Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:18):
Thank you for joining us on The Nicky Medoro Show
on a Wednesday edition because tomorrow is Thanksgiving. I am
Nicki Medoro. She is Kim McAllister on the other side,
who is in Disneyland if you can't notice from the
fireworks and the gorgeous ears. And thank you so much
for popping in on the show. Happy early Thanksgiving to everybody,
(00:39):
and thank you all for being here. Click the thumbs
up button. We do also have our cocktails. If you
thought that we weren't going to do cocktails and news,
it's Wednesday, it's five o'clock. Yes, we are having our cocktails.
Kim McAllister in Disneyland. What are you drinking, my friend?
Even though I know that you're in Disneyland and it
probably cost you a very pretty penny.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
This, my friend, is a twenty dollars cocktail, but it
comes in a plastic commemorative cup, which I didn't need.
This is called a Piranha pool. I wrote down what's
in it? It's Holy Strawberry vodka blended with pineapple juice,
cream of coconut, strawberry pure and blue cursew Is that
how you say that?
Speaker 1 (01:20):
Horas? Is how you say I? Like it. It sounds delicious.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
It's not a pineapple and a little umbrella and it's
a blended drink and it is delicious. It is colors.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
Maybe not, but you know, sometimes good you need alcohol.
I am a full alcohol in the amusement park to
get you through not getting drunk.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Though.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
I know in Disney what is it in Disney World
they have the whole around Beer around the World. Yeah,
and I think that's a little too. I've never done
Disney World, but I do think that that can kind
of get out of hand. Eric says there are a
few places inside Disneyland you can actually buy alcohol. California Adventure,
on the other hand.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
I think they just started selling it in Star Wars
Land as well.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
Yeah, I think they do have someplace.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
But you know what, here's something I found out Okay
and have partaken in Okay. They have at Trader Sam's
Tiki Bar, which is right downstairs the Dole Whip. And
you can choose whether you would like your dole Whip
to be sitting in a bath of coconut rum or
(02:26):
Myer's dark rum.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
Your husband's listening.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Yes, And I'm like, what, so I thought the coconut
rum and oh my god, it's good. I was going
to get that, but I didn't want to sit here
and eat a dolep in front of you as it melted,
So I went with a Piranha pool. But wow, they
don't sell that in the park, but they sell it
at the tiki bar downstairs. And I'm telling you, dole
Whip with rum.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Yes, I love dol Whip. It was one of my
favorite things to get in Disneyland. I got to I'm
telling you, and we went in this time when I
was hotter than heck. It lives up to the reputation,
and I swear like you'll go to like in downtown Campbell,
they have an ice cream shop next to the Starbucks
and they say, no, it's not the same. There is
something in Disneyland. I don't know, magic or something. It
(03:16):
doesn't taste the same. It's it's something different about Disneyland.
Doul Whip, it is so good. You as j Lola VICKI, yeah,
it is. I don't know what it is. Maybe it's
just because you're spending Disneyland dollars. I don't know. It
just tastes so much better in Disneyland.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
It's just gonna this is.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
All the ears, Mickey ears. I was looking at their
doll whip ears. Each ear is a pineapple slice with
a green bow and a dull whip pin in the middle.
I love it, Like, I didn't buy it, but it's cute.
It was cute enough that I took a picture of it.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
Are those now? Are those ears that you brought with
you that you've had before or those wough.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
These are like my my rose gold ears that I've
had for a long time. I have another pair of
ears where they went hold on.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
I love the fireworks behind Kim as well.
Speaker 2 (04:04):
I mean, I have another pair of ears. These are
my favorites.
Speaker 1 (04:07):
Okay, let's say yes, yeah, let's see. Let's see about
the cute she is? Lo how adorable Kim is.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
I've had a while though.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
This is Oh I love it. Yeah, exactly. You have
to save the ears because I mean, they cost you
so much money. I'm telling you, the best thing that
I ever spent money on at Disneyland. The last time
I want was a frame, you know, because they take
the pictures. And then I got this frame for like
I think fifteen bucks, and I was like done, absolutely done.
Now if you hear some commotion in the background. What
(04:42):
we're doing here in the Meduro household is my daughter
is baking for tomorrow. She's making a dessert. What are
we calling him? My daughter? What are you making? What's
it called? Okay's it's it's some sort of bark putting
barking quotes. What is it called? Oh, she's Oh she
(05:04):
has it on? Oh, so here it is. It has
ritz crackers, then chocolate, then pretzels, then caramel, and then
apples and then there's gonna be chocolate on top of
the apples.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
So she has made this, like, is there some kind
of marshmallow going on?
Speaker 1 (05:21):
No, that's apples. Those are Ranny Smith apples. It's most delicious. Okay,
thank you Marley that it does. So it smells like
chocolate in my house right now. So she's doing that.
So that's what she's making. I am going to be
making my viral remember my my my candy cake cress
and roll no big cheesecake thing that went viral. I
(05:43):
had like a million plus views. I'm making remaking that again. Okay,
I haven't seen it go back on my social media
making that again. My husband like trying to make it.
He's like, make this German apple cake that had fifteen ingredients,
and I was like, you know, I kind of liked
my crescent roll no big cheesecake, three ingredient things. That
was very, very very very easy. I think we're going
(06:04):
to be doing that again. So that's what we're making
in We're just going over to my mother in law
tomorrow for Turkey Day. So it's going to be a
fabulous Thanksgiving. And I thank all of you for being here.
Eric says, I have all I have my Thanksgiving dinner
all ready to go.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
Oh this is the sadness sitting in my freezer.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
No no, you guys, no, no, no, no, I will say this,
Oh yeah, exactly, Ricky, your house smells like chocolate. You
are so lucky. It does. Marley's been melting chocolate. It
smells like chocolate in my house. It just it so does.
I will say this, though, I woke up this morning
and this whole idea of Thanksgiving and just now again,
(06:41):
I think we've moved past, especially in recent years and
for quite a while, this idea of the each the
what we grew up with, the story of Thanksgiving, right
the Pilgrims, the Mayflower, the and I'm going to say
Indians and that whole thing, right, We've moved past that,
right because we understand and the true history of you know,
(07:02):
the Native Americans and from their perspective, and even though yes,
that story exists and it did, we understand the true
kind of horrifying story and what happened, you know, within
a generation of them arriving on land where people already were.
But I just feel like, with this whole deportation rhetoric
(07:26):
that's happened, does anyone else feel weird about just the
idea of that whole past story about Thanksgiving, about people
coming to this country and sitting down and breaking bread
with people that have just arrived, and just the load
(07:47):
of crap that that story was. And knowing that in months,
in a handful of months, not even in a couple
of months, the rhetoric, the really terrible, terrible rhetoric that
is going to be spewing from this administration, it's I
(08:11):
just don't know how we're gonna go. Like, literally, Kim,
I don't know how we're gonna go from the holiday
season into January, Like it is gonna be the quickest
case of whiplash from you know, love your brothers and sisters,
Oh the holidays, spirit to f those people, you know
what I mean. Like, that's pretty much what it's gonna be.
(08:35):
And I just I don't.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
Know Disneyland and you go to the restaurants or you
go into the stores or whatever. Everyone is a different race.
There's people here from everywhere. A lot of people you
talk I tend to chit chat with people a lot
you know me, and so a lot of people I
talk to are from southern California and they've come here
(08:58):
from other countries and other places. This affects so many people.
And I have to say that I don't normally advocate
turning away from news because I think it's important to
know what's going on in the world. Of course, it
shapes how we approach everything, right, But this time I
think it might be different. I think there's not much
(09:21):
we can do about things, and the news isn't going away.
So if you unlike me, because I have to know, right,
I have to look and I have to watch.
Speaker 1 (09:30):
Of course kind of my d have to keep up
on our current events.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
But if you don't have to, then for the next
couple of months, check out of the news, right and
then you catch up all at once and you are
outraged and it's horrible, and then you can check out
for a couple of weeks. Again. I think we have
to preserve our mental health. I just I remember the
last time Trump was in office, and it was like
I would wake up every day going, what outrageous text
(09:57):
did he dump on us overnight? What crazy thing is
happening now? And I don't look and I see it
already starting. It's nearly intolerable for me and I'm into
news and I have to know. But for everybody else,
like you don't have to put yourself through this psycho
crap every single day, Like, come on, man, join us
(10:20):
on on Thursdays at five and we'll fill you in.
That's all you need. Will be outraged, we'll exactly have
a cocktail and then move on about your week. But
don't immerse yourself in it like last time.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
Well, it's gonna be hard, and and the thing is is,
but I just kept thinking about like we're in the
holiday season, right, and you know people are hanging I
drive overround my neighborhood and I don't know about your neighborhood,
and I know that Thanksgiving people start putting their Christmas
lights up. It's way before I mean it is, it's
been there, lights are up and they've been up. They
(10:56):
I feel like people are like, we need the holiday spirit, but.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
During COVID where they.
Speaker 1 (11:02):
Exactly people just need it. But again, I just feel
like it's gonna be Christmas and then January and it's
the inauguration. I'm gonna play you this clip and this again.
This is Tom Homan. Your new borders are okay and
and and okay, And I'm gonna preface this before I
play it. And CNN's gonna say it as well. It's
(11:24):
this idea of rhetoric right, and will rhetoric be enough
right to prevent people from wanting to come over the border?
And blah blah blah. But this is what's going to
be coming.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
This is just.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
The the the kind of the words that are going
to be said. But my my concern is calling the bluff, right, Like,
when the words aren't enough, who's gonna call the bluff?
Who's gonna blink? First? Here we go, oh, here, let's
play it.
Speaker 3 (11:59):
Be clear there is going to be a mass defortation
because we just finished a mass illegal immigration crisis on
the border is the federal needs annoyingly partner and concealing
of illegal and immigration authorities. Don't test US.
Speaker 4 (12:15):
President elect Donald Trump's new borders are Tom Homan laying
out his day one plans for the new administration. Homan
traveled to Texas on Tuesday, meeting with Governor Greg Abbott
and delivering a message to Texas National Guard members. Texas
government leaders are moving to get more aggressive on immigration.
In recent days, they have ordered more barrier buoys onto
the Rio Grande River, like the ones seen last year.
(12:36):
The Biden administration had sued to get those barriers removed.
Not every local leader is signing up for the promises
of cracking down on migrants. Denvers Mayor says his city
would resist extreme measures, drawing the ire of Tom Homan
this week.
Speaker 5 (12:52):
If they want to focus on violent criminals, we would
be happy to help support pursuing, arresting and deporting them.
If they are going to send the US Army or
the Navy seals into Denver to pursue folks, to pull
them off the job at hotels or restaurants where the're working,
or pull kids off the soccer field, I think we
will see Denver rights and folks around the country who
will not violently resist that.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Me and the Denver mayor, we agree on one thing.
He's willing to go to jail. I'm willing to put
him in jail. Mike Dubkey.
Speaker 4 (13:23):
I mean, look, it's very clear the country is very
unhappy with the way immigration has been playing out. They're
concerned about the security at the border.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
Where do you.
Speaker 4 (13:33):
Think the Trump administration and how can they stay or
can they stay with Americans on that without I mean
some of the measure they're talking about. I mean that
language of like if you harbor somebody, we will find you,
you know, if the Denver mayor wants to go to jail,
I mean that has some significant and more extreme echoes
than some of what we heard from the Trump campaign
(13:55):
on the trail.
Speaker 2 (13:56):
There are several stages to.
Speaker 6 (14:01):
Kind of arresting and I should I should choose a
different word, but arresting immigration at the border. One of
which that worked incredibly well in the early days of
the first Trump administration was the rhetoric and this is
going to be my theme I think for today, was
the rhetoric around the border.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
So Tom Holman's.
Speaker 6 (14:19):
Very strong language is going to restrict and impede and
the number of people that are actually flooding the.
Speaker 4 (14:25):
Border, saying it's going to discourage people from trying.
Speaker 6 (14:27):
To totally discourage that.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Now, that's my question. Do you think that words are
going to be enough? And on that note, if they're not,
if Trump voters, do you think Trump voters are wanting
to see the mass deportation? Do you really think Trump
(14:52):
voters want to see the pulling of people from homes,
pulling from people from you know, the farms, from the
soccer fields. I mean, is that what these Trump voters
actually want to see to actually have Trump keep his promise?
Speaker 2 (15:07):
Yes, mm hmm, I think that's true. I think I'm
not saying all Trump voters are racist, but I think
that we have that element. And I think there's a
lot of them that want to see the others have
bad things happen to them that they want. They somehow
are unhappy in their own lives, they don't feel like
(15:28):
they have enough money, they don't feel like they have
enough success. They have now successfully been allowed to put
that blame on the backs of others and target and
put their anger all on these other people. And so yes,
I think they want to see bad things happen to people. People,
by the way, most of them that are not criminals,
(15:50):
that are coming here for a better life. And if
they were upset about their grocery bill. While I can
tell you that while it's not right that all of
these agriculture jobs and picking of fruits and the seriously
manual labor positions are mostly filled with migrants, and those
(16:11):
you know, Americans won't most of the time take that
those backbreaking jobs.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
No, they're not going to or they would already be
filled by Americans.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
So we'll either have shortages or they're going to have
to pay people more if they can even find people
to fill the jobs, in which case all the produce
is going up, the prices are going to go up,
And isn't that what you were trying to avoid in
the first place. And don't even get me started on tariffs.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Oh god, the tariffs alone. I don't even understand the
interviews between Trump and then Canada. Yeah, go ahead, Trump, Canada,
Mexico and China. I mean, these conversations, the trade wars
that are going to be going on again rhetoric, right,
the consequences of this rhetic We don't even know. We
(16:57):
don't even know exactly what products they're talking about that
are involved in these the trade wars of the tariff wars.
We don't even know what kind of people are going
to be caught up in the deportation war that Trump
is talking about. That's that's the problem with rhetoric, right, like,
what are we talking about? How's it really going to
look and what does he really mean? And Cheryl says, yes,
(17:19):
they do. I think they need to see how it
affects us here in the country. I hate it, but
some people need to learn hard lessons. You're right, Cheryl.
I saw headline where it said something to the effect
of Trump voters in farm country are begging Trump not
to deport their workers. That's a bit of a you know,
a FAFO, right, an f around and find out kind
(17:39):
of situation. It's like, well, this is what you voted for.
Who do you think Trump was talking about? Who do
you think he's talking about when he's talking about migrants
or illegal immigrants? Where do you think these people are
he can talk about? You know, they're they're drug dealers
and the rapists. But that's just rhetoric, that's just lie.
(18:00):
We know intellectually and factually that immigrants that come to
this country, undocumented immigrants, pay taxes, They work hard, they contribute, right,
that's what we know.
Speaker 2 (18:15):
Here's something else we know. When they pay taxes, they
pay into the Social Security system. Yeah, a system that's
on the brink of collapse anyway. What happens when there's
no immigrants to pay into that system because they pay
in and they don't collect, which basically props up Social Security.
So here they are in this country paying into this system,
(18:37):
getting whether they use you know, fake Social Security numbers
or not. They're paying in, then they're not collecting on
the back end. So it's the Americans that are collecting
that money. So there's something else that is you know
is not long.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Well, Kim's Kim, You've you've frozen a little bit there,
but you're absolutely go ahead.
Speaker 2 (19:00):
It was gonna be if Kamala Harris was elected, it
was something like Social Security would be not funded in
eight years, but if with all Trump's plans, it would
be something like four years. So it were hastening its
demise exactly.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
And also the problem is, and Revp says, the Trump
administration will focus on blue states like California when it
comes to mass deportation policy, wants to damage his enemies. Well,
let's just even talk about let's talk about farmers. We
produce so much food for the country. Go ahead, not
(19:36):
to mention our economy in and of itself, right, how
much we fund for this country. It as if we
don't understand how this country is funded, how this country
even works, and the contributions that immigrants give. It is
(19:58):
so it is so much that people are blinded by
their own racism that they don't understand it, and it's
so stupid. I got into this kind of online conversation
with a woman and she was based at Arizona. She
didn't understand what you were just talking about, Kim. With
the social security and undocumented immigrants, how do they get
(20:19):
away with And I tried to not be, you know,
sarcastic with her. She's like, I don't understand how they
get away with it if they don't have a Social
Security And I'm like, it's the white American employer that
looks the other way, that exploits the undocumented immigrant that
overworks them. They take their papers that are obviously fake,
(20:41):
that fake social Security number, overworks them, uses them for overtime,
it doesn't pay them, and then holds it over their
head because they know damn well they can't. They're not
going to report them because they'll get deported. That's how
they do what They exploit these people and then what
do they do. They screw me overcome voting time and
say oh yeah, to poort the guy, and then they
(21:03):
screw themselves in the back end. Anyway, It's it's so
Evan stupid, Kim. I just people just they boggle my mind.
They just thought.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
I thought Trump was on the side of the small
business persona right, because during COVID the whole pandemic, we
saw restaurants were closing down because they didn't have enough workers.
What do you think is going to happen when you
have to you come in the middle of the night
and you take the dishwasher and the prep cook and
the weight staff and all the people that make these
(21:35):
small businesses function in our communities. Do you think it's
going to happen?
Speaker 1 (21:38):
Exactly, They're all going to close.
Speaker 2 (21:41):
I mean, I don't know where you're going to get
a job working as a restaurant server. I would if
I had.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
To for the pay that he doesn't want to give
people for the for the the enormous pay that they
don't want to pay people, right because the federal minimum
wage is crap, right, Like, what where do these things
line up? Where does how much the federal government wants
to pay people? Let's get rid of the cheap labor. Like,
(22:10):
none of it is adding up, None of it is
adding up. This is not how we've ever run this country,
and not even saying that it's fair, like our country
isn't run fairly for all levels of people anyway. And
now the one area that's not even fair, right, the
use of undocumented immigrants, which prop up this system that
(22:35):
isn't fair we want to get rid of. And it's
this system that actually holds it up.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
Here's the thing is Trump knows this because he runs
businesses right, right, He's had to give special visas for
wait staff and hotel staff and servers to come into.
Speaker 1 (22:55):
These country's so many people people.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
So he knows how it works. I don't understand. And
if you wanted to say, oh, right, the way we're
doing it is wrong. We're you know, we're exploiting people.
They're paying into a system they're getting nothing. But you know,
not as much as they should get back. Let's change things.
Let's let's have a more robust visa work program where
(23:19):
you're here legally working, what have you. Let's let's change
the rules. I might be on board with that. I
might say sure, yes, but if you're just talking about
rounding people up and sending them back, regardless of what
type of contributing member they are to society, or stopping
people that have brown skin or the last name of
Gutierres or whatever it may be, because we feel somehow
(23:41):
that could be an illegal undocumented person. I just it's yeah, with.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
No other plan in place, either with nothing else, like,
with no other plan, that's the only he probably has
the concept of a plan.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
And states like we just saw the mayor in Denver,
but states that fight back. Now they're saying, will withhold
federal moneys from you, whether that's money for school, whether
that's money for wildfire. You know what they're going to
withhold federal money if we don't play ball and say sure,
bring in the military, round them up and send him home.
Speaker 1 (24:18):
And this is why tensions are so high. I mean,
look what's happening right now. So several of prosident elect
Donald Trump's cabinet picks and administration and pointees have been
targets of quote unquote violent threats, bomb threats, swatting, alistaphonics.
(24:38):
Home has been the target of swatting. This happened I
think yesterday. A number of people have had these threats
going on. And then this Arizona man has just been
charged with threatening to kill Donald Trump. His name is
Manuel Tomio Torres. He's been accused of posting almost on
a near daily basis, which is the thing in the world,
(25:01):
threats against the president. I mean, so obviously this but
this is you know, we kind of laugh, but again
I feel like he is not even in the White House, Kim,
this is what it feels, even more heightened. Do you
understand what I'm saying? And now, what are we gonna do? Now?
What are we gonna do? Now we're gonna add to
it this rhetoric. Now, not only is the rhetoric bad,
(25:25):
but just what you were talking about anyone with brown
skin And I'm sorry, I have brown skin, you know
what I mean?
Speaker 2 (25:32):
Like better carry your driver's license?
Speaker 1 (25:35):
What am I supposed to do? Right with you?
Speaker 2 (25:37):
Right?
Speaker 1 (25:38):
It's like I have family members with brown skin and
how dark do I have to be? You know, because
there's light skinned you know, Hispanic Latin people like, what
are we talking about? And then we're gonna they were
painting just even the idea of someone that looks of
a different skin Like, It's just we've gone so effing backwards.
(26:00):
I can't even believe it's gonna be twenty twenty five.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
So I'm whiter than white can be. Are you any
more of an American than I am?
Speaker 5 (26:07):
No?
Speaker 1 (26:08):
I just I can't believe we've learned nothing from history.
I can't. I seriously can't believe it's twenty it's gonna
be twenty twenty five and we're talking about this. I
can't wrap my mind around it. And yet I feel
like this is a lesson that this generation needs a
big slap in the face for. I guess you know,
it's like maybe this is what we need obviously, because
(26:33):
we put this ass hat back in the White House
overwhelmingly again, we put it back in that the White House.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
I don't know. I understand today that he only beat
Kamala Harris by like one point five percent, so it's
not the mandate. Everybody thinks, hey, he's calling it a
mandate because he's got the House, and he's got the Senate, right,
and we all know he's got the Supreme Court in
his back pocket. But if you look at the numbers,
he really didn't wallop her in the election. He really
(27:04):
didn't beat her to the point that everyone thought on
election night. The more the votes tally's come in, the
more we see it really is almost even and really okay.
That's why it gives me hope, because.
Speaker 1 (27:17):
That gives me better hope then I.
Speaker 2 (27:18):
Know that almost half of America voted on the right
side of history. There's as many people in this country
are good and will protect each other, and we'll stand
up for each other as are ugly an their black soul.
That's what I think.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
Well, and I do have a correction, well semi correction
to make. So last week we were debating about Matt
Gates and you were saying, no, Matt Gates isn't going
back to Congress, and I said, he could go back
to Congress. Now I have a bit of a correction.
Now he could have. He had a chance to, but
he has has said within the past I think five
days he's not going to There was he could go
(27:56):
back there was a question he could have said that
he was not going to, and there was a question
of whether or not, But I guess five days ago
he said, I am not going to whatever Trump wants
me to do, I will, but I will not be
going back to Congress. So Kim, your your your gift
has been given and Gates is never I guess not
(28:16):
going back to Congress. So there be something we thank
go for.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
How bad must that ethics report have been for him
to be like you know, that's okay, you guys go
ahead without me, You don't need me to come back,
Like how awful? Like what nasty dirt was in there?
Speaker 1 (28:32):
I just feel like, again, if you can't hang out
at Trump's table, it was bad to be How bad
does it have to be that you can't hang out
with Trump who grabbed one by the p and said
it on tape, like how much of a PERV do
you gotta be? Gates? You know what I mean? You
(28:53):
know what I'm thinking? You want to know the truth, Kim.
I don't even think it has anything to do with that.
I think people just don't like it him. I really
think nobody he's extremely unlikable because I really don't think
that Trump has any problem with any sort of essay.
I really think that he doesn't give a crap. I
really don't. It's my opinion. I don't think Trump gives
(29:15):
a crap if it's concept. I think that Trump doesn't
care if it's a seventeen year old I'm sorry he
was on Epstein's plane. I do not give a crap.
I don't think Trump cares. I think that Matt Gates
is extremely unlikable, and that's a.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
True Nobody wants him around.
Speaker 1 (29:33):
Yeah, yeah, I just think that people don't like him.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
We have Marty, who I think is from must be
from abroad, some other country. He said, I don't have
any hope left for your nation, to which I would
say to you, you know what, Marty, the next four
years are gonna suck.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
Or they're gonna be great, and we're gonna learn a lesson,
you know what I mean. I'm not I don't like
to be, you know, down to the dunce, but we
have to learn a lesson. We need a good spanking,
you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (30:01):
It's nothing that can't be undone exactly right. And it's
four years and we're gonna come back We're gonna come
out of this stronger.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Vicky has the best and we will rise again. Yeah,
like the phoenix.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
Absolutely so in us, completely, Marty, because we're not done, because.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
There's more people like us. There's more people like us.
Speaker 2 (30:18):
A blip, a pothole in our American road, We'll get
over it.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
You know, We've we've stepped in s before. We'll get
it off the curve and we'll keep on. Truck and Marty,
that's what I gotta say. I mean, it's not I'm
telling you.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
Probably right, he'll work alongside of hag Seth.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
Oh. You know, I beg you. You're absolutely right, You're
so right. He probably already has something lined up. He
already probably has not Newsmax. Oh, yeah, he probably has something.
He's probably gonna be Tucker Carlson's like buddy buddy or something,
you know what I mean, Like he has you know
him and mtg I know, know, are they friends? I
can't even keep truck who likes each other and who
(30:56):
doesn't on that? But I'm just saying Mad Gabe is
extremely unlikable and who wants to look at that face
every day? You know what I mean? That's that's a face.
Only a mother can love, That's all I have to say.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
So I don't even know if a mother can love
that one.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
I don't know. I mean I don't know anything about
his mother.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
But think about them their moms like Matt Gates's mom
and heg Seth's mom.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Well, look at jesse mom. He didn't even He's not
invited to Thanksgiving dinner. Jesse Waters f on Box News.
He was disinvited to Thanksgiving dinner. Jesse Waters his own
mother said, you can keep your ass at home, So
you know there is something to be said too. I
don't need to listen to your bs. I see it
on TV every day. I don't need your ass coming
(31:37):
to dinner.
Speaker 2 (31:38):
So yeah, God they must thank God to di raise
them wrong. I mean they're accused of sexual assault. They're
being so awful to the world, Like I.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Want my you know, where did I go wrong?
Speaker 2 (31:49):
We want our kids to go out in the world
and make a good, positive difference, not like you know,
drag us all down. What's going on?
Speaker 1 (31:57):
Okay? I will say this, and this is and I
know that there are some people that completely buy into
the kol aid right, they drank it, they believe it
with all their soul. I truly believe there is a
bigger piece of the pie that sincerely does it just
for the money. I honestly do. I think that there
are so and I'm gonna say this, I think it's
more conservatives than liberals. Maybe there are. I just feel
(32:20):
maybe that's my bias showing, and I will I will
own that. I will totally own it. This could be
my bias showing, and I'll just say that. But I
truly feel that these conservative hosts know they're full of shit,
but they want the paycheck. They want it. I think
that that's why you see RFK Junior. That's why you
see JD Vance saying one thing four or five years
(32:41):
ago and then be like, eh, I changed No, you
didn't change your ways, asshole. You have a job lined up,
that's the truth. No, And all these people are like, no,
it's because they learned, they educated themselves. No, they didn't.
I mean, and people that think that, I think that
(33:03):
you're more on. So that's my bias showing. I will
completely own it. I will completely own that that. That
could be my bias showing. But I think that JD
Van's and RFK Junior got offered jobs and then decided
to change their viewpoints because they were offered jobs. That
is what I truly believe.
Speaker 2 (33:22):
We know that RFK Jr. Offered his endorsement to the
person who was offering him the best deal.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
Yes, so I'm sorry. Now, I'm not gonna say everybody.
I think that there are people that I a few
and far between in my opinion. And you know what,
I think that I'm honest when I say when I
preface everything with saying this could be my bias, I
just wish that people would give me at least my
cookie for at least owning the fact that it's my bias.
(33:50):
But I truly believe that people like JD. Vans and
RFK Junior sold their soul for a job and a paycheck.
I just do you know some people buy it. I
just think most people don't. I think they just want
to get paid.
Speaker 2 (34:04):
I do. And then there's you can't fix stupid. Right.
Let's listening to a cast yesterday where a family voted together.
Their eighteen year old black son voted for Trump. His
reason was that America can't be run by a black woman,
and this is the current generation.
Speaker 1 (34:21):
He writes, Well, whatever and he's entitled to. I will
say this, everyone is entitled to their own opinion. Everyone.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. Now, if you
are a black person and you believe that a country
cannot be run by another black person or a black
woman of the opposite sex, I think you really need
to ask yourself what it is about yourself or your
(34:43):
race that you do not like about yourself. That's my opinion.
I mean, there must be something that you have been
taught about yourself, or your race, or your neighborhood fill
in the blank, whatever we're talking about, and that's been
taught to you. Now you should, you know, have a
come to Jesus moment about that and ask yourself, why
(35:04):
do I feel that way? Has something have I learned?
Maybe something's happened to you right like, because that could
also be a reason. Maybe there's a black woman that
hurt this guy, or maybe every interaction he's ever had
with a black woman has been negative. I have no
idea but to say something like that, to pay with
that brought of a brush, he's wrongs. It's ridiculous, you
(35:27):
know what I mean, Like, give me a break.
Speaker 2 (35:29):
Maybe another boy raised to be a misogynist, how sad.
Speaker 1 (35:33):
Exactly r F K Junior two for one and the
brain exactly like, aga't again the things that have come
out of RFK Junior's mouth. And he's in a position
I just a power, like any sort of power like
and then people are like, yeah, that makes sense, no,
(35:56):
doctor Oz, Like we talked about this before during you know,
all the laundry listing of cabinet appointments. The surgeon general.
What was the woman that was named the US Surgeon General. Well,
that's her schooling. She was from Oh, I think I'm right.
Trump's pick for US Surgeon General went to AWE. I'm
(36:20):
gonna get went to the School of I think it
was like the School of the Caribbean or some not
knocking the School of the Caribbean. But I'm just saying,
like we have someone from Harvard not knocking the school.
It was like some obscure or school, right, Like I
don't know, It's just like, why can't we choose more
(36:44):
mainstream things? You see what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (36:47):
Like he did pick someone I think I want to
say it's for the National Institute of Health, who was
a doctor from Stanford. The person is it like.
Speaker 1 (36:56):
A COVID critic or something right, Yeah, about herd immunity.
Speaker 2 (37:01):
They believed in herd immunity. Right, So they believe that
people should I don't know, get sick and then yeah
the immune, yes, because they're sick. And that's yeah, we're
going to get over COVID.
Speaker 1 (37:12):
Right and again, and I will all say this Kim there,
he wasn't alone in that, right, So he was saying
the younger people that were at lower risk should just
go out and play basically and older people. Uh. Now,
my always, my problem back then and now with that
idea was and always will be those people going out
(37:33):
to play could come home to the immunal compromised. There
was no way to separate those. That was my problem
with it. If there was a way of making sure
that those young, safer people could be kept away from
the immunal compromised, fine, but there was no way we
com mingle, right, how do you keep grandma away from
(37:54):
young safe person? You can't. So that was my problem
with this idea of herd immunity.
Speaker 2 (38:00):
And so and we know from President Obama that speaking
just a month or so ago, right before the election,
that Canada's rates death rates for COVID because they handled
it differently, were much less than ours. He said, there
were so many people in America that died as a
result of Trump not taking this seriously that didn't need
(38:21):
to exactly. And so I mean, if you look at
the numbers that they were, that kind of thinking is
obviously wrong. And all I can hope is that in
the next four years we've already suffered through our pandemic
and we don't have another one.
Speaker 1 (38:35):
Yeah, I mean, and again because of the people that
we have in charge. Another person that's in charge. And
here's another thing, like the Elon musk vivik Ramaswami Doge
Department of Government Efficiency dog E does it's so childish
it boggles my mind. Which again government efficiency. They want
(38:59):
to cut government, you know, like make government more efficient
by creating its own kind of new thing, which I
find ironic. So here's the thing, and just remember this moment.
I do believe that there is a lot of waste
in government. I do. I believe that there are probably
a s ton of jobs that don't need to exist
(39:23):
in government. That is true. I bet you. There's so many,
so many people that are paid in government that don't
need to me, I will agree with you. I will
agree with Donald Trump and many people that have said
it that there are jobs that we should probably go
(39:44):
through and say that's not needed, that that's redundant. But
many people have said that, right. Do I trust Elon
Musk and Viva Gramaswami to determine who those people are?
Not as far as I can throw them. And do
you want to know why it is for this that
they have blasted the names of the people in those
(40:05):
positions publicly. That is one of the main reasons why
their children they can't handle positions of power. So if
you haven't heard, they have publicized the names that they
would recommend to be cut from the federal government. And
just guess what has happened to those people? They're getting
(40:29):
death threats.
Speaker 2 (40:29):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (40:31):
I mean, think about this. This is why I don't
trust people like Elon Musk, Vida Gramaswami and the like
is because you give them just one drop of power
and they don't know what to do with it. So
Musk has reposted two exposts that reveal the names and
titles of people holding or relatively obscure climate related government positions.
(40:54):
Each post because he artificially, you know, blot boosts his
own posts on next because he's not immature. Each post
has been viewed tens of millions of times, and the
individual's names have been subjected to a barrage of negative attention,
and at least one of the four women named has
had to delete her social media accounts. Several current federal
(41:16):
employees have fold CNN they're afraid their lives will be
forever changed. They've been physically threatened. I mean, think about this.
I mean, and it has what they aren't even in
office yet. This is only uh, this was pre this
is even pre Trump being in office. And they're like,
(41:36):
you know what, I think that this job and you know,
even one of them gave Tesla, one of these people
in one of these committees or whatever, they gave Tesla
like tons of money. Right, Elon Musk has even benefited
from one of the people in one of these positions,
and he's named this person and they've had, you know,
threats there the problem with them.
Speaker 2 (41:57):
Are you ready for this?
Speaker 1 (41:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (41:58):
He wants to cut fighter jets and pilots. Why. Quote
from Politico, Musk said, manned fighter jets are obsolete in
the age of drones, he said with a one hundred
emoji to someone else's tweet, Drone superiority is the new
(42:21):
air superiority. So he shared a video of Chinese drones
and said, Meanwhile, some idiots are still building manned fighter jets,
like the F thirty five. The F thirty five has
been highly championed by Trump, who thinks this is the
greatest thing, right, who has an affinity for fighter pilots.
It'll be interesting to see what happens. But Musk wants
(42:42):
to take us in this all technology.
Speaker 1 (42:46):
Hmmm, I would have fighter pilots. Feel about that? Well,
let's ask this question and and you guys, honestly, let's
have the conversation. Okay, So I guess the first basic
question is do you think that we should have fighter pilots?
Yes or no? Kim? Do you think that we should
have fighter pilots? And why?
Speaker 2 (43:03):
Why? Maybe? I'm okay, let's just go down this road together.
Speaker 1 (43:09):
Yeah, that's what I want to do. Let's have the conversation.
Why should we have fighter pilots?
Speaker 2 (43:13):
So there are some decisions, and I know there's a
human sitting in a room somewhere making decisions for drones, right,
But there are some decisions that humans need to be
able to make right there at the moment with behind
the controls. Okay, I'm not ready to let go of
that yet until you can truly show me that one
(43:36):
is more superior than the other. Then I think we
should have both technologies available to us, depending on the
need and the situation. And I'm not convinced that when
we do things all online, when we do things like
that with drones, that there's no potential for hacking or
(43:58):
for something to go wrong. I just I'm not ready
to let go of the old way as yet, right,
And I don't I feel like the human response is
more valuable than maybe Musk realizes.
Speaker 1 (44:15):
Yeah, I feel like I feel like by separating the
human more and more from war, it makes killing people easier. Right.
I feel like when war becomes more and more like
a video game, we see the loss of life more
(44:38):
like a video game. Right, Like, it's easier to press
the button when it's as easy to kill someone as
pressing a button, Right Like, Think about it. If I
had to kill you with my bare hands, it would
be really hard. If I had to use a knife,
it would be hard, but less. Maybe if I had
(44:59):
to use it. And every step away that I take
from that act, it likely becomes I don't know, I
want to use the word easier, but easier, right, it
just it becomes quicker, it becomes I become separated from
the actual act. And so for me, that would be
(45:19):
my number one thing is I think war should be hard.
It should be a hard decision to make. And I
think that whenever we use men and women to fight
as weapons, which is what we what soldiers are to me, like,
when you decide, in my mind to become part of
(45:41):
the military, you are a human weapon, right, Like, that
is what you are. The government tells you to go
into an area and they use you as a weapon
in whatever capacity that is. And when they and when
you're used in that way, you don't have a say,
right They tell you what to do and you do it.
(46:02):
And so if they take that out, it it becomes
way too easy to to take people out. And and
I don't like that idea, right, I don't. I don't.
I don't like that idea. And so and you know
some people are mentioning, you know, Elon would benefit this
(46:22):
whole idea of starlink satellites using drones. I don't even
I didn't even think about stuff like that. Probably, you know,
would he been getting contracts for stuff like that? I
just war should not be an easy decision. It shouldn't
be an easy decision. Now, let me all be in
Devil's advocate. Would I like our men and women in
(46:44):
our troops not to be in harm's way?
Speaker 2 (46:47):
Right?
Speaker 1 (46:48):
Absolutely?
Speaker 7 (46:49):
Right?
Speaker 1 (46:50):
I would much rather not see them, our men and
women going into areas, you know, like you know, sweeping
for bombs or ied s and things like that. I'd
much rather send in a robot to do that sort
of stuff.
Speaker 2 (47:02):
Absolutely, there are points where it makes sense, yes, where
we can use that technology where it makes sense and
they're absolutely or maybe it doesn't.
Speaker 1 (47:10):
Yeah, I mean, I just feel like the more we
take humans though out of also jobs, where are we
putting these men and women, where do they go? When
you're going to say, okay, we don't need fighter pilots anymore, Okay,
what do we do with our fighter pilots? Go ahead
and have that conversation with these men and women that
have been training for this and had been dreaming of
this job. Go ahead, tell them what what are we
(47:32):
doing with them anymore? I had that conversation.
Speaker 2 (47:35):
A lot of fighter pilots at the end of that
career transitioned to being commercial pilots. And those are commercial
pilots that are you know, battle tested and able to
handle stress. Remember Captain Sully Sullenberger.
Speaker 1 (47:49):
Yeah, that's good, that's a good point. We do have
a pilot shortage.
Speaker 2 (47:54):
I'm just saying, like, but that's that what a great
ground to train these people to be ready to handle
any capability? Or does Musk want us all to be
on planes piloted by auto like, no one by the controls,
just like I.
Speaker 1 (48:10):
Don't like that idea.
Speaker 2 (48:12):
Just like the air, the robotaxis will be flying on roboplanes.
Is that the future?
Speaker 1 (48:16):
No?
Speaker 2 (48:17):
No, this whole Department of Government efficiency a ruse to
bring in all this high tech stuff, to eliminate all
these jobs and to just make this all happen faster.
Is that what this is?
Speaker 1 (48:29):
No? I don't I don't want my life put in
the hands of robots. I'm not even comfortable getting into
one of those, you know, rivers robot How many of
you have done that? I know I have a friend
that works at CACBS and he's taken them a million times,
and I'm like a hoppy really and he's like yeah
(48:50):
all the time. He was one of the ones that
did the pilot thing, and I was like, oh, hell no,
I could barely Again, I told you guys a story.
I couldn't even get into a tesla Like I was like,
you think, I know. I haven't even figured out how
to get into a test into and out of a tesla.
I'm not getting into or out of a cruise or
a weimou or anything like that. That's not happening. I
(49:11):
don't even care that I can't figure it out. I
don't want to figure it out. You call me a
lutite if you want to, but yeah, no, I have
I have zero desire for it. Also, I does anyone
else find comfort in the age that they're at? And
(49:31):
I had this, Okay, I'm gonna go off on a
little tangent. Are you ready go for it?
Speaker 2 (49:35):
Okay, bring it on, I'm taking a drink.
Speaker 1 (49:38):
Okay. I had this kind of like I don't know
if it was a midlife crisis because I'm in my forties,
I'm approaching fifty closer and closer and closer. Can you
feel me? I'm not at fifty. I'm not at fifty.
I'm in my mid forties, but you know, it's coming
ever closer. And so it's kind of I feel like
I'm bridging this gap between like being too old for,
(50:03):
you know, just the young and stuff, but understanding the
young stuff, but wanting to just kind of stay in
the analog age, right. I just I want to be
I look at the boomer era, right, that's dying off. Sorry, guys,
but you know you're getting to that age, right, and
just really looking at you guys and being like you
(50:24):
had a good right, you had a good life. Seems
to be moving so quickly. I have kids that I'm
trying to raise, and I'm discussing what they should major
in college, and I look at him, I'm like, I
have no effing idea what you should major in college.
I have no idea what the world's gonna look like
because the world is moving so quickly, and I just
(50:46):
I feel for them, you know. And there was this
come this moment where I was just like, I wish
that it would kind of slow down a little bit,
you know. I wish for the days of the nineties.
I loved the nineties, the nineties, the nineties were awesome
because you want to know why the nineties were awesome,
because it was we kind of read the beginning of
(51:07):
the internet, but we didn't Everything was kind of cool
and technology was just kind of starting, and it was
it was new, but we didn't have enough of it right.
We didn't know what we had and so I don't know.
That was my little tangent there where we were so
innocent and we didn't know what was coming, and I
just kind of long for those days. So, you know,
I just I just those were the days. But now
(51:31):
we're stuck in these days and it just seems to
be moving so quickly and I just don't know what's coming.
But I try to stay positive and it is what
it is. But you know, we just got to stay
thankful for what we have. I keep it going. But
speaking of the nineties, can I just tell you what
I've been watching lately? And it's going to kind of
I believe me, I'm gonna tie it into something newsworthy. Okay,
(51:53):
you know what show I've been watching. I don't know
why I started watching it again, the show Ali McBeal.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
Oh, I like that.
Speaker 1 (52:01):
Did anyone else watch the show? Not? Ali? Mcbeil. So
it was back in the I think it started like
the late nineties, nineties, six ninety seven era. Okay. So
I started watching it, and I started watching the first
season of it, okay, and I'm still in the first season.
And do you want to know what stood out to
me in the first season? And the first, very first
(52:23):
episode that they had was she starts and she goes
into the law firm and she had to go to
the bathroom. And do you remember what was unique about
the bathrooms? No, anybody remember what was unique about the bathrooms?
Speaker 2 (52:38):
And Ali mcbeil, anybody shared sync with men and women?
Speaker 1 (52:43):
It was a unisex okay bathroom okay. And it was very,
very funny because the moment it happens, there was this
comment about like it makes it makes women and men
like get over everything and collaborate better and the awkwardness
and everything like that, and it was just like a
one liner. Everyone got over it, right, And I was like, Ah,
how funny is that? And then maybe like ten episodes
(53:07):
or so into it, they have this whole transgender episode. Okay. Now,
the language that's used in it, I don't know if
we really kind of hold up today instead of transgender.
They use the word transvestite, which is not the same,
by the way, but they mentioned gender dysphoria. They try
(53:27):
to they try to get somebody off for sex work
by saying that for the insanity defense because they were transgender.
So it was kind of but it was just a
really interesting episode. From nineteen friggin ninety seven.
Speaker 2 (53:46):
They were triumph.
Speaker 1 (53:48):
It's twenty twenty four, and I feel like they were
making more headway in nineteen ninety seven than we are
in twenty twenty four. Was freaking governor just signed a
transgender bathroom ban for students. Now, you know, I get it.
(54:09):
It's like that. It's not that it bans like single
use bathrooms and all that sort of stuff. But I'm
just like, sometimes the like we were talking about earlier,
I feel like we need to repeat history because we
never a thing learned it the first, the second, third time. Sometimes,
you know what I mean, It's so silly. It's on them.
Speaker 2 (54:31):
On the like something look over here, shiny, pay attention
to this. Don't pay attention to the actual real priorities
of the country. Right, It's just such a dumb thing, right,
just you know, just go to the bathroom and mind
your own business and don't worry about the other people. Right,
you know what I should worry about. You should worry
about the real sex offenders that we're putting into positions
(54:52):
of power. How about we worry about those people rather
than worry about people that you think might be a
threat but haven't ever or shown that they are a threat. Well,
you've got you've got accused, uh, sexual assaulters being thrown
into the Trump cabinet. Why don't we worry about that?
Doesn't that more of a priority.
Speaker 1 (55:11):
I just exactly, It's just, you know, I feel like
we create it and who keeps saying it? Eric again,
the trans thing is a manufactured issue and a hateful one.
I feel like we create these big issues now, VICKI,
She's like, personally, I don't want to share a bathroom
with men? Are you kidding? But personally, if I was
in the bathroom stall, I'm not sharing. I'm not sharing
(55:34):
a bathroom with a man. Ever, I'm not if I'm
in a stall, I'm an a stall. I'm always as
a woman using my own bathroom. If I stepped out
of a bathroom and a man was using a urinal,
I'd probably like, and I keep I'd probably go.
Speaker 2 (55:50):
I don't put a urinal in a woman's bathroom.
Speaker 1 (55:52):
But if but if I was in the wrong, but
if I was in if I was in a bathroom,
if let's say I watch into the wrong bathroom and
I walk.
Speaker 2 (55:59):
Into a saw a bunch of penises, you'd be like,
oh my god, my bad, I'm sorry, and you'd leave.
Speaker 1 (56:03):
But even if I even if I walked, if I
was looking, if I'm in a bar, let's just I'm
gonna create a totally made up situation. I'm at a bar,
I've been drinking too much. I walk into a bathroom,
I walk into the stall, I don't even notice urinals.
I walk into the salt ipee. I get out, and
now there's a man standing at a urinal ping, and
I go, shoot, I am in the men's bathroom. I
would probably just walk out. I'd be like, oh, and
(56:25):
I keep going like that would be the entirety of
the The worst thing to happen is I have not
washed my hands right like that would be the entirety
of the situation. This is it's not an issue. And
you know what happens most in most places nowadays, they
make individual bathrooms. That's that is pretty much what most
(56:46):
at least bars and restaurants that I go to most
have individual bathrooms. I mean, it's a reduction of bathrooms now, right,
But I just feel like this whole bathroom issue is
a non issue. It's make individual stalls go into this.
It's like portal potties. Right, if you go to a
concert that has portal potties, nobody gives a crap. Just
(57:07):
go into the porta potty that you want to and
be disgusted by yourself. Right, it's not a big deal, Like,
just go. It's again, I feel Eric, You're absolutely right.
We have made bathrooms this issue of our time, which
really what we're saying is and I love all the
men in my life, basically what we're saying, and men
should be really offended. Men are perverts because that's all
(57:28):
we're really saying, right, is men are perverts. That's what
we're saying because we think that men can't handle being
around women in bathrooms. We think all men are perverts,
and that all that transgender women. This is what people
that don't understand what transgender women are. That transgender women
these people think are men and so because all men
(57:50):
are perverts, that transgender women are men, and men are perverts.
So if they're in the bathroom, they're going to do
something to women. That's what they're saying, and that's wrong.
Speaker 2 (58:00):
That's what I have to talk about it because it's
just so dumb, you know what. And I'm sorry, Vicky
because I really like you. But listen, when I'm in
the ladies, I'm in charge of what's happening in my stall,
and I don't really care what's going on in.
Speaker 1 (58:14):
The one next to me, exactly.
Speaker 2 (58:15):
I just don't. If there's if there is a man
who's not trans who happens to be using the next
to me, I don't care. I'm in charge of my
little space.
Speaker 1 (58:27):
That's all I asked for. Flash. If you're doing number two,
that's all I care, you know what I mean?
Speaker 2 (58:32):
Kind of embarrassing noises are you making that you don't
want someone of the opposite gender to hear?
Speaker 8 (58:38):
You?
Speaker 2 (58:39):
Like nothing, You're in and you're out, You're doing your business.
You're getting out there. There's quick. It's not a lounge.
I don't know what the and and that we have
to take time to talk about it seems stupid.
Speaker 1 (58:54):
Dumb and again there's like real problems in the world. Honestly, yeah,
I just yeah exactly. And Eddie, You're right. I seen
women at concerts where the line is huge going to
the My friend, I mean, we have a memorable story
where she just like walked into the men's bathroom and
she's just like, I have got to go, and she
(59:16):
it's not a big go to the bathroom. Everyone wants
to do. Go pee, get out, that's it, that's it.
Just go and again it is get your job done
and go. Did you hear though? Speaking of the transgender issue,
who thinks she can beat Kamala Harris if Kamala Harris
runs for governor?
Speaker 2 (59:37):
Who?
Speaker 1 (59:41):
Now, I'm going to ask you, do you think if
Caitlyn Jenner ran against Kamala Harris that she would win
in California?
Speaker 2 (59:50):
I'd like to say one hundred percent no. But given
the fact of what just happened with this election, what
do you guys think? No faith in the American electorate,
I have.
Speaker 1 (59:59):
No in California. In California, We're not talking about the
United States. In California. Do you think Caitlyn Jenner could
be Kamala Harris in California for California government.
Speaker 2 (01:00:11):
Well, Californians love some celebrity, don't they.
Speaker 1 (01:00:14):
But Caitlyn Jenner was not a Kardashian. Now, let's let's
keep it under control here. She was not even a
top She wasn't even a top card. She wasn't even
a Kardashian. She wasn't even a popular one. I mean,
I will say this, and again, I'm not gonna I'm
not trying a dead name, but she was more popular
on the show when she was Bruce Jenner. Okay, I'm
(01:00:36):
just gonna say that. I'm not trying a dead name.
But I'm just saying on the show before she was
because she talked mad shit about the Kardashians. But I'm
just saying Caitlyn was more popular. She hasn't done much
since then. She plays golf. I mean, she's not much
of a celebrity, and then she goes on some of
these talk shows and that's it. I wouldn't say, I
(01:00:58):
wouldn't not call Caitlyn Jenner a celebrity, like a Kardashian
celebrity anymore. I think she's more of a political pundit.
But as a celebrity in California. Not not really, not really,
I don't think. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
I'd like to say that's not a real viable choice.
I mean, she says, other than being a runner and
an olympian, what's the political qualifications?
Speaker 1 (01:01:23):
I mean, what's the political qualifications of anybody? I mean
to be governor? I think No, No, I mean of
Caitlyn Dinner.
Speaker 2 (01:01:30):
That's what I'm asking. There are any qualifications.
Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
No, You're absolutely correct. I mean, I I feel like,
but again because she has some sort but yeah, I mean,
what was up with you know, Steve Garvey.
Speaker 2 (01:01:46):
Wasn't he was a baseball player. You're too smart for
that kind of stuff. I don't mean.
Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
Again, that's all he got pretty far just because he
was a baseball player. That's that's That's pretty much it.
So yeah, I don't know, but yeah, she's she's apparently
telling people that she would that she would she would
literally beat Kamala Harris in a landslide if she ran
for governor. I do not think so so sorry sorry
(01:02:15):
sorry sorry, yeah, exactly. You know who else is washed up? Though?
Mister Rudy Giuliani tells a judge he's completely out of
cash and his defamation ruling. He says his financial situation
has become so dire as a result of a court
order that he can pay election workers one hundred and
fifty million dollars, and late October, judge ordered Juliani to
(01:02:38):
hand over his assets as payment for the election workers
whom he falsely accused of being complicit in the steal
the vote bs. Those assets included six million dollars of
a New York penhouse, a signed Joe DiMaggio jersey, a
nineteen eighties Mercedes that was once owned by Lauren Bacallo.
(01:03:02):
I know, right. Guliani also had to give up a
collection of valuable watches, one of which was gifted to
him by world leaders after the September eleventh attacks. You know,
I don't think I could muster up one tier for
Rudy Giuliani. You know, he was doing those cameos and
(01:03:23):
now Lauren Bobert was trying to do those cameos for
like two hundred fifty bucks, and then they made her
stop it like right afterwards, because there was like, you can't.
Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
Get the law. Yeah, he's a member of Congress, you
can't do that. No, iout the person that does the
artist that does the sketches in court right, And they
were saying, Rudy Giuliani is losing it, like this is bad.
He's trying to tell his lawyers what to do, and
he's when they're standing up at the at the you know,
(01:03:55):
near the judge what they call it sidebar. He's working
orders across the court, like nonsensible stuff that doesn't make sense.
It's like he's not quite right.
Speaker 1 (01:04:04):
Yeah, he really isn't right. Well, I mean he hasn't
been right since he's kind of jumped on the Trump train.
I mean remember when he and again we didn't know
what it was die or shoe polish. Remember when he
was like sweating all that stuff down. I mean again
the four seasons thing, I mean he was I don't know.
I mean maybe it's his he was losing it from
a long time ago. But yeah, I just feel he's.
Speaker 2 (01:04:27):
Yeah, rewards loyalty, and Rudy's been awfully loyal. And it
might be that Rudy is such a bad way that
it's obvious even to Trump and team, and that's why
they haven't named him as a cabinet pick yet.
Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
Well, he like Trump like distanced himself, remembered I think
Rudy was like saying, Trump, pay me, pay me, pay me,
and Trump was like, no, that's not what I do, Like,
I don't pay.
Speaker 2 (01:04:49):
He held some fundraiser for him at his as his
new Jersey golf club.
Speaker 1 (01:04:53):
Dry I don't know, together for him.
Speaker 2 (01:04:55):
So yeah, there's some part of him that still wants
to help Rudy. But I've noticed that Rudy doesn't isn't
doesn't seem to be getting a job yet.
Speaker 1 (01:05:04):
Yeah, I mean, the times are tough. Rudy needs money,
you know. I mean with all these with all these
tariffs coming up, you never know, you never never know exactly.
All Right, Well, okay, that's enough with politics. It's Thanksgiving, okay,
so let's lighten things up just a bit. So tomorrow's Thanksgiving.
Are you where? So you're in Disneyland? Are you leaving?
(01:05:26):
Are you what?
Speaker 5 (01:05:27):
Do you?
Speaker 1 (01:05:27):
Where do you eat for Thanksgiving? And Disneyland?
Speaker 2 (01:05:29):
So we have made reservations at a buffet, the character buffet. Okay,
characters will come around and visit on Thanksgiving.
Speaker 1 (01:05:36):
And do they start turkey and everything like that?
Speaker 2 (01:05:38):
Yeah, they have a whole like Thanksgiving. As a matter
of fact, every restaurant in Disneyland changes their menu on
Thanksgiving Day, So no matter where you go, if it's
the fancy Blue by You or if it's to a
buffet or wherever, it's all going to be Thanksgiving spread.
Speaker 1 (01:05:56):
Oh that is now? Is it packed? Is our the
lines crazy crazy crazy?
Speaker 2 (01:05:59):
Some times of the day, No, not at all, And
sometimes of the day yes, I think after work. From
what I've talked to a lot of Southern Californian folks
that are here, they sometimes will get off of work
and look at the line cues and if they see,
oh it's fifteen minutes to get on these popular rides,
they've just head over because it doesn't have them anything
(01:06:20):
because they have the past, yes, or maybe it'll cost
them fifty dollars to come in. I was riding on
a train last night with two girls that got off
work and just decided they have passes and they were
coming to Disneyland. So that's kind of a Southern California thing.
So it depends on the time of day and what's
going on here. But for the most part, I was
getting off the monorail and I heard one staff member
(01:06:43):
say to another, Oh, look how few people there are.
I love fall So.
Speaker 1 (01:06:49):
That is so awesome. I really feel like Disneyland for
Thanksgiving is most people think Christmas, but I've never thought
of Disneyland for things. Now is your sister there?
Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
So it's all decorated for Christmas?
Speaker 1 (01:07:05):
Oh it is already. Oh I didn't know if it was.
Speaker 2 (01:07:07):
Okay, all the holiday decorations are up. As a matter
of fact, you can meet with Santa, get your picture taken.
The tree is on Main Street. So all of these
things are happening. But no, it's just the four of us.
The rest of my family is back in Pedaluma.
Speaker 1 (01:07:21):
Oh that is very very nice. Okay, So so Thanksgiving tomorrow,
we're just going to my mother in law's house. How
many of you let us know in the comments since
it's just you and you and your husband and your
two kids, how many of you are avoiding Thanksgiving conversations
this Thanksgiving? So my family's in town. My father is
(01:07:45):
a Trumper, but we've learned, so I'm not really worried
about any political conversations. Anybody really worried about Trumper conversations
or political conversations, I'm really I mean, we haven't had
any of those situations in my family for a long time.
I mean, I know, well, I don't know. This is
(01:08:06):
a new election, so I don't know how this Thanksgiving
is gonna go. I'm hoping they're listening, and I'm saying
no anybody worried about it. I know that there are
some people that are just not going. I mentioned earlier,
like Jesse Water's mom is not inviting them. I would hope,
you know, this is what I'm gonna say. I would
hope that, given the Trump's going to be in office
(01:08:28):
in January, like, enjoy the last Thanksgiving before he is,
if that's how your family is going to be, right,
like get it in now or don't?
Speaker 4 (01:08:39):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (01:08:40):
Oh, Vicky said, I said no thanks to one invitation
because there were Trumpers there? Did you, Vicky? Did you
say that that's why you weren't going to go? Because
that's awkward? Like how do you say that?
Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
I think requires the Trumpers and the never Trumpers to
all agree.
Speaker 1 (01:09:00):
Not to talk politics is a no go. Yeah, all
of politics.
Speaker 2 (01:09:03):
We could talk about anything else under the sun, but
no politics, because these are family members that you still love,
that you still hopefully want to have relationships ships with
that maybe someday will come over the other side of
whatever they're feeling, right, I feel like we can, we
should be able to agree not to talk politics. But
I do know that there are some people who would
(01:09:26):
laugh at that and say, forget it. It's my house.
We're talking about what I want to talk about, and
if I want to talk about Trump, then I'll talk
about Trump. You know. Please have a lovely Thanksgiving is
enjoy your turkey. We'll see you next time.
Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
Thank you told the truth, Viggy said, I told the truth.
I'm not going. Wow.
Speaker 2 (01:09:42):
How what was the reaction to that?
Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
Yeah? Oh, and she said it to Oh, she said
it to the hostess, who's a non Trumper.
Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
Okay, so they had understood. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:09:50):
She was like, I just can't go. Sorry. Yeah. Eric said, nope,
all I'm making is a brief call to my sister,
and I don't think politics will come up. Yeah. Yeah,
I just don't know. So obviously I would. And I've
said this so many times before, because you guys all
know that my dad's a big old Trumper. I will
never I will never miss a time to hang out
(01:10:13):
with my family because life's too sharp, right, And I'll
never miss a holiday to be with my dad because
life's too short. But I will purposely tell them to
shut the f up because life is too short. I
have conversations about that crap. But that's the relationship I
have with my own dad. Not everybody can do that,
you know what I mean, Like, not everybody could be like,
(01:10:33):
shut the f up, I'm not talking about this with
you because they don't have that. Vilma says, no politics
at my house of Thanksgiving has worked for the last
eight years. Perfect let's see. Oh Cameo says, we're mostly
of like mine. That's nice, when oh, that's so nice.
Speaker 2 (01:10:53):
Same with my Petaluma family, we're mostly of like mind
and our discussions are in really really interesting. But I
was at my dad's house, I want to say, like
a year or two ago, and he tried to tell
me that they were trying to make my children feel
guilty for being white in school with the the what
(01:11:14):
is it the policy, the the hist of teaching history,
which really is they're teaching you the truth, right, And
I tried to explain to him that that's not what
it meant, and he's like, well, let's just not talk politics.
And I went up all right then, and that's the
last time we talked politics.
Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
You want to know, I think, yeah, I believe.
Speaker 2 (01:11:34):
I forget what that policy is called, what that is called,
but yeah, he really he really believed that my kids
were going to school and they were taught to feel
bad for being white.
Speaker 1 (01:11:42):
And I'm like, you know, there's something teaching.
Speaker 2 (01:11:45):
Yeah, maybe Columbus didn't really discover a new world. Maybe
there were people here before that, and maybe we weren't
so nice to the Native Americans that were here. And
maybe maybe the black people that were slaves, they really
didn't want to be slaves. They didn't really like that.
And maybe we've really abused people and treated them badly
in this country. And I don't understand what the bad
(01:12:06):
thing is about learning the truth? You want to get
fed and sucked down a bunch of lies in school?
Or do you want your kids walking away knowing the
hard truth?
Speaker 1 (01:12:16):
And when people say like why why do you why
do you make people feel bad about being white? I go,
why do you think that you're white? Like why does
white apply to you? Like you're fill in the blank, right,
Like that's the whole thing. White isn't something like white
isn't anything like your German, your French or whatever, Right,
like why isn't why does a term right, Like, it's
(01:12:38):
it's a privilege, it's it's kind of a descriptor about something, right,
Like that's the whole thing. And and you know, the
whole Columbus thing because you bring it up because it's Italian,
right And I'm half Italian and my dad's Italian chalker. Ah,
so that whole Columbus thing was always like and I'm like, dude,
give it up, right, I give it up. Everybody knows
about Columbus, Like we don't stop, just stop stops. But yeah,
(01:13:01):
it's just you just people just have to like stop. Uh.
This is again my opinion. People want to stop having
to be so beholden to historical figures that they could
have given two ships about five seconds ago, right like Columbus. Really,
you're so beholden to a man just because he was Italian? Really,
(01:13:24):
like who cares? He was an asshole?
Speaker 2 (01:13:27):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
Like that that's history, right, Like, yeah, it was great
we learned this story, but let's just learn the whole
history of it. And it's fine.
Speaker 2 (01:13:35):
Yeah, critical race theory, it's critical. Yeah, you heavily disagreed
over critical race theory. And and that's the last of
that was the last of it.
Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
Yeah, it's just it says. They're like, we could just
learn the whole history of the whole entire thing, right, like,
yeah he was Italian, Yeah, the Nina, the pins at
the Santa Maria. But there's also a whole other thing,
you know what I mean, Like, let's just let's just
incorporate all of it. Be proud of one part of
the other, and just incorporate all of it. It's fine,
it's fine, but yeah, it's so stupid. It's just so stupid.
(01:14:04):
Let's see, Tony says, we're hosting a ton of people
this year, three turkeys. Wow, that will be drinking. So
it goes, work goes. I won't be the one bringing
it up though maybe Tony. I love you, I really do,
you know what I like the whole idea of it
goes where it goes. But I will say this, once
it starts going a place where it goes negative, do
(01:14:26):
what I do in my family, be all right, shut
the f up right, like it's too much. And then
we just change the subjects like we always like have
like some sort of like topic or game or some
out right have an out the football game or something
like you have to have an out like something something right,
(01:14:47):
like what's on the TV? Or yeah, gotta do something,
but yeah, good goode.
Speaker 2 (01:14:54):
Still Vick's still caught up on the fact that we
don't care about going to the bathroom with men.
Speaker 1 (01:14:59):
I go to the bat there with the door open.
I'm here, it's tally and I could get two rats.
I I could. I do not even care.
Speaker 2 (01:15:07):
He's not in my stall.
Speaker 1 (01:15:08):
It's fine and not even careless. I really, honestly I could.
I don't even care. Oh w k rpans andcinnati baby. Yeah,
the turkey drop as God is my witness. I thought
Turkey's could fly. Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2 (01:15:23):
I have a story for you, yes, because I know
that you're a roller coaster Okay, you love a good
roller coaster. I, on the other hand, avoid them like
the plague. But you, my thrill seeking, spicy food loving friend,
this is your jam or movie loving friend. So this
this video is like maybe a minute forty Okay. It's
about this guy who realizes and he's a big loopy
(01:15:47):
loop do loop. He realizes his lap belt is not working.
Speaker 1 (01:15:51):
Oh no, and.
Speaker 2 (01:15:52):
He's just about go to go down the loop do
loop and he's probably gonna fly out the roller coaster
to his death, and so he takes a chance living life.
And here's what happens, and I will show you this
crazy story from KPHO and KTVK.
Speaker 9 (01:16:12):
Here's what stood up in his seat and jumped onto
the emergency staircase just seconds before that big drop. And
you can actually see a portion of that coaster behind
me where it heads up to the highest point.
Speaker 1 (01:16:25):
The man who.
Speaker 9 (01:16:25):
Spoke to us says this was a terrifying experience that
should have never happened. A celebration at Castles and Coasters
Sunday newly turned tragic for one valley man.
Speaker 7 (01:16:37):
Yeah, it was just adrenaline and I didn't want to
die that day.
Speaker 9 (01:16:41):
He didn't want to show his identity, but describes the
terrifying moment when he says, his lap bar unlocked.
Speaker 7 (01:16:47):
I heard a click noise that was different from the
chain taking us up the hill, and I checked my
lap bar and it released.
Speaker 9 (01:17:00):
This video shows the moment he stood up in his
seat and jumped out onto the emergency staircase, which is
seconds to spare. He believes he could have been killed
if it wasn't for his quick thinking.
Speaker 7 (01:17:12):
Oh my god, I could have been somebody younger.
Speaker 2 (01:17:15):
It could have been.
Speaker 1 (01:17:16):
Oh my god, he says.
Speaker 9 (01:17:19):
The manager offered him a refund and took a report.
It feels like his concerns were not heard here In Arizona,
the state does not oversee regulations of amusement park rides,
but requires rides to be inspected at least once a year.
State law says it's up to municipalities and counties to
enforce compliance.
Speaker 7 (01:17:40):
Regulation was in the state better training for the employees.
I think that actually them checking the bars themselves, making
sure that they're actually latched.
Speaker 9 (01:17:55):
And we called an emailed Castles and Coasters several times
today getting to the manager or the owner about this incident,
but have not heard back.
Speaker 1 (01:18:05):
I will not be going there. Oh my, it's hard
to describe what happened.
Speaker 2 (01:18:11):
I thought that was fascinating. A guy has the presence
of mind to go, oh, I'm getting out of it
good right before out of the roller coaster. How crazy
is that?
Speaker 1 (01:18:22):
You know? What's interesting is like, so just because I
go on so many roller coasters, what's interesting is that
that bar wasn't attached to any of the other seats,
because oftentimes.
Speaker 2 (01:18:33):
They all go down as a unit.
Speaker 1 (01:18:34):
Yeah, they kind of go down as a unit, like
you know this one and that one, like because they
all go up and down. That's scary. Ji Land.
Speaker 2 (01:18:42):
Often you have your own little cart, not the roller coasters,
but the rides, and so the bar will just click
into place, you know, depending on your size, it goes.
If you're a little kid, it goes all the way down, right,
For a grown up, it just kind of goes as
far as it'll go, and then it'll click in.
Speaker 1 (01:18:57):
And yeah, I would be deathly afraid. Oh my god,
I would be so deathly afraid. I'm just saying that
if that happened to me. I know somebody is saying,
Kim's a frozen right now. But Rend's like a bottle. No,
you're back, a bottle of tequila and a parachute. No
lifetime tickets or I don't know money, like you have
(01:19:19):
to pay me, I don't. And what's interesting is that
he didn't want to show his face, Like I wonder
why he didn't want to show his face, but yeah,
he's very smart. Rend's like, the guy is smart. I
would have tried to just hold on. I wouldn't have
made that.
Speaker 2 (01:19:34):
I would have just been holding on for dear life,
like wrap myself around that thing.
Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
I wonder what I would have done. I mean, I
think that he's very smart, that is, but.
Speaker 2 (01:19:44):
Be a gap between the roller coaster cart and the stairway.
You're kind of taking a chance as it's moving past
to jump.
Speaker 1 (01:19:53):
And then think if he had a kid with him
or somebody else, like you have to convince that Like,
thank god he was by himself. Can you imagine if
you were.
Speaker 2 (01:19:59):
With your friend just getting off here.
Speaker 1 (01:20:01):
Like but no, but like think about it if you
were with your kid and you're like get up, get
like you know what I mean, Like you were able
to think it a split second, but now trying to
convince somebody else to get up. No, Like, oh my god,
somebody was watching out for that guy. My heart's beating
fast for him. Like yeah, lawsuit later, Like I'm not
showing my face because I'm gonna sue their ass, I
(01:20:22):
swear to god. No. Now, I'm always gonna check it,
like I don't know, check it anyway.
Speaker 2 (01:20:29):
Check it for your kids, check it for yourself, check
it for everybody.
Speaker 1 (01:20:32):
He said, He's like check the bar, Like do they
not come around and check it? That's Arizona came around.
Maybe that's Arizona for you. Maybe they just don't do it.
That's see it out. That's what you get.
Speaker 2 (01:20:43):
Watch yourself what it was.
Speaker 1 (01:20:47):
That's crazy, crazy crazy? Well what else? Okay, So I'm
not doing any amusement parks. I did see Wicked, by
the way, anybody else see Wicked. I'm just telling you
lived up to all the expectations. I never saw the musical.
I never saw the play. My daughter, by the way,
apparently has seen the she's seen it. I guess she's
(01:21:09):
she never saw the play. I know she never know,
never saw the play, but she knew the music, and
she's read the book, which I never read the book.
Loved it. Me and her were crying. My son went,
he loved it, but all three of us went. My
husband didn't want to go. All three of us went.
Absolutely loved it. Almost three hours long part one and
it's only part one.
Speaker 2 (01:21:30):
There's going to be a part two. Yeah, it was.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
It was so good. I'm telling you never never never
like looked at the clock ever like it was. It
moved Ariana Grande the comedic performance ever, and I forgot
how funny she was because she was an actress. You know,
she started as an actress. So funny, she's so funny
as Glinda or Glinda. She's really really funny in it.
(01:21:55):
Cynthia rivo Is. I mean, her voice so good. I mean,
go see it. I'm not gonna, I'm not tim Sika,
but so effing good, so.
Speaker 2 (01:22:07):
Good that this will be nominated come Oscar time in
every single category.
Speaker 1 (01:22:11):
It is. It was the the music was so good.
I saw one person though, on TikTok that didn't like
the beginning because they said that munchkin Land or whatever
wasn't colorful enough. They thought it was a little drab.
But did you know, I was like whatever. But other
(01:22:32):
than that, I thought it was so and because I'd
never seen it before so it was all new to me,
I loved it. I thought it was so so good.
Uh and again because I had I was a total newbie,
it was really good. And the whole hold your Space
for Defying Gravity, I mean such I've never heard any
(01:22:54):
of these songs before, a total movie. I never heard
any of the songs. Stopper Pop, I mean, I was crying.
I heard the song popular by by the way, I've
heard that song before.
Speaker 5 (01:23:08):
But.
Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
My god, such a good such and such. So if
you have any time this weekend, go see that the
new Pleasant and Costco is open if you want to
wait in line for that. Anybody doing Black Friday, here's
a question for you, Kim, do you think, given the
tariff threat, that Black Friday is going to be bigger
this year?
Speaker 2 (01:23:28):
I think so. I've heard a lot of people say
you've got to stock up on stuff, businesses saying still
are supply rooms because we don't know what's coming. I wonder,
surprise me if people bought not only for others, but
for themselves.
Speaker 1 (01:23:44):
And really, yes, I'm even I'm not a big like
consumer person like honestly, because we're I will say this, Okay,
this is what I'm buying, and I'm just gonna be
completely honest. I am looking for because we're doing our
big trip across the country, I'm looking for all sorts
of things, so I I'm buying. I'm waiting to buy
our amusement park season passes because they go on sale,
(01:24:06):
so I'm going to buy those. I'm looking actually at
r V or car rental sales because we're still debating
whether or not we're going to do RV or car
rentals and anything to do with our trip. So anything
to do with our trip, that's what I'm looking for.
So anything to do with that, I'm buying. But other
than that, I mean, the kids are pretty much done.
So but the trip, it's next summer, so it's going
(01:24:30):
to be the end of June into juely, so that's
pretty much my summer. My son goes to Washington, d
C for his eighth grade. After eighth grade, and once
he comes home from Washington, d C, we out, So
but yeah, I mean, I'm I'm thinking this might be
a good time to start buying crap because I don't
(01:24:52):
know if this tier of thing is all rhetoric or not,
but there are people outside the pleasanton Costco apparently for
Papivan week bourbon or some sort of crap and Pokemon cards.
There's some sort of Pokemon thing going on as well,
So but whatever.
Speaker 2 (01:25:10):
So I guess it wouldn't affect maybe I don't know,
would it affect things that are made in the USA.
You know, most of the food you're gonna buy is
probably gonna be made here, right right. Most of the
paper products or toiletree is likely made in the US.
I would guess I don't know. Yeah, so it's just
for stuff made overseas.
Speaker 1 (01:25:31):
You know what. I've also seen a lot of people
lying and I don't know, it's Christmas time, so they
do that cars because nothing is one hundred percent American made.
I'm sorry, Trump cars are not one hundred percent American
made in the United States. Parts everything like.
Speaker 2 (01:25:42):
That, components overseas, overseas be put together.
Speaker 1 (01:25:46):
So I've I mean, I know two people within the
past week that have bought a car, So I don't
know if that's terrif related or not. But it's holidays too,
so who knows. An end of the year is always
a good time to buy a car anyway, But but yeah,
it's us get a rental car that doesn't have California place.
But I'm just saying, like it might be it might
(01:26:06):
be with you, just possibly if you're gonna buy anything anyway,
maybe before Trump gets in the office, just in case,
we shall.
Speaker 2 (01:26:15):
Start because they laugh. Teacher, they last teacher Murray says,
stock up on batteries from China, because I guess our
maids so that makes sense.
Speaker 1 (01:26:23):
You know what else I'm watching, you know what's gonna
happen to things like she and all these fast fashion
places Amazon, Like, what's gonna happen where we get all this?
And I'm gonna say the crap, but just cheap crap
from China. I don't know. It is gonna be so
interesting to see if this is gonna happen.
Speaker 2 (01:26:43):
Anyway, it's or need anyway. But also that some people
can't help it. But if yeah, ten dollars top that
looks like such a bargain is now gonna be thirty
five forty dollars, it's not such a bargain anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:26:58):
What I know? But I mean, but I don't think
we actually know how many things we buy has that
in it, you know what I'm saying, Like you know
a lot of the crap we use, We're like, oh
it's not fast fashion, but we use it is overseas,
So you know, it's it's gonna be it's going to
be interesting. I want to know how much is rhetoric?
(01:27:21):
How much is really going to happen? And you know
what's all talk and what's all Trump and what's really
going to happen. So Eric's tariffs will allow local manufacturers
to raise their prices since the competition is more expensive.
And that's another thing. How many people are going to
hide behind this, you know what I mean, just like
COVID and all that kind of crap. But I will
say this, I will say this before we go. It'll
(01:27:43):
fall on Trump and the one thing that Democrats can
totally say, don't blame us at least now you can't
blame us when you're bitching and moaning about the high
prices and all that kind of crap. When your gas
and your eggs aren't what free or a dollar or
(01:28:03):
anything else, don't come crying to us because that's not
how it apparently works. So yeah, that'll just be great.
At least we won't get blame for it. Ninety nine
cents or now five dollars, says egg exactly, so at
least we won't have that. All right, that is our show.
Thank you all for being here on Wednesday and said
that Thursday even have a fabulous, fabulous, fabulous Turkey Day
(01:28:27):
if you can, you guys, please support the show any
way you can either Patreon, PayPal, super Chat, whatever way
you can. We always do appreciate it and we love
you guys for being here. The Niicui medoroshow dot com
is the way to support the show. You can find
all of the links there. Another delicious way to support
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(01:28:49):
is our barbecue sauce. It's a guava barbecue sauce sauce
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It's a guava barbecue sauce. And if you use the
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you get ten percent off every single time you order.
And this sauce is so delicious and it not only
(01:29:10):
supports our show if you use the coupon code, it
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Go to the Nicki medorshow dot com support us. We
appreciate it so so very much. Happy Thanksgiving to all
of you guys. Take care of each other, don't argue
if life is too short. We appreciate you guys so
(01:29:31):
so very much, and we will see you back here
next Thursday. The cotaousand News. Thank you, Kim, have fun
with your family and Disneyland.
Speaker 2 (01:29:40):
Thank my friend.
Speaker 1 (01:29:40):
Happy Thanksgiving. I love you guys, Hi everybody.
Speaker 8 (01:29:45):
Nikki you as save Fast, I give you the bless
you all so the best. I really get rest. You're
also user.
Speaker 2 (01:30:04):
Wow. Okay,