Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Hello, I'm you happy, Pepook.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Neil Smith, and old Buck Buddy. Are you hearing Neil Neil?
Speaker 1 (00:09):
I miss you, man. I have a question. Respect for me.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Downs breaking a major story, Chris, congratulations.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
Listen to a single score podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:43):
I got a question for you.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
What do you think the consequences should be for someone
who decides they want to go and murder a Supreme
Court justice? What do you think the punishment should be?
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Now?
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Granted, let's let's put into evidence the fact that this
individual did not succeed in following through with his mission.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
He failed, but he planned.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
To kill, traveled all the way from California to kill
Justice Kavanaugh on the Supreme Court. Now, what do you
think the appropriate punishment for this individual would be? Would
it be twenty years, twenty five years? What about eight years?
(01:25):
That's what this guy got eight years from a Beijing
Biden appointed judge. I'm reading from the Karl Rove never
Trump network federal judge who sentenced the defendant found guilty
of attempting to assassinate US Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh.
It's being criticized by conservatives on social media for the
length of the sentence and concerns about Nicholas Roski, who
(01:47):
goes by Sophie, identifying as transgender. Judge Deborah Boordman, a
Biden appointee, sentenced Roski to eight years in prison Friday
for attempting to assassinate Kavanugh on June of twenty twenty two,
in the week before the Supreme Court's landmark Dobbs decision.
The sentence is more lenient than what the Justice Department
had sought. Prosecutor said Roski should face at least thirty years,
(02:10):
while Roski's defense team had asked for eight. Boardman said
during a sentencing hearing that while Roski's actions were quote reprehensible,
she also considered a string of mitigating factors, including that
Rosky spontaneously confessed to and cooperated with police uh huh
(02:31):
after being caught Right. Maryland US District Judge Deborah Boardman,
a Biden appointee, is a national disgrace. Mike Davis, a
conservative lawyer and strategist and former chief counsel for nominations
for Senate Judiciary Chairman Schuck Grassley, wrote on X on Friday,
and He's.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
Right, folks, what does it take? What does it take?
Speaker 3 (02:51):
They're out there killing us, and then they're letting their
left wing loans off easy when they target us. Something
else that's going on out there, folks, just part of
the lies of the left. I suppose you can call
it this, this idea surrounding the government shutdown, that taxpayer
dollars are not going to illegal aliens through medicaid and
(03:13):
other means. They're actually claiming with a straight face that
this isn't happening. I'll give you an example of the
left wing just looking at you and just lying to
your face. Here's quintessential liar. Abby Philip at CNN. Listen
to this.
Speaker 4 (03:31):
The other debate about who's going to get taxpayer funded
medicaid in this country. That's what the means are about.
That's what the fight is about. Democrats want to make
it about this subsidy issue they don't want out to
the end of the year, by the way, But the
real thing is they filed legislation to repeal what the
Republicans did this summer, and so these two issues have
(03:52):
been conflated. But the fact is they don't just want
the subsidies. They want other things, and the President is
drawing attention to it. I think in a pretty clever way.
We just had a national emergency medical.
Speaker 5 (04:04):
Still not going to illegal immigrants, Scott. And it really does.
It's not.
Speaker 6 (04:08):
It is, so it doesn't.
Speaker 5 (04:11):
No, it's not.
Speaker 4 (04:12):
It really does.
Speaker 5 (04:12):
Listen the part of the bill that deals with the
money that goes to uh, two states, it doesn't say
anything about their immigration policy. So red state or blue state,
those states are getting less money from the federal government
that still has to be dealt with and that has
nothing to do with immigration. And and again, Medicaid does
not go to undocumented immigrants.
Speaker 7 (04:33):
Uh.
Speaker 5 (04:34):
SNAP does not go to undocumented immigrants. Uh you know,
CHIP does not go to undocumented immigrants. I don't know.
I mean, Scott, prove me wrong.
Speaker 4 (04:44):
How many bluestates show me the law money?
Speaker 6 (04:46):
How show me?
Speaker 4 (04:47):
Mike Johnson showed.
Speaker 5 (04:48):
It, Scott, show me the US Show me the US
Code where it says that they're allowed to get medicaid funding.
Speaker 6 (04:54):
Will I will on social media?
Speaker 1 (04:56):
It doesn't. It doesn't.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
In fact, the law says exactly the opposite.
Speaker 4 (05:00):
So it's trying to repeal the Republicans.
Speaker 5 (05:03):
Scott. That is a lie. Okay, Now you might you
might want to dispute whether or not states should get
reimbursed from the federal or should get federal dollars for
medicaid at the levels that they got it before. And
that's a different issue. But that's not an issue that's
actually tied to immigration. And you know it, but go ahead.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
I mean, that's just such bs, folks, it's just such bs.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Democrats. They repeat this claim over and over again. Medicaid
is not going directly illegal aliens.
Speaker 3 (05:31):
No, you know what Medicaid is going to, folks, It's
going to the states, and the states repackage. They take
that money and they fund their own state initiatives to
give you illegal aliens health care. That there's subsidies from
the federal government to give you illegal aliens healthcare on
the state level. So the federal dollars fund the state programs,
(05:53):
then the state gives that money and that But this
this is why Abbey Phillip is other saying, well, technically speaking,
no federal dollars are going to the illegal aliens, folks.
This is the This is the butcher shop. This is
the butcher shop all over again. The butcher shop claims, well, hey,
we don't take any money from the federal government for
(06:15):
abortions right, They just take federal money to pay their salaries,
to keep the lights on, to to pay for their facilities,
to pay the rent. Right, and then all the abortion
money is profit that goes back into the organization. So
the the idea that that no money goes to abortions
(06:38):
is is just that's the argument that Abby Philip is making.
And it's an absolutely a complete and utter lie. She's
the one who was lying here, folks. Does she forget
Doge and what they uncovered.
Speaker 8 (06:54):
We started the top of the system, mapping the whole
system of so Security to understand role the fraud was.
And there's a lot of great people there that showed
us in really a lot of waste and so that
came up with a big list of stuff they're working on.
You've heard them that already. But this is what jumped
out at us when we saw these numbers. We're like,
what is this? In twenty one you see two hundred
and seventy thousand people goes all the way to two
(07:16):
point one million and twenty four These are non citizens
that are getting social Grete numbers.
Speaker 6 (07:23):
Yeah, this is a mind blowing charge.
Speaker 8 (07:25):
Yeah, just this this literally blew us away, Like we
went there to find fraud and we found this by accident.
And this isn't political. By the way, my parents' immigrants,
Uh yeah, this has been great to us. My brother's
sister all born in Spain. I'm pro legal immigration. This
is not this is not political. This is not political.
(07:46):
This is about America and the future of America. And
there are a lot of good people in the system
that pointed this in this direction. I want I want
to honor them right now that work in the garment today,
who took risk to show us these numbers and tell
us what's going on. So I want to stop for
a minute. I want to tell I want to honor
those people today. Very good people, very good people. I
(08:07):
have been from DC to sociality offices to the border
to track this down and very good people have helped
us along the way. I want to thank them.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
Yeah, this number.
Speaker 8 (08:18):
What this is is when you come in the country
if you're illegal, there's a couple ways to come in.
You come in through a port of entry, and you
can tell them you're afraid, you'll get they'll give you
an asylum asylum case, you'll get an interview, then you
get in. That's one way to do it. Another way
to do it is to just go to the border. Literally,
this happened. I talked to border patrol myself. Elon was
there too. I went to Laredo and I went to Bronsville.
(08:41):
Elone went to Eagle Pass. You walk up to bordportal
officer and you tell them you want to come in.
They have a couple of choices. They could charge you
with a misdemeanor or a felony under thirteen twenty five,
or they can make it an administrative offense like a
park get ticket. Basically they were told to do that,
make an administrative offense on a last administration, and then
you will walk across the border.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
They do.
Speaker 8 (09:03):
It's called a release in your own recognizance and they
give you an nta notice to appear, which to period
to judge. The way times on judges are like average
six years.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
Look at Garroculo.
Speaker 8 (09:13):
See it on immigration judges there's only seven hundred of them.
This is five point five million people. Okay, So what happens. Then,
once you're in the country and you've got asylum, do
one of these pathways and we map the whole thing out.
You can apply for a work document. You file a
seven sixty five. It's the work form. You get this
(09:33):
form called the seven sixty six, that's the authorization, and
then Social Security Administration automatically send you in the mail
you're so a street number, No interview, no idea.
Speaker 6 (09:44):
This is worth like just reiterating it's not that it's not.
People sometimes think that under the Biden administration that he
was simply asleep with the switch.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
He wasn't asleep.
Speaker 6 (09:53):
They weren't asleep with the switch. It was a massive,
large scale program to import as many illegals as possible,
ultimately to change the entire voting map of the United
States and disenfranchise the American people. Yeah, they had a permanent,
deep blue one party state from which there would be
no escape.
Speaker 8 (10:11):
Look, if I hadn't seen this myself, I'm not trying
to believe it. I went through it myself and mapped it,
and Elon is right. This is true that defaults in
the system, from Social Security to all of the benefit
programs have been set to max inclusion, max pay for
these people, and minimum collection. That's what's happening. We found
one point three million of them already on Medicaid as
an example. We've gone through on every benefit program we
(10:34):
went through quick.
Speaker 3 (10:35):
Somebody wake up, Abby Philip, somebody let the folks over
at CNN. No, yeah, our money is going to illegal aliens.
Our benefits are going to illegal aliens.
Speaker 8 (10:44):
We found groups from this particular group of people, this
five point five million people in those benefit programs. And
then what was really really disturbing us was why we're
asking ourselves why. And so we actually just took a
sample and looked at voter registration records, and we found
people here registered to vote in this population, yes.
Speaker 1 (11:04):
And who did vote.
Speaker 8 (11:05):
And we found some by sampling that actually did vote.
And we have referred them to prosecution at the Home
Mad Secure Investigation Service already already, that's already happening here.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
So the liars are CNN folks. The liar is Abby Phillip.
They're the ones peeing on our feet and telling us
its raining. The show behind the show was Sean Chastain.
Next on the sal Sado Storm podcast.
Speaker 8 (11:28):
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Speaker 3 (15:03):
Today I have the show behind the show and Sean
Shastain is back.
Speaker 1 (15:06):
Hey buddy, hey man, sounds like you're a little off.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
Yeah, I'm I didn't get a lot of sleep. I
think it's either allergies or something along those lines. You
didn't get a lot of sleep before the night before
we're recording this, So just kind of dragging.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
I am holding in my hands.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Listen, Hello, Texas.
Speaker 2 (15:28):
That is a summons. I am moving in my for
jury duty.
Speaker 1 (15:34):
Well yeah, fun. Never done it, You've never done see.
Speaker 3 (15:37):
Now that really pisses me off because I mean, you
know how busy I am. And I deferred this once,
and I'm like, guys, really, oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
We talked about it when you deferred it.
Speaker 3 (15:50):
Yeah yeah, And so you've never You're older than I am,
and you've never received a summons.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
I think I received one once and I think that
by the time I opened it it had passed because
I'm not really good about that kind of stuff about
opening mail when it when it comes, I see, if
it's not a check, I really don't care most of
the time. Mm hmmm. And there were no consequences as
(16:18):
far as I know. I've never been uh, you know,
pulled over and arrested for not going to jury duty.
I've never gotten a letter saying, hey, you missed jury duty,
You're in trouble, nothing like that.
Speaker 2 (16:29):
So interesting.
Speaker 3 (16:31):
Well, I'm going to show up, and I know what's
gonna happen. I'm gonna show up. I'm gonna sit down. Hey,
what do you do for a living. I'm a conservative
talk show host. I have a television and radio show
in a podcast.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
Oh sorry, thank you, so goodbye.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
I'm gonna I'm gonna waste my entire day, gonna take
time off of work, gonna have to pay for parking,
do all that kind of stuff, just to have somebody
tell me what I already know that nobody that there
are There are no two parties that are going to
that are going to want to have a conservative talk
show host or anybody in the media on their jury.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
They're just not nop.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
So it's to me they.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
Really ought to do a pre screening questionnaire, you know.
And if you're a member of the media, I don't I.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Can't know everybody would claim they're a member of the media,
especially with YouTube and all that stuff now, or everybody
would claim I'm a practicing Nazi.
Speaker 3 (17:31):
Well we'll see again. I'm not claiming to be a Nazi, dude.
It's not like you can't go out and look up
the Chris Salsado show.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
It's every I know. But if they had that pre questionnaire,
nobody would go to jury duty. Well yeah, I mean
maybe some kind of nerd that just wants to.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
But but if you lie on it, then then and
they find out, Let's say they do some random spot
checking and they make it it's a five hundred dollars
fine for lying on I think there is a fine
if you're caught lying on this registration stuff.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
So I'm not sure anyway.
Speaker 3 (18:07):
I'm just this is me not wanting to go, and
it just I don't know, man, only because I know
it's a waste of time. If I actually thought that
I could actually be selected for a jury, I think
I might find it interesting. Everybody that says that part
I know that participates in this, they say it's so
interesting once it's a pain to get there, but once
(18:28):
you're in it, it's interesting.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
I'm like, Okay, I'm down, but I know that I'm
going to get there.
Speaker 3 (18:34):
I'm going to go through all the trouble, and I
know they're going to reject me because nobody wants a
media person on their jury.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Nobody there, no, So you're illing with allergies or something. Yeah,
you know, mentally, I feel like I'm in my twenties,
if not younger. Okay, physically, they're just you know, every
once in a while, some sign pops up that you're
not in your twenty right, and the last two days
(19:03):
and I don't know what it's from. I don't know
if it's from repetition with machines at work. I don't
know if it's yanking on my lawnmower cord hello, Hello Texas,
or working the mouse with drawing for CAD class. But
my right shoulder is so sore, I mean like deep
(19:28):
to the bone sorely. So I don't know if it's arthritis.
I don't know if it's you know, something to do
with the ligaments or something like that. But Lee, man,
it just kept me up last night too, and I've
just been you know, sitting here digging at it with
my fingers and nearly in tears because it's so painful
(19:52):
when I press on the right spot. So I don't
know what that is, but gitting old just kind of
sucks in general.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
Else not for whoosies, that's for damn sure. So not
that I'm going to diagnose you here, but I did it,
just did it. Do you have any discernible physical activity
you don't normally do? That could be weighing on that
because and do you have a history of arthritis? If
your family has a history of arthritis, it may be that.
Speaker 1 (20:19):
Yeah, there is some congenital arthritis that all of us
suffer in our backs from my dad's side of the family.
That I mean, my sisters had multiple operations because of it.
Mine just hurts all the time. I mean, I'm never
not in pain from my back. But it's it's you know,
(20:42):
I lived through it. It's manageable. It's no big deal, right.
But this shoulder thing, Yeah, it just it just kind
of came out of nowhere. And so I don't know,
Like I said, I don't know if it's arthritis or
or something just else.
Speaker 3 (20:57):
You know, they can't take paintpills anymore because you ibuprofen
take out of it. Well, yeah, then there's that the
ibuprofen will cause heart heart problems, they say if you
take too much of it. And then there's the tail
in all that. They has some issues with it as well.
So I mean I actually asked a doctor, it was
(21:17):
actually the former CDC director Redfield, Well, if you can't
pop a seed of metaphine and you can't pop ibuprofen,
what can you take?
Speaker 2 (21:27):
Right?
Speaker 3 (21:27):
And then and they don't recommend that young people take aspirin.
They say aspirin could give you an ulcer or you know,
what is that rye syndrome? Is that what it's called
rye syndrome. I'm not sure if it's an our age group,
but I remember being told I shouldn't take it when
I was younger because it could give you rise syndrome
(21:47):
or something along those lines. But yeah, so it's like,
what do you take? So I'm doing Is it tumeric
or turmeric?
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (21:58):
Turmeric, I'm doing that.
Speaker 3 (22:00):
So and hoping that and I get these arthritic waves
like it'll like I'll get a wave of inflammation across
my body. I'll hurt for about a week and a half,
you know, I mean sometimes on my knee, sometimes in
my hands sometimes on my lower back and then it'll
go away.
Speaker 1 (22:20):
So there's a there's a book that keeps popping up
on my Facebook reels feed that is some natural medicine
and it's it might be amish published, but they have
you know, there's a cure for everything. Everything is in
(22:40):
this book that you know, if you've got some ailment
or some mental issue or something like that, there's some
kind of herb for it. So well, I don't know
if you're going, if you're you know, gonna totally scrap
the title and all or the ibuprofen or whatever, then
you know, maybe I'm sure there are a billion books
like that that because people who have been, you know,
(23:02):
treating themselves naturally for millions of years.
Speaker 3 (23:05):
So yeah, speaking of all natural I don't know if
you caught this. We did a space on this the
third hour of the Christalsado Show on Fridays called the
Third Rail, and we invited this lady from an ostrich
farm in Canada and her birds caught the bird flu right,
and then they were vaccinated and treated. Some of them died,
(23:29):
but those who survived in this four hundred ostriche farm,
they they now have natural immunity. So and by the way,
this farm is a farm for BioResearch. It's not it's
not for you know, producing you know, ostrich meat or
anything like that. These birds, because they've contracted a bird flu,
(23:51):
developed a natural immunity to it. They can pass on
that immunity through their eggs right to to other species.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
So what the the.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
Developers of this farmer saying these birds are are priceless
because they go through like everybody else does in this
ecosystem of ours, and they're part of that ecosystem. And
that the government of Canada just tried to slaughter all
the birds.
Speaker 2 (24:18):
Did you did you hear this story?
Speaker 1 (24:20):
So no, but I mean it's been happening here in
the United States because apparently, you know, when the bird
flu comes around and you hear news stories of of
you know, twenty eight million chickens being slaughtered, Apparently we
can't immunize our chickens here in America. Well, we can
(24:41):
pump up full of steroids and all other kinds of things,
but we can't unize them against the bird.
Speaker 3 (24:48):
And that that's and that what this is, This is
the pyiz The resistance of this whole story is that
the researchers at this ostrige farms say that if you
take out those ostrichs, you kill them, you're taking out
a vital a link rather of the entire ecosystem. This
is how we develop natural immunity. This is how interspecies
(25:11):
helps other species to develop these immunities to the diseases
out there. And since the United States does that with
slaughtering chickens, and the Canadian government tried it with these ostriches,
and I'll tell you how they avoided it, there's a
lot of speculation that big Pharma is driving this because
(25:31):
they don't want natural cures. They want you to have
to go to them for the cures to these ailments
that are out there, which may have been behind the
slaughtering of our chickens. And the Canadian government shows up,
seizes this farm, throws the two ladies who are in
charge of this farm in jail, and then just as
(25:53):
they were going to start, you know, slaughtering these ostriches,
one of the local Indian tribes shows up and says,
we're we're declaring this land. It's unseated land, meaning you
didn't we didn't seed it to you. So this land
is unseated land and we're going we're telling you cannot
kill those ostriches, and they had to pull back, the
(26:17):
government pulled back. So just try to wrap your head around.
You know, every species out there has ailments and illnesses.
Those who catch them and then survive build up that
natural immunity, which is exactly what we went through in
the pandemic that they were there. They were actually trying
to bullshit us and tell us, oh, vaccination immunity is
(26:38):
better than natural immunity, which nobody has ever ever said,
No science even backs up. So this is this is
part of this propaganda machine, these people say, and trying
to get medical care and treatments monetized, so you can't
go you can't get naturally cured just by eating eggs
(27:00):
or being part of the ecosystem. So it's a fascinating discussion.
But yeah, that's that's what happened, and the birds are saved, so.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
Yeah, that's cool man. Yeah, So I don't know what
good ostriches are except for boots, but well.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
They apparently people eat their eggs and.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
Others a lot of eating good board.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
That's a big egg. It's a big egg, and not
to mention the drumsticks on those things.
Speaker 3 (27:24):
Ostrich meat is is out there, you know, ostrich meat is.
But these these birds are being cultivated for their research purposes,
not you know, to kill to slaughter.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
So what else is going on in your world?
Speaker 1 (27:38):
Due? Oh, not much, man, just just working. And I'm
working at a couple of different shops. I'm helping a
friend out at his shop, and it just kind of
blew my mind. The other day I'm thinking, you know what,
a little maybe less than a year ago, I'd never
been in a machine shop, and now I'm working in
two of them, and justind of funny, I think, yeah,
(28:02):
oh yeah. The guy that I'm helping, he's he does more.
We do more small run stuff, specialty stuff for aerospace
racing outfits and oil field stuff, but he does major
runs of I mean eight, ten, twelve thousand parts, you know,
(28:27):
all that have to be machined. And so the other
day I was there working in the first operation on
one of the parts only last thirty seconds in the machine.
They're plastic parts, and so you're just like just standing
there the whole time, waiting every thirty seconds to open
the doors, change the change the stock out, get the
(28:50):
newly machined part out, put the raw stock back in,
and start it all over again. And then at the
other end of the shop is are these metal eye
hooks or eye hook points for some kind of massive
machinery because they're really thick steel and it will eventually
(29:15):
get welded onto plate that gets picked up by a crane.
And that runtime is fifteen minutes, you know, just running
back and forth to the to either end of the
shop to change out parts, and yeah, getting my steps
in and and maybe that's why my shoulder hurts.
Speaker 2 (29:36):
Well maybe, well maybe maybe not.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
You know, I was missus Salsada ordered some rocks to
put into some flower beds. We're finding that the rocks
don't wash away, finding the rocks actually are pretty and
that you don't have to replace them every year, right right, right,
So she orders these and not that the pebbles. She
(30:01):
orders some pretty nice size I mean four to five
inch rocks and one ton of them. Is was actually
nine hundred and some odd dollars both for rocks.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
Those are some fancy rocks.
Speaker 2 (30:18):
For rocks, dude.
Speaker 3 (30:19):
And then she then she found out she didn't have enough,
and she ordered some more.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
At the end of the day. It was close to
a couple grand just to get for rocks.
Speaker 3 (30:28):
That's a I'm thinking to myself, Man, I am in
the wrong business because I mean, you're charging for a
ton of rocks.
Speaker 2 (30:38):
I mean, granted, you.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
Got to get it out of the ground, you got
to you got to process it, you gotta sort it.
That does take time and it does take money. But
I'm thinking to myself, Wow, you're just You're just down
there selling rocks.
Speaker 2 (30:54):
Right when anybody could go out.
Speaker 3 (30:55):
I mean, I guess if you wanted to, uh and
gather up your own and feel your your Actually we
did that at one of our houses, went out to
a guy said he was going to build on this
particular part of his property that used to be part
of a floodplain. But they diverted the water upstream, so
all the all the river rock that was in the
river had been deposited as property. So he's like, wherever
(31:17):
he digs all, he's finding his river rock.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
Right.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
So he's digging it up and he's saying, come, please
take it off my hands. I have no place to
put it. So we went up got a big old
bed full of that rock. But man, if if we
had been enterprising, we could have just said, hey, sell
this stuff.
Speaker 2 (31:35):
That's a lot of money. That's it's a lot of money.
Speaker 3 (31:38):
So that, by the way, yeah, missus Salcedo is just
as sore as you are bending over.
Speaker 1 (31:43):
Putting in those Yeah.
Speaker 3 (31:45):
It's uh, that's what made me think of that when
you start talking about all the running around you were
doing and all that the increased business.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
When I was up in Yeah, I mean, it's a
good time to be in manufacturing right now, it looks
like because things are going well. But and then I
you know, speaking of that, I heard Mike Rowe the
other day on some broadcast just talking about the lack
of blue collar workers anymore. Gee, whiz man, there's opportunity everywhere. Yeah,
(32:15):
I know for some kids coming out of high school,
you know, and good money opportunities. So keep that in
mind if they're hounding you to go to college anyay.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
Well, you know, and you and I have talked about
this before, you know, we've been talking about it about
how the trades are now they're starting to be an
emphasis on the trades. My air conditioning guy shows up,
you know, does it diagnostic? That's sporn in fifty bucks,
that he just charges.
Speaker 2 (32:39):
You know, for his labor. So working with your hands.
Speaker 3 (32:43):
They've been overemphasizing college degrees, which are becoming increasingly worthless
because of what they're learning or not learning in these schools,
and people that can fix things are becoming very much
a commodity. So yeah, to all the all all the
thirty something folks out there thinking about what they're gonna
do with their lives, think about engineering. Think about working
(33:07):
with your hands fixing stuff because or you know, Automaker,
the new automobiles coming online are going to be are
going to take an engineering degree to figure out with
as much as much computer and all that kind of
stuff that's that is needed to program these things.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
But what started that thought was when I was up
in Colorado for our class sixtieth birthday, yeah, that we
had earlier this summer. We were talking about all the
jobs we did because we were all, you know, if
we were middle class, it was the very lowest end
of middle class, and so we would have to do
(33:48):
stuff for money, you know, just for gas money and
oun money. And one of the things we did was
steal moss rock from remote mountain proper bees that just
sandstone covered in moss. Yeah, and you would not believe
what people pay for that stuff. Really. Oh yeah, moss rock.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
I don't even know what that looks like.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
It's just moss covered rock.
Speaker 2 (34:15):
Really, it's sandstone with light like.
Speaker 1 (34:17):
In Yeah, because Lions. Uh, I don't know if you've
ever been a boulder and seen see you at Colorado University.
It's built entirely out of sandstone made or mind or no,
what is in mind? Quarried yeah, quarried Yeah in Lions, Yeah,
where I grew up, so pretty. It's just pinkish.
Speaker 3 (34:40):
Yeah, moss rocket is it's folk folks. It is what
it sounds like.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
It's uh like in moss covered rock. But we would go,
I mean, it's highly illegal and and we probably couldn't
could have gotten in a lot of trouble, but we
would take one of our beat up Bold trucks and
you knowed up some mountain road and find this rock
(35:05):
and just load it up. And I mean I remember
in Jeff's halftime sixty four Chevy pickup, we probably had
four tons of that stuff in the back and we
you know, scraping the bumper all the week to the
rock place that bought it, and luckily we found one
(35:26):
that didn't ask questions, so they just gave us cash
for that, and they made a fortune off of it,
I'm sure, and we were happy because we got some
cash out of it. But yeah, you talk about you
talk about some hard work working with stone or gravel
or rock or whatever, you're you're gonna be sore the
(35:48):
next day.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
Sure, I'll bet, I'll bet.
Speaker 1 (35:50):
Well.
Speaker 3 (35:50):
I guess I would be remiss if I didn't ask
you what you thought about the government shutdown.
Speaker 6 (35:56):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (35:57):
Yeah, I mean I have family members in the military
and family member in government services, so they're without paychecks
right now, which you know, it's always distressing. I mean,
I know they'll get it back, but it's it's still
it's distressing. I wish they wouldn't include military when they
(36:21):
do this shutdown stuff. Other than that, you know, the
government's not spending money at least, so that's a good thing.
Speaker 3 (36:31):
Well, seven hundred and fifty thousand employees at which I'm
sad to say your family appears to be some of them.
Seven hundred and fifty thousand employees are deemed non essential.
Yeah right, they're the ones who are furloughed, and Americans
are trying to ask the question, why am I paying
for non essential government? Yeah, and I think it's a
(36:53):
fair question. Now, we did some analysis. There are seven
and fifty thousand non essential employees in the federal government.
Do you know the average government salary.
Speaker 1 (37:01):
Pays uh, probably more than I'm making.
Speaker 3 (37:08):
Probably, yeah, a lot more than ninety seven thousand a year.
Speaker 1 (37:10):
Holy we happ are you kidding me?
Speaker 3 (37:13):
That's the average. There gonna be something make less, there
will be something to make more.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
Ninety seven thousand dollars.
Speaker 2 (37:20):
So when you do the math, it comes by My.
Speaker 1 (37:22):
Sister is you know, she's pretty high up in gs. Yeah. Yeah,
I had no idea because she seems like she's always broke.
So and she's the one that retired from the Navy,
so she's getting that pension as well. Well. Totally, MOLA
must have to start heading herrow from cash.
Speaker 3 (37:40):
Seventy three billion dollars a year we pay for non
essential government, and people are starting to say, why are
we doing that?
Speaker 1 (37:51):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (37:52):
Why are taxpayers being reamed to pay for government that
is not essential? And I think it's a fair question.
Oh yeah, And you know, to your point about the military,
a lot of us would would indicate that military jobs
are what you would classify as essential to the defense
of the country, so they could be umbrella in a
(38:12):
lot of people believe that's true, and I think a
lot of conservatives would, but I think the vast majority
of the expansion of government. Then you and I witnessed
from the occupation of the Oval office of Barack Hussein Obama.
They had the expressed intent of growing that government so
dang big that it could didn't have the prayer of
(38:33):
being administered. And that's exactly what we have. So a
lot of people are jonesing to and you know President Trump.
Kevin Hassett was out over the weekend saying, well, you
know what, if they're if they're not talking in good faith,
the layoffs are coming, quit talking about it. Do it,
quit talking, just do it, because I think we're using
(38:55):
your leverage is gone because the Democrats right now have
already shut down the government. The Schumers, the Democrats Schumer
shut down. If you better follow through because if not,
the next time, they're just going to shut it down
and they're not going to think twice about it.
Speaker 2 (39:10):
You better make them pay a price for it.
Speaker 3 (39:12):
So getting rid of that administrative state, I think is
a not, my opinion, a good thing.
Speaker 1 (39:16):
Oh heck, yeah, yeah, I mean yeah, non essential that
that is a mind blower, isn't it. How why do
we have them? Yeah, I don't. I don't know. And
and so you know, other than my people in the military,
because you know, they're not they're not struggling so much.
(39:40):
They've done okay because I lived for really if rugally
and uh, and are able to put some stuff away
and do okay that way. But man, there are so
many just grunts in the military. They're living a check
to paycheck. And it's not because they're buying new trucks
(40:03):
and eating out every meal. It's it's because they don't
make a ton. Yeah, true, And so I hate that
that they're not getting paid right.
Speaker 3 (40:14):
Now, Maybe if we cut the non essential government out
there and the unconstitutional government, maybe there'd be a little
more to go around to make sure that those who
are essential get paid well.
Speaker 1 (40:26):
And I saw some congressmen floated the idea of no
back pay for Congress. Yeah, and also thought was a
pretty good idea. I'd like to see that no.
Speaker 3 (40:37):
Back pay for Congress, no back pay for some of
these individuals who are being laid off. That this is
the Democrats bad bread and butter. And I'm hearing anywhere
between two and a half, depending on who you ask,
two and a half to four million federal employees, all
of them incentivized to vote Democrat. Yeah, right, or the
(40:58):
vast majority of them anyway, So out.
Speaker 1 (41:01):
They how to rethink that now that humors shut this down,
this is no way a Republican thing.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
Well, they're trying. They're trying to make it a Republican think,
and I don't think there's sure.
Speaker 1 (41:11):
But I mean, all the Republicans have to keep saying
is hey, yeah, we don't want our money going to
illegal alien healthcare. Yeah, be it in the form of
the emergency rooms or medicaid for you know, parolees.
Speaker 3 (41:27):
Well, coming into you, we had Abby Phillip of CNN
and Jennings Scott Jennings going back and forth. She's claiming
with a straight face that illegal aliens are not getting
medicaid money, and it's just an out and out lie.
She's accusing Scott Jennings of lying. She's lying because and
we all know the game. You know, the money gets
block rendered to get sent to the states. The states
(41:49):
filter it through their programs so technically it's not federal
money because it's been laundered through the state and the
states are paying for it. But this idea that, oh no,
there are no taxpayer dollars going to illegal aliens and medicaid,
you're out of your mind.
Speaker 2 (42:03):
It's a lot.
Speaker 1 (42:04):
It's it's it's like the old joke, the drinking joke.
It's uh, you know, a drunk comes up to a
guy on the street and says, hey, yeah, give me
twenty bucks. Guys, is, if I give you twenty bucks,
all you're gonna do is go buy booze with it.
He goes, oh, no, no, I got booze money. You know,
he's gonna he's gonna go eat or whatever.
Speaker 2 (42:24):
I got booze money already.
Speaker 1 (42:26):
They take that. Yeah, the the you know, the the
medical system, it's their booze money. That's that's it's you know,
I heard somebody talking about like planned parenthood. If you know,
they claim they don't spend any government money on abortions,
(42:48):
it's all to keep the lights on. Well, where's the
money that they were going to use to keep the
lights on?
Speaker 3 (42:53):
Yeah, the rent paid the lights on, the salaries paid
going to abortions. Yeah, so all the abortion money is
all profit right and that's how they're able to continue
to fund Democrat political campaigns. By the way, speaking of which,
it was something we didn't note on the podcast. We
talked about it on air and Houston, the largest abortion
(43:14):
mill in the country was shut down. It it lost
funding so they said bye bye uh and they're gonna
shut it down. So that that was one of the
tech one of the black eyes of Texas.
Speaker 2 (43:28):
Uh planned parenthood.
Speaker 3 (43:30):
The butcher shop, the largest facility shut down and now
it's it's a lot cleaner place in Houston because it's gone.
Speaker 1 (43:37):
Uh, they're still Houston.
Speaker 2 (43:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (43:39):
Well, and there's that, but hey, there is there is
something I want you to find and watch on social
media because I also talked about this bringing you in
uh before before you and I started talking.
Speaker 6 (43:51):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (43:51):
Our buddy at amuse on X he's an influencer. They're
showing a video of police officers out in Portland and
they're threatening to arrest a car that's trying to drive
on the streets and he's telling them, well, the streets
are occupied right now with this illegal protest over here.
And he's like they're like, wait a minute, we're taxpayers.
(44:14):
We pay for these roads. They're blocking the road. You
can't go through there. That's illegal what they're doing. If
you go through that crowd, you're going to be arrested,
say the Portland Police, this Portland liaison officer. Right, these
guys are actually providing security in Portland PD for terrorists.
(44:38):
By the way, Antifa has been declared a terrorist organization.
So all these guys want to do is drive on
a street, which they have the legal right to do.
The illegal activity is being conducted by Antifa. But Antifa
is controlling the cops in Portland. Isn't that nuts?
Speaker 1 (44:58):
Well, not only is Antifa controlling the cops, but the
these these judges, these out of control judges are controlling
things as well, not allowing Trump to put federal agents
in there to protect the federal assets. So I don't
I don't get where these judges are coming from and
(45:20):
why they're allowed to do what they're doing. I mean,
I'm no constitutional expert, obviously, I'm no legal expert obviously,
but it sure does seem like there's so many judges
out of control now able to uh make decisions from
across the country that have nothing to do with the location,
you know, where these these things are taking place, and
(45:43):
everything comes to a halt until the next judicial step.
What the hell is that about?
Speaker 3 (45:48):
Well, yeah, if only there was a constitually mandated group
that was to keep uh, you know, tabs and be
a check on these rogue judges. Oh, that's right, there
are it's called Congress. The people in Congress. And by
the way, speaking of judges, you saw that. You know,
you can threaten to assassinate and plan to assassinate a
(46:10):
sitting Supreme Court justice. You're only going to get eight years.
Speaker 2 (46:14):
Eight years.
Speaker 3 (46:15):
It was a an a Biden appointed judge. That's that's
These people are lawless. Uh, I know that you always
push back on me.
Speaker 2 (46:24):
For saying this.
Speaker 3 (46:25):
They don't want to be Americans anymore, dude, they really don't,
and they want to turn this into something else. And
that's just that's just proof positive what's happening and the shutdown,
what's happening with these judges, what's happening out there in
Portland at these people, they are rioting and breaking the
laws in defense so they can continue to keep illegal
(46:46):
aliens in the country. It's just I'm sorry, that's that.
That's exactly what they're doing.
Speaker 1 (46:53):
Yeah, I guess, I just I can never understand the
the endgame that they are looking for revolution.
Speaker 3 (47:04):
Man, we play that sound by before communist revolutions what.
Speaker 1 (47:07):
They're after, But they ain't going to be at the
top of the communist pyramid.
Speaker 2 (47:11):
Well, they don't think that.
Speaker 1 (47:13):
I just I don't understand that part.
Speaker 3 (47:15):
They've been told by academia this entire time that's what
you need for a just society, you need communism, collectivism,
and they bought it, hook line and sinker again.
Speaker 2 (47:26):
Back to our our education discussion.
Speaker 3 (47:28):
You know, maybe you'd save your kids a lot of
angst and not to mention a lot of brainwashing, send
them to a trade school. They don't have a lot
of time for that bullshit in trade school. So you
got to you actually got to perform.
Speaker 2 (47:41):
In trade school, you know.
Speaker 1 (47:43):
All right? Man?
Speaker 2 (47:44):
Well, hey, I hope you get some better get some
better sleep.
Speaker 1 (47:47):
Yeah, me too. Hopefully my shoulder will stop hurting, Hopefully
you'll uh your allergies won't kick in full blast, and
you'll get some sleep too.
Speaker 2 (47:56):
Amen. Brother, Hey, I have yourself a great week.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
Peace, how girl scout?
Speaker 3 (48:00):
And with that we limp across the finish line, my friends. Ugh,
just feeling it three ways from Sunday, folks. I'm just
hoping it passes.
Speaker 2 (48:10):
Hope you have a better start to your week till
we visit again.
Speaker 3 (48:13):
My friends, Remember this, A society's worth isn't measured by
how much powers stolen by government. A society's worth is
measured by how much power is reserved for you and me,
we the people. You stay healthy, and you keep fighting
for freedom out there, my friends,