Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Hello, I'm you happy, keep book Neil Smith and old
Buck Buddy. Are you hearing Neil?
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Neil? I miss you man, Donnes I have a question.
We respect for me.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
Down breaking a major story Chris Congratulations.
Speaker 2 (00:17):
A single score podcast.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Part of President Trump's charm is his ability to get
the left wing to basically play right into his hands,
and he's he's done so again. One of the ways
he does this, folks, is through his ex account and
his truth social account, and President Trump typically on the
weekends will are retweeting slash retruthing his his favorite memes,
(01:06):
and one of them depicts himself. On One of these
memes shows President Trump being depicted as one of the
characters from Apocalypse Now, and the label on the meme
is chapocalypse now as in Chicago, and it shows the
(01:29):
United States military heading into the war zone the Democrats
have made Chicago to liberate American citizens from the crime
that the Democrats have have teed up. And President Trump
puts a quote, I love the smell of deportations in
the morning, Chicago about to find out why it's called
(01:50):
the Department of War. That's right, we are declaring war
against foreign nationals. Invading our country. We're declaring war against
those who have made our streets not safe for our
families and our communities. We're declaring war on the democrats
sensibility that every other nation on the planet is first,
(02:13):
in America is last. And I fully support what President
Trump is doing in the restoration of the rule of law,
law and order, the restoration of the adherence to the
Constitution of the United States, and forcing the Democrats to
live under those rules. And if they don't, they can
get the hell out, they can faffo, they can f
(02:33):
around and find out, which is what Chicago is about
ready to do. President Trump is about ready to go in.
He's about ready to go and find all of these
Democrat voters, all of these illegal alien foreign nationals from
one hundred and sixty eight countries the Democrats allowed to
bust into our country. Well, not just the last four years,
but it was record breaking of the last four years.
But they've been allowing them to break into our country
(02:55):
for over half century, with complicit Republicans giving the wink
in the nod. President Trump says, it ends now, it ends. Now.
He's going to be surging ice, He's going to be
surging the FBI into a crime ridden hell hole which
is Chicago, which is Democrat runs Chicago, and he's going
to get it under control. And every Democrats effort to
(03:18):
make sure that the people are under their thumb, that
the people are under this yoke, this burden of crime,
Democrats sponsored crime. It goes away, and then the people
are going to be recognizing, oh my gosh, we don't
have to live this way. We don't have to live
the way Governor Pritzker or Mayor let's go Brandon Johnson
(03:38):
tells us, we have to live anyway. The Democrats are
melting down over this ch apocalypse. Now. I love the
smell of deportations in the morning. And there's a comic
that's out there. I can't remember who made it, but
it's a woman crying. I think it's Karen Bass, Karen
Bass of Los Angeles. She's crying saying, stop deporting our voters.
(04:03):
We all know this is what the Democrats plan to do, folks.
They plan to open the borders, give the vote to
criminally legal aliens, foreign nationals from one hundred and sixty
eight countries, and then wipe out American votes. It's not
me saying it, folks, that the Democrats have already given
illegal aliens the right to vote all over this country
(04:24):
in various communities, and the last count is between fourteen
and seventeen. It's illegal, It's completely illegal, canceling out American votes.
And then there's Yasmin, I'm sorry, this waste of space,
jumped in front of the cameras last week and rather
crudely and crassley admitted what the Democrat agenda has been.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
Listen.
Speaker 3 (04:48):
So I didn't realize this was such a controversy until
the right wing media started attacking me for using the word.
So I googled the word constituent. The definition of constituent
is somebody who is part of a community, doesn't matter
what their legal status is. If somebody is an asylum seeker,
if somebody has a green card, if somebody is a
US citizen, if somebody lives in the community, I represent them.
(05:14):
Constituent does not mean voter. I don't care if these
If none of these individuals can vote for me, I
don't give a shot.
Speaker 4 (05:23):
Uh uh, you don't get a shot, Beckay, Like, oh
my gosh, Beckay, you don't get a shot. Oh what
what a flippant loser, what what an? And you know
what to all of you out there who have been
dropping me emails and telling me that I'm being pejorative
and that I shouldn't be calling these Democrats anti American koops,
(05:46):
freaks and nuts. Save your flip and emails. I'm sorry,
Just save your time. There is nothing you can say
to convince me that these people love our country. Here
is a Democrat Socialist who is sing in front of
the cameras admitting that she puts foreign nationals on the
same level playing field as American citizens, that she's there
(06:09):
to serve them. I mean, the arrogance, the arrogance. Oh,
I'm a representative of like everybody around the world, Like
if they're in my district, Oh my gosh, like, oh
my gosh, Becky, save it. These these people in the
Democrat Socialist Party hate this country. They they don't like
you very much if you're an American citizen, and they're
(06:32):
busy putting your needs and wants secondary to the needs
and wants of criminal, illegal aliens. So, folks, come on,
it's time we stop pretending that these people are Americans,
these Democrats. It's time we stop pretending that they're here
for us and the benefit of the United States of America.
It's time we stopped pretending that the Democrat Socialist Party
(06:55):
is at all American. It's time we stopped pretending that
we should be treating these people thoughtfully with a stroke.
Speaker 1 (07:03):
Of our chin. And well, you know, if here i am,
I'm Senator John Cornin or Mitch mcconnor Lisa mccowski, let's
examine what this crazy, whacked out, freak job of a
Democrat is saying. Hey, maybe there's something to this idea
that American politicians should be representing criminally legal aliens from
(07:25):
other nations who break into our country, that we should
take their interests at heart and govern and rule in
their name and for their benefit. I'm just stop already.
The show behind the show was Shan Chastain Roars Your
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Speaker 2 (08:24):
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Speaker 2 (11:08):
Why get your news from people who don't share your values?
Speaker 1 (11:11):
Get new stories from Texas Scorecard.
Speaker 2 (11:13):
We provide real news for real Texans.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
Go to Texas scorecard dot com. Today, time for the
show behind the show, and Sean Shastain is here.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
Hey, buddy, I'm waiting for the big elf style burd Yeah.
I know.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
I just just chugged up a big can of soda
and just as we are pushing record folks, I let
out a big old belch. Said excuse me, so I
won't repeat it. I'll spare you all that stuff. That's
just something dudes, do you know when you're not like
because there could be ladies listening to this, and no
lady wants to hear some dude belching. You know.
Speaker 2 (11:47):
I wonder, you know, I mean when you were in
elementary school, there was always that one kid. That kid
belched the alphabet.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
I never could do that without do that.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
Yeah, and uh yeah, I just always a little little
tiny bit of jealousy. I wonder if women have the
same thing. Do they have where they're girls in elementary
school that could belch the alphabet.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
Or something equivalent? What is the girl equivalent of belching
the alphabet? I mean, I wonder I got to ask
my wife. She's gonna I ask my wife, She's gonna go,
what the hell, what the question is that? Oh? Man,
if I had a dollar for every time my wife
looks at me, just shakes her head, going what planet.
(12:33):
It's amazing we learned to to relate on the same
planet because they just you know, men are from Mars,
women are from Venus.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
Right. One thing that women don't do that I just
don't understand what scratch their backs on the on a
corner of a wall, like a doorframe.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Or something, you know what that I was just thinking
of that.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
I've never ever seen a woman do that, heard of
a woman doing that. There was a in the former
studios where we worked. They had these sound these kind
of sound buffering panels up yeah, and they were canvas
colored canvas covered so they're kind of scratchy, and it
(13:20):
was perfect. So I would just get in there and
like a bear on a big old pine tree, just
scratched my back like crazy on the corner of those
pads because it just felt good. And the women in
the studio would just go like, what the hell are
you doing? And I have never seen a woman do that,
(13:40):
and they are missing out. I'm telling you, well, well,
I was.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Thinking good I was thinking about this the other day
because I'm in bed. I don't know if it's ever happening.
I'm in bed and I get awakened out of a
sound sleep because my backages, and I'm like.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
I have a bat scratcher by the bed.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
Same reason, Well, I don't have it by the bet.
I haven't my closet right, So I'm like, oh man,
I don't want to get up, and so I start,
you know, moving around, hoping I could just get just
enough of it so I don't have to get and
then she inevitably comes the hand from the other side
of the bed. You know, stop moving around, you know,
whatever you're doing. Probably thought I was having a bad
dream or something, so sh and I'm thinking to myself, man,
(14:21):
and I got this image of a bear, you know
how the bears in the woods up against the pine
tree and they're like rubbing their backs on that pine tree.
And I'm like, I go and I'm imagining a bear
scratching his own back, going, oh man, that'd be great.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
How come girls don't do that because that's so satisfying,
it feels so good.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
Well, yeah, but they usually come to us, Hey, can you.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
Scratch all back.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
It's like, why can't you just go find a wall somewhere,
you know, or or get a back scratcher? What have
I got to do it?
Speaker 2 (14:53):
And don't they know that invariably all we're thinking about
is undoing your brother.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
Exactly exact Hello, It's like, don't don't. Don't you know
that you're inviting every single time, exactly.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
The time we're twelve years old until we die.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
You asked me to put my hands on your back,
and I'm supposed to stop at scratching your back up.
Don't you know that it's just the ultimate ease. It's
uh yeah, well Venus and Mars Venus.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
You man, it's uh, it's fun.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
What'd you do this week?
Speaker 2 (15:29):
Uh? So this week it was kind of an easy
work week at work, and then made a bunch of
trips to uh other places where they're involved in machining.
This is what I'm finding out about this machining world
is that there are hundreds of ancillary businesses that are
(15:50):
all in support of each other. Well, like like heat
treat for one.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
They call that the supply chain.
Speaker 2 (15:58):
Yeah, and I guess, you know, never been in manufacturing before.
I just never thought about it. And it's amazing all
these little tiny you know, when you drive around an
industrial park and you see just hundreds of businesses all
in a row. Well, they're all supporting something and something
(16:20):
that you're using every day. So it's just really interesting
to me. And one of those is heat treat and
here in Texas, I can't imagine a job that would
be much worse. But they all seem really happy in
they're nice guys.
Speaker 1 (16:33):
Well what does well, everybody's asking what does heat treat do?
Speaker 2 (16:38):
So the parts we have are generally pretty small, but
when you go into the heat treat facility, there are
humongous parts and they all get heated up to a
certain degree and cool than a certain manner, either by
air cool or oil cool or something like that, depending
on the required hardness that that steel needs to be.
(17:01):
And you can imagine that this is a football field
sized warehouse full of nothing but huge ovens. Wow, getting
stuff up to you know, probably close to two thousand degrees.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
That's cool.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
Well, not so much, I mean, I mean, but I.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
Mean the technology, the technology is well, I mean.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
You wouldn't think it's that technologically advanced because it's these
huge steel ovens. So but to know how hard a
piece of steel has to be, and and all the
science and leaving it in there and cooling it down.
Blah blah blah.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
I don't by thing too though. It's like women will say,
I don't care how it's made, that just gets made.
I just want it right. Guys are like, I'm fascinated
by how That's why Mike Rose program is so pobby,
and I'm fascinated by how stuff gets made.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
Machines that built America. That series that is on one
of those channels. Isn't a dude thing though, probably more,
do you think, But I would think that some women are,
you know, find it at least interesting. It's a shame
that not enough of them are in the STEM programs
to you know that also support all we you know,
(18:23):
all manufacturing engineers. So you know, it's it's a shame
that more women aren't at least interested in that. But
I don't know. But anyway, so all these little ancillary businesses.
We have one that does anidizing, we have one that does.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
Dude, you're gonna have to explain what the hell that is.
This is all language you're learning to speak, and you're
talking certainly above me. But you're talking probably a lot
of people out there were not in manufacturing, don't know
what that is. What is anateiz?
Speaker 2 (18:51):
Anidizing is taking I'm not entirely sure myself. It's like
a clear h hate almost you can to see through.
It's I don't think it's paint. It's it's chemically changing
the metal to a different color.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Oh don't they call that. It's not powder coating.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
No, powder coating is different. Anadizing is what it is.
So I'm not sure how it works, how it's done.
Speaker 1 (19:20):
Is it there's an electroc electronic process.
Speaker 2 (19:23):
For electrolysis or something like that.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
Yeah, And they charge the water and then they and
then they dip the steel into it and the charging
it's it's like plating. It's it's the it's how they
do either gold plating or in this particular case, color
plating of certain colors. So so it integrates into the metal. Yeah,
that's cool.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
All these businesses, you know, I mean, like I said,
you drive you drive down any industrial park and you
just kind of I have never done it before I
started this world of manufacturing, wondered what each one of
those businesses does you know? And how vital they all are,
and how it's all intertwined and it's really fascinating.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
You know. We've talked about about how the people say, man,
I go to the store, and that's where my beef
comes from, and it's like, no, man's that where your
beef comes from. Your beef comes from a farm and
it was once a cow co little eyes and everything. Yes,
it was once a cow. And I think there's a
lot of that among the American population about not realizing
(20:25):
that the lengths to which our manufacturing base a is crucial,
be just how it's all around us and we just
don't realize it.
Speaker 2 (20:33):
Oh yeah, I mean you can wrap your head around
this steak. Is that cow I saw in the field
coming to the store. You know, that's probably easier to get.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
You and I can, but you'd be surprised some of
these millennial and gen Z cats well like wait, wait
a minute, it comes from but what a farm.
Speaker 2 (20:51):
I think what's harder to grasp is the tractor that
brought the hay to the cow in all of the.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
Did you there's a video online that shows one of
these massive, big ass harvesters and it's going over a
tomato field and well, and it's just it's scooping up
all the debris everything, and there's a sensor and you
watch it in slow motion, and the sensor every single
time it sees a tomato, it flaps and knocks a
(21:25):
tomato into a sorting bin and then all the rest
of the trash just falls like the and you watch
it in slow motion and it's like it doesn't miss
one tomato. And it's being shoveled in there like like
nobody's business, like like a like a big machine just
throwing it all in there.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
And I was like, fortunately it's Squatemalan was just deported.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
Yeah, well, which just which is if it's if it's
any illegal machine, and it ought to be freaking departed,
which don't by the way, I'm I'm gonna get it
in a minute, but something something for our industry. I
was talking with somebody I went to remember I told
you a couple of weeks ago. I was speaking at
Gun Owners of America and their second annual gathering in Knoxville,
(22:13):
and I bumped into somebody who has a radio station
in Texas, and I asked him, Hey, man, how's everything going,
And he said, we just automated everything to where to
where we have nothing but talent And I go what,
(22:34):
and he goes, yeah.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
We have.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
We've gotten rid of all of our studios. I said what.
He goes, yeah, everybody works from home. Everybody has their
home studios or a remote studio, and all of our
talent dials in to the transmitter directly using this brand
new software. And I said, you're serious. He goes yeah.
(22:59):
Anytime we we have, the individual talent does all the
production needs, all of our you know, the traffic for
those of you not in the business, traffic means you
know when your schedule, not not the traffic reports, but
your your spots. You know, the commercials you hear. All
of that's done remotely. People get to work from home.
They all love it. I'm saving a boatload on, you know,
(23:22):
some way, just because you know, people are willing to
trade a little bit of pay for not having to
to drive into work, right right, And then he says,
I'm saving a boat load on studio rental, insurance, electricity,
phone lines, YadA, YadA, YadA, because it's all done over
the internet.
Speaker 2 (23:44):
Well, as one who was a behind the scenes person
for my entire career, very munch right, that's kind of
sad because that would be out of a job.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
Well, no, because you still need you still need to
have somebody running.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
But you're not going to board up please, that certainly are.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
You're do it from home. They got they've got board ops.
I mean, you still need somebody to kick off the
music to make sure everything's running. So you just dial
into the computer system from wherever you are and you
run your and you run the show.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
Wow, all right?
Speaker 1 (24:18):
And I'm like, dude, that is so kick ass. And
he goes, that's where everything's going, and he goes. Everybody
wants it, everybody loves it, and I'm like, who wouldn't
love it?
Speaker 2 (24:30):
Right?
Speaker 1 (24:31):
So, talk about technology changing everything from what you're doing
in manufacturing to our current or your former and you know,
Toe and Pinky Toe still in it, and in my
current business, the things that they are doing now that
we couldn't even have imagined just ten years ago.
Speaker 2 (24:49):
I wonder how. I mean, I lived through it during
the COVID farce, you know, when everybody was from home
except me. I was the I had to carry my
little letter of what do they call it, vital employee
or something like that. Essential, Essential, Essential, employee. Yes, I
(25:10):
had to carry my little letter in the in the
car in case I got stopped on the way to work.
Because I had to go to work every day. I
was the only one there. And uh, man, that was
a depressing couple of years. That just sucked. The whole
thing just sucked.
Speaker 1 (25:27):
My preacher, my preacher, I remember this, father, Mike. He goes, uh,
he says, you know, I really do believe the pandemic
was of the devil. I really do, because of what
it did to us, because how it separated people. It
brought out the worst in people. It brought out the
worst and you know, leftists and markedus. You know how
I feel about that. But yeah, he he is thoroughly
(25:48):
convinced it was. It was of the devil.
Speaker 2 (25:51):
My experience was unlike just about everybody else's. Everybody else
kind of you know, yeah, they had to stay home
or they worked from home or whatever. Not me. Man,
My routine did not change one bit, except I talked
to even fewer people than I do now. Yeah, So
it's it's just.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Uh, you're suppressing despite the fact you never go out
into public. I mean, you are kind of a social guy.
I mean when you when you think about. And by
the way, your only social outlet for all those years
was was work.
Speaker 2 (26:22):
It was work, Yeah, yeah, because I worked with my friends,
Yeah exactly, So you know I would be with them
on the weekends at the lake house or whatever. So yeah,
so it.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Was Wait a minute, you got an invite to the
lake house. Nobody ever invite to me the freaking lake house.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
So how has a lake house out at Possum Kingdom?
Speaker 1 (26:41):
Yeah, well I never got an invite.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
What the hell? I mean? There were there were months there,
you know, a few years in a row where we'd
work Monday through Friday. Yeah, go to the lake house
Friday night, spend the weekend, work Monday through Friday, go
to the lake house the next Friday night. I mean there,
(27:05):
I think we canada up. One time we had spent
like twenty eight days straight together, jeez, which is a
blast because I'm working with my friend, you know it
was it.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
Was I feel the same way.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
Well, I got the invites. I guess they must have.
I guess they must have. Man, I don't know. But
the rest of the week was so I had to
run a lot of parts around and we got off
in that little tangent about ancillary businesses. But and then
my boss. Let's see, Wednesday, I had my CAD class.
(27:44):
The computer aided to sign and drafting you, and that
was an experience and we got homework out of that. That. Man,
this learning curve is extreamly steep, dude.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
So I actually literally have nightmares about what you're going
through right now. Actually have nightmares, literal nightmares of being
I'm deadly serious. I get nightmares of having to be
back at school, yeah, and learning and papers and do dates.
And I just I really did not that. The whole
(28:25):
school experience was when I was glad to put behind me.
Speaker 2 (28:27):
I didn't have any of that. In machine school, machining school,
there was never really homework. I mean, you don't have
a lathei or a mill at home, you know. So,
but this I have a computer at home, and what
happens is the is the professor lectures for about an
(28:48):
hour and then we're set on our own to do
our projects. Well, I had not one. I can barely
work a computer. Didn't have them in high school. We've
talked about this before. I mean I just really am
behind the curve.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
On computers, computer literate.
Speaker 2 (29:06):
He really, really really am. I'm learning though, and the
the hardest lesson for me to learn has been you're
not going to break it, because I am terrified of
hitting the wrong button, and you know, the hard drive
starts to flame. Everything that's on the computer is completely
(29:28):
wiped out. And everybody says, it really doesn't happen that way.
You're watching way too many movies. You know, Yes, exactly,
it's it's not going to happen. So that to get
that through my head that it's just a it's just
a command. You can undo the command, or you can
redo the command. You know, it's no big deal. So
(29:50):
getting that straight is helping me become more computer literate.
But the software or this, you know, can software. I
hadn't ever experienced any of it before. So man, it
was learning and and he was he was going really
fast in the lecture. I'm trying to keep up. I
don't know what's going on. I'm trying to get this
(30:14):
drawing done in class and it's just not going well.
And then I see people start to leave, and he,
the professor, says, oh, yeah, if you guys want to
do this at home, that's fine. I don't care, he said.
I'm just here to answer questions after the lecture. After
the lecture, Oh, OK, so if you guys want to
(30:35):
go do it at home. So I did. I went
home and the last two days we had five drawings
to complete with all the dimensions noted, and I got
it done and precisely. Uh, just different weird parts. Like
one's called the base plate. You know, it's a angular
(30:58):
plate with a couple holes in it. And these are
very rudimentary drawings. I mean, if we got that into
the machine shop, it would be sent back because there's
no you know, there's no type of metal, No you know,
what kind of threading, what kind of radius, what kind.
Speaker 1 (31:14):
Of Oh you're making my head hurt stuff.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
So, oh my god, dude, I'm back in college and going,
oh my gosh, I got this project.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
To about the college thing.
Speaker 1 (31:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
Man, I'm having a blast just learning stuff. Dude. I
I didn't. I wasn't a good student in high school
at all. I think the only reason they put me
through is because I was a good kid and that
everybody liked my parents.
Speaker 1 (31:45):
You know, grief, seriously, it was.
Speaker 2 (31:48):
If it was Yeah, dude, I bet I barely made
it ungrades, barely I seriously think the only reason I
got pushed through is because I was a decent person
and then tried my hand at college.
Speaker 1 (32:01):
You never told me you were a social promotion cat.
You never told me.
Speaker 2 (32:07):
It's every report card, every single report card I've ever gotten,
has said great kid, if only he'd apply himself.
Speaker 1 (32:16):
No wonder you have that. That that's how that now
everything You just connected our whole time together because you've
admitted to me openly. I mean even on this podcast,
that you know I really could do something if I
just really you know, you spent thirty years at the
(32:37):
same job because it was like it was fun. It
was you know, Ry rocked the boat, right.
Speaker 2 (32:41):
See, it wasn't necessarily that. It was just that I
was having fun.
Speaker 1 (32:46):
Well exactly, And so why change it? If it ain't broke,
don't fix it right? See for me, me, I and
this is why I could never relate to you on
that level. It's for me. I hate stagnation. You know
that the problem for me was I'm in college. Yeah,
I'm learning this. I saw that as a means to
an end to get out and get to real life,
(33:08):
to where I could start making money, to where I
could start doing something that was right now in school,
I was like, Okay, I'm just forking over tons of
money to these people so I can get the certificate,
so I can maybe open up some economic doors down
the road. See, to me, it was a big ass
waste of time because and my money, because I was
(33:30):
making somebody else rich and I wanted to be working
on making me rich, right or making me some sort
of some sort of a living. But everything, everything that
I was doing in school, you know, so rewarding is yeah, bullshit.
I just I really just want to I really want
to get out there and start making some money, thank you,
and stop forking over thousands and thousands and thousands of dollars,
(33:52):
which is what I did, just to say that I
got a college education. I don't know that I use
much of my college education my data.
Speaker 2 (34:01):
You'd be surprised, Well, I think, you know, I mean
just from trivial stuff, if nothing else, you know, just
a broader knowledge that you have that a lot of
people don't like me. And that's okay. I mean I've
gotten through life for sixty years without, you know, or
with my limited knowledge when I was when I was
(34:23):
college aged. Though yes, I didn't have any money and
was trying to go to school and working at a
couple of radio stations and a gas station at the
same time, you know, And so it just it's just
a recipe for failure if you can't afford school and
(34:43):
are trying to work your way through it. I know,
I know that a lot of people do it. It's
just I think they might have had a better or
a higher ground to start from, or at least we're
better at manipulating the system to get some cash out
of it. But if you're straight, working in straight, paying
(35:04):
for school, all of you all on your own, now
you're a way better man than me. Because I didn't
have what it took to do that. But so when
I should have been learning doing that kind of stuff,
I was not. I was working and finally got into
the the job and the career that I loved and
(35:25):
enjoyed and spent thirty years there. But now that I've
been forced out of that and I'm having to learn
other stuff, it's been really fun. I just, you know,
to use your brain after a while and learned something
completely new, something that you have never ever done before,
(35:46):
is really kind of fun.
Speaker 1 (35:48):
Well, I I enjoy learning from you know, life in
the career and what we're going through. Now, sure that's
just me.
Speaker 2 (35:59):
I mean for you, something like if you went to
the junior college and took the machining course, I mean,
you wouldn't have any clues to what's going on, but
you might really enjoy it. Or you know, you'd be
a man and take welding, you know, something like that.
Speaker 1 (36:12):
You know, I wouldn't mind you just did that.
Speaker 2 (36:14):
I mean two nights, two nights a week is what
it took for me to get through the machining course.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
And I wouldn't I I wouldn't mind going to get
some basic carpentry skills. I took woods shop. I took
I took wood shop in school. But you know, uh,
and a lot of it would probably come back, you know,
how to miter and how to uh you know, uh
do use utilize the tools? You know, I have some
(36:40):
of my family members or builders, so I I wouldn't
mind having a little more technical expertise in that regard.
But again for me, it's like that that's an outflow
and I want I'm about intake right now. I want
I don't want to spend a time which I don't
have b money that I don't have in that pursuit.
(37:02):
Right now, I'm just trying to keep my head above water.
And where I'm at, I'm trying to advance. And you know,
to me, that's well, that's what you do when you've
got when you've got the either the time or in
your case, when it's yeah, mother, necessity is saying, hey,
you got to do this. Right. So, speaking of well,
(37:24):
let's let's you and I touch based on some things
happened over the weekend. Now that we've touched on real life,
we can go to, well, this is just about as
real life as it gets. Part of the reason I'm
enjoying Trump so much is on the weekends. Now he starts,
he starts truth socially and and then it ends up
on Twitter, of course on x and he's the memer
(37:46):
in chief and it's it all has a message and
he tweets out, Chippocalypse now is in, you know, Chicago. Chippacalypse.
Speaker 2 (37:57):
Now, I don't think it's I think ship.
Speaker 1 (38:00):
Okay, ship Papa, Well, okay, fine, yes, chappocalypse now. Anyway,
I love the smell of deportations in the morning, says
President Trump Chicago about to find out why it's called
the Department of War. And yeah, he's gonna he's declaring
war on crime. He's declaring war on criminal illegal aliens.
(38:23):
He's declaring war on illegal aliens, period. And they're going
to go into these these cities like Chicago that are
homes of generation generational crime. I mean, it's a way
of life in Chicago, it's a way of life in
Los Angeles, it's a way of life in New York.
And he's saying there's a better way.
Speaker 2 (38:44):
This is going to be a really unpopular opinion. Yeah,
I understand him doing it in Washington, d C. Because
they're special rules for Washington, d C. Yeah, the American cities,
that's on them, And you can leave those cities if
(39:04):
you know, if you want to, or you can put
up with the crime, or you can vote it out,
or you can, you know, get the right people in
there that supports the police and gets more police on
the streets and does all that. So I don't I
don't want to see the federal government taking over cities
except for Washington, d C. Because, like I said, that's
(39:26):
a whole special deal.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
Now, when you say taking over, what do you mean
by that?
Speaker 2 (39:32):
Well, I mean, if he's going to do in Chicago,
or if he wants to do in Chicago what he
did in DC, we don't need the Federal Police Department
policing Chicago.
Speaker 1 (39:42):
Well, it's going to be different, it's going to be
a different TAC because you're right, the President has to
work within the confines of the Constitution. So what he's
doing is he's surging ICE.
Speaker 2 (39:53):
By the way, don't have a problem with that. No,
that's fine.
Speaker 1 (39:55):
He's going to surge ICE into Chicago and they're going
to start coming after illegal aliens, which is exactly what
they're supposed to do. Now, he's going to put the
National Guard down there to protect the ICE agents because,
as you know, the ICE agents have been under attack. Now,
what about the Federal Bureau of Investigation. What is their jurisdiction.
Speaker 2 (40:18):
I guess it's it's all over the country, but I
think they have they have special rules as well. Well.
I mean, they're not issuing traffic tickets, They're not. They're
not gathering up looters, you.
Speaker 1 (40:32):
Know, no that they are. They are targeting criminal enterprises, right,
They are targeting Rico statute violators, federal.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
Law, federal law violators, yes, but you know in DC
he's going after turnstile jumpers and window breakers along with
everything else. If he tries that in Chicago, that just
I just that doesn't sit well with me.
Speaker 1 (40:55):
Well, again, I don't think that's any agenda.
Speaker 2 (40:57):
I don't think that's okay. Well, if he says he
wants to, I mean, he said he wants to go
into these cities, these blue cities and do what he's
done in DC, and it affects the case. I don't
want the national guard all over now. If the governor
wants to bring in his national guard or his state guard,
whatever they call it there.
Speaker 1 (41:18):
It's called the national guard there. Yes, every state has
their national guard.
Speaker 2 (41:22):
Yes, that's fine, let him do that. I don't know
that we need it federally appoint it.
Speaker 1 (41:28):
That's not what he's doing again, Sean, If you have
federal agents swarming in handling all the federal crimes, the
illegal alien crimes, and all the rest of them, what
does that do to the domestic police force there? What
does that do for them?
Speaker 2 (41:45):
No, it frees him up, for sure. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (41:47):
Yeah, and then all of a sudden, there's no excuse
for you.
Speaker 2 (41:51):
I guess my question is to What are the rules
of engagement for those National guardsmen? What are the arrest
powers that they have. I just want to make sure
it's all above board and we're not. You know, I
don't know some dictatorial regime marching the army in to
take over cities. Want to see that.
Speaker 1 (42:12):
Well, National Guard is not the army Number one, number two.
Speaker 2 (42:15):
I know, you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (42:16):
I understand exactly what you're saying. But it's all part
of the hype because a, is that what we saw
in Washington.
Speaker 2 (42:22):
D C. No, But again special rules. No.
Speaker 1 (42:27):
But again, we didn't see the marching of the military
in there. You know, everybody goose stepping and Hyle Hitler
and all that kind of stuff as they marched down
the street and started rounding up American citizens. That's not
what we saw, was it. So what you're going to
see in Chicago, as President Trump is saying, quote, We're
going in, what you're going to see is you're going
(42:47):
to see the federal government doing what it's supposed to do.
It's going to free up Chicago's police force, which they're
going to be grateful for. And all of a sudden,
you're going to see I can tell you what the
rule some engagement are. If one of these thugs, who
who has been accustomed to running Chicago, these Democrat enabled thugs,
(43:08):
decides he wants to get a little squirrely with a
member of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or decides to
get wants to get a little squirrely with a National
guardsman or with an ICE agent, guess what, they have
the right to respond. They have a right to go
home too, to their loved ones. So if the criminal
element does what it should do, which is retreat, which
is run and get out of Chicago, then all is
(43:32):
going to be well shot. But the minute they start
attacking ICE agents, the minute they start attacking FBI agents,
the minute they start attacking physically with harm a National guardsmen,
they will respond with overwhelming force, as they should because
criminals don't have a right to do the crap they're
(43:54):
doing inside of these cities. So what they're going to
see is they're going to see a whole They're going
to see a beefed up police force, and all of
a sudden, it's not going to be profitable or easy
to do to break federal law in the city of Chicago.
And I think they ought to come to Houston. Remember Houston.
Remember all those fires they had a few years a
(44:15):
few years back in the Chinese consulate as they were
burning all the documents that they had been stealing from America.
There's a reason why the traitorous infiltrators into our country
flocked to these blue cities. There's a reason why because
the law, the law don't fly there, man. So that's
what you're gonna see. What you're going to see is
(44:36):
the scales tilted back toward law and order. And that's
exactly what needs to happen. It's common sense. Uh, President
Trump talking about.
Speaker 2 (44:44):
I mean, I hope so yeah, again, I would rather
see the people of Chicago say enough is enough.
Speaker 1 (44:50):
They already are, They already are.
Speaker 2 (44:51):
But it's well, why aren't they electing the right people then?
Speaker 1 (44:54):
But it's because it's the criminal element versus the criminal
element versus actually criminal en and the government versus the
people out there. And you know what, Mayor, Mayor, let's
go Brandon Johnson. He's pulling at seventeen percent right now
among Chicagoans, right, so he may be out in his ass,
but you know, again, these people have been conditioned for
(45:18):
generation sean to believe this is as good as it gets.
Speaker 2 (45:21):
Well, that doesn't that doesn't really make it right to
have the federal government come over and take over. Well,
so that's all I'm saying. I want everything to be
about board. I want everything to ben.
Speaker 1 (45:31):
You keep on saying that, and if.
Speaker 2 (45:33):
The if the people of Chicago you aren't happy, then
they ought to change it.
Speaker 1 (45:37):
You keep on saying that they're going to quote takeover,
and they're not. They're going to They're going to for
the first time in my lifetime, they're going to go
in and do their duty and they're not going to
give a shit about which left wing feathers they ruffle.
They don't care. We're going to go in and we're
going to do our job. You don't want to do yours, Fine, Fine,
(46:01):
everybody's gonna see and this is the net effect of
everything that we're talking about. Everybody's going to see, Hey,
in Chicago, it doesn't have to be the way Mayor
Let's go Brandon or Lori Lightfoot or JB. Pritsker said
it was going to be. Oh, it doesn't have to
be this way. In Los Angeles the way Gavin Newsom
and Karen bas said it was going to be. Oh,
it doesn't have to be this way. In New York
(46:21):
that mayor what's his name, I just I'm looking right
at him, the mayor of New York City, who I
thought was going to drop out of ar Yeah, Mayor Adams,
and Kathy Holkl said it's going to be. But it
doesn't have to be this way. And this is this
is why the Democrats are so afraid of what Trump
is doing, because the American people are going to see.
(46:43):
You think the two point one million people that are
no longer Democrats that are fleeing the Democrat Party that
it's you think that exodus was massive, Wait till you
start seeing Democrat voters going, oh my gosh, I don't
have to walk down the street and be afraid anymore.
Way Democrats want me to be. Listen to this this
(47:04):
fake news journalist talking to President Trump saying, hey, are
you gonna go to war with Chicago? I want to
dump what a dumb ass broad Listen to listen to this?
Speaker 2 (47:15):
Okay, that darling, that's fake news.
Speaker 1 (47:17):
I don't listen.
Speaker 2 (47:19):
Be quiet, listen. You don't listen. You're never listening.
Speaker 1 (47:22):
That's why you're second grade We're not going to war.
Speaker 2 (47:26):
We're gonna clean up our city. We're gonna clean them
up so.
Speaker 1 (47:29):
They don't kill five people every weekend. That's not war.
That's common sense speak. God, you know, I just it'd
be great if I'm never in a position where I
can say that to one of these douchebags. But the
president just he the president just did. I mean, I'm
like going, yeah, that's exactly what these a holes need
(47:51):
to hear. Absolutely, yes, give it to her because she's
you know, are you getting good at war? Read Chicago.
It's like, shut the hell up. This this maligning of
the president's motives. Everybody knows, understands and knows why he's
doing what he's doing. Right, fake journalist put in her place.
They sensationalize, oh, you're going to war the way your
(48:14):
your meme. Everybody saw that place. I did. I saw
the meme and I said, that's pretty flipping funny. Yeah,
you know. And and again it's the president saying, I
love the smell of deportations in the morning. That's the
way it ought to be. You know that their illegal
aliens shouldn't be in America.
Speaker 2 (48:32):
Well, that's the problem. That's none of the problem that
I have.
Speaker 1 (48:36):
Yeah, yeah, well again.
Speaker 2 (48:38):
Problem is I have. It's you know, some National Garden
from Illinois, some suburb of Illinois is faced with a
turnstile jumper with a pistol. Well, what what is what happens? Then?
Speaker 1 (49:01):
What do you do if if somebody, if you're a
National Guard law enforcement, they won't be doing their their
their mission is UH to protect federal assets and to
protect federal agents. That's their mission. Now if they see
(49:21):
a guy out there gunning down people in Chicago, what
what would Sean Chastain say If you've got a unit
of guardsmen and some guy takes an oozy and starts
opening up on all of these people in the middle
of the crowd, and they just sit there and do nothing.
No no, no, no, no no, I'm deadly serious. What what
(49:44):
would Sean Chastain's response be to those guardsmen who sat
there and watched their countrymen get massacred by a by a.
Speaker 2 (49:51):
Criminal that they should have stepped in. Exactly, I don't
want to see state.
Speaker 1 (50:01):
I get it, I get it, But give me an
example of when President Trump has ever ordered anything like that.
Speaker 2 (50:11):
I can't. I can't either up until Kent State you don't.
You could have said the same thing.
Speaker 1 (50:16):
Yeah, who ordered that?
Speaker 2 (50:19):
I have no idea.
Speaker 1 (50:20):
Democrats? Democrats?
Speaker 2 (50:22):
All I know is it, you know for dead in Ohio.
Speaker 1 (50:25):
Yeah, well I dude, I'm just going to say that
if they're there and uh, they see a guy, Oh,
we got a guy with a gun, They're going to
hop on the horn to Chicago p D say, look,
got a guy with a gun here jumping the turnstile.
You might want to get down here, You might want
to get your patrol units down here. You know, that's
(50:46):
what's going to happen Chicago. Chicago p D is going
to show up. And if and if they don't, if
they say, well, we don't help, the National Guard and
this guy ends up opening up, National Guard is going
to say at three fifty five in the afternoon, we
notified Chicago PD of a man with a firearm and
they allowed it to happen. Yeah, And what's going to
(51:06):
be the net effect the Democrats? The Democrats, because they
didn't want to implement law and order, are going to
be responsible for the massacre of more Americans, which is
what they've been doing. So these guys, because they are
military trained, they're going to have the discipline because they
are military trained and they have the right orders. You're
(51:27):
there to protect federal assets and federal personnel. That's your job.
Speaker 2 (51:32):
That's fine.
Speaker 1 (51:33):
And the FBI is going in to prosecute federal crimes
and to arrest on federal crimes. And guess what ice
is going in to enforce federal immigration law. And if
anybody wants to get scorely with them, they will be
able to respond in kind. And the increased I mean,
if you're a crook in Chicago and you see the
National Guard out and you see FBI agents, what is
(51:57):
your inclination going to be? You're going to sit there
and just shoot everybody up the way you've been able
to do. No, the net effect is going to be
safer streets, increase police presence, more eyes and there. And
this is what the Democrats don't want. This is what
they can't handle is having their own voters being shown
(52:20):
there's a better way. And well that leads me to
I don't know if you saw what Yasmin and sorry
she's a Democrat congresswoman, what she said in regards to
illegal aliens. Now I get sorry, I get people bitching
at me because they think I'm too pejorative. I'm too
(52:42):
an anti Democrat. I don't give them a fair shake.
They say when I call them anti American, when I
call them an American, when I call them lawless, when
I say that they want to destroy our country, that
I'm being rhetorical. Hell, you've even said it to me,
that I that I that I am exaggerating because I
don't like leftists, because I don't like the left wing. Well,
here's yes, Yasmin, I'm sorry, And she is saying that she,
(53:07):
as an elected official in the United States, is a
member of Congress. She's there to represent everybody in her district,
even illegal alien foreign nationals. Listen.
Speaker 3 (53:18):
So I didn't realize this was such a controversy until
the right wing media started attacking me for using the word.
So I googled the word constituent. The definition of constituent
is somebody who is part of a community.
Speaker 1 (53:31):
She like, googled it. I mean, that's what we like,
jen millennials. Do we google it? And you know, we
didn't look in Webster's dictionary, but she went to Google.
Speaker 3 (53:41):
It doesn't matter what their legal status is. If somebody
is an asylum seeker, if somebody has a green card,
if somebody is a US citizen, if somebody lives in
the community, I represent them. Constituent does not mean voter.
I don't care if these If none of these individuals
can vote for me, I don't give a shit.
Speaker 1 (54:03):
No, I don't give a SHITCKA. So here is the
Democrat Party that illegal alien foreign nationals are their constituents
right on the same level playing field as American citizens. Yeah,
and they say I am pejorative for saying these people
(54:26):
are anti American coops? What do you say?
Speaker 2 (54:32):
Yeah, I mean, I guess if that's the definition, the
Merriam Webster definition, maybe she's right, but it sure doesn't
sound right. It sure doesn't sit right that an illegal
alien has the It's the same ear that I get
out of my congressman.
Speaker 1 (54:50):
Is that why we elect members of Congress to represent
illegal alien foreign nationals other people from other countries?
Speaker 2 (54:58):
I wouldn't think. So that's that's not what I go
to the battle box for.
Speaker 1 (55:02):
No. And by the way, she went to Google. She
didn't go to Merriam's dictionary, Merriam Webster's dictionary. She went
to Google. She probably went to Wikipedia, which is left
wing compromised, you know, to the nines, you know, and
they're they're redefining the language. And again it's right back
to what President Trump said. Common sense says, when you're
(55:22):
an American, you elect an American politician to take care
of Americans, not foreign nationals, not people from other countries.
You don't elect Americans to to look out for the
welfare and the well being of criminally legal aliens and
put them on the same level playing fields as a
law abiding American citizen. That that is not common sense.
(55:46):
That is not the founding of this country. That is
not the constitution. Dude. These people are Pat Guano crazy,
and I'm sick and tired of having to to play
nice with people who are obviously trying to undermine what
it is to be an American.
Speaker 2 (56:05):
I'm with you, man, Yeah, anyway.
Speaker 1 (56:08):
It just common sense to me. I don't elect you
shrubs to go up there and say, oh, yeah, illegal alien,
just like Salsato, you know, in illegal aliens. Word with
me is the same as Salsado's, who's been an American
citizen all of his life. Right. That's that is not
what you elect government to do. That is not their job.
(56:30):
Their job is to be for America, by America, and
in America. This is this, that's your job appealing to
foreign nations. That that's the America last crowd. I want
no part of it, no part of it all. All right, man,
you got anything special this week? Just one more.
Speaker 2 (56:51):
Inside the beltway thing.
Speaker 1 (56:52):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (56:53):
That I don't know who it came from. I don't
think it came from the president himself, but somebody in
his administration floated the idea of outlying weapons sales to
trans people.
Speaker 1 (57:08):
DJ.
Speaker 2 (57:09):
Yeah, well whoever floated that idea should read the Constitution
again and maybe be fired.
Speaker 1 (57:17):
Yeah, should be fired, should be fired.
Speaker 2 (57:19):
Uh. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (57:20):
It is not illegal to be trans, whatever the hell
that means. You know, it is not illegal to be
diagnosed with genderness. For you, if you're a transvestite and
you're just a freak and you want to get your
kink on, that's not illegal. And it doesn't mean that
you should lose the ability to defend yourself with a
firearm if some you know, if some dude wants to
(57:41):
kick the garbage out of you because he discovers you're
not a real female, right, you should be able to
defend your life with a firearm. Yeah, you know, you
should be able to defend your life with a firearm.
That's not illegal. Now if you're if you're insane, if
you're nuts and the cocktails made you insane, you've been
adjudicated as being a nutcase, Well then then there's already
(58:04):
along in the books that says you cannot have a firearm.
But the idea of making the criteria trans I tell you, man,
the aforementioned gun owners of America came out and said
we do not support this.
Speaker 2 (58:16):
Good okay.
Speaker 1 (58:17):
Because you start making that arbitrary argument, then it's not
going to take long for a for a Democrat to say, hey,
maybe no conservatives should have that.
Speaker 2 (58:30):
Or you know, black people are shooting black people all
the time. That's why there's so much issue in Chicago.
Are we going to start saying, well, we just can't
sell guns to black people anymore because see what they
do with them.
Speaker 1 (58:45):
Well, that's already been tried. Remember the Jim Crow South.
The first example of right of gun control was was
the left wing Democrat whites in the South disarming freed blacks.
That's the first example of gun control in the United States,
and it's all part of the Democrats racist yes, gun
(59:08):
grabbing history.
Speaker 2 (59:09):
Absolutely Okay, Well I feel better now that you have
said that, and that GOA has said that, and whoever
loaded the idea is an idiot.
Speaker 1 (59:20):
It is a is it? Yeah? That this trial balloon
is really a lead balloon, because no conservative anywhere is
going to back that, none, zero, not I And if they,
if they, if they really want to undermine their their coalition, uh,
they'll they'll push that. If they don't, they'll just let
that go be a week headline, a very week week headline,
(59:43):
a weekly headline, and then let it go because and
it should never be revisited again. Absolutely good.
Speaker 2 (59:49):
Well, I wish me luck pale all right, I will
because Tuesday morning, I am taking my you a pilot's license.
Do it test so.
Speaker 1 (01:00:03):
By the way, speaking of which, there is a neighbor
of mine who is ordering I believe it's Chipotle, and
a drone is delivering the burrito. On every weekend, I
see this drone come by, It comes down, it lowers
the order down into the front yard of the person,
and then it takes off and heads out. I mean,
(01:00:25):
cool looking drone. My wife thinks we're being spied on.
I don't know. I think that's I think that's Chipotle
because they're doing doubt Dallas is the test network or
the test market. I should say, I.
Speaker 2 (01:00:37):
Don't understand how they're doing that. They're doing that here
in Weatherford too with Walmart. Yeah, but from the from
the test that I have to take. Uh, you have
to maintain a visual line of sight with your drone,
and so I don't understand how they're doing that when
(01:00:58):
there's no pysic way that somebody from Walmart here or
the Chipotle store around the corner from you, there's no
physical way they can see that drone. So I don't
know what.
Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
Well, maybe they've got a camera mounted on a.
Speaker 2 (01:01:14):
But yeah, no, but that doesn't matter. You still have
to maintain visual line of sight.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
Right, But I'm saying maybe they have a camera mounted
on a large fire that they can watch the drone.
Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
As that's not in the rules. The rules are you
have to have a visual line of sight, even your
visual observer, which you know if you have a big
drone mapping project or something like that. Yeah, they still
have to see it with their eyes. They can use
binoculars to kind of look for guy wires or stuff
(01:01:48):
like that, but they can't depend on the binoculars. Your
visual line of sight has to be with your own eyes.
Speaker 1 (01:01:55):
Oh well, you know that's a fantast.
Speaker 2 (01:01:58):
I just don't understand how they're doing that. How are
the retailers Again, this is a brand new world for me,
so I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:02:06):
Well, what if it's GPS guided.
Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
Again? According to the rules right now about the test
that I'm about to take tuesdayles, Yeah, you have to
have a visual line aside to your drone.
Speaker 1 (01:02:17):
I would ask your instructor how the hell they're getting
away with this? How are they? What are they doing?
By the way, there's got to be a pilot.
Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
Well I did ask that, because yeah, there's a pilot
or maybe you know they they loaded and then the
computer takes over and does everything. But I did ask
my instructor that, and he said that they probably paid
a whole lot of money to the FAA to be
able to either invent some new rule or bend a
(01:02:47):
rule or break a rule or whatever.
Speaker 1 (01:02:49):
Give them a waiver, you know, and either way.
Speaker 2 (01:02:51):
Yeah, I mean that's what it comes down to.
Speaker 1 (01:02:53):
Yeah, they're going to to do that exactly. There's going
to be some money in trained drone flyers who can
show up that you put layer to Walmart or whoever's
doing Amazon is also i think doing some of these deliveries.
And it's quite impressive. So there's money to be made there, man,
there's money to be made. You you could be a
drone coordinator.
Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
And we don't hey test Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (01:03:15):
There you go, Good luck, buddy, And you know what,
we'll talk about drones and the military applications probably in
the coming weeks because that's the next gen of a
fighter aircraft drone.
Speaker 2 (01:03:25):
YEA, since we have them, I don't see why we
need a boot on the ground anywhere. It just doesn't
you know, door to door stuff. I guess, dude, you
need sometimes.
Speaker 1 (01:03:34):
But they are talking about a level of sophistication. I
can't even wrap my head around. You're talking about a
hundreds of drones surrounding aircraft one aircraft and being part
like a like an appendage would be, like your arm
would be to your body, being an appendage of that
aircraft and being able to either be a shield or
(01:03:55):
be an offensive weapon or whatever. They need these drones
to do surveillance. It's quite extraordinary. So maybe in the
coming weeks we'll talk about that good luck, Bud.
Speaker 2 (01:04:06):
All right, I'll let you know brother, thanks peace.
Speaker 1 (01:04:09):
That right there is gonna put a wrap on this
Salcedo Storm podcast till we visit again. My friends, Remember this,
Society's worth is not measured by how much power is
stolen buying out of control government. Society's worth is measured
by how much power is reserved for you and me,
we the people. You keep fighting for freedom out there,
my friends,