Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
They have to cheat in order to beat us, because
the truth is more powerful than their lives. And this
is a small battle in God's war. And I'm telling you,
when you're on the side of God, who can stand
against you? No one can't. And we're in the fight
and we can't give up. This is time for over drive.
(00:26):
You say so, destroyers and show me.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Chris Daunte Harris on the run Down Life.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
Make my everyday dose mushroom coffee with me. You might
be skeptical, however, it BeOS focused. The SAME's energy, improves
the health and more. Use one tablespoon of everyday dose
and two tablespoons of water, and then I froth it.
I like to max it really well, just to make
sure that it's all mixed together. Add some ice. Oh welcome,
had I my creamer all it's so pretty.
Speaker 4 (00:57):
I love it and it's so This is the Rundown
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time again.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
Time to relax, kick up your feet, grab your favorite beverage, and.
Speaker 4 (01:17):
Tune into the Rundown.
Speaker 5 (01:18):
Live your forecast into the future. Now you don't know
it yes, but you are listening to history the making
while you are listening to this show.
Speaker 4 (01:39):
We know now that in the early years of the
twentieth century, this world was being washed closely by intelligence.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Is greater than man, yet as mortal as it all.
Speaker 5 (01:51):
Thanks you, I want you g get up now.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
I want all of you to get up out of
your chat.
Speaker 6 (02:01):
I wanted to get up right now, to go to the.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
Window, open it and stick your head out and yell
as hell.
Speaker 5 (02:11):
I'm not gonna tell you this anymore censored by the
mainstream media. The destroyer of fake news.
Speaker 4 (02:18):
And your host of The Rundown Live, Chris Dawn T. Harris.
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Listening to the Rundown Live Rundown Live dot com, Welcome
to another broadcast on kg R, a dB dot com
band dot video and the home of many great broadcasters
across the nation, including Clyde Lewis. We have you know,
I talked to Popeye just recently from rabbit Hole Radio.
Was trying to get Joe Joseph on the show for
today because today's President's Day.
Speaker 4 (02:52):
That's right, Have.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
You guys deep thrown into your local boot lately, because
that's kind of a little bit about what we'll be
talking about on today broadcast, we're gonna be talking about
presidential facts.
Speaker 4 (03:03):
Did you know that.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
George Washington may not have been the very first president
of the United States. I think there is like six
or seven other people who acted as a presidential figure
president with that title in the United States before George Washington.
There's a whole bunch of interesting stuff we're gonna dive
into today.
Speaker 4 (03:19):
So don't go anywhere.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
Share this live stream, knock it, hit it, like, like it,
share it, comment, do whatever you guys can. We also
have open lines here if you guys want to call
into the broadcast. The phone number here save it to
your phone for KGRA is one eight five five four
seven two fifty four eighty three. One eight five five
four seven two fifty four eighty three. And you know
(03:42):
it's gonna be cold here in Milwaukee, non they're saying
sixteen below with windchill tomorrow. I don't know if I
believe it. I don't know what to believe anymore when
it comes to the weather, bro.
Speaker 4 (03:50):
How's your weekend? How are things going?
Speaker 5 (03:52):
Man? Thank you know, things are going pretty good in
my neck of the woods. Really chill weekend. One of
the first acts. Relaxing weekends I've had in a while
where I haven't had something to do, so that's nice.
And you know, similarly, we're having the same situation over
here in Virginia. I'm not sure if I believe all
these weathermen. They're talking about a winter storm coming in
(04:14):
for my neck of the woods around the Petersburg, Central
Virginia area, suggesting that we're gonna get several inches of
snow between Wednesday and Thursday, and well, it was nice
and sunny today, so I don't know if I'm buying it.
Speaker 4 (04:25):
Man, the polar vortex.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Dun, dun, duntun. Everyone be scared. It's time for the
polar vortex. That's right, Hide, fine, cover, do whatever you can.
Be careful out there, man, it's good. I mean, I
was seeing like negative forty with Winchell in Minneapolis. I
don't know if that's the actor. I'm working out this morning.
(04:48):
I'm staring at the boob tube and I'm like, what
the hell? Negative forty one with Winshell. That's like, you know,
dropping eating your pants and going to the bathroom that
freezes before it's a ground coold, like taking the hot
boiling water and making snow out of it by throwing
in the air cold.
Speaker 4 (05:05):
It is just freezing at at that rate.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
I don't know what you do, but you know, just
make sure that you guys are staying warm out there.
Speaker 4 (05:13):
If you're up in that northern country.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
Ron Squatch, if you're up there, you gotta let me
know what the weather is. Like one of our listeners, Ron,
he isn't from Minneapolis in that area.
Speaker 4 (05:23):
Oh, and there it is. There's the cold weather. It's
coming to get you.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
One of the greatest shows of all time on the
Rundown Live talking about stories you won't hear anywhere else.
But yeah, like Ron Squatches in Minneapolis, we have a
lot of listeners all over the United States. I used
to pull the stats and like our top markets are
like Milwaukee naturally is like in the top three. It's
not even number one. You would think we're out of Milwaukee,
it'd be our top listening market. But a lot of
(05:50):
people listen from like New York in Chicago and like
these are like liberal cities, right, So it's interesting to
see our demographic. But yeah, you know, your weekend was
not eventful of mine was. I was like, well, I
got a hustle I got bills to pay. I'm trying
to get ahead. I'm trying to figure out the direction
of the show, what we're going to be doing in
the future with guests, and getting some structure to the
(06:13):
show so we can grow, cause you know, we got
normal lives too. But you know, I'm sitting here thinking about,
you know, all the different cool guests we could have on.
I'm talking to Bill, our producer, you know, which direction
do we want to go? Do you want to do
more news? Do we want to have some paranormal stuff
in here just for the you know, late night listeners.
And the answer is yes. I decided that we're gonna
(06:35):
do a whole lot of everything. Why why should we
just be news, you know, and why should we just
be talking police brutality, or why should we just be
talking ancient history.
Speaker 4 (06:44):
Let's let's bring on an expert on ghosts.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
So we're gonna have an expert on ghosts joining us
who has invented a machine that allows people to clear
out white noise and to hear the voices that are
actually coming through, which I'm like, well that's kind of interesting,
and he's like it's scientific. And I'm sitting here I'm like,
I don't know, but you know, what if it was
what if we could pose a question and then get
(07:07):
an answer through the white noise, because white noise is
quite a phenomenon. But that's interesting. This week and this
week Thursday, we have a guest from mufan. We we're
gonna be talking everyone's favorite conversation, Little green men. You know,
do you don do you think do you think aliens
have thermostat wars? Or like in the UFO, they're flying
around and all of a sudden, one of the aliens
(07:29):
gets a little cold, so he changes the temperature, and
in the UFO and the other aliens like.
Speaker 4 (07:34):
What the hell?
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Who just changed the temperature? Walks over to thermostat, turns
it back up. A few minutes later, the cold Alien's like,
boy got cold in here real quick, goes back and
Jack's you know, you know, Jack's it up and turns
it down and up and down. I'm kind of curious.
I'm just kind of curious if aliens have real life
problems like we do.
Speaker 5 (07:52):
Ah, who knows? I mean, if they're creatures anything even
remotely like us, I would assume that you know there
are problems, would at least in some capacity be similar
to ours. But you know who knows, won't find out
until we actually talk to one.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
I guess you go say, hi, what's up? Go grab
a burger or strawberry ice cream.
Speaker 4 (08:13):
I hear that. I hear they like strawberry ice cream.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Anyways, that being said, there's a lot of interesting stuff
going on on today and today's President's Day. And I
saw an article before we dive into the President's Day
stuff that just kind of blew my mind today done.
And I brought it up with one of my friends
and they're like, don't I don't know why no one
went into that school and kicked that teacher's ass. And
(08:36):
I'm like, I don't know. I'm not all for spreading violence,
but that's the thought people have when it comes to
people going after propagandizing their children or doing bizarre stuff.
Speaker 4 (08:46):
Here it is in the news. This was kind of interesting.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
This was sent to me over by my buddy Joel
Maski because who I used to do a show called
What the Fuck Is Wrong with People?
Speaker 4 (08:55):
And it was great.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
We're gonna be rebooting it at some point here. But
he's like, bro, oh, I can't. I have no words
for this, and I'm like, what, There's no way that's real.
I'm like, this is just a meme, because he sent
me a meme and I looked it up and you
can't make this up. High school teacher reportedly identifies as cat,
licks hands and hisses at students. What is the student
(09:17):
teacher parents like meeting like with a guy that dresses
like a cat. Do you think he goes to the
parent teacher conferences and he's all dressed in his cat
garb and he's like licking his hands and you know,
he's like his and at different parents with kids that
aren't doing good and then kids with kids that are
with parents with kids who are doing real well in school.
(09:37):
He's going up there and he's like nuzzling them like
a cat and purring. You know, Like, what is wrong
with people? Like what makes this okay?
Speaker 5 (09:46):
You know, honestly, I've got no idea. Dog pun intended
her had shoot in my common vernacular in there, but no,
I really have no idea. This is one of those
things that just it really is one those WTF is
wrong with people type of moments, because like, how does
a person like this become a teacher in the first place,
(10:09):
you know what I mean, because it's I don't know,
it's sometimes when it comes to stuff like this that's
just so bizarre and out there. I'm actually for as
much as I run my mouth, I'm at a loss
for words.
Speaker 4 (10:25):
Well, it's it's clown world.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
That's essentially what we live in. We live in clown world.
And I don't mean like clown world is and hey,
I like clowns. Who It's like people are just they're
running with this yor like I'm you could be trans
everything except for trans financial, because I've been trying to
be trans financial and identify as a billionaire since like
twenty fifteen. So I'm not quite sure don what the
(10:51):
situation is there, But this article out of the New
York Post blows my mind. Parents are I have expressed
their concern at Queen's Lend high school teacher, who has
reportedly been referring to themselves as a cat, allegedly hissing
at students and licking the back of their hands during kids. Dude,
some teacher comes up and starts licking your kids' hands the.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
Back of them Like why no, I don't get it.
Why why would anyone want to do this.
Speaker 5 (11:19):
So is it saying that they're licking the back of
the kid's hands or they're licking the back of their
own hands, because that's, you know, like a cat would do.
They would link the back of their paws or something.
Speaker 4 (11:27):
Yeah, I'm not sure.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Like, so here's the grammar allegedly hissing at students and
licking the back of their hands during class. Does that
mean their hands as in the person who identifies as
a cat? Or is this person going up and like
licking the back of people's hands.
Speaker 5 (11:46):
So I'm I'm thinking contextually it's probably the person who
identifies as a cat is the one licking their own
hands as opposed to students at least, right, Yeah, Like.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
Why I don't understand on why are we having this
conversation on the rundown.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
Live Like we're going crazy?
Speaker 1 (12:07):
Like what kind of drugs are you gotta do before
you go into school? And you're like I'm gonna act
like I can't today. You know, it's not like what
Batman week? You got catwoman?
Speaker 4 (12:16):
You know? I don't know.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
The teacher who works at Martstan State High School in
Logan City, south of Brisbane, has reportedly asked students to
call her miss Purr, multiparents have claimed on social media.
Speaker 5 (12:31):
So it's in Australia. Okay, well that makes a little
bit more sense now, I guess.
Speaker 4 (12:35):
The Ausi's down there. It's that Foster's beer bro. I'm
telling you, it's like an oil can. Whoever can make.
Speaker 1 (12:42):
In stomach Fosters Milwaukee's Best is bad, but Foster's man,
that's what's turning people into cats.
Speaker 4 (12:47):
I'm telling you right now why.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
Photos and short videos first published by The Currier Mail
show the teacher wearing a cat ear headband in lanyard
and the word purr on it.
Speaker 4 (12:58):
Well in front of the classroom.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
She forces the children to call her miss Perr and
cat screeches and grawls when they don't listen. And relative
relative alleged in the comments on Facebook and here you go,
that's that's a she or I'm not sure she sits.
Speaker 4 (13:16):
Is that a dude that identifies as a female cat?
Speaker 5 (13:19):
I can't I don't know. I actually can't tell either.
I mean, for me, partially, it's because i'm you know,
my vision is terrible and my computer screen sits so
far away from me. That's why anyone watching the show
you see me like lean towards the cameras because I'm
messing with my computer doing something, so partially it's because
of that, but I don't know.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
Well we got an answer. She sits in class and
licks her hands. It's absolutely disgusting. Something needs to be
done about this.
Speaker 4 (13:44):
What you're like getting up? You're like, what are we
gonna talk to the kids too about today?
Speaker 1 (13:50):
Fuck it, I'm gonna just dress like a cat, Like
what are you gonna teach them how to clean the
litter box appropriately?
Speaker 4 (13:59):
Like? Why I'm so confused.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
On the same Facebook post, one mother allows the teacher
made her daughter pearl for a LOLLI bruh, you made
some person's daughter per so she could get a lollipop.
Speaker 5 (14:19):
Nah, that's that's a big old no for me. Chief,
That is unacceptable.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
Do you think somebody whips this person's ass like ms
Kerr gets there like the shit kicked out of her?
I myself, like, some mother is gonna be like pissed.
I would I'm gonna doude. I wouldn't hit a woman,
but you know some mother is gonna find this person.
And I don't ever support violence, but you know, there's
mentally unstable people out there like this teacher, but the
exact opposite who want to I don't know, is that
(14:47):
mentally unstable for somebody that then wants to enact violence
on somebody who dresses like a cat, wants to make perr.
Speaker 5 (14:56):
So I would say that, you know, the teacher hasn't
physically harmed any children, so I'd say that's one hundred. Yeah,
But you know it's it's always a slippery slope when
you go to church to try to justify violence for
nonviolent reasons.
Speaker 4 (15:12):
Right right, I'm not justifying violence.
Speaker 5 (15:16):
Of course, of course I know, of course, yeah, absolutely, if.
Speaker 4 (15:21):
Your kid isn't at school, they should punch that teacher
in the face. I'm just kidding. Don't do that.
Speaker 5 (15:27):
You know, a couple of years ago, when I was
you know, when Bill informed me, or maybe it was you, you know,
one of you informed me of our numbers internationally. We
actually do have a pretty big listenership in Australia, strangely enough,
so maybe we should be careful.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
You're sending us from Fosters in the mail. We're gonna
get these big barrels of oil can barrels of the
worst beer ever made and brewed, and I'm in the
beer capital of the world here in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, so
you know that's a big thing. You know, there's a
lot of bad beer made here and so it takes
quite a bit the top Milwaukee Best or Old Milwaukee.
You know, some of the worst spears ever of Fosters.
(16:06):
You know, some kangaroos, maybe they've been hit by one
too many kangaroos. Do you ever see those videos that
are going viral where kangaroos look like dear from like prison,
They're all ripped and they're like always gonna hold some
dog underwater, and some dude walks up and just goes
and socks.
Speaker 4 (16:19):
The kangaroo right in the face and it looks at
it like did you just hit me? And then let's
go the dog. You know, it's just hopping around.
Speaker 5 (16:27):
Yeah, dude, I've seen a lot of those videos, and like,
I love watching animal videos, especially casual, geographical and YouTube
that dude's great, hilarious and informative at the same time.
But yeah, kangaroos can be vicious, man Like for anyone
that is not just like you know, fascinated by animals
and just doesn't really pay attention to like just abstract
(16:47):
animal facts. You know a lot of people might not know,
but rules can be freaking vicious.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
Dude, dude, here's what I got to put this on
the screen for everyone to kind of see in the background. Just, dude,
just we're always gonna go punches the kangaroo because it's
like messing with his dog. He's looking for his dog.
Here you go, check this out. This guy, the kangaroo
has the dog. And then like a headlock, the dude
walks up to the kangaroo and just literally.
Speaker 4 (17:12):
Watch us touch us.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
He just sits there, he looks at him, and he
squares off with him, and then he decks it and
it's like, did you.
Speaker 4 (17:18):
Just punch me? He's like what did could just touch
me in a face? Right?
Speaker 1 (17:23):
It doesn't know what to do, and it's like, Okay,
I think I'm gonna pop on off after this dude
punches me in the face. But like, I don't know, man,
I've seen a couple of videos now where people just
go up and really just sock the kangaroo right in
the face.
Speaker 5 (17:38):
Yeah, and you know, honestly, it's completely justified because like again,
another one of these abstract facts. So kangaroo on their hands.
They have these like really big ass claws that are
super sharp and they can like rip your throat open.
They could have easily ripped the throat open to that
dog if it it wanted to. Was probably trying to
who knows, but I mean, you know, yeah, there's there's
(17:59):
been even you know reports, you know, kangaroo will go
out into a body of water and like try to
lure people out, like if you're like animals or people
or whatever, try to lure them out there, and they'll
try to drown them.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
Like, my new problem with this teacher that dresses like
a cat is that it didn't choose to dress like
a kangaroo instead. I've decided that's what I'm upset about today.
Like I'm just angry at this teacher. Uh, at least
it could hop around and it wouldn't be licking the
back of their heads and making small children like I
(18:32):
it just sounds wrong, bro, It just sounds don't want
a kangaroo, dude, Like tell somebody to put it in
their pouch. I don't know, like like like because that's
where it keeps its babies, right in the pouch, right,
and they have the little kangaroo poach. They have those
kangaroo shoes. When I was a kid, I used to
love them. They have zippers on the side and just
zip and unzip and hide things in there. But the
(18:56):
real reason why you guys are here today is not
to hear about teachers, is cacts and punching kangaroos in
the fair face and crappy Foster's beer.
Speaker 4 (19:05):
It's because it's President's Day, right done? Today is President's Day.
Speaker 1 (19:11):
And uh, you know there's a lot of interesting statistics
about presidents and what like.
Speaker 4 (19:19):
I don't know, don if you became.
Speaker 1 (19:20):
President, Like, let's say you're president, what is like the
first thing that you would do? You you like, you
as yourself run as a president and now it's official.
And what's the first thing that you think you're gonna
do in the White House? Are you gonna go for
a tour? You'd be like where the secret underground rooms?
You know, Like, what are you gonna do? What's the
(19:40):
first thing you want to do when you're president?
Speaker 5 (19:43):
First first thing I'm doing is a slew of executive orders.
First and foremost, FBI, C I A I R s
ATF all abolished, NSA gone all abolished. Next Federal Reserve
gone next, reinstating the Bretton Woods Agreement, reinstating the.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
Wait, wait, what what agreement? What the name of that agreement?
The Benton Woods Agreement.
Speaker 5 (20:08):
The Breton Woods Agreement was in nineteen seventy one under
the Nixon administration. It came to an end, which is
basically the last piece of monetary policy that we had
in place that actually gave our money some kind of value, so,
you know, putting that back in place, but more importantly,
restoring the gold standard and giving our currency some actual
(20:32):
tangible backing with gold and silver again. Though, those are
the first things I'm doing, and then I'm declassifying everything
about UFOs.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
Well, then we're gonna find out if they actually fight
in the UFO and have temp thermostat wars, or somebody
forgot to hit the cloaking button once and they're like,
that's why we saw them.
Speaker 4 (20:50):
Jimmy forgot to hit the cloaking button, and it's like
all in the secret report.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
Sometimes I wonder if they actually keep real reports like that,
like you figure that they live record everything else they
if they have UFOs, they have some AI programs that
just monitor records everything that people do. Inside their spaceship,
like there would be no need for like having video surveillance.
You just have AI do it all for you or
anyone watching video surveillance for that matter.
Speaker 4 (21:14):
But that's interesting.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
I'm trying to think of what I would want to do,
and you know, sit up, go around and be like,
where's the secret clause? And there's gonna be some secret
rooms in the White House, right you would think that
they have like like trap doors or like the secret
presidential bathroom. When Trump wants to get away from listening
to his wife bitch at them all day, He's like,
I'm gonna go into the secret presidential or she goes
(21:38):
in because Trump Trump is being obnoxtionm notxious and bitching
at you know, missus Trump there all day, and so
she wants to use the secret presidential bathroom where nobody
knows where it is and knows where to hide. You know,
Like you'd think that there'd be something cool like that
in the White House. Maybe some secrets, some past secrets.
But there's an interesting I wanted to bring up, and
(22:01):
that is.
Speaker 4 (22:07):
There is forty five or excuse me.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
I wanted to bring up some of the most weird
facts about presidents before we dive into some of the
crimes and some of the cool things that they've done.
You know, like you mentioned executive orders and things that
you can do. That's kind of dictatorship, that's kind of
authoritarian of you.
Speaker 4 (22:26):
There. Don to get in there and just do a
whole bunch of laws that give you less power. Right, Yeah,
So here we go.
Speaker 1 (22:35):
We're gonna go ahead and pull this up. Well, first
of all, I want to mention that there are presidents
that were people who had the presidential position before George Washington.
It's always interesting that they call him the first president
of the United States, but there is actually like a
slew of at least seven people who had the title
(22:57):
of president before George Washington, And there's a whole article.
I guess we'll start here because that's actually an interesting story.
Who is the first president of the United States. Now,
many people out there would think it's George Washington, the
forty sixth president Joe Biden, forty seventh is Donald Trump.
(23:20):
But you get a list of here the presidents in
the US history in order first to current. So obviously
the first couple was George Washington, was the first president,
John Adams, was the second, Thomas Jefferson was the third,
James Madison was a fourth, James Monroe is the fifth.
Do you think they made a deal behind scenes after
(23:40):
the warfare Independence? Are like, George, you'll take the first term, John,
how about you take the second one, Thomas Jefferson, you
take the third. It just seems like a lot of
convenient names sitting there.
Speaker 4 (23:52):
You know, James.
Speaker 1 (23:52):
Madison, you'll have the fourth, and you know, we'll just
go down the line and you'll all be elected president
or you'll get the chance to run.
Speaker 4 (24:00):
But it seems like when you look at this.
Speaker 1 (24:10):
That many people that were early on involved in our
nation's founding are also some of the first presidents of
the United States.
Speaker 5 (24:17):
They're done, Yeah, I mean it would logically it stands
to reason, of course, whether or not they struct some
sort of backdoor deal behind the scenes, I don't know.
I mean, you know, one could argue perhaps you know
a lot of them were Freemasons, including George Washington. But
at the same time, when we look at the process
in which Congress elected Washington, it was unanimous, so at
(24:40):
least on paper, nobody was against making Washington the first president.
Speaker 1 (24:45):
Well, here it is how many presidents were there before
George Washington. Well, Washington is recognized as the first president
of our nation, there were several presidents before them. I
feel kind of jip on my education, right, Like, most
people don't realize that there were several presidents before George Washington.
During the Continental Congress and Confederation Congress, a president was
(25:06):
elected by the delegates to oversee the legislative necesssion. According
to the US House of Representatives, this official had many responsibilities,
including ruling on preliminary issues, managing official correspondents, advancing or
holding back legislation, among others. These are the presidents of
the Continental Congress and the Confederation Congress and their term links.
(25:31):
Peyton Randolph, Henry Middleton, John Hancock, John Jay, Samuel Huntington,
Thomas Smiff and Richard, Henry Lee, John Hancock, Nathaniel Gorman,
Arthur Saint Clair, and Cyrus Griffin. Huh, there's a whole
bunch of them, but most people don't even know that
there was a whole group of people before George Washington
(25:54):
that were holding that position of president.
Speaker 5 (25:58):
Yeah, And I think for the most part, the reason
why Washington is typically recognized as the first president is
that contextually, we're talking about the first president of the
newly created nation of the United States of America, whereas
all these former men were, you know, serving as president
over Congress or you know how a legislative committee, you know,
(26:20):
things of those natures, not in the capacity of you know, say,
commander in chief, chief executive officer of the US. So
I think that's contextual.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
So we're going to talk about some interesting facts. One
about George Washington. One of the first things school children
in the United States are taught about our nation's first
president is that George Washington had false teeth. Not to
mention a cherry chee, Well, Washington did have false teeth.
They weren't made of wood, which you know a lot
of people are like, you know, Washington had wood teeth,
(26:56):
but rather hippopotamus ivory, human teeth and animal teeth, gold screws,
and brass wire. Some historians believe the wooden teeth rumor
came from Washington's love of red wine, which may have
caused fractures, and his false teeth making them appear to
have a wood grain. According to q Kqed, Washington was
(27:20):
also an avid dog breeder, on hunting or of hunting hounds,
who would give unique names to his dogs, like Drunkard
and sweet Lips. His dog's name was Drunkard and Sweet Lips.
John Adams, the second President of the United States is
(27:42):
the was known for a lot of things, especially his
love of his wife Abigail and his hatred for his
once friend Thomas Jefferson. Adams wrote Abigail more than one
one hundred love letters over the course of the relationship. Bro,
Can you imagine writing somebody one hundred letters, like just
(28:05):
every day, taking time and just mailing it.
Speaker 4 (28:06):
That's the way you do email.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
You miss your wye while you're away, You're just sending
her love letters. Why not just bring her while along?
Speaker 4 (28:13):
You know?
Speaker 7 (28:14):
Right?
Speaker 1 (28:16):
Meanwhile, the feud between Adams and Jefferson reached new lows
during the election in the eighteen hundred, which pitted the
pair against each other in the fight to succeed George Washington.
Speaker 4 (28:27):
If you think munsling is banned now.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
During the eighteen hundred election, Adams called Jefferson a mean spirited,
low libed fellow and the son of a half breed
Indian squaw sired by a Virginia mulatto father. So that's
some racist stuff, John Adams.
Speaker 5 (28:45):
Yeah, which you know, for the time is certainly unsurprising.
And you know, once we get into a lot of
the misdeeds of these gentlemen, you won't be shocked to
find that that end worse comes up quite often.
Speaker 4 (28:58):
In an attack.
Speaker 1 (28:58):
And Adams said, if Jefferson is elected president, murder, robbery, rape,
adultery and incests will be taught, openly, taught in practice.
The air will be rent, The air will be rent
with the cries of distress, and the soil will be
soaked with the blood of the nation, black nation, black
with crimes. Then animosity between the two carried out over
(29:21):
into Adam's final words on July fourth of eighteen twenty six,
where were reported as Thomas Jefferson still survives. It turns
out Jefferson had died just five hours before Adams passed.
Both deaths occurred on the fiftieth anniversary of the signing
of the Declaration of Independence. They died within five hours
each of each other, and they hated each other. They're like, no,
(29:41):
I gotta hold out. But John Adams one a pof
And by the way, Thomas Jefferson was a member of
the Adam Wece hop Lodge, you know, the illuminati. So like, hey,
you know kind of interesting and weird stuff.
Speaker 5 (29:54):
I'm telling you, right, yeah, most certainly, you know. And
there's so many interesting facts regarding you know, that period
of time, and you know so some of the you know,
lesser known facts surrounding it. Admittedly I haven't looked into
(30:15):
a lot of the you know a lot of the
weird facts of early presidents, you know, for this episode,
So little, little ill equipped.
Speaker 4 (30:23):
Check this out.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
Thomas Jefferson and John Adams were friends. At one time.
The pair visited the home of William Shakespeare in Stratford
upon Avon and new in England, where they each broke
off a piece of one of Shakespeare's chairs. As a sylvenir,
think going to the dude's house, break his chair, take
a piece of it, like, That's what they did. At
the one point, he possessed the largest library of books
(30:46):
in the United States, Thomas Jefferson did. His collection had
books that were rare fines even in Jefferson's day. Much
of the library was destroyed, but hundreds of books survived
and can be seen in the exhibition in the Library
of Congress in Washington, d C. Which is currently the
largest library in the world. Jefferson was petrified of public speaking.
During his eight year presidency, he gave two speeches, one
(31:08):
per term. Portrait of Thomas Jefferson, so oh, seems like
an interesting.
Speaker 4 (31:14):
Dude who liked to read a lot on.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
James Madison was best known for writing the US Constitution.
James Madison is known for being the country's smallest president.
He was five foot four and weighed one hundred pounds.
During the War of eighteen twelve, Madison his wife Dolly
were convinced that the American army would defeat the British
during a battle that he ordered a huge celebration feast
(31:37):
for forty guests to be prepared at the White House.
Madison had sent a little trained militia grew a group
against the British, who beat the Americans, causing Madison and
Dolly to flee the White House. When the British arrived
at the White House, they enjoyed a huge feast before
burning the building to the ground. James I don't know
(32:02):
much about James Monroe. Monroe was known for wearing out
of date revolutionary style attire, earning him the nickname the
Cocked had Monroe president over the country during the Era
of Good Feelings, which was a time of national pride
and unity following the War of eighteen twelve. There was
good that Monroe ran up. Oh, things were so good
(32:23):
that Monroe ran unopposed. Nobody chose to run against them.
John Quincy Adams, the son of the nation's second president,
John Quincy Adams, is perhaps best known for successful fully
arguing a case before the Supreme Court which freed Africans
who had rebelled in the slave ship Amistad. The event
was depicted in Steven Spielberg's nineteen ninety seven film Amistad.
(32:47):
I didn't know that that's interesting, all right. Anyways, there's
a lot of interesting facts out there. Today's presidency done. So,
what are some of the things that you got that
you're looking into or that you found about former presidents done.
Speaker 4 (33:01):
Well?
Speaker 5 (33:01):
I mean, the fact of the matter is that a
lot of what we know about US presidents, or you know,
a lot of the mythology that permeates the you know,
US education system and just popular culture really is just
that it's a mythology that tries to put a lot
of these guys on a pedestal, you know, with this
(33:24):
sort of exceptionalist air around them, when when we have
to keep in mind, you know, all of these people
were men, you know, only men, and not only that,
you know, they were men during a period of time
where while admittedly it's not always accurate to be able
(33:44):
to attempt to judge, say, eighteenth century or seventeenth century
society by twenty first century moral standards, because eventually you're
going to run into a whole lot of conflict that
isn't in some cases logically reconcilable. There are still a
whole lot of things that you know, didn't sit well
(34:05):
with you know, things of this nature. But you know,
I just figure, you know, starting off with George Washington,
you know, we I've got actually a few things here.
I've got several articles, and we're not going to cover
all of them.
Speaker 4 (34:17):
The drugs, guns and prostitutes.
Speaker 5 (34:23):
Well, first, we have this piece here from the New
York Post. While twenty twenty two came out to why
George Washington was a man of many contradictions and just
tends to go over you know, some of the contradictory
nature of you know, the man and the quote unquote myth.
(34:43):
You know. One part of the article says, but contrary
to customs of the time, Washington did not want his
guests ravage ravishing the property's slaves. Regarding his the slaves
at Washington Own, he said, as one Major William North
wrote to a friend, will you believe it? I have
not humped a single one of them since I have
(35:05):
been here. One visitor, who dared to test Washington's resolve
felt great felt the general's wrath. An artist staying at
Mount Vernon brought an assistant who tried to accost one
of the young slave girls who was working in the house,
and when she screamed, Washington charged out of his room.
He was partially shaven and only partially clothed, and when
(35:29):
he realized what was happening, he kicked the fellow down
the stairs. So we have this instance of Washington actually
protecting a slave girl. But at the same time, you know,
we have these other reports. That's also mentioned in this
very same article. As the author of the First among Men,
George Washington and the Myth of American Masculinity, John Hopkins
(35:52):
University Press writes, the mystery of George Washington lies here
The civilized man could on occasion turn into a very
very straightforward and reckless mail himself a barbarian. Even if
he heroically defeated defended the honor of one slave girl,
he enjoyed the sexual favors of others. There was even
(36:15):
a rumor that he had a secret system for rating
the erotic abilities of his enslaved conquests. So you know,
we have, unfortunately, contrary to this mythologized version of Washington,
pretty solid historical evidence that you know, in addition to
the abhorrent system that was slavery, which let's let's be honest,
(36:38):
all of the Founding Fathers grappled with, and it's something
that we'll even revisit here in just a few minutes
when we go over you know, people like Thomas Jefferson
and whatnot. You know, the man was certainly very sexually perverted,
and one could argue a rapist, you know, one could
say that it's it's highly unlikely that all of these
(37:00):
quote unquote conquests were consenting to mister Washington, and uh,
you know, it's just one of these things where see
this whole episode was essentially my idea when I messaged
you earlier this morning, the point of which is, you
know a lot of people are gonna say and they're
(37:22):
gonna be like, oh, well, you know, just you just
like you know, talk shit on the president's and you
know you're on America. Blah blah blah blah.
Speaker 4 (37:28):
They're human.
Speaker 1 (37:28):
They did some of them did terrible They all did
terrible things. They are all involved in war and murder,
and they probably didn't know if they're gonna live tomorrow,
and they probably did a whole.
Speaker 4 (37:37):
Bunch of mad shit.
Speaker 1 (37:38):
Don I wouldn't tell it, like you're in the Revolutionary War,
you don't know if you're gonna eat tomorrow. You got
all this property, you're growing marijuana, you're smoking it as
you can, you're probably drinking every chance you get, your partying,
and they probably took advantage of some girls, which doesn't
make it right at all, well not at all, but
it's crazy the life that they probably lived, uh, and
(37:59):
what they all got way with and they work together
with And you're right, dude, like none of these people
are worth deifying. They're just meant. I always ask, why
do we even need a president? Right, what's the purpose
of a president? It's just gonna act like a dictator.
I think the first executive order by George Washington was
to get his wife off as asked, and to Adam
get some new plates in the White House, you.
Speaker 5 (38:19):
Know, right, you know. And there are so many things
that we could you know, point out here. I mean,
his treatment of Native Americans, first of all. And that's
sort of you know, the a bit of the contradictory
nature of a whole lot of the founding fathers and
the founding of this you know, constitutional republic quote unquote
(38:40):
uh and and this whole concept of you know, freedom
for all all men created equal, which even at that time,
undoubtedly Thomas Jefferson, despite the fact that he himself was
a slave owner and a rapist and a pedophile. We'll
get into that a little bit, he was quite resolute
when he wrote that all men were created equal, and
(39:05):
to the point where there were numerous people, even at
that time senators and congressmen who were so abhorred that
he would even suggest equality for enslaved peoples, even though
he didn't practice what he preached, that they even would
amend the documents in some certain southern states, especially to
(39:29):
say that all freedomen were created equal. But at the
same time, you know, we have this walking contradiction where
so many of these founding fathers were creating this constitutional
republic of quote unquote freed people created equal on stolen land,
(39:53):
that they had absolutely no problem massacring countless people in
order to take you know, just from this New York
Post article about Washington himself, it says, but Washington could
be brutal too as a lieutenant. As a lieutenant colonel
in the Virginia Regiment in seventeen fifty four, he fired
(40:13):
the first shot in what would become the French and
Indian War and led a bloodbath at the Jovenil in Pennsylvania.
He didn't flinch after the battle when the Iroquois chieftain
allied with the Virginians scalped the French commander, split his
head into with a hatchet, and pulled out the man's
(40:35):
brain to wash his hands with them. His defense could
be seen in a letter written to the Delaware Nation
in seventeen seventy nine, when he wrote, I am a warrior,
you know, so these are the kind of behaviors and
it's not even getting into you know, things like a
lot of the war crimes that were sanctioned by Washington
(40:58):
to be committed during the American Revolutionaries.
Speaker 1 (41:01):
Oh okay, so we're talking about war crimes like there's
rules in war.
Speaker 2 (41:06):
You know.
Speaker 1 (41:06):
It's interesting is back in the day they used to
all line up, was it in one row and then
another row, and you just do potshots at each other.
And that's how they fought. That was the gentlemanly way
to fight. And the Americans the reason why we had
our independence. We chose not to fight that way against
the British, right, we chose to go and snipe them
off one by one. Because you know, there's a lot
(41:28):
of different reasons why people believe we went to war
with the British and you know, get our independent freedom.
But the major reason is that they didn't want centralized
banking and they didn't want control of the United States
through the Pope and the Vatican. Those are true fact,
two interesting facts. But I'm sure that there was a
(41:49):
lot that went on back then that were crimes and
evil things. What are some of the things that they
deemed war crimes back in the day.
Speaker 5 (41:57):
Well, a lot of the things that would be deemed
war crimes at the time are the same things that
we do war crimes now, you know, theft of property,
murder of civilians, rape, you know, these sort of things
are just as unacceptable then as they are now. But unfortunately,
you know, particularly during the Valley Forge campaign for example,
(42:19):
And there's a great book that discusses a whole lot
of war crimes committed by both the British and the
Continental Army during the Revolutionary War that I heard about
and put on my reading list many many years ago.
I can't remember the name of it off the top
of my head. I've actually tried to search for it
since then and can't find it. So that's quite disappointing.
But when I was reading bits and pieces of it
(42:41):
at the time, it had mentioned during the Valley Forge
campaign specifically, and for anyone that's studied Revolutionary War history,
you know, Valley Forge was particularly brutal during the winter.
There was not a lot of rations, you know, sickness
was beginning to spread throughout the content. Mental army people were, uh,
(43:02):
you know, didn't have basic you know, socks, boots, things
of that nature because certain you know, supplies hadn't come
in and uh, it got to the point because of that,
and and people can argue about whether or not it's acceptable,
or whether or not he had any choice. But he
got to the point where even farms of the allegedly
(43:24):
the people they were attempting to free with this whole
war were targeted by Washington's troops and and you know, ransacked,
and they took what they could, uh, you know, and
and and and again. You know, it's war. So people
can argue about whether or not, you know, what's the
other whether the choice they have other than just allowing
(43:44):
themselves to get decimated. And you know, maybe nowadays we're
speaking British, if that didn't, if he didn't, who knows.
You know, we can argue semantics all the time, but
the fact of the matter is, uh, you know, these
were still civilians that were supposedly meant to be spared
these kinds of ravages, but instead they weren't and if
(44:07):
they fought back, they were shot and they were killed.
And this sort of goes to this the brutality of
war in general and things of that nature. But sort
of jumping back to my previous statement, there is this
article that came out. I'm not sure if this was recent,
I know they put out one recently. Yeah, so this
(44:28):
was a couple of years ago that Native News Online
put out says US presidents in their own words, concerning
American Indians, and it's essentially just a collection of quotes
as to how a lot of these, you know, the
founding fathers felt about the Natives. And you know the
(44:54):
very first ones from George Washington quote, Indians and wolves
are but both beasts of prey, though they differ in shape.
Thomas Jefferson, if we are ever constrained to lift the
hatchet against any tribe, we will never lay it down
till that tribe is exterminated or driven beyond the Mississippi.
(45:15):
In war. They will kill some of us, we shall
destroy all of them. Andrew Jackson, who's you know. Of course,
we're going to mention a little bit later as well,
the most infamous for the Indian Removal Act and things
of that nature. My original convictions upon this subject have
been confirmed by the course of events of several years
(45:36):
and experience in every day adding to their strength. That
those tribes cannot exist surrounded by our settlements in a
continual contact with our citizens. Is certain. They have neither
the intelligence, the industry, the moral habits, nor the desire
of improvement, which is which are essential to any favorable
(45:59):
change in their condition. Established in the midst of another
and superior race, and without appreciating the cause of their
inferiority or seeking to control them, they must necessarily yield
to the force of circumstances and are long despair. So
(46:20):
it just goes down the line Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt,
Harry Truman. You know, I guess it doesn't necessarily need
that much reiteration. It's sort of a common sense fact
that you know, you still hear it today of you know,
Native American activists, that this nation exists on stolen land
(46:44):
and it was done so in a way where the
concerns of the people that were here for thousands of
years were completely disregarded for this colonialist project.
Speaker 4 (46:57):
And he's done. Question for you.
Speaker 1 (47:00):
It isn't every nation on stolen grand land ground per
se like I had ground and land I made a word.
Speaker 4 (47:07):
They're grand.
Speaker 1 (47:08):
Yeah, But it's like, when you think about it, even
the Indians, who's to say that the Egyptians weren't here first?
And that's what they're saying, you know, is in Kincaid's Cape,
And who's to say that maybe that's why there's some
correlations in South America and some words that are identical
in Egyptian as they are in some of the languages
in South America and in the America, they have the
(47:29):
same meaning, like like I get that this nation is
on stolen ground and stolen land, and we wrongfully took it.
That's undeniable, right, But they probably took it from somebody else.
Speaker 4 (47:40):
That's just like the nature of the game.
Speaker 1 (47:42):
At some point, And obviously at some point, the United
States is going to dissolve. I know it sounds weird,
but it's either going to become part of a global
United Nations or a world government. It will be just
one planet and it willbe its own region. But I
think that nations in general will be commandeer, taking over conquered,
(48:03):
or they'll just you know, submit via you know, some
kind of global consignment or law that comes into place.
And it's interesting because there's a lot of wrong that
happens in history and you know, conquering nations. The Germans
were slaves to the Romans. The Romans would come and
(48:25):
rape the women on their wedding night. You know, just
things have always been terrible all throughout history and that
doesn't justify it right, It doesn't make it good or right,
But at the same time, it gives us a context
to what history is like and that era and how
much we've changed and evolved in some things for the better.
Like I could imagine having to look at another whole
(48:48):
class of human beings as being lesser because of the
color of their skin or the size of the person,
because you know, some of those Asian people be kind
of tiny. But like it's one of those it's stereotypes, right, Americans,
we all eat we all eat crackers, and we love
fried chicken and uh, you know whatever. You know, it's stereotypes,
(49:10):
and people look at these things. And we've evolved as
a nation and in a positive way in many sheeps
and forms, and it's gone too far a lot of times,
you know, like as we talked about, you know, cat
teacher who is licking his or who's miscat teacher, miss perr,
miss puh who uh licks her pause and hisses at students,
and you know it makes kids per in order to
(49:31):
get lollipops. You know, It's just things sometimes get extreme
the opposite way as well, And I'll throughout history we
need to identify that there has been progress made in
the United States. And I don't think there is any
perfect form of government. I think you can sit down
at a table with the socialist of communists, a Democratic
(49:52):
republic supporter, a you know whatever, a anarchist, whoever it is,
they'll all sit there and know well, but about government,
and right, everyone complains about government. There's always a problem
with government. Government is always an issue. Nobody's happy with government.
So the question always is why do we have it?
And there is no form of perfect government, I think.
(50:13):
But to take a look at this and you know,
having the most self accountability and being able to you know,
on small markets, small levels, be able to have an
anarchist maybe your own commune per se and live by
those rules and feed yourselves and have farms.
Speaker 4 (50:29):
And I mean that's kind of my dream.
Speaker 1 (50:31):
To have a farm and be able to have animals
and be somewhat self sufficient.
Speaker 4 (50:34):
Isn't get older, you know, it's just.
Speaker 1 (50:38):
Like you got to be able to look at things
and be like, man, you know, what could we have
done differently?
Speaker 4 (50:44):
Right?
Speaker 5 (50:45):
I think that you know, the key word there is accountability.
And I think in the social context that's why we
still have a lot of people that talk about, you know,
the need for acknowledging has been done to the indigenous
people of this land, and for and for full transparency,
(51:06):
just to let people know my bias. I do have
a bias in this subject. I am partially Polatan.
Speaker 2 (51:11):
Uh.
Speaker 4 (51:11):
You know.
Speaker 5 (51:12):
One of my great grandmothers was from the Palatan tribe.
She married my great grandfather John By. So I do
have ancestors that were victimized by this, by these atrocities.
That is my bias. I'm being fully transparent about that.
Speaker 1 (51:26):
Well, there's nothing wrong with that bias either. It's like
me having my great grandfather die in a concentration camp.
You know, it's just you're gonna have certain bias. But
at the same time, you know, so let's say we
gave America back to the indigenous tribes, which which tribe
would we get to?
Speaker 5 (51:41):
Well, so, first of all, well, that's that's not what
I'm getting at.
Speaker 4 (51:44):
What I'm you know, I don't, I don't.
Speaker 5 (51:46):
Just what I'm getting at is, first of all, it
needs to be acknowledged widely in the public discourse that
these things happen, not just in the sense of this
fake cultural war that's been going on. But first of all,
we're talking about the outright genocide of one hundred million
innocent people for this European colonialist expansion to take place. Mostly,
(52:14):
I won't even go into the religious things.
Speaker 4 (52:17):
I think that's.
Speaker 1 (52:17):
Interesting because I think it was Thas Iverson that mentioned
that the indigenous tribes had the mystery religion in its
purest form, like the most ancient form of religion he
believed was the tribes over here in the United States.
Speaker 4 (52:37):
And you know, as you know, religion is really.
Speaker 1 (52:38):
Important, and the belief of earth and the wind, and
like the four colors of the different tribes.
Speaker 5 (52:47):
It's a very interesting the point of what I was getting.
As you know, we're talking about the genocide of one
hundred million people. We're talking about the fact that up
until the nineteen seventies it was federally ill legal for
them to even practice their own religion. The nineteen seventies,
think about that. You know, we're talking about, you know,
one of the last residential schools in the United States.
(53:09):
The residential schools for people who don't know are schools
set up by Christian missionaries. Because I hate to be
the bearer of bad news, but the entirety of native
genocide is carried out at the behest of the church.
We have documents like the Doctrine of Discovery, the Romanist Pontifects,
(53:30):
the Intercarterra, the Second Intercarterra, all of these things passed
by various popes throughout the fourteen hundreds, basically saying that
non white, non Christian nations are essentially lesser than they
are not God's people, and therefore it is okay to conquest, subjugate, kill, enslave,
so on and so forth, which served as the primary
(53:54):
driving factor for European expansionism, served as the primary driving
factor that led to the Transatlantic slave trade, the enslavement
of African people, the massacres of indigenous people over here,
and you know we, like I said, One of the
last residential schools were closed in the late nineties. These
(54:14):
were schools set up by missionaries with funding from the
federal government, with the approval of the government, where they
would go into these tribal areas after they had already,
mind you, after already having displaced millions of people, slaughtered
millions of people, and put them on these reservations, and
they would go they would take all the children. They
(54:36):
would put them in these schools, the whole point to
essentially convert them over to the American way of life.
Cut their hair, You're forbidden from talking in your native language,
you're forbidden from worshiping your native religion. And these schools
were absolutely brutal. They killed countless children. And I bring
(54:58):
this up because you know, these things are still very
recent in public mind, or at least as far as
tribal people are concerned. And that's not even to mention
the numerous treaties that were broken time and time again
by the US federal government. They said, Okay, we're not
going to take this amount of land. We're signing a
treaty with you, and you know this is your land,
(55:19):
and blah blah blah, blah blah. And they would consistently
break these treaties. So we're talking about a history of
mass murder. We're talking about a history of multiple treaties
being broken. You know, when federal troops would go into
massacre Native peoples, like at the Wounded Knee massacre, wherein
the overwhelming majority of people that were killed were women
(55:42):
and children, when they ran out of bullets or when
they didn't feel like it was financially beneficial to them
to use bullets. They would take the babies and children
and hold them down and stomp their skulls open with
their boots. We're talking about very brutal shit that admittedly
(56:04):
makes me very emotional, you know, And a lot of
these wounds are still very present in tribal lands today.
There is an epidemic of Native women going missing and
winding up murdered in this country that our federal government,
that our FBI and Justice Department don't give a shit about.
Speaker 1 (56:24):
There's like a thousand, it's something ridiculous. They just go
mia and they like it's in a certain region, isn't it.
Speaker 5 (56:31):
Yeah, And you know there there are rampant levels of
poverty on tribal lands that again our federal government does
nothing about. Poverty rates on reservations are exponentially higher than
in most places, and even you know in some places.
I know we reported on this, the Free Thought Project
(56:53):
did several years ago for the Navajo Nation, the Denay
people specifically, the water is at least several years ago
I haven't checked now, but has been worse than Flint Michigan.
So we still have tribal people and even today, actually
still to this day now that I recall it in
the article that I just very recently wrote about Trump's
(57:14):
immigration actions, we have Native peoples again, particularly in the
southwest US, New Mexico, Arizona, Thenay People's Navajo, being targeted,
racially profiled, and harassed by ice because these people can't
even tell the difference between a Hispanic person and a
Native American, and they won't even recognize tribal identification as
(57:39):
legitimate documentation to prove their citizenship. So we have this
constant discrimination that is still happening to this day to
Native peoples disregard. And I'm trying to pick my words
carefully because i can tell that I'm getting emotional about this,
and I'm not trying to I'm wanting to come across
(58:01):
professional and get my point across professionally, So I'm trying
to very carefully pick my words so as to not be,
you know, overly emotional and whatnot. But the fact of
the matter is there's a lot of bad ship still happening,
which is why it's important to continue to bring these
sorts of things up, because it's a history of over
two hundred years of this sort of mistreatment by the
(58:24):
federal government specifically that is not only continuing, but is
barely even acknowledged still. I mean, we talk about you know,
Columbus and things of that nature, and you know, it's
this sort of new thing where when people they bring
up like, oh, Columbus Day and you know, just a
couple of years.
Speaker 4 (58:44):
Ago, and by the way, because he allegedly had sex
with the mermaids.
Speaker 7 (58:48):
So before it was cool, right, But yeah, so it's
this thing in where it's this thing in recent years
where you know, people will celebrate Indigenous People's Day in
place of Columbus Day, and you still have a whole
shitload of people.
Speaker 5 (59:07):
You know, they'll you know, laugh at it and say, oh,
how ridiculous is that? But it's like it, you know,
it goes to show the point of the mindsets in
this nation where so suspect, excuse me, societally, we can't
even acknowledge the atrocities that have been going on and
(59:28):
are still going on for the past two hundred plus years.
Sorry for that little rant. I just had to again
biased and emotionally invested, so you know, sort of my
own personal bias took over there. I apologize.
Speaker 1 (59:44):
I mean, we can look at the negatives with all
this stuff, which there is a lot of craziness in
our history that people are not aware of. And because
of the Internet, there's access to all these things. And
there's always two sides of the story, right, Just like
Washington didn't have wooden teeth, but that was a big thing. Oh,
he was a cannibal. That's why he had wooden teeth.
(01:00:05):
There's that conspiracy that was out there.
Speaker 4 (01:00:08):
He's eating the children.
Speaker 1 (01:00:09):
Nah, you know, obviously then you hear you know, Oh,
they treated their they had slaves, but then they treated
them well, you know, and then they had marijuana farms,
and so they smoked the doobie, but it's banned now.
And like people used, like the presidents and the founding
fathers in whatever way they feel deemed necessary to make
(01:00:32):
their point or to support or to support whatever their
opinion is. The truth is a lot of us we
just don't even know. I don't know if I sat
down and had a beer with George Washington, obviously he
was drinking wine, they say, but you know, smoke the doobie.
Speaker 4 (01:00:49):
Would he be a cool dude? You know?
Speaker 1 (01:00:50):
Would Thomas Jefferson be all right? Dude, although I'm sure
he had some extremist viewpoints. It sounds like, but you
know how many of the president people were, it would
actually be would Benjamin Franklin be a cool dude to
talk to you, except he's out there getting high in
you know, rainstorms and getting shot by lightning, you know.
Speaker 5 (01:01:08):
So, and not to mention, you know, his his constant
affinity for ladies of the night.
Speaker 1 (01:01:15):
You know, frank forgot to be president. He's only one
of those guys that never got got to be president.
Speaker 5 (01:01:22):
Right. But yeah, So, actually there is a fun fact.
I can't remember the details of it, but there was
this big party that a whole lot of the founding
fathers put on sometime during the Revolutionary period. I think
it was like shortly after the war, and it was
a huge party, and I'm talking to everybody was there, Franklin, Washington, Jefferson, Adams, Hancocks,
(01:01:43):
so on and so forth. The receipts are still somewhere
because I remember I learned about this a couple of
years ago, and unfortunately I can't remember the specifics. But
the kegs of beer, the bottles of wine, I mean,
when we're talking about a blowout of a party man.
Speaker 4 (01:02:05):
Well, they knew how to party.
Speaker 1 (01:02:06):
They lived every day like it was their last. I'm
sure quite a bit back then. And you know, I
don't know how how like incredible it was to be
in that time or that era. I started sometimes I
think about, well, what era would I like to be
born in? And I always liked the medieval era, but
then again it was a very dark and scary era
as well, Like like if you could take the knowledge
(01:02:29):
you have today and just go back in time, just
think about how rich you could be and the things
you could create or make or know how to make.
But I think a lot of times we'd go back
in time when we realized that they have a lot
of those things and we just never gave people credit
for it. Like the wheel or bicycles. I don't think
the first bike was made in the sixteen hundreds or
fifteen hundreds. They probably had bicycles, like two three thousand
(01:02:49):
years ago, somebody made some kind of bike on it
was you.
Speaker 4 (01:02:52):
Know, riding around and wheels.
Speaker 1 (01:02:54):
And all that stuff. I don't know people are smart
back then, but oh yeah, founding Father just some of
their things that they were interested in, you know, like
here we go some interesting facts. Gerald Ford was a model.
Speaker 5 (01:03:09):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:03:09):
Herbert Hoover invented his own sport called Hoover Ball. Sounds
like something of a lot of people would be good
at these days.
Speaker 4 (01:03:16):
Hoover Ball.
Speaker 1 (01:03:18):
The game was sort of a cross between volleyball, tennis,
and dodgeball, except much more terrifying because it played with
a medicine ball. Herbert Hoover managed the football team at
Stanford University. Theatore Roosevelt didn't think a black eye seemed presidential.
(01:03:39):
Theodore Roosevelt had a lot of pets and had a
lock of Abe Lincoln's hair. Okay, Incidentally, during the inauguration,
Teddy Roosevelt wore a ring that contained a locket of
Abraham Lincoln's hair, which may be the fourteenth weirdest thing
about him, Like like why would you keep like I'm
gonna put Abraham Lincoln's weird triman in my ring, Like
(01:04:03):
just so weird the things that they did. Theata Roosevelt
viewed Abe Lincoln's funeral procession in nineteen or eighteen sixty five.
Data Roosevelt watched Abraham Lincoln's funeral procession in New York City.
Apparently it left quite an impression on him. Abraham Lincoln's
hair was incredibly versatile. Lincoln's hair, it was amazing, stately
(01:04:24):
bed tossed.
Speaker 4 (01:04:25):
Shaggy, neatly trimmed.
Speaker 1 (01:04:27):
He pulled off dozens of looks that one reporter called
wild and Republican hair uless.
Speaker 4 (01:04:33):
Thees S.
Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Grant was given a speeding ticket while he was president.
They even gave him.
Speaker 5 (01:04:41):
That's one thing that I actually learned earlier today that
I was not aware of that. Yeah, apparently he was
arrested for speeding in a horse drawn carriage in Washington, DC.
He was pulled over one day, given a ticket, and
then caught him the very next day speeding again. They
arrested them, and then he bombed out the same day.
It's like, that's wild to me.
Speaker 4 (01:04:59):
Bill Clinton is kind of a bronie.
Speaker 1 (01:05:01):
When Bill Clinton appeared on Wait Wait, Don't Tell Me,
he aced the three questions about my little pony friendship
is magic. Bill Clinton's cat had its own video game,
The Clinton's The Cat almost had The Clinton's Cat almost
had his own Super Nintendo game called Socks The Cat
Rocks the Hill. The release didn't go through, but fortunately
(01:05:25):
a Kickstarter campaign made the game a reality. In twenty eighteen,
Richard Nixon proposed to his wife the day they met. Wow,
don you which have you ever thought of that? You
just met a girl and you're gonna propost her that day?
What girls is yes to that? She's like, you're the
one I've been waiting forty six years. You're the one,
by the way, and there's nice meeting you.
Speaker 4 (01:05:46):
Let's do it. Let's see lope.
Speaker 5 (01:05:48):
You know that's that's wild.
Speaker 4 (01:05:52):
Pro tip.
Speaker 1 (01:05:53):
That's not a good and good idea that he obsessively
pursued Pat for two years until she finally said yes.
Speaker 4 (01:06:00):
So not a good idea. Well, Richard Nixon must have
really had the had a thing for his wife.
Speaker 1 (01:06:06):
Huh. That's it reminds me of the Johnny Cash story. Right,
So Richard Nixon drove his future wife on dates with
other guys.
Speaker 5 (01:06:16):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
But it gets weirder than that because to spend time
with Pat in the interm, Nixon acted as her chauffeur,
driving her on dates with other guys, which is not
creepy at all.
Speaker 4 (01:06:27):
By the way, for our listeners.
Speaker 5 (01:06:30):
Just when you think Nixon couldn't be more of a
creepy right, oh.
Speaker 4 (01:06:33):
Well, you know you like to listen in the thing.
So you know.
Speaker 1 (01:06:36):
Richard Nixon's favorite snack was cottage cheese with ketchup. That's
everything you need to know about Richard Nixon. He's even
got a creepy smile. Man, I gotta put this smile
on the face. It's like one of those Jack Nicholson
like red ram you know, the.
Speaker 4 (01:06:50):
Shining right right right, shining looks. It's just creepy.
Speaker 1 (01:06:56):
And when you look at it and you think think about.
Speaker 4 (01:07:00):
It, it's just here it is. Look at that smile.
Speaker 7 (01:07:08):
Yeah, you know.
Speaker 4 (01:07:10):
Here you go.
Speaker 1 (01:07:10):
Warren Harding bet white House china on a poker game.
It was a priceless set and he lost. Not the
only example of corruption in his administration. When you play poker,
you're like, oh, I'll give you death, the white House,
fine china and the silverware too. Let's play for that,
you know, and then you'll lose it and it goes,
you know, taxpayer money on it, and you gotta buy
(01:07:32):
some new ones.
Speaker 4 (01:07:33):
George H. W.
Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
Bush thought about naming Clint Eastwood as his running mate.
Speaker 4 (01:07:39):
That's incredible, but he chose Dan Quail.
Speaker 1 (01:07:50):
Martin van Buren wrote autobiography without mentioning his wife must
have been the least.
Speaker 4 (01:07:56):
Important part of his day.
Speaker 1 (01:07:58):
You'll wake up every day and see wife if she's
making a breakfast buie back then giving you kids. But oops, so, honey,
I forgot to put you in my autobiography.
Speaker 4 (01:08:08):
They had six kids together.
Speaker 1 (01:08:10):
Sadly, she died at thirty five of tuberculosis before he
became president.
Speaker 4 (01:08:14):
He never remarried.
Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
Linda Johnson issued the very first Medicare card to Harry Truman.
The bowling Alley in the White House was a birthday
president to Truman. I didn't know they had a bowling
alley in the White House.
Speaker 5 (01:08:26):
Yeah, neither did I.
Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
For those for the for this for birthday nineteen forty seven,
Harry's pails had a bowling alley instilled in the White House.
Speaker 4 (01:08:36):
Let's see if it's still there. I don't know. I'm
kind of curious if it's still there.
Speaker 1 (01:08:42):
If you're in the chat and you know, if the
White House still has a bowling alley, let me know.
I wonder if Donald Trump is, you know, hitting up
those strikes. Harry Truman never pardoned a turkey. Oh terrible person.
The first Turkey turkey pardon was.
Speaker 4 (01:08:54):
By John F.
Speaker 1 (01:08:55):
Kennedy go figure who is also part of a bootlegging family.
We've note ruthfert h. R. B. Hayes was the first
to host an Easter egg roll. Gerald Ford hosted a
prom you're person in the United States, How do you
pick which problem you're gonna go to? H It was
(01:09:16):
for his daughter, Susan's school. Nothing says embarrassing like having
the secret surface chaperon your your high school dance.
Speaker 4 (01:09:24):
Wow.
Speaker 5 (01:09:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:09:27):
Lyndam B.
Speaker 1 (01:09:28):
Johnson sold mouzak to muzak to the White House. Oh music,
they spelt the m u z ak. Johnson owned a
franchise of easy listening music in Austin and sold the
tunes to Eisenhower's White House years before he'd sit.
Speaker 4 (01:09:44):
In the Oval office.
Speaker 1 (01:09:46):
Huh before he was president, Glover Grover Cleveland was president.
Hats off to the twenty second and twenty fourth only
president's served two non consecutive true terms, which is no
longer true because.
Speaker 4 (01:09:59):
Donald try Trump now did.
Speaker 5 (01:10:01):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (01:10:05):
Before he was the president. Grover Cleveland, guess what he was?
He was a hangman. Really, Grover Cleveland is the president
that vetoed everything, isn't he like one of the best
presidents ever? He just vetoed everything that they tried to pass.
It's like, I think we're gonna just veto it. Whatever's
on the desk, just veto it today, not gonna even
look at it.
Speaker 4 (01:10:25):
Veto it.
Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
You know, before he was president, Grover Cleveland was a hangman.
As sheriff of Uriy County, Cleveland personally carried out two
hanging sentences to save his district money.
Speaker 4 (01:10:39):
Why that guy was elected back in the day. What
do you do for a living? What's your qualification to
be president? Done?
Speaker 5 (01:10:45):
Oh?
Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
I hate people. We're gonna start with people who identify
as cats. No, just kidding. I'm just kidding.
Speaker 1 (01:10:54):
You can identify as a cat if you want. I'm
just making funny. I don't want harm on anyone. I'm
just saying, there's a lot of weird things that you
want to do. You should probably keep it away from children.
William Faulkner turned down an invitation from John F.
Speaker 4 (01:11:09):
Kennedy.
Speaker 1 (01:11:10):
William Fawkner once refused an invitation by the President Kennedy's
White House. So that's one hundreds of miles away. Calvin
Coolridge really didn't like talking. His nickname was Silent cal
was well earned upon hearing the news of his notoriously
quiet Calvin Coolidge death, Dorothy Parker reportedly asked, how can
they tell.
Speaker 4 (01:11:35):
Because he acted dead? Anyways, Uh, there was.
Speaker 1 (01:11:38):
An assassination attempt on FDR's life in nineteen thirty three.
I would be assassin shot Franklin Delano Roosevelt five times
while Roosevelt was giving a speech right here in Milwaukee.
Speaker 4 (01:11:49):
By the way, I've been in the spot where it happened.
Five people were hit. None of them were Roosevelt. Oh wow, Oh,
maybe maybe that is when I was thinking about Milwaukee.
Speaker 1 (01:12:03):
Ronald Reagan wrote about Drew Barrymore and his diary. An
excerpt from Ronald Reagan's diary in nineteen eighty four reads,
Little Drew Berry mar the child in e t was
one of the children I met. She's a nice little person.
Ronald Record Reagan absolutely dominated electoral college. Reagan was offered
(01:12:24):
a role in Back to the Future three. What Ronald
Record could have been In Back.
Speaker 4 (01:12:28):
To the Future three.
Speaker 1 (01:12:29):
Reagan was a mild punchline in the first Back to
the Future, which he screened in the White House. So
director Robert Zemeckis liked the idea of him playing a
small role in eight in the eighteen eighty five mayor
of Hill Valley, they got Reagan's former agent, who was
the head of the Universal Studios, to reach out to offer.
Speaker 4 (01:12:46):
Him the part.
Speaker 1 (01:12:51):
Fascinating Ludacris made headphones exclusively for Barack Obama, if that
makes sense. Do you think Barack Obama might have been
the most hip president we've had?
Speaker 5 (01:13:07):
Honestly? Who knows. I mean, a lot of people will
probably foist that upon him, but I think it's probably
also has to do with his administration. Was the first
one to really start to sort of dip into the
Internet culture and like, you know, the young people, so
that might have a lot to do with it.
Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
But yeah, no, just wild crazy the facts about presidents
that you never thought about, right, just the wildness. And
you know, here we don't want to talk about the
human humid or and Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinski and
just the crazy things presidents have done, you know, nine
to eleven JFK assassination, all these things that are coming, Like,
(01:13:47):
I don't know how long it'll be until we get
those JFK documents. I know one of my close friends,
file La Foya, we might be one of the first
ones to have access to the JFK documents to so
get those type that those keyboards as typewriters ready, get
those keyboards ready to start typing up.
Speaker 4 (01:14:04):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:14:05):
One of the things that's interesting about presidents don is
that there's presidents that we don't even elect.
Speaker 4 (01:14:11):
Have you ever heard of Mount Weather operations? Yeah?
Speaker 5 (01:14:15):
I have. You know, we've covered it on this broadcast before.
Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
I think we actually talked about potentially going there and
being like, there is a Mount Weather, let's go prove
it on the rundown line. Well, so for the listeners
that don't know, there is a secretive operation underneath what's
called Mount Weather. And what's so controversial about Mount Weather
is there they have in emergency capacity, the entire government
(01:14:44):
laid out and sitting there waiting just in case a
bomb hits the White House kills everyone. There's a whole
other government that is waiting to be enacted and put
in place. But the scary thing is is who elected them?
Speaker 4 (01:14:59):
Done?
Speaker 5 (01:15:00):
Right? Yeah? You know, it essentially serves as a massive
continuity of government facility. And yeah, none of these people
that have any sort of supposed power have been elected
by any of the American people. I mean, granted, even
our supposed elected official or supposed presidents aren't actually elected
(01:15:22):
by the American people, but at least there is the
veneer or the illusion that presidents are elected by the
American people. But you know, these these folks in the
shadows are completely you know, they don't even have.
Speaker 1 (01:15:34):
That well, and it's it's a continent. What is a
continuity of government? So like, if our government gets destroyed,
there's one backed up. But who elected the president and
what kind of do it is?
Speaker 5 (01:15:45):
He?
Speaker 1 (01:15:45):
Like, why is it that we just have to have
these secret people that are in underneath a mon whether
a female organization, that are elected or unelected to represent
us in Congress and Senate and a president don't Why
can't we just put in like a vote for a
backup like minor league.
Speaker 4 (01:16:00):
Here's the B team by the way.
Speaker 5 (01:16:03):
Yeah, I mean that's that's certainly impossibility.
Speaker 1 (01:16:07):
But if you look at Mount Weather and we're gonna
go ahead and we'll put on the screen, it's a
secret place in Virginia, right.
Speaker 5 (01:16:15):
Yeah, and mountains this is probably I think it's about
three and a half maybe four hours away from me.
Speaker 4 (01:16:21):
It's not that far away from you, huh.
Speaker 1 (01:16:24):
But according to Public Intelligence dot net, mount Weather Special
Facility is the continuity of government COG facility operated by
the Federal Emergency Management Agency. The two door thousand square
foot facility also houses FEMA's National Emergency Coordinated Center. The
site is located on a four ner and threey four
(01:16:44):
acre mountain site in the borders of a Loudon and
Clark Counties, approximately forty eight miles west of Washington, DC. Allegedly,
the mountain is burrowed out and it's a secret facility,
one of many. The site was originally aired by the
National Weather Bureau to launch weather balloons and kites. In
nineteen thirty six, it passed to the Bureau of Mines,
(01:17:07):
which board a short experimental tunnel less than three hundred
fet p note beneath the mountain's crest to test new
mining technology and techniques based on a favorable equation of
the hardness of the integrity of the mountain rock. The
Bureau began constructure of the facility's tunnels in nineteen fifty four,
which were completed by Army Corps of Engineers under the
(01:17:27):
code name Operation high Point. The total construction costs, adjusted
for inflation, are estimated to have exceeded one billion dollars
of your tax period dollars. Tunnel roofs are shored up
with some twenty one thousand iron bolts driven eight to
ten feet into the overhead rock.
Speaker 4 (01:17:46):
The entrance is projected by what they call a guillotine
gate and a.
Speaker 1 (01:17:52):
Ten foot tell by twenty foot tall wide ton blast
or that is five feet thick and reportedly takes ten
to fifteen minutes to open.
Speaker 4 (01:17:59):
Urkle life.
Speaker 5 (01:18:02):
Damn, that's a heavy door man ten to fifteen minutes
to close. Holy cow.
Speaker 1 (01:18:09):
So on this President's Day, just keep in mind the
president that you didn't nominate or vote for or elect
that's probably sitting in mouth with wet weather. I wonder
how that works. Some guys sitting there and he's like,
I'm the secret delegate in charge of things, or do
they just run a secret government other and everything's really
run out of Mount Weather and the secret government.
Speaker 4 (01:18:30):
You know.
Speaker 5 (01:18:31):
An that's a very interesting theory, and I think it's
certainly one that deserves, you know, being looked at, because
we have this so called government in place right that
that is essentially like the face of our governmental operations.
We have the supposedly elected figurehead the president, whether it
(01:18:52):
be a Joe Biden and Donald Trump whomsoever, you know,
selected by the Builderberg group to be you know, the
essentially like a mayor mccheese sort of figurehead mayor anybody
that remembers those old McDonald's throwbacks. I'm dating myself currently,
but you know, and then of course we have what
(01:19:15):
is generally referred to as the deep state, being you know,
these unelected bureaucracy, the corporate decracy, military industrial complex, Security Complex,
c i A, FBI, n s A, as well as
you know, all of these you know, corporations that hold
a lot of sway over the government. And then you
know other interest groups and lobby groups like I PACK,
(01:19:38):
you know essentially the Israel lobby, the Zionist lobby, you know,
all of these groups that actually hold sway over the
operations of the US governments as opposed to our seemingly
supposedly elected officials. So the idea that there's you know,
(01:19:59):
the deep state, so to speak, quote unquote, is a
little bit more structured in a way, perhaps being led
out of a facility like amount weather or perhaps a
raven rock which is located in the Mountains of Pennsylvania.
Speaker 4 (01:20:15):
You know, that's another one, like Cayenne Mountain. There's a
bunch of these places.
Speaker 5 (01:20:20):
Yeah, exactly, Yes, I certainly believe it. You know, could
be plausible.
Speaker 1 (01:20:29):
The US is a secret network of bunkers primarily built
during the Cold War era protect government officials in case
of in the town of bomb. And what's interesting is Thursday,
our guests wants to talk about secret cities underneath the ground.
Could there be secret cities throughout the United States just
underneath the ground? I think about. I have no doubt that,
like where there's like thousands of people living and working
(01:20:49):
and some people, well, who's that One person we had
was that at e L I forgot what her name was.
She was the mk ltruck experiencer who said that there's
secret bases in which children are kept that have never
seen daylight, which I could. I'm not saying it isn't true,
but I'm not saying it is true either. It's just
like to think about like that there's that possibility there
(01:21:10):
government's running secret ops and as these secret bases throughout
the United States running rogue.
Speaker 8 (01:21:16):
You know, it's interesting, Yeah, and you know it's we
just look at Area fifty one for example, right, the
overwhelming majority, according to people alleged, you know, whistleblowers who've
worked there, Bob Blazar and others.
Speaker 5 (01:21:33):
You know, that the majority of the Area fifty one
facility is actually below ground. You know, so we we
do know, and not to mention that there's a whole
conspiracy theory that I haven't personally looked into a whole
lot of, but I think we might have had a
guess on a couple of years ago to talk about
the deep underground military bases, the domes, and you know,
there's a whole bunch of theories that surround those things.
(01:21:55):
You know, there's the theory of a facility being underneath
the Denver International Airport sort of goes hand in hand
with that Denver Airport stuff about Illuminati and a whole
bunch of weird symbolism at Denver International. I've never been
at Denver International, so I don't know, but yeah, you know,
it's a subject that is certainly not without its merit
(01:22:19):
with regard to a lot of these underground facilities. And
you know, even beyond that, you know, we look at
you know, archaeologically, there have been plenty of you know,
places found around the world, not just here in the
United States, of you know, very old civilizations that you know,
there wasn't any sort of weird conspiracy going on. It's
(01:22:40):
just they dug into the dirt and they had a
bunch of underground cities, you know, And so yeah, I
definitely believe.
Speaker 1 (01:22:45):
That, Well, what would be going on, like if there's
a secret basis, Like, what do you think would.
Speaker 4 (01:22:50):
Be going on?
Speaker 1 (01:22:50):
Because when I start to think about this, and you
as a listener out there, you might have some ideas too.
Speaker 4 (01:22:56):
But cloning, why not clone human beings?
Speaker 7 (01:23:02):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:23:03):
Advanced AI life extension animal human hybrids like some Plumb
Island shit, like some creepy like Mengola experiments.
Speaker 5 (01:23:14):
Oh yeah, you know, because when we get to talking
about these experiments, I mean it's it sort of goes
into when we were talking to that one guest. I'm
just forgetting everyone's name today, but we had somebody on
We're talking about people going missing sort of the missing
for one one thing, and the fact that a lot
of these hot spots for people going missing throughout the
(01:23:36):
United States line up with these cave systems. You know,
at some point you got to think you know, these
people are going somewhere, specifically talking about the people that
have just vanished without a trace, and you know, they
just can't you know, they can't find them. They got
to be going somewhere. And so I certainly don't think
that it's just a coincidence that so many of these
(01:23:59):
hotspots people going missing line up with you know, these
these underground cave systems, you know, all throughout the country.
Speaker 1 (01:24:09):
Yeah, I don't know what to tell you, but our
government obviously has tunnel boring machines and they've been digging
cities and tunnels underneath the ground.
Speaker 4 (01:24:20):
For a long time. And who knows what they do
underneath the ground.
Speaker 1 (01:24:23):
Like you can't, like even if you did, don let's say,
if you wanted to sneak in there, right, Christan T.
Harris is gonna break the story of my lifetime. Right
I find one of these openings, you know, it's gonna
be surveilled. They're gonna know I'm there before I know
I see anyone. You know that there's no way to
(01:24:44):
get a cell phone.
Speaker 5 (01:24:45):
Signal down there, Oh no, not at all.
Speaker 1 (01:24:48):
So there's no cry for help. You gotta think about
your walking down these tunnels like that, like what is
it ozarks? Like these these trains that go for miles
and miles underground, just you could get lost never find
your way back.
Speaker 4 (01:25:10):
There's a lot of things that could happen.
Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
Who knows what kind of animals are living other they
got like Trannosaurus rexes that were like running in.
Speaker 4 (01:25:16):
The caves and going after you start eating you.
Speaker 1 (01:25:19):
You know, I just who knows about the underneath they
got Jurassic Park, You know what kin experiments? Are they
running underneath the ground there. You know, I start to think,
you know, giant spiders. I'd be like, oh, hell no,
I'm owners knowing I'm run out running some of those
eight legged freaks.
Speaker 2 (01:25:32):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:25:32):
Who knows what they got going on underneath there. Maybe
it's like West World. They have robotic cubans doing everything
and they're testing it out before they bring them all
along on the surface and let them go. I don't know,
it's kind of interesting to think about.
Speaker 5 (01:25:46):
Yeah, you know, it most certainly is. And you know,
we start talking about things like, you know, animal human
hybrids and cloning and things of that nature. I mean,
these a lot of these operations require a whole ship
load of space to to really carry out a lot
of these experiments, and it just makes the plausibility of
underground facilities that much more likely because at the end
(01:26:09):
of the day, I mean, yeah, you know, you can
do it inside of buildings, you know, hangars and you know,
things of that nature, but at some point you're going
to need an entire infrastructure grid that if it is
above ground. Even if you're doing it inside of uh,
you know, closed behind closed doors facilities, it's going to
start to become quite obvious that something untoward is happening.
Speaker 1 (01:26:33):
Well, right, do they have like crazy holographic technology, which
by the way, is in the news done. And I
know there's more we could talk about with presidents, but
I wanted to share this.
Speaker 5 (01:26:46):
Yeah, I figure I did have a bunch of other
stuff pulled up for the presidents, but I just feel like,
you know, we we've sort of shifted beyond that topic anyway,
So what we could.
Speaker 4 (01:26:55):
Just it's president man.
Speaker 1 (01:26:57):
Presidents have done a lot of really bad things and
they continue to. And it's one of those things about
how more government means less freedom and less or excuse me, less.
Speaker 4 (01:27:08):
Government means more freedom, and more government means less freedom.
Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
That's and so we need to remember that, and why
do we need a president to represent everybody in this nation?
Which I think in the future they're just gonna go
to blockchain voting and we'll just get rid of Congress,
the Senate and everything else and everyone will have a vote.
Speaker 4 (01:27:26):
Right.
Speaker 5 (01:27:28):
Well, that's still assuming that whether or not a person's
vote actually matters, but well.
Speaker 1 (01:27:34):
Sure did when they legalize marijuana in some states. Anyways,
this breakthrough holographics display could make AR glasses of reality
in twenty twenty six.
Speaker 4 (01:27:45):
They have holographic displays now, which.
Speaker 1 (01:27:52):
It's incredible to me to think that the Luke Skywalker
technology is there could supergmended reality glasses could soon become
a reality thanks to break.
Speaker 4 (01:28:02):
Through holographic chip from US Wave.
Speaker 1 (01:28:05):
Lightweight, low powered, affordable AR glasses have thus far been
distant dreams, but the best smart glasses can display mass
of virtual screens but require a phone or an other
device for video and power. Buzz around AR glasses has
been growing, spurred by impressive made O Ryan prototype demonstration
(01:28:27):
and the powerful new Snap Spectacles update. So basically it's
like normal glasses that you would wear, like you know,
you pick up for your prescription that will now be
able to be augmented reality.
Speaker 4 (01:28:38):
They're getting lightweight.
Speaker 1 (01:28:39):
The technology is getting better so that now people can
everywhere they go have augmented HXR or augmented reality glasses.
Speaker 8 (01:28:49):
Man.
Speaker 4 (01:28:49):
You know, and isn't it just dollars prize? So one
hundred bucks for repairs?
Speaker 5 (01:28:54):
What they're saying, thinking, Wow, that's actually incredible, and you know,
not to continuously to our own horn, right, but this
is something that we predicted, man, and I think it's
certainly worth at least pointing that out. It was like
two years ago we were talking about this when when
they were first coming out with you know, VR goggles
(01:29:14):
and things of that nature. You said it yourself. I
remember the episode. You're like, how long until we just
have their like regular eyeglasses you're able to.
Speaker 4 (01:29:22):
Get contact lenses for that matter.
Speaker 5 (01:29:25):
Exactly, And you know, hear it. And for one hundred dollars,
that's actually that's not bad at all. I mean, shit,
my prescription glasses cost more than that.
Speaker 1 (01:29:34):
Well, in the movie The Batman, that's the newer version
with all the woke stuff, and Catwoman is talking about
how the white man keeps her down or whatever white
privilege she had. Contact lenses that Batman could remotely access
and see what she was seeing and listen as long
as the Wi Fi and Internet was kicking in and
(01:29:54):
they didn't lose signal. I mean a lot of times
TV shows show you the tech they already have that's
just not made available to the public. Right, So we're
starting to see a lot of these technologies from these
old movies being you know, floating to the surface and
being used and implemented. It won't be long till you
have AI contact lens, maybe next ten or twenty years.
Speaker 4 (01:30:17):
They probably already have the technologies. Is too expensive to me.
Speaker 5 (01:30:22):
Yeah, you know that new Batman move? Was that the
one Robert Pattinson or has there been another one that
I'm unaware of.
Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
Uh, I'm not sure it's called the Batman.
Speaker 5 (01:30:32):
Because I know, I don't know if it's the same
one I'm thinking of. But the one that I think
it was, like twenty twenty two came out with Robert Pattinson,
and uh, yeah, I really enjoyed that one.
Speaker 1 (01:30:42):
That movie. I'm not saying it was a bad movie.
I like the fact that Batman had that human aspect,
he got hurt. Yeah, you know, there's a lot of
things I liked about I just thought Catwoman was terrible
where we're like Catwomen was like the worst Catwoman actress possible.
I will say that the villain, the Riddler was well
played as well, just that cat.
Speaker 4 (01:31:00):
Woman destroyed everything because she was just so bad.
Speaker 5 (01:31:03):
It's funny enough, like how much I enjoyed the movie,
But I don't remember any of Catwoman's pars at all,
so I guess it just goes to show her, you
know what.
Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
You know what series I am looking forward to is
Daredevil Born Again and it's supposed to be super violent,
superrated are it looks amazing. It's the sequel to the
Netflix series daredol Netflix. When Netflix did the Marvel Remember
when Netflix did good stuff like Stranger Things and everything
they put out with solid it was the Daredevil. The
(01:31:31):
Punisher was was with John was his name benethal Or
I've forgotten.
Speaker 4 (01:31:38):
Burn Fall. Uh you know they're bringing both of.
Speaker 1 (01:31:41):
Those guys back for the Daredevil and it's interesting. I'm
really excited to see, uh which direction it goes? And
the trailer delivered Like I saw the trailer and I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah,
I want to see this. It looks awesome. You know,
I got excited and I was like, hell yeah, the
new Daredevil series that is coming out on Netflix and Marvel.
Speaker 4 (01:32:01):
Marvel did it right.
Speaker 1 (01:32:02):
And Marvel's been struggling lately, like they just haven't been
good except for a couple franchises have been doing real good.
Speaker 4 (01:32:10):
And I think them.
Speaker 1 (01:32:12):
Not rebranding but bringing out the Daredevil and continuing it
along the path that goes instead of trying to rebrand
it and recreate it was a smart decision because everyone
loves the Netfolk series, Jessica Jones, Luke Cage.
Speaker 4 (01:32:25):
All of them are solid.
Speaker 1 (01:32:27):
Marvel normally does some pretty bad has historically is that
some bad you know, you know movies. But the problem
is is you can't go wrong with comic book superheroes, right.
People want to come out and see it. Obviously it
was a Deadpool, Wolverine was huge.
Speaker 4 (01:32:44):
This is gonna be.
Speaker 1 (01:32:44):
A little bit more brutal than that, and rumors Spider
Man will be in it, so I'm kind of curious
to see what happens because you know, spider Man is
a cash cow series, The Vengers is a cash cow series.
Captain America has kind of, you know, since Origin know,
a lot to die during the whole fight with Thanos.
Has gotten a little bit.
Speaker 4 (01:33:06):
Right, right.
Speaker 1 (01:33:07):
It was the Galaxy. Guardians of the Galaxy is good.
I cried during the third one of that, and I
was like, you know, but although it's all about Lucifer,
I think I'm pretty sure.
Speaker 4 (01:33:18):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:33:18):
And you know, funnily enough, so, I was talking with
a friend just the other nights when we were all
on PlayStation together, and he had mentioned he had just
recently seen the new Captain American movie. I haven't really
bothered with a whole lot of Marvel recently, but I
do agree, you know, with the way they're going with Daredevil.
I think it's the right direction and it's a great
(01:33:42):
call from a marketing standpoint. I think that Marvel is
now starting to learn from the mistakes of Disney with
the Star Wars franchise. You know, because the Star the
Star Wars franchise has been getting hit just left and right,
you know, with just cancelation after cancelation. You know, we
had the Shoka and you know all these other things
(01:34:02):
getting shut down.
Speaker 1 (01:34:03):
Well, they went, they went, they made it, they took
a sci fi adventure, made them kids movies.
Speaker 4 (01:34:09):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:34:09):
Well, not only that, because like, Okay, don't get me wrong,
I enjoyed you know, like Force Awakens and whatever the
hell the other two were after that. You know, yeah,
it certainly shows how much I enjoyed them. Can't remember
what they were called, right, uh Last Jedi or you know,
something like that. But I didn't think they were that bad.
I thought Rogue one was freaking awesome, and the Obi
(01:34:29):
Wan Kenobi series was fan fantastic. I think they did
an amazing job with that. But with a whole lot
of these other things, I mean like they've just been
you know, missing the mark so damn frequently, you know,
to the point where I don't necessarily think that they
were that bad. Like the Ashoka I don't think was bad,
you know, Mandalorian I've been enjoying. But just like there's
(01:34:53):
been a lot of public uh scrutiny of things. So
I think Marvel is starting to you know, take note
of that and and shift into a different direction. Uh.
And the whole star The thing about the Star Wars
franchise pisses me off personally, because I love the Star
Wars franchise, and they talk about, oh, we don't have
(01:35:16):
a lot of source material to go off of after
you know X amount of things, and we're like, bro,
we have an entire graphic novel series, you know, the legends. Uh,
admittedly it's not canon. Uh, but go ahead and make
it cannon. There are a lot of people, myself included,
(01:35:36):
that really enjoy a lot of the legends. Uh you
know contents. I mean shit if our name uh you know,
top three favorite characters in the Star Wars universe, Uh,
Mace wind Do, star Killer, and Darth Reeven are probably
my top three. And that idea they were throwing around
(01:35:56):
a couple of years ago, if they were to make
Reeven cannon to haven't played by Keanu Reeves. Just please
if if anybody actually bothers listening to the fans, if
there's anything you're gonna do, please do that. That'd be great.
Speaker 4 (01:36:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:36:11):
So for those who are watching the trailer of their
Devil's playing in the background, but it's like, I don't know, man,
the fight scenes they're phenomenal. It's uh just good. And yeah,
I'm with you with the Star Wars thing. I think
the whole issue is that they went away from the
sci fi adult oriented show to more of a children's movie,
(01:36:32):
and they try to market it for it, like like
you make the adult movies cool and then you sell
the toys right enough.
Speaker 5 (01:36:40):
Funnily enough, they did the exact opposite with the video games.
So like I haven't played Jedi Survivor yet, but I
remember I played Jedi Fallen Order and I absolutely love it.
And they did a great job with that story and
really and and because the Fallen Order is considered canon,
right and so you know, they did a great job
with presenting that to the correct target audience.
Speaker 4 (01:37:04):
So I don't know, have you ever read the books
by timothy's On.
Speaker 1 (01:37:10):
They were the first sanctioned gospel of Star Wars of
what happened after the last Star Wars movie, And I
think timothy's On wrote them, and I read them all
and they were all really good books, and I always
wondered why they didn't turn those into movies. The Star
(01:37:30):
Wars the Throng Trilogy, and this was written I think
in the nineties, but Timothy Zon wrote Air to the Empire,
and they were all really good and they even had
like the movie actors as the cover of the book.
So I don't know, it's interesting to see which direction
that they go with Star Wars and The problem with
(01:37:52):
the Star Wars universe is that the episodes are too short.
Sometimes there are twenty three minutes, sometimes they're forty five
sometimes or an hour, like give me, you know, give
give the viewers at least an hour, two hour in
half or something. You know, you don't have to follow
conventional times. You don't have commercials, right, you can. You
(01:38:13):
can roll with it and go with whatever time time.
Tell the story right, make it suspenseful, suspenseful, have action,
make it borderline everything Edgy does well done. The first
Batman with Or was edgy. The second Batman was Edgy
with Danny DeVito. Maybe the third one then got real cheesy,
(01:38:34):
more cartoonish, and that's why I didn't do well with
mister Freeze.
Speaker 4 (01:38:38):
You know.
Speaker 1 (01:38:38):
Then you had the same thing with the Batman returns,
and then the second one with the Joker, or the
first one with the Joker, and then he died, he
committed who played the Joker?
Speaker 4 (01:38:52):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (01:38:54):
Yeah, it was like dark, dingy and it was brutal.
That's what people want to see when I see comic books.
It's like X Men. If you're gonna bring out X Men,
it's about it's like race Wars. People hate the X Men,
they do spin on them, treat them like second nature sitisms,
but they're saving the world.
Speaker 5 (01:39:12):
Anyways, right, and you know that, you know that's sort
of reflecting the fact with just how popular Wolverine is.
And you know, I want to go see Deadpool Wolverine.
Speaker 4 (01:39:23):
I think too. It kicked as it was a good movie,
not gonna lie. It was pretty decent.
Speaker 1 (01:39:28):
And it's because they allowed Wolverine to be who he is,
which is a rated our character.
Speaker 4 (01:39:33):
And I have an issue with.
Speaker 1 (01:39:34):
Books like, if you're gonna make a movie, the script
is already written, just choose the script. You know, the
comics are already out there. Stick to the script, and yeah,
they're rated R. There's a lot of brutal murder, there's
a lot of hate, there's a lot of anger in
those comics, and it's borderline not children for friendly. But
that's what makes dead Pool great. You don't think kids
(01:39:57):
watched it well exactly.
Speaker 5 (01:39:58):
And you know, when we're talking about like you know,
edgy characters and things of that nature, I think that's
a big part of the reason as to why. In
addition to the nostalgia factor that the Obi Wan Kenobi
series actually did so well because Darth Vader was on
his demon timing during that whole series.
Speaker 2 (01:40:19):
Man Like.
Speaker 5 (01:40:22):
In the Obi Wan series, when Vader pulled up, you know,
bodies were about to drop.
Speaker 1 (01:40:28):
So where are we at with the Star Wars series
with Obi Wan? Are they no longer making those series?
I heard that they just signed a whole series with
the original Luke Skywalker actor.
Speaker 4 (01:40:42):
Mark Hamill, Mark Hamlon. Yep.
Speaker 5 (01:40:44):
Uh, that I'm actually unsure of. You know, I've been Mark.
Speaker 1 (01:40:48):
Hammel, that's what it was. Star Wars series Disney.
Speaker 5 (01:40:57):
Yeah, because I know they're they're always constantly trying to
pump out, you know, new series, and I think that's
also a Probably a part of the problem as to
what's happened with the Star Wars franchise is just the
fact that you know, they're trying to milk it as
a cash cow, and in doing so, they're diluting, you know,
(01:41:19):
the whole.
Speaker 4 (01:41:20):
Thing, right, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:41:23):
So if I was Star Wars, I would have hired
the old actors and done shut you know, did a
couple of knockoffs or do a couple you know, TV
series with them. It's kind of one of those things
where nobody really cares about movie theater movies anymore. Everyone
wants to see the Netflix series. Everyone wants to see
it the story done right and told right. It's like
Lord of the Rings. If you're gonna do it right
(01:41:44):
and you're gonna ever remake it, make it a TV
series on rated Iron Network where you can show the
darkness of everything, but also make it a cliffhanger. You know,
you do the Netflix, do the Amazon Prime, do like,
but do it right.
Speaker 4 (01:41:57):
Stick to the script, like you got a script already.
Speaker 5 (01:42:00):
And that was one of my biggest issues with some
of the newest movies with was Mark Hamill's portrayal of
Luke Skywalker. And it wasn't necessarily him. He did, he
did what he could with the role that he was given,
but the way that they absolutely just neutered, you know,
like the canonical Luke Skywalker, I mean in the in
(01:42:22):
the books and the novels and whatnot. I mean, he's
an absolute beast. After you know, these events of the
of the movies take place, you know, he rebuilds the
Jedi order, he learns how to work within the dark
side of the forest without losing the light side. You know,
he is arguably even more stronger than Star Killer himself,
(01:42:43):
which granted, star Killer is not a canon character as
of you, is he? I think they made star Killer
Cannon recently, but either way, you know, the canonical Luke
versus the Luke in the movies now are just there's
for Forest part of Night and Day. And if they
had kept him as the badass that he was in
that Cannon, oh would have been completely different.
Speaker 1 (01:43:07):
So here, this is what they're saying, Mark Hamill is
returning as Luke Skywalker for the sequel trilogy, that there's seven,
eight and nine gonna be made.
Speaker 5 (01:43:17):
Seven eight and nine wasn't Weren't those the ones that
already came out? I think for The Force or The
Force Awakens was number seven.
Speaker 4 (01:43:27):
I'm not quite sure. I don't know there's three mores.
Speaker 1 (01:43:30):
I think there's three more that they're gonna make, and
I don't know if like I saw that in news clips,
I'm not a Star Wars buff, so I'll take my
word for it. I'm gonna try to find more on
it and make sure that we have it, because I
also I'm seeing his TikTok videos and those can be faked.
But it says under the news. Mark Hamill on returning
is Luke Skywalker for the sequel trilogy.
Speaker 4 (01:43:52):
Let's see, well we'll share why not share a screen?
Here you go, do do do do do? Here you go.
Speaker 5 (01:44:13):
We don't have any of the audio times.
Speaker 6 (01:44:16):
Well, I was shocked because George specifically said I'm not
doing seven eight nine they. I didn't know he was
going to turn the company over to other people. And
when he told us that they wanted new another trilogy,
he said, if you don't want to come back, we
won't recast. We'll just write you out of the story.
So I really had I was thrilled and terrified at
(01:44:39):
the same time, because I thought, well, we had a beginning,
of the middle and the end. Let's leave well enough alone.
But it's irresistible. I mean, actors like to work, and
the idea of getting to go back and work with
Harrison and Carrie was.
Speaker 4 (01:44:52):
Just I think he's talking.
Speaker 6 (01:44:55):
I only see them at lunchtime.
Speaker 4 (01:44:56):
But that's why you don't depend on the run down
life for your entertainment. News just real news, star wars enough, dude.
Speaker 1 (01:45:07):
I wish they made a real version of the Vultron
and genuine transformers that's true to the original series. There's
a lot of things that I wish that they did
better and that they went ahead and procured and made better.
On this President's Day, That's all I really wanted was
Daredevil Born Again, the Punisher to come back, which is
a great series. All of them are good series, and
(01:45:27):
Marvel needs to do X Men right. They're bringing out
the new X Men, and I don't know with all
the multiverses this and that, it's hard to keep up,
but I guess find out how they're going to handle everything.
And I haven't seen the new Captain in America. It
was originally going to be called New World Order, now
it's called Brave New World.
Speaker 5 (01:45:45):
Yeah, i'd noticed that as well. I believe we discussed
that a couple months back.
Speaker 4 (01:45:48):
To yeah, that they went ahead and dropped it.
Speaker 1 (01:45:52):
That being said, you know, holographic technology, teachers dressing as
kaats in school and you know me and hissing at students.
The world's gonna become a crazy place. And the think
about the fact that we are okay with that, I
think in some levels because otherwise it wouldn't happen. But
should teachers be able to dress up as kaats, hiss
(01:46:14):
and you know I identify as a cat.
Speaker 4 (01:46:17):
You know, it's a whole furry culture done. I'm telling you.
More I learned about furries, the more creepy it is.
Speaker 5 (01:46:23):
Oh yeah, for sure, I didn't know.
Speaker 2 (01:46:25):
I did.
Speaker 1 (01:46:26):
Like the whole furry thing is giant, is a giant
like orgy lifestyle.
Speaker 4 (01:46:30):
And it's like, okay, let's just make everyone furries. Is
where we're gonna have a big like cosplay and everyone's
gonna hang out.
Speaker 1 (01:46:37):
I just I don't look, why why do we have
to subjugate our kids to this kind of stuff? Why
do we have to have teachers walking around with fake
giant tatas, uh, just to make points. It's wild the
way the world is gone. And on this President's Day,
I don't know if you've ever if you saw this done?
Did you see the grand Theft auto AI version of
(01:46:59):
the Donald Trump that's going around there?
Speaker 4 (01:47:02):
I have not, So there's this.
Speaker 1 (01:47:05):
Uh, it's it's kind of viral right now. Somebody used
a I to make a grand Theft otto.
Speaker 4 (01:47:14):
Donald Trump. Here it is.
Speaker 1 (01:47:19):
Grand theftd Donald Trump. What are they they call an
epic vice City AI and I had a I had
to look for it and I found it here and
it's actually we'll go ahead and we'll put it on
the screen for viewers. As the closing segment for President's Day,
you can watch the president and his grand theft Auto
(01:47:42):
World in.
Speaker 4 (01:47:43):
His great you know, natural habitat. Here we go here
it is listen to music.
Speaker 1 (01:47:52):
Yeah, there's Trump with a giant Stogy cigarette cigar, look like.
Speaker 4 (01:48:00):
A prosecute Who's that is that Kamala? No, it's not.
There's Elon Musk smoking his cigars, mob boss.
Speaker 1 (01:48:09):
That's one of his many, you know wives, because he's
just there's Barack Obama in the hot tub with a
hot chick, Donald Trump a mer Lago looking like uh.
Speaker 4 (01:48:21):
Michael J. Fox? Did he not look like Michael J. Fox? Wait, wait,
let's rewind that. There he is. Tell me that doesn't
look like Michael J. Fox.
Speaker 1 (01:48:34):
Oh my goodness, it looks like a pregnant Michelle Obama.
Speaker 4 (01:48:39):
AI that created this.
Speaker 1 (01:48:43):
Oh there's the Vice president Vance with the giants Skogi
cigar in his mouth. Is that Nancy Pelosi dance is
doing a bunch of cocaine. It looks like this is
like crazy what I can do? Yeah, But like from
where we were a couple of years ago, we were
(01:49:05):
playing these videos.
Speaker 4 (01:49:13):
There's a AOC.
Speaker 1 (01:49:20):
And fifty Oh boy, we can't even see that in
an air. It's basically everything you believe. Grand theft bhutto
is AOC dance around a pole. It looks like uh
z epateel. This is what AI's doing. This is what
(01:49:43):
we spend millions of dollars to billions of dollars to
invest and create, not to solve the health problems of
the world, not to enlighten people, but to make AI
grand theft auto Donald Trump videos right well, a scantily
clad congress people and bikinis and other politicians. Just look
(01:50:04):
at there's Barack Obama shooting people down with a machine gun.
Speaker 4 (01:50:08):
This is crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:50:12):
That's not why Anthony Fouci does that. Does that just
FOCHI shooting Oi. They have like Mobster's Foci gun. He's
like mobster foci. I can't believe what I'm seeing here.
It's Fochy in the mops with a mobster gun Tommy gun.
Speaker 4 (01:50:28):
Stand shit.
Speaker 1 (01:50:39):
So this president stay just remember Donald Trump has a
grand theft of auto commercial out there created by AI.
Because why somebody told AI to do it, didn't do
it on its own but the world is a weird
placed on it definitely is.
Speaker 4 (01:50:52):
For those out there listening, we hope to see you
guys tomorrow on kg R A d B.
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You're listening to The Rundown Live kg R A dB
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Show tunes at the show Tunes show show tips at
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(01:51:18):
is hard some days. Show tips at the Rundown Live
dot com. We'll be back tomorrow.
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You clean Up on the Ground Journalist. You listenings The Destroyer,
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Rundown I Undown, Feed your brain, I'm.
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Very healthy all day and hand up on Down.
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