or you know, the ten year buffers
or nothing like that.
Speaker 1 (54:11):
So they're on this. They get used to.
Speaker 2 (54:13):
Paying this same rate for a long ass time for
them and their family, and then all of a sudden,
twenty twenty six is rolling around and it's like, hold up,
it's going to go from thirty dollars a month to
five hundred overnight, Just like, what are you talking about?
So you got all these people used to paying this
knowing it was going to go dramatically up. It never
should have been enacted into law. It was completely unsustainable
(54:36):
long term. They knew it was unsustainable long term, and
they did it anyway because it wasn't about what was
good for the public. It was about getting a signature
piece of legislation through for Barack Obama.
Speaker 1 (54:48):
That's all it was about.
Speaker 2 (54:50):
That is all they cared about was getting that piece
of legislation forced through shoehorned in those ACA subsidies. So
now here we are fighting over this crap that never
should have been enacted into law because we never could
afford it. We couldn't afford it back then, we certainly
can't afford it now. Now, the other thing to take here,
(55:13):
there's two other takeaways from this. The first one is
that the agreement they uh, oh wait, what's yeah. The
agreement they reached was that snap funding was going to
be fully funded through October of twenty twenty six. So
the end of September, snap funding's good. So October first
(55:37):
is when they would be having this argument again.
Speaker 1 (55:40):
Now, why would they mea why would they.
Speaker 2 (55:41):
Pick October at twenty twenty six for this to expire?
Do you have any ideas? Is there an election right
before the midterms? A month before the midterms you get
a sticker for that one.
Speaker 1 (55:55):
Good job.
Speaker 2 (55:56):
It's the same reason ESPN and YouTube TV end their
contract right in the middle of football season every year
so that they can fight in front of the kids,
use it as leverage, and publicly shame the other one
claiming they're responsible for it. That's all there is to
it that this is a plan. I mean, in the
short term, yes, the Republicans on paper, it looks like
they got everything they wanted. But for the long term,
(56:19):
looking forward to next year, this looks like Schumer and
the Democrats were thinking, I mean, the Republicans were thinking,
what's five minutes in front of my face? The Democrats
were thinking, what's five miles down the road. And that's
what this looks like to me. Because here's what's gonna happen.
Here's what's gonna mark my fucking words. Snap's gonna expire
in October twenty twenty six. And the Democrats, if you
(56:41):
thought they were bad this time, they're going to firmly
dig their heels into the ground. They ain't gonna give
an inch, none of them will, and they will sit
there and they'll just go over and over again.
Speaker 1 (56:53):
You have the majority. You have the majority, You have
the majority. And they'll let people sit there for weeks
without food, and for a while.
Speaker 2 (57:02):
They'll go to the food banks. But those are going
to dry up. Those are going to dry up. And
you know what else is going to happen. Companies like Walmart,
companies like high ve they depend on EBT to come
in and drive a significant portion of their revenue. Now,
grocery stores already operate at a slim margin. So what's
going to happen is those stores are going to start
(57:24):
to lay people, or at least furlough people, but lay
them off. That's going to make the jobs report look
like shit, and eventually you're actually.
Speaker 1 (57:31):
Going to get food riots. They're looking for their George
Floyd riot chaos.
Speaker 2 (57:37):
Moment that they got in twenty twenty. They caught lightning
in a bottle five years ago. They're looking for a
second time around. Mark my words, that's the plan. They
are going to try to ignite food riots to spark
chaos and cost the Republicans the midterms. This is the
kind of sick shit these people do. They don't care.
They see you as pawns in a game. They don't
see you as a living, breathing person that's a single
(57:59):
mom that to feed three kids. They see you as
a pawn in a game. They want you to go
out and act a little bit rowdy. They want you
to cause some chaos because they want people to look
at the news and see shit burning and grocery stores
getting looted and go, oh my god, I just want
things to go back to normal.
Speaker 1 (58:15):
I'll vote for the Democrats just to make it stop.
It's like if someone's torturing.
Speaker 2 (58:19):
You and you know they want you to say something
to get them to stop, You just say it so
they'll stop.
Speaker 1 (58:24):
Doing it right, it's the same thing. That's what they're
gonna do here.
Speaker 2 (58:27):
They're going to starve people for a month, pretending to
fight over a technicality, trying to bait the Republicans once
again into nuking the filibuster. Which is my other big
takeaway from this. I was anti nuking.
Speaker 1 (58:39):
The filibuster, and then I sat down and thought about
it for like thirty seconds. We should just fucking nuke it.
Speaker 2 (58:44):
We should because when the Democrats had a simple majority
of fifty one votes in the House and Senate, excuse me,
in the Senate, Joe Manchin and Kirsten Cinema were the
only people that were anti nuking the filibuster.
Speaker 1 (58:58):
Every other one of them was the for it.
Speaker 2 (59:01):
John Fetterman campaigned on nuke in the filibuster, the most
reasonable Democrat there was, campaigned on nuke in the filibuster.
Now maybe he's changed his mind, but guys, if they
ever get the Senate back, they're going to use it.
They're going to use it. They've already said they're going
to use it. They don't care. They're going to eliminate
the filibuster to shove whatever garbage they want through It's
(59:26):
like I always say, tolerance is a two way street.
So that was planned by the rules. If you know
the other side's gonna do it, it's not a matter
of principle that you don't do it first. It's you
being a pussy. If you're at a bar and a
guy sizing you up and you can just tell when
the dude's about to hit you, you can, and you don't
(59:46):
hit him first, you're just being stupid. Like, clearly a
fight's about to break out, and you don't hit this
guy first, he's just gonna pummel you and beat your
ass now because you, for whatever reason, wanted to stand.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
On principle, didn't want to throw the first punch.
Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
Well, now you're on the ground and you're missing three
teeth and you got to go to the hospital because
this is a big old contusion over your eye. Congratulations,
mister principle. Here is your seven thousand dollars medical bill.
I hope you enjoy it and you look like a
pussy in front of your woman. Congratulations. Congratulations. Speaking of Fetterman,
he has caught a lot of abuse for voting.
Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
A big, stupid, ugly O. Good. We don't want to
pile on him when you hear what has been said
to him.
Speaker 4 (01:00:28):
I'm always gonna do that.
Speaker 1 (01:00:30):
I know he does. He just looks like it.
Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
But Fetterman has caught so much abuse from his own
party for this. Here let him tell you on CNN
the types of things people have said to him because
he voted to end the shutdown, which, by the way,
these same people were all clamoring for for the last
month and a half.
Speaker 1 (01:00:51):
Go ahead, you.
Speaker 22 (01:00:52):
Said, quote, I've drunk deeply of the venom of vote
the left and the right. As a connoisseur, I can
confirm that the most poisonous, the bitterest is from the
far left. That is pretty remarkable to hear you say
that as an elected Democrat.
Speaker 10 (01:01:09):
Why yeah, yeah, yeah, No, you know, it's been it's
just been my personal experience on this thing. And when
I asked my digital team, I said, you know, you're
we're on all the platforms, you know, really, what's what's
kind of the harshest, what's kind of the most personal?
And the answer was immediately said, oh, blue sky. It's
(01:01:31):
blue sky. And the difference is, I mean, the right
would say really rough things and names, you know, some
names I won't I won't repeat on TV. But but
but the the on the left, it was like they
want me to die, or that we're cheering for your
next stroke, or that's terrible, that depression want why couldn't
(01:01:51):
it depression one? And and I hope your kids find you. Uh,
I mean they even have like the graphic a gift
they have like a stroke you know, you know in
your head and cheering. Yeah, and and they said that
I remember one they claimed the doctor let us down,
(01:02:14):
and why did they have to save his life? I
mean just really like I just can't imagine people are
are wishing, you know, I wish he dies or I
want him to die, you know, literally cheering for for
a stroke. And I don't know what the kind of
a place where that comes from. I mean, that's that's
much different than just calling me a name, you know,
(01:02:36):
And that's that's really been consistent, you know, in that
community online.
Speaker 1 (01:02:43):
They said they wish the stroke got him.
Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
Why does he look like he's in a crack house?
Speaker 22 (01:02:50):
Back up you said quote I've drunk deeply, why.
Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
He died? He looks like he said he does.
Speaker 4 (01:03:01):
And then with his hoodie on, I know, he.
Speaker 2 (01:03:04):
Looks like he's in like an abandoned warehouse or something
where they have ICP cover band concerts or something like that.
Second ICP reference on that space in two weeks, by
the way, So I mean.
Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
Man just vicious nasty people. Mind you, he didn't rape somebody.
He didn't vote to go out and nuke a bunch
of kids. He voted to do what they've wanted. He said, hey, look,
Fetterman's even said hey, look, I want the subsidies to continue,
(01:03:40):
but we need to negotiate that while people aren't starving.
My primary goal is to make it so that people
aren't having to rely on food banks and go fund
me to eat, And we'll worry about the subsidies when
we get there.
Speaker 2 (01:03:54):
We'll cross that bridge when we come to it. But
like right now, my primary responsibility is making sure government
employees are getting paid and poor children aren't going hungry.
I feel that was reasonable.
Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
And they're like, I hope your kids find you after
you come in and suicide. Monsters. Monster.
Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
Here's the thing, guys, nobody's talking, and this is Mike
Tyson said it best. Mike Tyson said social media has
got way too many people, way too comfortable with running
their mouths because they know they're not gonna get knocked
the fuck out for it. Nobody would ever talk to
anybody that way in public. And I know there's some
fucking neck bearded nerd sitting in his studio apartment going,
(01:04:31):
I would know you fucking wouldn't, dude. You know how,
I know you wouldn't because you don't leave your house.
Even if you think you have the balls to talk
to anybody like that in person, You're never gonna be
in a situation where you can talk to somebody like
that in person because you don't go anywhere. And it's
not because you're afraid of covid or, and it's because
people don't like you.
Speaker 1 (01:04:50):
They don't invite you to anything. You're a fucking loser.
That's you, loser. You're a loser, you know what, Dude? Yeah,
if Fetterman shot himself, his kids probably would find you.
Do you know who would find you your landlord when
you were a month late in the rent? Because no
one's ever gonna come looking for you because nobody fucking
likes you. Guys, that's the big difference. Nobody talk. That's
(01:05:11):
the problem with the internet. Manage No, y'all get way
too comfortable. Every now and then.
Speaker 2 (01:05:15):
Every now and then you'll see someone that thinks, uh,
real life is the local news comment section, and that
person gets shut down real quick. But for the most part,
ninety seven percent of these people aren't gonna say a
goddamn word to you in person. Nothing, nothing. They would
piss down their leg. These people, dude, These people that
(01:05:36):
talk this big game on the internet, telling the other
they want you to kill yourself and all that stuff
like that, these are the people that tell that openly
talk about how they get anxiety calling their bank's customer
service hotline, having to talk to a person, or ordering
from a menu at a restaurant. These are the same people.
They're not saying shit to you. They're not you know.
(01:05:57):
You know what's funny is every now and then, well
I don't normally our comments. Every now and then we'll
get like a real nasty comment and I'll just reply
to it and I'll go and sometimes I'll be aggressive back,
depending on the mood. They catch me and sometimes be like, hey, man,
I hope you're doing okay. I know this isn't coming
from a good place. You know, people that are healthy
(01:06:17):
and happy with where they're at in life. Don't leave
nasty comments wishing death on people on the internet.
Speaker 1 (01:06:23):
They don't do that.
Speaker 2 (01:06:25):
And I remember one time, one time, I've gotten someone
that goes, oh, I honestly didn't expect you to reply.
I guess now, in hindsight, that was a little too far,
and it put it into perspective, Oh, that that's a human.
On the other he may not like me, they may
not agree with me, but you're not gonna say these
things to me in person. And then when you realize
(01:06:45):
that you're not just talk typing away into an empty
screen and you're actually typing to a person.
Speaker 1 (01:06:49):
Some of them change their ways just based on that.
They are pussies. They're not doing shit. Okay, let's go
to the next here. Um, oh boy, oh boy, Mia,
what are you gonna do? What are you more excited
about with all that Trump's doing? The two thousand dollars
tariff check or the fifteen year car loan or the
fifty year mortgage?
Speaker 2 (01:07:10):
Which one excites you the most out of these three?
Just economically brilliant ideas.
Speaker 4 (01:07:15):
I like the fifty year mortgage, the.
Speaker 2 (01:07:17):
Fifty year mortgage, because I mean, what what's better than
knowing that about sixty percent of the people to take
the mortgage out aren't going to live to see it
paid off. That's that's the real selling point for me.
The fifty year mortgage. Yes, Trump proposed a fifty year
(01:07:39):
mortgage loan.
Speaker 1 (01:07:40):
FDR back in the New Deal had.
Speaker 2 (01:07:43):
A thirty year mortgage loan, and Trump said, just like
a great American president FDR, which decided to I have
a problem with him referring to FDR as a great
American president, But I could do a whole show on that.
Trump's going to be offering a fifty year mortgage to
help combat low homeownership rates. You know the fact I
(01:08:04):
read a news article the other day. Man, do you
know what the average age where a new home buyer.
Speaker 1 (01:08:10):
Is right now?
Speaker 4 (01:08:13):
Thirty six?
Speaker 1 (01:08:14):
Fifty nine?
Speaker 4 (01:08:15):
Are you getting me?
Speaker 2 (01:08:16):
The average age last month for a home buyer was
for a new home buyer was fifty nine years old.
Speaker 4 (01:08:23):
First time, yes, HomeBuyer.
Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
Yes, fifty nine That was just last month. Now over, yes,
if you go over the last couple of years, it's
like thirty. But that that should never be the average age,
even for a day of the new home first time
home buyer.
Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
So I understand.
Speaker 2 (01:08:41):
I'll give Trump credit at least he's trying to do
something about it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:46):
This is just not the answer.
Speaker 2 (01:08:49):
This is not the answer if you want to do
something about home ownership, it's simple. It's the economy, stupid.
It's simple supply and demand economics. Some of this you're
not going to like MAGA. Some of you guys aren't
going to have my MAGA listeners, aren't going to like this.
The reality, though, is everyone should like. The first part
is you got to cut back on some of the regulations.
(01:09:10):
You've just got to make it easier and cheaper with
less government red tape for people to come in and
build houses.
Speaker 1 (01:09:17):
It's supply and demand. You want the price to go down.
Speaker 2 (01:09:19):
The supply has to go up so you don't have
a bunch of people competing for a few items.
Speaker 1 (01:09:24):
Right.
Speaker 2 (01:09:24):
They've become less valuable when there's more of them, so
of course the price is going to go down. You've
got to make it easier for people to build houses.
Other than cutting regulations, there's another thing you can do that.
Like I said, you guys aren't gonna like some of
my MAGA listeners. But it's a harsh reality and it's
something that needs to be done.
Speaker 1 (01:09:41):
If we are serious about lowering the price of houses
without wrecking the economy, you gotta cut.
Speaker 2 (01:09:47):
The tariffs on import on steel imports. You gotta cut
the tariffs on building material imports. You have got to
make it so that we can flood the zone with
materials to build the houses for as cheaply as we
possibly can, as cheap as we possibly can did. That's
the only solution here. That's the only fifty year mortgage
(01:10:09):
is not it. It's not, guys, I mean, because here's what
happens with a fifty year mortgage.
Speaker 1 (01:10:16):
So so we'll give you a history lesson.
Speaker 2 (01:10:18):
First, the thirty year mortgage was something FDR did and
it actually when he did it back during the Great Depression,
wasn't a bad idea because mortgages back then were high interests,
like five to seven year loans. Barely anybody owned a
house back then. It was like twenty some percent because
excuse me, like forty some percent because you would have
(01:10:39):
to make these crazy payments and you know, after seven
years you were done with it.
Speaker 1 (01:10:42):
But the interest was high and it was just it
was a bad deal.
Speaker 2 (01:10:45):
So he brought in, Hey, we're gonna make it to
a new fifteen and thirty year mortgages, and that spread
the risk out over time, which lowered the monthly payments
and more people could buy homes. Now there's a difference
between thirty year and fifty year mortgages. You know, these
aren't interchangeable time periods either. The problem they had back
then was lending and banking and finance issue. The problem
(01:11:06):
we have right now is a supply issue. Those are two.
Speaker 1 (01:11:09):
Different That's not a one size fits all solution to
just keep extending the mortgages.
Speaker 2 (01:11:14):
What a fifty year mea? Okay, let's let's let's do
some interaction here. What is the benefit we own a home?
What's the upside of owning property over renting? What's the
number one benefit owning it? You own it equity? Right,
it's an asset. Property is an asset. That's the benefit
you own something. You're not giving money to a landlord
(01:11:37):
every month and not paying toward anything. You own this house.
Maybe you don't have it paid off right now, but
someday you're gonna hopefully have the house paid off and
you'll own it out right, and that'll be an asset.
And when you die, you can pass it on to
your kids, or when you get too old and your
kids are moved out and you say, you know, I
(01:11:57):
just kind of want to go than a condo with
a chihuahua. You can sell the house and you can
get a big old nest egg from it, right, and
you can downsize and do whatever. You can rent it
out or whatever. That's the benefit of owning a home. Now, Mia,
what's the downside of owning a home?
Speaker 4 (01:12:16):
It's more expensive, it's.
Speaker 1 (01:12:17):
More expensive, and shit breaks.
Speaker 4 (01:12:20):
You have to pay for your own stuff. You don't
have the landlord.
Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
To do it, and yeah, nobody's coming to the rescue
when your shit breaks. So what a fifty Okay, let's
say take a home loan out at thirty fifty year mortgage.
You're not gonna have it paid off to you're eighty.
A lot of people don't live to eighty. Is the
problem there? So what a fifty year mortgage does is
it takes the downside of owning a home and the
(01:12:45):
downside of renting and combines them. The downside of renting
is that you're just perpetually paying somebody and it never ends.
The downside of owning a home is it when shit breaks,
you don't have a landlord to come fix it for you.
So somehow you've managed to put both of those things
into the same category, into the same loan. They've packaged
it in in the name of home ownership. So yeah,
(01:13:05):
I mean, people like the idea of it because yeah,
you're making their smaller payments and it's like, oh, yeah,
I own something, But do you really you're a debt
slave until you're way past retirement.
Speaker 1 (01:13:17):
Is that really a life that you want to live?
You might as well just rent at that point.
Speaker 2 (01:13:21):
We need to be encouraging people to take on less debt,
not more debt, for longer.
Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
I mean, here's the thing, because here's what's gonna happen.
You're gonna get people.
Speaker 2 (01:13:31):
They're gonna say, hey, I'm gonna take a fifty year
mortgage out and I'll just make the minimum payment and
I'll live there for a couple of years, and I'll
have some equity and i'll sell it and then i'll
do like a fifteen or a thirty year mortgage.
Speaker 1 (01:13:41):
Right now, I'll be good.
Speaker 2 (01:13:43):
What those people aren't gonna realize is here, we're gonna
do a science experiment. Guys, get an eye dropper, fill
it up with water, and then go into your bathroom,
take your eye dropper and let out one little drop
into your bathtub, and then let out another one, and
then another one, and then let out like twenty twenty four,
(01:14:07):
twenty four little drops from your eye dropper into your bathtub.
Speaker 1 (01:14:11):
That was the first two years of your mortgage payment.
That's what that did to the principle because the interest
is added on to the front of the loan, so
you're not really paying toward anything for the first couple
of years of a mortgage.
Speaker 2 (01:14:21):
Now let's take that with a fifty year mortgage. You're
not going to actually be paying toward any significant amount
toward the principle on a twenty year or a fifty
year mortgage until you've owned that home for twenty years.
So you're gonna get people that are goh, we'll make
payments for five years and you know they'll be smaller
and that'll allow us to save up some money and
(01:14:41):
move into a bigger house at a lower rate. Well,
those people are going to have no equity in that
home and they're going to realize, oh shit, we're screwed,
and they're going to be stuck in that home, and
you're going to get a whole bunch of people that
are going to be stuck in houses that they did
not intend to be there for us homes. Maybe not forever,
(01:15:01):
but for way longer than they want it to be.
And what that'll do is that will tank the housing market.
That will cause people to sell or well that they'll
try to sell it for a lot more, but they're
not going to and since they won't be able to
get the money back that they owe on the house,
(01:15:22):
they're just going to be stuck there and you're going
to have a stagnant market. I can already tell you
how this is going to go, like that's that's how
this plays out. This is a bad idea.
Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
Again.
Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
I admire that he's trying to do something about the
low rate of homeownership, but this is not the way
to go. This is what's going to happen here is
you're gonna buy you this house and you're going, let's
say you stay in it for the whole term, and
that will till you die. You buy it at twenty
five and you die at seventy three, or maybe you
(01:15:56):
die at eighty, but you refinanced it on another fifty
year mortgage. So your kids get stuck with this house
that you're flipped in. They don't want to deal with it,
they can't afford that, they're not going to make any
money renting it out, and they don't want to live there,
so they just sell it and Blackrock buys it up,
or these big conglomerates that go around buying up all
(01:16:18):
the housing come out and buy it up, and then
fifty years from now we're in the same problem that
we're in right now.
Speaker 1 (01:16:23):
This is not going to work. It's not gonna work.
Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
You've got to make you've got to deregulate the housing sector,
and you've got to make it cheaper for people to build.
That's all there is to it. And you've got to
incentivize This is a key one. You've got to incentivize
these these new home construction companies to come out and
build houses, not apartments.
Speaker 1 (01:16:45):
Mia.
Speaker 2 (01:16:45):
When we drive around town, we live in a bustling
area right when we drive around town, not our area,
our there's nothing getting built out here, which is nice
because I don't have to worry about the hoodlums, the
riff raft coming in, you know what I mean. But
when we drive around town. What do you see getting
built apartments? Not houses everywhere, it's apartments everywhere. And now
(01:17:09):
part of that is economic and the other part is
cultural because younger millennials and Gen Z don't seem to
be as intent on owning a home, which is why
you've got this problem where some of these companies have
come in and bought these houses up because for a
while the demand wasn't there. Now some of them are
starting to realize that was a bad idea, but they're
(01:17:29):
stuck in this apartment lifestyle. Apartments are miserable, by the way.
So we've owned and rented, which do you prefer?
Speaker 8 (01:17:39):
I mean owning, But I will admit like renting was
nice because we didn't have to worry about like if
something Oh.
Speaker 1 (01:17:48):
No, it was Yeah, there's pluses and minuses.
Speaker 2 (01:17:51):
The boat, you know, it was nice when you'd get
a bad windstorm to not sit here and worry is
this the day I'm going to need a new roof?
You know, it was nice that you know, it sucked
when it would freeze, but it was also like, well,
you know, if the pipe bursts, it's not my three
thousand dollars responsibility.
Speaker 1 (01:18:08):
You know, that was nice.
Speaker 2 (01:18:10):
There's pluses and minuses to both, but at the end
of the day, I think long term owning a house
is worth it. I also don't like apartments because they
have rules. I don't like having. I don't like living
somewhere where somebody else tells me what I can and
can't do inside my own home, even if I don't
disagree with the rules. Should I be Should I I
light up a charcoal grill in my living room? No,
(01:18:33):
but I don't want someone to tell me I can't
do that.
Speaker 4 (01:18:36):
Also, having people right next to you that sucked.
Speaker 2 (01:18:40):
Humans were not meant to live on top of each other,
like livestock, that's the other big thing, or like like rodents,
that's that's the other big thing right there. I mean
throughout history it really just ignores apartments and hotels. Both
really just ignore thousands of years of human evolution. I mean,
we used to sleep with our tribe, and that it
(01:19:01):
for the longest time because you didn't trust strangers.
Speaker 1 (01:19:03):
Now we sleep. I mean, if you're in an apartment,
depending on the layout of your apartment, there's a chance
you're sleeping three feet from a complete stranger and you
have no idea.
Speaker 2 (01:19:15):
You don't even give it a second thought. That's a
weird thing. That is a brand new concept over the
last one hundred years that we've never had a consider
as humans before. So consider that. The other thing Trump
is bringing up kind of on the same thing as
a fifteen year car loan fifteen years. How many of
these cars that they make nowadays last fifteen years? A
(01:19:37):
fifteen year car loan. It'd be like it'd be the
same thing with the housing thing, y'all. I'll take the
fifteen year car loan out and I'll lower keep my
payments low, and then I'll trade out of it in
a couple of years.
Speaker 1 (01:19:49):
And then it turns out.
Speaker 2 (01:19:50):
The interest is compiled up so much and the value
of the car has gone so far down that you
actually owe seven thousand dollars more than the car is worth.
And it's like, fuck, now I'm stuck with this. I
don't know what's a shitty car. A Hyundai Elantra for
the next set for the next twelve years, and the
(01:20:11):
wheels are falling off of it, and I do break
all kinds of crap is going wrong, and there's nothing
I can do about Kia Forte. That's more of a
shitty card. No Hondai Hyundais are a little bit nicer
than Kias. I've had both. By the way, I'm not
being a snob. I've driven, I have owned both. The
Kia saved my life with its safety settings. Not a sponsor.
(01:20:35):
We will be sending them a bill for that ad though.
Speaker 1 (01:20:39):
Yeah. So it's just another more debt, more debt, more debt.
Speaker 2 (01:20:42):
I mean, what you're doing is you're making people perpetual
slaves to big banks. That that's who likes this because
they can screw you over on the interest and just
run it up for even longer.
Speaker 1 (01:20:54):
So I don't think this is a good thing.
Speaker 2 (01:20:56):
The other thing here that he's offering is two thousand
dollars check from tariff revenue. Now here's the problem with this.
They're saying that anyone making less than one hundred thousand
dollars a year is going to get two thousand dollars
in the form of a check or a tax credit,
which is basically the same thing as a proceeds from
(01:21:22):
the tariffs. Here's the problem. The tariffs are on pace
to generate about three hundred to three hundred and fifty
billion dollars in revenue by the end of the first year.
In order to give everyone a two thousand dollars tariff check,
that makes under one hundred thousand dollars a year in
this country. That's an adult. You'd need about five hundred.
(01:21:42):
So where does the rest of that money come from?
We go right back to the COVID problem, where we're
just printing off money because it makes people feel good
in the short term, but in the long term at
Jack's All, the price is up. Now, Mia, had you
known when they say how much were the stimulus checks
like thirty five hundred total?
Speaker 1 (01:22:01):
I don't even remember it so long ago.
Speaker 2 (01:22:03):
Had you known, Mia, a couple of years ago, when
they were sending those stimulus checks out, that a thing
of Folger's coffee was gonna go from three ninety nine
to twelve dollars? Would you have wanted those stimulus checks?
Had you known that all the prices were going to
skyrocket as a result of that legislation, That stuff was
going to be four or five times more than it
(01:22:24):
was initially worth in a short period of time, would
you have wanted that?
Speaker 1 (01:22:28):
You're gonna tell me, yes.
Speaker 4 (01:22:31):
Well, I used it to pay off my car, so.
Speaker 2 (01:22:35):
Yeah, I'm not the best person that has no And
I'm not saying people didn't use it for legitimate purposes,
and but I'm.
Speaker 1 (01:22:44):
Just saying, in the long run, you all lost. We
all lost money on those stimulus checks. We all did
in the long run. Yeah, no, if you paid your
car off with it or what, that's great. You know,
I'm glad that you were able to use it for something,
But in the long.
Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
Run, it's going to hurt you. This is the same
thing we have I've not learned. Do you want my
honest opinion what this is here? What these these two
thousand dollars tariff dividend checks are my honest opinion. The
Supreme Court is set to review whether or not Trump
can initiate these tariffs without going through Congress. What this
looks like to me, because who doesn't like free money?
(01:23:18):
Is Trump trying to put public pressure on the Supreme
Court to uphold his ability to enact these tariffs without
going through Congress With these two thousand dollars checks, he
pitches the idea of a two thousand dollars check. Now,
all of a sudden, people that really didn't have a
rooting interest either way in these tariffs are paying closer
(01:23:40):
attention to it. All of a sudden, the Supreme Court
becomes the bad guys that took away your two thousand
dollars check. That's what this seems like to me. I
will be very, very surprised if we get a two
thousand dollars check, if we get a two dollars check
from tariff dividends. What I think we need to do
with this money is pay off the damn debt. Pay
it toward the Yet the national debt's what like forty
(01:24:01):
trillion dollars. Great, we made all this money from the terraces,
with you agree with or not, we did pay off
the debt.
Speaker 1 (01:24:09):
Okay, Let's go to the next one here, all right?
Next up New York City. They had their mayoral election.
Zoran Mam Donnie Cruz divading cruise to victory.
Speaker 2 (01:24:19):
He won, though pretty comfortably, and he promised he's going
to be a mayor for New York City.
Speaker 1 (01:24:25):
He doesn't want to hear anything else about anywhere else
in the world.
Speaker 2 (01:24:28):
Don't ask him about Hamas, don't ask him about Israel,
don't ask him about this.
Speaker 1 (01:24:31):
And that he's the mayor in New York City, which
I agree with. That's not.
Speaker 2 (01:24:36):
We shouldn't care how the mayor feels about Israel and Hamas.
It's not a situation he's gonna have to deal with. However,
his first order of business as mayor elects meo, what
do you think it was?
Speaker 1 (01:24:46):
What do you think he did for his first order
of business?
Speaker 4 (01:24:50):
Bench press?
Speaker 2 (01:24:52):
No, no, he's never going to bench press anything on
hundred and thirty five pounds. No, no, that'll never happen.
His first order of business as mayor elect of New
York City, who's only the mayor of New York City,
was going to Puerto Rico for a six day stay
at Hilton and San Juan, where the by the way,
the average rate per night like eight hundred bucks a night.
(01:25:15):
So that was his first order, man of the people,
zor on, mom, Donnie New York first goes straight to
Puerto Rico and just kicks it back, kicks his feet up.
You gotta love it. Here's what he said the day
after the election. This is the communist grift never ends.
Speaker 1 (01:25:31):
Look at this. This is what he said the day
after the election.
Speaker 5 (01:25:36):
Good morning, New York City.
Speaker 4 (01:25:38):
Thank you.
Speaker 5 (01:25:39):
Last night we made history, and today we begin the
work of making a new administration. Welcome to the transition.
This is the period over the next few months rebuild
a City Hall that delivers on the promises of our
campaign to make New York City affordable and to make
government accountable to the people it serves. As we've prepared
to govern, we'll start announcing the leaders will help implement
our attention people like Deputy Mayor who oversee entire areas
(01:26:01):
of government, and the commissioners who carry out the critical
work of city agencies. These appointments will be driven by excellence, integrity,
and hunger to solve old problems with new solutions. Talking
to organizers on the front lines of the fight to
improve our city government, veterans with proven track records, policy
experts from around the country and the world, and working
people to know better than anyone what our neighborhoods deserve.
(01:26:22):
And this will be a period like the campaign we ran,
and the City Hall to come defined by transparency, because
New Yorkers deserve a government they can trust. On January first,
I will be your mayor. New Year's Day and a
new era for this city. Oh and one more thing,
Remember how I told you a few months ago to
stop sending us money you can start again. This transition
(01:26:43):
requires staff, research, your money, and it will be made
possible by the people who built and believe in this movement.
So I hope we'll make a donation a Transition twenty
twenty five dot com.
Speaker 23 (01:26:54):
Now let's get to work.
Speaker 1 (01:26:55):
He needs your money.
Speaker 2 (01:26:58):
He needs these were the people that are just crying
about how they're starving, children that can't afford to eat,
that have the nerve to come out and beg for
your money to pay for the transition. You've gotta be kidding.
Why don't you have your buddy Alex Soros to it? Also,
he talks about working people. Why does this NEPO baby
who's never had a job in his life. This is
(01:27:18):
literally gonna be his first job. Mayor is going to
be mayor of the biggest city in the country. He
is literally going to be his first job he's ever had.
Why is he this big voice for working people, the
guy who's never had a job. How does that make sense?
That would like be saying, Hey, Caleb Salvatore is the
voice for supermodels.
Speaker 1 (01:27:38):
What the fuck does that? What are you talking about? No,
how does that work out? What are we doing here?
This is gonna be a clown show. It's going to
be a disaster.
Speaker 2 (01:27:49):
I hope you're ready for it, because unfortunately, in a
city like New York City, Milwaukee, Minneapolis, even Chicago, we
can kind of deal with them being run by idiots.
We're all going to feel the ripples of New York
City going to shit. Unfortunately, that's just how this is
going to be. And they'll blame Trump or they'll blame whoever,
but this is how it's gonna be. Here's another one
(01:28:10):
of his policy points he's talking about. Check this one
out here, one of his Boulder policies.
Speaker 5 (01:28:14):
Earning on day one, we will expand the city's special
enforcement programs, doubling fines for hazardous violations and tripling them
for conditions that are immediately dangerous. And when a really
bad landlord like this guy refuses to fix sust the
city's going to step in, make the repairs and send them. Okay,
if that doesn't work, the city's taking over the building,
(01:28:34):
throwing the worst landlords out of business.
Speaker 2 (01:28:37):
The city's taking I didn't know that was a PbD clip,
otherwise I wouldn't played their voiceovers with it. But yeah,
so the city's going to take over the building if
they don't play ball with them. Here's what he means
by that. I'll give you a direct translation to what
that means. What he means is the city is going
to waste hundreds of thousands, probably more likely millionllions of
(01:29:00):
dollars in court fighting lawsuits. By the way, that's all
tax payer money, fighting lawsuits that there's no way in
hell they're going to win because they've violated however many well,
I mean, it goes without saying that. That's what's going
to happen. The city is going to waste millions of
dollars in your money in legal defenses New Yorkers fighting
(01:29:22):
cases that they don't stand a snowballs chance in hell
of winning. Because Mamdannie wanted to get tough on the internet.
That's what will happen. That's a thing he can actually do.
We talked about how last week about how he's going
to be limited in the scope of what he can
do because the governor's going to kneecap him because a
lot of it's handled at the state level. That's something
he can actually do, that's a real negative effect he
(01:29:45):
can do. He can actually go in and attempt to
seize these buildings from property owners. What's going to happen
is the property owner is going to say, Hey, this
isn't Soviet Russia. You can't just come in and take
my property. You can find me, you can do whatever,
but you can't just take my property from me. They're
going to sue. New York's going to spend a crazy
(01:30:07):
amount of money defending themselves, and then the city's going
to lose. Whether it's a class action lawsuit or a
standalone lawsuit, they're going to lose because, like I said,
I'm all for cracking down on shitty landlords, but the
city does not have the authority to just come in
and take your property from you.
Speaker 1 (01:30:25):
This is not the Soviet Union. That's something he can
actually do.
Speaker 8 (01:30:32):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:30:32):
His speech on election night really made some waves. Here's
a clip from it.
Speaker 5 (01:30:40):
So, Donald Trump, since I know you're watching.
Speaker 1 (01:30:45):
I have four words for you.
Speaker 21 (01:30:49):
Turn the volume up. We will hold bad landlords.
Speaker 5 (01:31:16):
To account because the Donald Trumps of our city have
grown far too comfortable taking advantage of their tenants.
Speaker 2 (01:31:24):
Okay, so we just played two other videos of him
talking where he's the soft, effeminate, non threatening, nice guy.
Where the hell was that in that speech. Listen, when
emotions are running high and people are overly excited or
overly upset or whatever. I think that's when you get
(01:31:46):
a glimpse, not necessarily the whole picture, but a glimpse
into who somebody truly is.
Speaker 1 (01:31:53):
You saw the reels are on, Mom, Donnie.
Speaker 22 (01:31:55):
There.
Speaker 2 (01:31:56):
He wasn't hiding behind his big, cheesy smile and all
his soft spoken rhetoric that just makes everybody happy. That's
the real guy. He wins, whether you like him or not.
It was a historic victory for him. And the first
thing he does is talk about Donald Trump. The first
(01:32:16):
thing he does is go after You didn't run against Trump,
but the first thing he does is go after Trump.
This is an angry, spiteful man who wants to expand
the powers of government. That is a dangerous combination there.
That is someone who we cannot trust with that type
of executive authority. I mean, if you want me to
(01:32:39):
be honest, I'm not talking about the rhetoric in terms
of the content of what he was saying, but the
mannerisms and the way he was speaking that sounded like
a Hitler speech. It really, I'm not saying he was
saying gas the Jews, but the way he delivered that
speech was hilaria. And I'm not the only one who
thinks that this is Van Jones, a far left commentator
(01:33:01):
on CNN. Check out what he had to say shortly
after that speech.
Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
But I think he missed an opportunity.
Speaker 19 (01:33:07):
I think the Mom Donnie that we saw in the
campaign trail, who was a lot more calm, who was
a lot warmer, who was a lot more embracing, was
not present in that speech. And I think that Mom
Donnie is the one you need to hear from tonight.
There are a lot of people trying to figure out
can I get on this train with him or not?
(01:33:28):
Is he going to include me? Is he going is
he going to be more of a class warrior even
in office. I think he missed a chance tonight to
open up and bring more people into the tent. I
think its tone was sharp. I think he was using
the microphone in a way that he was almost yelling.
And that's not the Mom Donnie that we've seen on
(01:33:49):
TikTok and the great interviews and stuff like that.
Speaker 7 (01:33:51):
So I felt like it was a little bit of.
Speaker 19 (01:33:53):
A character switch here where the warm, open, embracing guy
that's close to working people. Was not on stage night.
There was some other voice on stage.
Speaker 1 (01:34:04):
That's it.
Speaker 19 (01:34:04):
He's very young, and he just pulled off something that's very,
very difficult, and so.
Speaker 1 (01:34:11):
That's yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:34:12):
I mean, that's basically what I was saying. Welcome to
the Communist grift. They will lie to your face, they'll smile,
they'll say all the right things, they'll seem non threatening.
But when they actually get power, this guy's not even
merry yet. But the second he got a sniff of power,
it's a total onet eighty. He's a different guy. That's
the real hymn right there, Mark my words, that is
(01:34:33):
the real hymn. That's what these people do. They sell
you a bag of goods, and then they come in
and they take that bag of goods and beat you
upside the head with it. It wasn't a bag of
goods at all. It was just a bag of bricks.
Now you're dead, congratulations. That's what communists and Marxists do,
and that's what's gonna happen in New York City under him.
He made it clear that this is not a you know,
(01:34:55):
I'm a man of the people. I'm welcoming of everybody.
He doesn't want a big tent. Communists never do they
claim they do, But once they get power, as we've
seen time and time again throughout history, that's never how
it works out. He is very much into the business
of othering people us versus them, who doesn't matter who
(01:35:15):
they are. They're the ones keeping you down though, That's
the only message he needs you to get so that
he can pitch you against them, until, like we've found time,
time and time again, even in America, you're no longer
of use to him. Then all of a sudden, you're
the others. You're the ones outside the tent because it
just continues to shrink. You're the ones who need to
be ostracized and alienated from society. You're the ones keeping
(01:35:38):
people down because we've gotten rid of the other people
that were keeping you down. But the target has to
constantly move. The goalpost has to continue to move, otherwise
the game's over. It's the reason Tom never kills Jerry.
Communists always have to have a bad guy. They've always
got to have a scapegoat otherwise the show ends.
Speaker 1 (01:35:57):
That's all there is to it. Congratulations, New York City,
you elected a man who is going to burn your
city down so that he can rule over the ashes.
I hope you're proud of yourselves because you reaped what
you sewed here, speaking of reaping what you sew, I
got curious because Cuomo lost.
Speaker 2 (01:36:15):
Andrew Cuomo, he's a former governor of New York. He
really rose to prominence during COVID as governor in New York,
and his policies during COVID are likely what cost him
the election in this mayoral race. For more than one reason.
Cuomo was famous because he put a bunch of COVID
patients into nursing homes and just cleared them out. I mean,
(01:36:36):
just old people massacre in these nursing homes. And so
I looked up, I'm like, okay, how many people left
New York City between twenty twenty and twenty twenty one
due to COVID. The estimated amount of people that left
New York City during COVID was three hundred and fifteen thousand.
(01:36:56):
Cuomo lost by two hundred thousand votes. Now, it goes
without saying if you left a city that had draconian
COVID policies, you probably weren't going to vote for Mom Donnie.
Speaker 1 (01:37:07):
You were not a leftist. You were either in the middle,
you're a libertarian, or you were right leaning. So if
even two thirds of those people showed up to vote
for Cuomo, he wins his policies under COVID or during
COVID where he decided he was going to be the
(01:37:29):
WOP dictator. I can say it.
Speaker 2 (01:37:31):
I'm Italian quite literally cost him this election because he
drove the people out of the city that we're going
to vote for him. And I don't feel bad for him.
I don't feel bad for any of the people in
New York that voted for this crap.
Speaker 1 (01:37:45):
This is what you get here. We got a couple
more than we're getting out of here.
Speaker 2 (01:37:50):
So this video has gone viral all over the internet,
all over We've got this girl who's on the Tic
TAC and she calls up a bunch of churches saying, hey,
my Snap benefits expired, and she's got a recording of
a crying baby in the background. My Snap benefits expired.
I don't have anywhere to go. Can you give me
(01:38:10):
some money so that I can co feed this screaming kid?
And she posted a video go and play some.
Speaker 22 (01:38:17):
Of it.
Speaker 13 (01:38:19):
Helped a starving baby, and right now I'm not to
call story Side Church in Belleville, Ohio, so I don't
really have.
Speaker 1 (01:38:27):
Any resources to do that right now.
Speaker 5 (01:38:30):
The account where I have to give to community member.
Speaker 8 (01:38:34):
Now, we don't help with formula all have you talked
about you at CCC.
Speaker 7 (01:38:38):
Yeah, I've been calling everywhere all day.
Speaker 1 (01:38:40):
Okay.
Speaker 8 (01:38:43):
We are a small church and as a result, we
have limited funds, and so we tend to help those that.
Speaker 17 (01:38:52):
Are part of the church or come to the church.
Speaker 1 (01:38:55):
We're going to be there because there's people that are
right around you.
Speaker 9 (01:39:01):
Okay, all right, thank you.
Speaker 22 (01:39:03):
Okay, uh huh bye.
Speaker 8 (01:39:07):
We really don't have an estimated time just because we
think you see a lot of requests here.
Speaker 1 (01:39:13):
Each applican is different. We could take a couple of days,
you could take a couple of weeks.
Speaker 8 (01:39:18):
You don't have a time there.
Speaker 4 (01:39:21):
Okay, you said it would take a couple of days to.
Speaker 21 (01:39:23):
Weeks, Yes, Sam, Yeah, it's approved.
Speaker 4 (01:39:30):
Okay, all right, thank you.
Speaker 21 (01:39:33):
But we don't have formula or any of like that.
Speaker 1 (01:39:36):
Okay, I'm really sorry.
Speaker 13 (01:39:40):
That's all we have right now.
Speaker 8 (01:39:41):
That has an eight all day and she's like, I
don't know what else to do.
Speaker 21 (01:39:47):
Yeah, I'm not sure because we don't have cash here,
and I'm I'm not in control finances.
Speaker 12 (01:39:55):
Okay, Well, unfortunately that's.
Speaker 1 (01:39:57):
All we see.
Speaker 2 (01:40:00):
What's a stupid neck tattoo she has because it's blocked out. Now,
she went out and pulled a clip or this image
up underneath it. This is her list of churches that
supposedly offered her assistance and those that quote unquote turned
her down. Now, what she's claiming is that only thirty
three percent of Christian churches offered her assistance, and the
(01:40:21):
rest of them just said an't go fuck yourself. You're
gonna starve to death. Who gives a shit? Was more
or less the message. You can close it out. Now,
here's the problem with this. As you can see, those
clips were selectively edited. What this woman did was first off,
I want to make this clear. There are absolutely churches
out there that are in it for the grift, These
(01:40:42):
mega rock and roll Jesus churches I'm not a fan of.
I don't have any use for these people. They have
bastardized the name of Jesus Christ and they've used it.
Speaker 1 (01:40:51):
To make money. I don't like those people.
Speaker 2 (01:40:54):
I would be foolish if I was going to sit
here and say that no one has ever used Jesus
Christ named to make money or get fame or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:41:02):
So I want to make that clear.
Speaker 2 (01:41:03):
I'm not going to argue that one hundred percent of
churches are run by upstanding individuals. The problem with this video, though,
is her standards for what qualified as quote unquote help.
She would call these churches up, hey, can I have
some money to go get diapers or formula or whatever
for my kid asn't eaten all day, and the church
would say, hey, we don't have cash on hand here.
(01:41:27):
We don't directly give people money or supplies, but we
do partner with this food bank at XYZ up the street.
You can go check them out and they'll be able
to help you. And when they would say that, she
would say that she was denied help. Here's the problem.
And I'm an adult convert Catholic, so you're not gonna
find me sticking up for these denominational Protestant churches very often.
Speaker 1 (01:41:50):
Here's the problem, though, is these small, standalone churches don't
have the resources, manpower, money, or space to have their
own food bank at the church. So what they do
is all the churches in the area will pool their
resources into a couple of faith based operations where they'll
help single mothers, or they'll help people that don't have food,
(01:42:12):
and it's a centralized location where people can go to
get it. That's not the same thing as telling somebody,
you know, acting like you're Scrooge McDuck saying to go
die in the street and act like I give a shit.
That's not even remotely close to the same thing there.
Speaker 8 (01:42:27):
You know.
Speaker 2 (01:42:30):
One of the churches she called was a Catholic church
that was shutting down, like closing down, literally had shit
boxed up, and they said, hey, you know, we're closing.
We don't have any resources, but if you call this
church that's a mile and a half away, they'll be
able to help you out. She counted them as turning
her down because they're closing. She called poor desolate churches
(01:42:53):
in the South. At the end of the day, what
this was was this woman had an agenda. She had
an a tech Christian agenda, and the study was so biased.
All these churches have come out and said, hey, look,
we offered her resources places to go get help, and
she either hung the phone up or cropped that out
of the video that I mean this woman's philth you
(01:43:17):
shouldn't take her seriously. This is an anti Christian agenda,
that's all there is to it. And like I said,
I'm not one to defend these rock and roll Jesus
churches as Mia and I call them. But those people,
at the end of the day, have the same belief
I do, hopefully, and I'm not gonna let them be
unfairly trampled upon, you know. And now I saw some
(01:43:41):
other people arguing that, you know, why couldn't they just
give her money? Couldn't they just give her cash?
Speaker 1 (01:43:45):
No, no, they couldn't.
Speaker 9 (01:43:47):
That.
Speaker 1 (01:43:47):
That's not how you help somebody. You don't give somebody cash.
Speaker 2 (01:43:50):
If churches just gave out, if word got out on
the street that churches gave cash to whoever called in
with a sob story, every drug and alcoholic within one
hundred mile radius and be beating down the door trying
to get their next fix in.
Speaker 1 (01:44:06):
No, you don't give someone cash. You give them supplies.
Speaker 2 (01:44:09):
Absolutely, you may pay a bill directly, like our church
will pay people's utility bills. Right, They'll find out, Hey,
who's having trouble keeping their lights on or their gas
on this winner and they'll write checks directly to the
utility company with the person's account number in the memo line,
and they'll cover their bills for the month or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:44:32):
That's fine.
Speaker 2 (01:44:33):
What they don't do is they don't give the people
cash because the cash doesn't always go where it's supposed
to go. And it is not Christian to enable someone
who's making bad decisions. By the way, it is a
bad decision to try to run this.
Speaker 1 (01:44:44):
Type of scam on people. And that's what this is.
This is a scam.
Speaker 2 (01:44:47):
This is an attempt in bad faith to paint Christians
in a negative light. And I'm not going to sit
here and stand for it. The majority of these people
she was talking to were elderly people or church volunteers.
These aren't the people that are running the church. These
people don't have any say in the finances. Even if
they wanted to cut you a check today, they couldn't.
And they said they're doing the best things. It's like
(01:45:07):
calling uh, It's like, what's a good example. It's like
calling the bank and saying, hey, e. The teller picks
up the phone, Hey, I need a loan. Okay, Well
I'm just a teller, so let me get you on
with the banker and we'll set up an appointment and
they'll figure out a time.
Speaker 1 (01:45:26):
To get you in to get it. No, you're denying
me alone. No I'm not.
Speaker 2 (01:45:30):
I'm just telling you that we need to get you
on with the person that can actually help you fill
out the application. I'm just processing, you know, check deposits
and cash and stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:45:38):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:45:39):
I can't believe this bank has denied me alone. I'm
closing my accounts.
Speaker 1 (01:45:44):
That's base.
Speaker 2 (01:45:44):
That's the church equip or the banking equivalent of what
she's doing here. That's the customer service equivalent of what
she's doing here. That's the problem here. This is not
somebody you can trust. This is a direct bad faith
effort by the enemy to paint us is something we
are not. And every time you see this video you
should call it out for what it does. Did you
(01:46:05):
have anything you wanted to add?
Speaker 1 (01:46:06):
I know you were. You brought this up to You're
the one who told me about this.
Speaker 4 (01:46:11):
No I didn't.
Speaker 1 (01:46:13):
Oh no, I saw it on social media. You mentioned it.
You were the one. You did bring it up to
me though.
Speaker 8 (01:46:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:46:19):
Above the churches, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:46:22):
About the rock and roll Jesus Church. Do you think
the righteous gemstones would give give her some help. No,
it might give her some cocaine. Um, Okay, we'll do
one more and then we'll get out of here.
Speaker 1 (01:46:36):
We've got uh.
Speaker 2 (01:46:37):
Sidney Sweeney is in big trouble, big trouble. She did
an interview that has since gone viral, and she was
asked about the dreaded genes ad and here's what she
had to say about it.
Speaker 23 (01:46:50):
The criticism of the content, which was basically that maybe,
specifically in this political climate, like white people shouldn't joke
about genetic superiority like that was kind of like the
criticism broadly speaking. And since you are talking about this,
I just wanted to give you an opportunity to talk
about that specifically.
Speaker 7 (01:47:09):
I think that when I I.
Speaker 4 (01:47:13):
Have an issue that I want to speak about, people
will hear.
Speaker 2 (01:47:20):
That was the best non answer ever. Nobody gives a fuck.
This is all them pretending to give a fuck. This
is not about anybody on the left valuing Sydney Sweeney's
opinion on racial issues.
Speaker 1 (01:47:37):
Make no mistake. They don't care how she feels.
Speaker 2 (01:47:41):
They don't think she's going to add some insightful commentary
that'll just change everything. The only thing that matters to
these people. Is that she bends the knee.
Speaker 1 (01:47:50):
That's it.
Speaker 2 (01:47:51):
They don't care, do you I mean, do you really think,
I mean, I know these people are stupid and crazy.
Do you really think that they value Sydney Sweeney's input
on cultural issues? Of course they don't. Of course they don't.
That's not what this is about. This is about getting
her to fall in line the same way they do
(01:48:14):
with everybody else. That's all that matters. They'd prefer They
don't care how you think they prefer, you don't. They
just want you to fall in line. And she couldn't
have handled that any better. Now, she was in a
movie that just came out called Christy. It was about
a wrestler boxer named Christy Martin. I really don't know
(01:48:38):
who this woman is now. It bombed at the box office,
and they were talking about how it was the American
Eagle campaign that killed it her ties to quote unquote
white supremacy. Now, it could be that, or it could
be the fact that I'm just now hearing about this
movie for the first time a month after it came out,
and it's about an unknown female wrestler that might also
(01:49:01):
play a little bit of a role in why this
movie failed. I mean, it's like the Robbie Williams movie.
Somebody somebody made a biopic of Robbie Williams, like, I mean,
he was famous, but not Freddie Mercury famous. But they
decided that it wasn't enough to make a movie about
(01:49:21):
a relatively obscure British singer. They needed to make a
movie about a relatively obscure British singer. But for some reason,
and they're not gonna tell you why, they replaced him
with the chimp in the movie. And it's like, of
course that was gonna bomb at the box office. It's
the same thing. I mean, they made it a football
movie about Matt Castle. No one's gonna go watch it.
(01:49:44):
So Ruby Rose, her coworker or coworker co star in
this movie from Batgirl and Orange Is the New Black,
took a swing at her co star. Ruby Rose said
the following the original and I quote the original Christy
Martin script was incredible, life changing. I was attached to
(01:50:06):
play Cherry. Everyone had experienced the core material. Most of
us were actually gay. It's part of why I stayed
in acting. Losing roles happens all the time.
Speaker 1 (01:50:16):
For her.
Speaker 2 (01:50:17):
Pr to talk about it flopping and say she did
it for the people. None of the people want to
see someone who hates them parading around pretending to be us.
You're Acretan and you ruin the film period. Christie deserved better, dude.
The left just consists of the most angry, bitter, genuinely
(01:50:41):
unhappy people you will ever meet. The movie did not
bomb because of Sidney Sweeney. The movie bombed because nobody
fucking heard about it. Turns out, if you don't promote something,
people don't go see it. Turns out if it's not
about a subject matter that most people even know what
the fuck it is, they don't go see it. Now,
(01:51:02):
you could have done well if they tried, and she
she's all diikey in the movie Sidney Sweeney is. They
could have done well if they would have went out
and trot her out and barely any clothes. No one
wants to see Sidney Sweeney look like a frumpy lesbian,
So you're you're missing out on all the target demographics there.
I don't know what to tell you but to sit
there and just rail. I hope, I hope Ruby Rose
doesn't get another deal ever. I hope she doesn't get
(01:51:22):
another major acting role. Ever, If you're known as the
person that throws your co stars under the bus publicly
and just trashes them, calls them names like that, I
hope you never get another acting gig, not a major one.
Speaker 1 (01:51:33):
You don't deserve one. Why are they so unhappy? I
mean it is it's it's.
Speaker 2 (01:51:39):
From the the Fetterman comments that we were talking about
on Blue Sky to this. These are the people that
can't function without weekly therapy sessions and three or four
different types of psychotrophic drugs that want to tell you
how to how to live your life. These people that
hate themselves so much, they like this publicly every day.
(01:52:02):
They're not happy unless they're lashing out against somebody. Want
to tell you how to live your life better. They
think they have all the answers. They can't function without drugs.
They can't function without going to therapy and telling a
Kamala Harris vote or all their fucking problems.
Speaker 1 (01:52:18):
They can't function. Excuse me.
Speaker 2 (01:52:20):
These are the people with four different mental illnesses that
contemplate suicide weekly, but they know how you should live
your life. They have all the answers to society's problems.
They can't figure out their own problems. Their sink has
been overflown with dishes for the last three weeks. But
they're gonna figure out world hunger if you ask them.
(01:52:41):
They're gonna end racism and bigotry. They can't change the
cat's litter box. But they're gonna fix war in the
Middle East.
Speaker 1 (01:52:50):
That's right, they figured it out, all right. Last one?
What's our positive story today?
Speaker 8 (01:52:55):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (01:52:55):
Wait, I have a positive story we can do? Can
we share mine first? That you want to do your first? Okay,
go to the last segment there, one more down, not
the trans there, all right, we're ending on a high note.
So this woman on TikTok, she's blown up his little
local news. She took her mom. Her mom's a lifelong
Nebraska fan, but never did you see this, never went
(01:53:18):
to a game before.
Speaker 1 (01:53:19):
So they live out.
Speaker 2 (01:53:20):
They say, hey, let's go to the bar and Lincoln
and watch the game. But she actually got her tickets
to the game and didn't tell her until they got there,
and the mom's reaction is priceless, worth the whole Listen
to this show of this is all you get from it?
Speaker 1 (01:53:33):
Go ahead? Does that sound like an kay place to go?
Speaker 2 (01:53:38):
After the game. Now, Nebraska went on to lose that
game and our star quarterback broke his fibulous So I
speak on behalf of all Nebraska fans when I say,
(01:54:00):
never let that woman attend another game.
Speaker 1 (01:54:02):
Ever, she's banned from the stadium. Sorry, sweetheart, I don't
make the rules. Bad luck charm, get out of here.
Speaker 8 (01:54:11):
I started crying when I saw that for the first time.
Speaker 1 (01:54:14):
I did too, because of what that woman did do
our football program. She she torched it, ruined it. Okay,
what's going on? What's the what's the positive story for
the week that we're gonna end on the high note?
Speaker 4 (01:54:25):
Okay, So there is this girl on TikTok I watch.
Her name is Serena.
Speaker 21 (01:54:30):
I think.
Speaker 8 (01:54:31):
So she's kind of like the new Jenna Marbles. I
don't know, you've seen Jenna Marbles. Yeah, yeah, so I
was obsessed with Jenna Marbles.
Speaker 4 (01:54:39):
But she's like the kind of like the new Jenna Marbles.
Speaker 1 (01:54:42):
What does Jenna Marbles do or did she do for
the audience that doesn't know?
Speaker 8 (01:54:47):
So, she did like little skits and just like fun
little things, like she would do little skits of like
cooking and then she would do like little skits of
her boyfriend giving her makeover, and she did one where
she tried to like she did like face pet and
(01:55:08):
like blended in with her couch.
Speaker 4 (01:55:09):
And she's just like fun little skitch.
Speaker 1 (01:55:11):
So she wouldn't do the pranks where people pretend to
start fights in public.
Speaker 8 (01:55:15):
Yes, okay, yeah, because it got to a point where
she just like she just started a fuck around, like
she didn't really need the money anymore.
Speaker 2 (01:55:23):
Did she stand outside of people's doors in Halloween masks
at night?
Speaker 21 (01:55:27):
No?
Speaker 8 (01:55:27):
Okay no, but yeah, so she just did like silly
little stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:55:31):
So there's this girl. Her name is Serena.
Speaker 8 (01:55:33):
She like kind of looks like Jenna Marbles and she
has like the same mannerisms. And so she has outside
of her door, she has a little mini fridge for
ups and her mailman and stuff with like drinks so
they can come and get drinks. And she has like
(01:55:55):
a little like uh like a whiteboard for like requests
and stuff, and she refills it all the time. And
she always does these like really nice things, like on Halloween,
she brought pizzas around to all the different fire stations.
Speaker 1 (01:56:08):
Oh nice.
Speaker 8 (01:56:09):
And she brought Dunkin donuts or Krispy Kreme donuts to
people at the airport, and she just always does like
all these really nice things. And so this week she
got an angel tree. Do you know what an angel
tree is?
Speaker 11 (01:56:25):
No?
Speaker 8 (01:56:26):
So at Walmart, if you go to Walmart during Christmas time,
there will be kids who fill out it's called an
angel tree. They fill out little like requests of things
that they want for Christmas.
Speaker 1 (01:56:38):
Oh I know what that is.
Speaker 4 (01:56:39):
Yeah, you can go and like shop for them.
Speaker 8 (01:56:42):
And so she went and she did, and she always
does them, and she did her first angel tree this
week and it's just so sweet.
Speaker 9 (01:56:50):
All right, let's see, I think it's angel tree time.
Speaker 7 (01:56:52):
Let's go see.
Speaker 4 (01:56:57):
Come on, is Crimas time.
Speaker 9 (01:57:00):
I have a seven year old boy, a seventeen year
old boy, and a four year old girl.
Speaker 7 (01:57:03):
I'm so excited. Start with clothes.
Speaker 9 (01:57:05):
My little boy clothes. I have shoes at Boys Love Minecraft.
Speaker 17 (01:57:08):
He's size six seven must If I had a child,
they would be wearing this Sonic sweat set.
Speaker 4 (01:57:14):
These are nice.
Speaker 9 (01:57:15):
They feel like those Lululemon ABC pants. Vegas Night's Beanie.
I got all the clothes. Let's do a fashion show
for my four year old girl.
Speaker 17 (01:57:21):
I got this nightgown a matching set, a little dread
this outfit, and this outfit.
Speaker 9 (01:57:25):
Simple shoes and a beanie, socks and underwear. And for
my seventeen year old boy. Let me know if I'm
in your way. I'm just doing a little fashion show.
This little sweat set, yeah, big sweat set.
Speaker 4 (01:57:35):
Cute, cute, very cute. I agree.
Speaker 11 (01:57:38):
This outfit a little monochrome, nice colors though I like
them too, Thank you. This outfit, another T shirt, beanie,
shoes and socks and underwear. For my seven year old boy,
I got this sonic sweat set, this.
Speaker 17 (01:57:50):
Outfit and this one jacket, beanie and shoes, minecraft, socks
and underwear.
Speaker 9 (01:57:53):
So that's my clothing hall. So now let's go get
the toys.
Speaker 17 (01:57:56):
My seventeen year old boy says he wants a PS
five controller and a skateboard.
Speaker 4 (01:57:59):
I mean, what do you think is cooler. Let's see
the camps.
Speaker 9 (01:58:03):
Let's the camel one's really cool. Now we'll get a skateboard.
I'm thinking they're with the bikes because wheels. Oh look
I was right.
Speaker 7 (01:58:11):
Look an eagle.
Speaker 9 (01:58:13):
And my seven year old boy wants legos K pop,
demon Hunter and a racetrack. I think this is awesome.
Thank you so much.
Speaker 23 (01:58:19):
Yes, thank you.
Speaker 17 (01:58:20):
We did the F one Ferrari and the F one
little teat this three and one truck helicopter thing that
they can build and rebuild.
Speaker 9 (01:58:26):
We checked on the app and sadly there is no
K Pop Demon Hunter stuff here. So I wonder if
we do one of these like Mister Beast lab things
like little boys love Mister Beast.
Speaker 1 (01:58:34):
This one comes with cars.
Speaker 9 (01:58:35):
Okay, we'll do this racetrack a few more little cars.
Speaker 17 (01:58:39):
And for my little girl, she wants playset, dress up
clothes and Honeybee stuffy.
Speaker 9 (01:58:42):
So we'll look for a Honeybee stuffed animal. I found one,
but it's like Minecraft, But I think that's okay. I
don't really know what a play set is. Is this
the play set?
Speaker 8 (01:58:50):
Like?
Speaker 9 (01:58:50):
You can never go wrong with Elsa.
Speaker 17 (01:58:52):
Let's go back to the pajamas and get the other
little pajama dresses.
Speaker 9 (01:58:55):
They have all these princess nightcowns. You like, that's perfect
because then it's dress up, but then they can all
sleep in it.
Speaker 4 (01:59:00):
There's Jasmine.
Speaker 17 (01:59:01):
This one has pants with like a skirt overlay with
a pretty bell dress and aerial with a tail and
a little Elsa dress and then a little Tiari shoes said,
let me show you what I got for my seventeen
year old boy, do you have socks, underwear, beanie shoes, PS,
five controller skateboard and three outfits For my seven year
old boy, shoes in hat, socks and underwear, a sweat set,
a jacket to outfits, some hot wheels, mister beet.
Speaker 9 (01:59:22):
Slab and some legos.
Speaker 17 (01:59:23):
And for my four year old girl, we have a
matching set two outfits, a little dress, a bee stuffed animal,
a crown and a tiara, a ton of pajama dress
up dresses, shoes, socks, underwear, a little hat, and a
place set, and then a little something for me.
Speaker 9 (01:59:37):
Cosmo and Wanda Redwull all ready.
Speaker 7 (01:59:39):
To go, I just have.
Speaker 1 (01:59:44):
So what's oh?
Speaker 8 (01:59:46):
But I was yeah, also going to add So she
actually ended up getting the wrong like bee stuffed ana.
Speaker 1 (01:59:52):
Hang.
Speaker 3 (01:59:53):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:59:54):
People in the comments were like, oh no, it's not
like that kind of bee.
Speaker 4 (01:59:57):
She got something. She got the wrong bee stuffed animals.
Speaker 8 (02:00:00):
So she went back and asked Walmart if she could
like cheat or like add another thing to it.
Speaker 4 (02:00:06):
So she went back and added it. She got the
correct toy and added it.
Speaker 1 (02:00:10):
Nice. Yeah, where can people go to do this if
they want to be generous, if you want to do it.
Speaker 8 (02:00:16):
So she just goes to Walmart and at the entrance
of Walmart there's like a little Christmas tree and you
just grab a little tag and then it has everything
on there that the kids want.
Speaker 4 (02:00:27):
Yeah, and then you just shop for them and.
Speaker 8 (02:00:32):
You bring it up to the register and give them
like the little tag and then they bring everything up
and I mean you don't.
Speaker 9 (02:00:40):
Have to go like all out like she did.
Speaker 4 (02:00:42):
Like there's different different ones.
Speaker 8 (02:00:44):
But yeah, so she just does like positive.
Speaker 4 (02:00:46):
Things like that.
Speaker 2 (02:00:47):
That reminds me. December thirteenth, it's rolling around. We're doing
our annual fundraiser for the res Kids again at Beach
House Roast Battles. So where can people Can people donate
to that early if they want.
Speaker 4 (02:01:01):
To, Yeah, you can venmo me.
Speaker 1 (02:01:06):
She'll totally use it on the right stuff.
Speaker 4 (02:01:11):
My venomo is just at me a strader.
Speaker 2 (02:01:15):
Yeah, her maiden name. Yes, you don't need her real name.
So weirdos creepy comments. I see what you guys say
about her. It's creepy. It's not mean. You might find
it flattering. They're weirdos though you don't want anything to do.
You can send her money, send her my Like, isn't
(02:01:37):
that like a thing guys get turned on sending women money?
Speaker 21 (02:01:41):
You can?
Speaker 4 (02:01:41):
Okay, so you can do two things. You can either
send me money to donate, or you can just send me.
Speaker 1 (02:01:47):
Money, yeah, to get her nails done?
Speaker 7 (02:01:48):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (02:01:49):
Perfect, Yeah with either one VEO.
Speaker 8 (02:01:52):
Yeah, just just make it specific in the subject line
which one it's for.
Speaker 2 (02:01:56):
Yeah, I know, isn't that a weird thing that guys
just sit there and jack off that they just sent
fifty dollars like they don't get anything in return.
Speaker 8 (02:02:04):
If they were to do it to me, I would
be like, okay, it's called it.
Speaker 1 (02:02:07):
It's called a pay pig. You've never heard of this?
Speaker 2 (02:02:10):
No, or the guys literally it's called financial domination. There's
finndam or something like that, where the guys were will
literally they will send these women money. And it's not
like an OnlyFans thing where they're getting pictures for it
or anything. Just the act of sending these women money
turns them on, and the women will degrade them and
(02:02:31):
insult them and call them these names and stuff like
that and try to bully them into giving them more money,
and it just turns them on to be bullied out
of their money.
Speaker 1 (02:02:42):
That's a real thing.
Speaker 4 (02:02:44):
Well, if any of you guys are into that, Mia will.
Speaker 1 (02:02:49):
Call you nat.
Speaker 2 (02:02:50):
It might be me typing. It could actually we could
run the Andrew Tatee thing here. It might be me typing.
I'm kind of mean.
Speaker 1 (02:02:56):
I'm better at being mean than she is.
Speaker 2 (02:02:58):
But if you want to send her money, then yeah,
we'll type up some nasty insults to you that that works. Anyway,
that's been our show. We will see you guys on Wednesday.
Back to your regularly scheduled programming. Cheat on your taxes,
not your spouse, and stay based