All Episodes

December 8, 2025 80 mins
On this Salcedo Storm Podcast:

Chris and Sean reminisce about the good ol' days of TV. The boys get into a robust discussion over the U.S. targeting drug boats in the Caribbean. 
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Hello, are you happy people? 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 down Missy were breaking a major story. Chris,
congratulations single four podcast.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
My friends. As you know, we we love God on
this this podcast, the Chris Helsado shows have never strayed
away from talking about God and and the importance I
believe he has in our day to day lives. I
don't usually make podcasts, actually, I can't think of one
in recent memory, other than the holiday emphasized ones Easter

(01:07):
and Christmas, when we have theologians on, or when we
have holy Men on to talk about the importance of
those holidays. I can't think of a time when I
have dedicated an entire podcast to thoughts about God. And
I'm not going to do it this time, but I will,
and nor do I do self help on these podcasts.

(01:29):
Other than the fact I want Americans to take back
control over their government. To understand that we are supposed
to be a government of, by and for the people,
and we are not right now. So I prompt people
to take a more active role in their own and
the administration of their country because it directly impacts them

(01:51):
and their families. I'll give you some examples of this
in a minute. But I don't want what we do
on talk radio, or what we do in the podcast Realm,
or what we do in conservative thought media to be
interpreted as something that gives people worry. And I actually

(02:12):
got a phone call on this on the radio show.
This was about a week and a half two weeks ago,
who said that this guy told me that he has
friends who won't listen to talk radio anymore because it's
all bad news. And I was like, wow. And I've
often been asked you if you're going to or I've

(02:33):
actually heard it asked, hey, if you had bad news,
would you want to know or do you want to
remain ignorant, whether it be about a health diagnosis or
some bad things coming, would you want to know so
you could be prepared. I am always saying yes, I
want to know so I can either mitigate the damage,
avoid the damage, or at least be able to mentally

(02:54):
prepare physically prepare for what I got to go through.
Right So that's kind of where I land, and that's
kind of how I look at everything that I talked
to this audience about is hey, I'm letting you know
what's going on so you can do something about it.
I heard one of the I don't know if you
guys know this app. It's a Catholic app called Halo.

(03:17):
And every weekend my wife tease up, actually every weekday,
my wife tees up some of these discussions on this app.
And this last Sunday, my wife teed up a father
Mike had a wonderful probably his most impactable sermon that

(03:37):
I've ever heard him make, and he was talking about worry.
And he starts, you know, he cited all these studies
that say that Americans human beings, typically Americans in particular,
but we don't like waiting, and we don't like waiting
without purpose. And he started talking about the reason why
we don't like waiting is because we are we are

(04:00):
consumed with worry about what's coming about waiting in line.
You know, when is this going to end? We worry
about the end. Right, So, really what his focus was
was worry. And I've got this this stone called the
worry Stone. It sits on my desk and I pick
it up from time to time and I'll describe it
to you it's a clear resin oval shaped medallion. I guess, well,

(04:28):
you hold it. It's a stone. It's in the shape
of a small stone, and you hold it. And in
the middle of this clear plastic resin is the figurine
of an angel, right, and the worry stone is what
it's called. And there was a prayer that was included
with it in the little package that came in. And

(04:51):
the prayer goes like this, give your worries to the angels.
It's time to heal your heart. Every day is a
new beginning where love and hope can start. Give your
worries to the angels, release your doubt and fear. Trust
in God to always be there with angels always near.
And when I first got this, it was just like, well,

(05:12):
that sounds like a very nice idea. And you know,
I don't like I'm a worrier and I got that
from my mom. I just worry about stuff that I
don't have control over, and that is and I can
rationalize all day long that that's just stupid. You know,
I can sit there and tell myself that is counterproductive
worrying about stuff you have no control over. That's just

(05:32):
that's just insane, right, So what I got from this,
this message from this this priest on Halo this weekend was,
you know, worry is a lack of trust in God.
Worry does you know good? What's coming is going to come?

Speaker 2 (05:53):
Right?

Speaker 1 (05:54):
What's coming is going to come. The only thing you
can change is how you're going to handle it, right,
So worry worrying about it? He said, You can't be
a worrier and you and have joy in your heart
at the same time, you can't, so worry robs you
of your moments of joy. So don't do it. And
I guess it's just a different way of looking at

(06:16):
the world. And we can see problems developing on the horizon.
And part of the angst and the worry that impacts
so many people that cause them to tune out from
talk radio is and this is what they're saying. I
worry that about things that are coming. I can't do
anything about it, so I'll just sit here and worry

(06:40):
and not take any action to stop it. But also
what those surveys that the priest was talking about, Father Mike,
is that when people are taking action about what is
to come, they feel better, right, They feel really good,
because when you're taking action about things that are coming way,

(07:00):
you are able to psychologically and maybe in reality help yourself.
So I guess that this was again one of the
most impactful things I'd ever heard Father Mike say. And
worry is I know, easier said than done. Worry is counterproductive,
get rid of it, plan and simple.

Speaker 2 (07:20):
All right.

Speaker 1 (07:21):
So, but what might, in my opinion, contribute to your
worry is when you hear about things going on and
you choose to do nothing. I think that compounds the
worry because you feel helpless and you don't trust in
God to know where it's going now. So not worrying
isn't like just saying, hey, what will come will come,

(07:42):
and I'm just gonna I'm just not gonna do anything
about it. I don't think that's the message, right, I'm
not going to take steps to protect me in mind,
I don't think that's the message. That The message is
to act, to act, so you know you're doing and
you will be able to say, even if bad things
come your way, I did everything I humanly possibly could
to prevent its happening, right, And that way you can

(08:03):
deal with any negative and maybe even positive positive outcomes
that result. Let me give you some stories out there.
You know the DEA chief, the financial director under Barack
Hussein Obama. His name is Paul Campbell, who resigned in
twenty sixteen ahead of President Trump's administration. He had his
Virginia home rated and has been charged for agreeing to

(08:26):
launder twelve million dollars for the CJNG A Mexican cartel
while acting in his role at DEA, the Drug Enforcement Agency,
a Democrat was running drugs, helping to run drugs for
one of the drug cartels. That's what you get when

(08:49):
you elect a Democrat. What's the lesson? Don't do it.
Don't elect democrats. Do everything you can to prevent them
from having power over you. Why, Because it's folks, I'm
this close to making it an axiom. Democrat equals corruption, fraud,
Democrat equals fraud. It's a mathematical constant wherever you find

(09:12):
these people. And then there's this from the Epic Times.
The average weight for a doctor's appointment. You know what
it is, folks in America, thirty one days over a
month you are waiting, on average to go see a doctor. Right,
that's life under Obamacare. We said it was going to
get this bad we told you it was going to

(09:33):
get this bad, and it's only going to get worse.
I told you last week I think I did on
this podcast. The Democrats have double down, triple down on
failure on Obamacare. They will accept nothing but throwing trillions
more dollars at the trader's insurance companies to pad their
own pockets with using the traders insurance companies to launder

(09:55):
money into their campaigns.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
Right.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
Meanwhile, your policies are Meanwhile, you're waiting longer and longer
and longer to get seen by a medical professional, and
the quality of your insurance is so crappy. You're paying
more out of your pocket than you ever have, but
your money is being funneled by the trillions to these
traitorous insurance companies. Folks, I'm here to tell you that

(10:20):
the reason why American health care is in the toilet
is in direct proportion to government's involvement in it.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Period.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
Insurance companies need to go away from health care. The
government needs to go away from health care, period. End
of sentence. Health Care is between the doctor and the
patient only, and that means not just in diagnosing, not
in treatment, but also in payment for services that is
between the doctor and the patient right and government should

(10:52):
butt out. We should actually government will never do that.
Let me rephrase that should be kicked out and the
insurance companies should be kicked out. Who can do that? Yes,
three hundred and forty million Americans, we can do that.
We outnumber the five hundred and thirty five cats in Congress.

(11:13):
We outnumber the traitorous insurance company CEOs. We could do that.
We could take a proactive step so we won't have
to worry about the future of healthcare. We can take
proactive steps saying we're doing everything we can not only
protect ourselves but our children in the future and to
make sure that we restore America's healthcare system to what

(11:37):
it was. The show behind the show was Shan Chastain
Roars Your Way Next on the Salzado Storm podcast and
now a word from our sponsor, My friends, did Bidenomics
in the left wing economy really rock your world? Lat
American Medical Plans relieve one burden health insurance. American Medical
Plan specializes in under sixty five health insurance plans that
have zero copays and no deductibles. You choose your doctors,

(12:00):
you choose your hospitals. These plans have nothing to do
with your income and are thirty to sixty percent less
than Obamacare. If Obamacare has your paying out the nose,
call American medical plans. Don't let these Marxists destroy one
sixth the US economy and your access to healthcare without
a fight. You deserve better. You deserve American medical plans

(12:21):
the answer to the cancer that is Obamacare.

Speaker 3 (12:24):
Chris Salceato, Hello, my friends in liberty lovering community. Did
you know that as a follower of Chris Salsado you
get exclusive bonuses and discounts.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
At quality vendors like my.

Speaker 3 (12:37):
Pillow My pillow with promo code Team Liberty, you get
thirty to eighty percent off everything you order every time
as part of the Salsado family. So go to MyPillow
dot com forward slash Team Liberty and check out the sheets,
the pillows, the blankets, the mattress toppers, and so much more,

(13:00):
and you get thirty to eighty percent off everything and
many times free shipping with promo code Team Liberty. And
if you don't believe me, check out what Chris has
to say about my Pillow himself.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
You know what they say, my friends once you go
my pillow, you never go back. I started out with
the old fashioned my pillow, loved it. Then I graduated
the to the towels and the MyPillow towels they take
all the water off, Yeah, and they're so soft, and
just love them. And then then I said, well, I
gotta have something to cover my pillow, so I got
the whole sheet. Said, once you start, folks, you won't

(13:34):
be able to stop because you're just gonna love the
products like I did.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
So that's it, ladies and gemmen, you heart from the
man himself. Go to my pillow dot com for slash
Team Liberty and buy your my pillow. Now you're not
only gonna save thirty to eighty percent on everything you order,
but you're gonna get amazing products for your home. You're
gonna support a great American company, and you're gonna keep
the salceedar Storm podcasts on the air. It's a triple

(13:59):
win and you'll never sleep better.

Speaker 4 (14:04):
Chris Celciado, how.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
Can switching to Patriot Mobile help you? First, when you
switch to Patriot Mobile, you're not gonna be funding a
left wing company. Patriot Mobile is America's only Christian conservative
cell phone company. They donate to the causes you and
I support. How else can it help you? Well, it
will keep voices like mine independent. You switch over to
Patriot Mobile. They have industry leading reliability because they're not

(14:26):
just one network, they have all three major networks. And
every single time you switch to Patriot Mobile using my
promo code storm, you support me and you keep my
voice independent. So just in case somebody in the woke
crowd tries to come around and cancel me, they can't
because you have the power. So go to Patriot Mobile
dot com, slash storm, Patriot Mobile dot com, slash storm,

(14:47):
and switch today. Can also dial nine seven to two
Patriot check out all their discounts. Stop funding your political opposition,
help keep me independent. Spend your hard earned money on
folks who have your values, not the woke crist nine
seven two, Patriot nine seven two, Patriot, Patriot Mobile dot com,
slash storm. Why get your news from people who don't
share your values?

Speaker 2 (15:07):
Get new stories from Texas Scorecard.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
We provide real news for real Texans.

Speaker 4 (15:12):
Go to Texascorecard dot com.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
Today Guy for the show behind the show, and Sean
Schastain is here housework Huh busy busy Sunday for you.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
Uh yeah, just doing housework. Yeah, laundry in got to
sweep and vacuum and do all that nonsense. And once
I hate it. Once I wish I could.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Afford it made really Yeah, once a month laundry, Right, it's.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
A little more than that, especially working working the job
of working now that things get dirty.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
Dirty jobs, you know, Mike Mike Row made a great
career out of that, out of out of the dirty
jobs franchise. I mean, and when everybody, when everybody thinks
of dirty jobs, everybody's thinking micro. Now he's getting speaking
gigs and endorsement gigs and all that kind of stuff.
So when everybody thinks about blue collar or work that

(16:01):
needs to be done, it's micro. You know.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
He's like, that's kind of funny that he is such
a champion for the blue collar man. But I don't
know that he's ever been a blue collar man, So
that's kind of funny.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
And that's kind of that's kind of the whole thing,
is that he would get out there as a non
blue collar guy.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
Yeah. No, I love the show. Yeah, and I'm glad
it's still around doing his things.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
So yeah, and I was getting all kinds of endorsements
and everything. And he's got a great set of pipes.
Don't get me wrong, the guy's very talented. I just
I just you know what. It just it just shows
goes to show you you can find your niche and
you can make you can make something great happen.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
Right, Oh yeah, I don't know that it was his niche. First.
Do you remember back in the seventies a show called
Real People. Yeah, I do with Sarah with the uber
hot Sarah percell Yeah, I do. Gip somebody Hold on
a minute, the black dude firing.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
Great and went on to well, I'm I mean that's great, man, Yeah, yeah,
hot Percelle. Some other dude and a black dude, some
black guy.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Oh my gosh, he's but he's like a billionaire, multi billionaire.
The black dude Isron Byron something.

Speaker 1 (17:18):
Okay, hold on the cast of Real People TV show,
Hold on him inte. Now see now it's gonna bug
the crap out of me Byron Allen.

Speaker 2 (17:25):
Yeah, Byron Allen. So yeah, he's some He started that
show when he was like nineteen on Real People, and
he just went on to become some black television mogul.
How about and not well, I mean he's a television.

Speaker 1 (17:42):
He's a television mogal. How about what his name? But
I mean, like, for is it black Television.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
B ET or I don't know if it was b ET,
but you know that kind of programming.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
They got seven out of ten in the ratings. Now
look at Sarah Purcell, Skip Stevenson, Yeah, John Barber, Byron Allen,
Bill Rafferty, Jimmy Breslin, Fred Willard.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
Fred Willard might have been later on.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Fred Willard actually starred in Stargate As it actually became
kind of a comedic actor Victoria Vetri, she starred as herself.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
I think those might have been the the later years
or you know, after the original cast. But the original
cast is what I fell in love with. And the
reason I bring it up is because we were talking
about Micro and his championing of blue collar people. Well,
they did this on that show. They would show people

(18:42):
at their weird jobs, and I remember one of them
was they went to a horse radish factory where they
manufacture horse radish to you know, so you can eat it.
And in the beginning, when they're oiling it down, these
guys were in full hasmat suits, because it will blister

(19:04):
your skin. I mean it's like mustard gas, you know. Yeah, yeah,
And so it gets progressively diluted until it's finally processed
enough that we can eat it comfortably. Well, they would
challenge each other, of course, dude to being dudes, you know,
to start at the consumable end and see how far

(19:25):
back you could go until you, you know, got blisters
from the mustard gas while eating it, you know too.
It's just yeah, I don't know why I remember that episode.
I just thought it was funny.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
Sarah Purcell, you know, is it me or does she
looks like well yeah, but doesn't she look like Jamie
Lee Curtis in her youth. I mean, look at that.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
When I was, when I was coming of age, so
seventy fours when that started, so I would have been
I would have been ten. Yeah. Uh boy, she she
had it going on for me. I don't know why,
but she was.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
I think she's she she's attractive. Yes. She also worked
with Regis Fieldman.

Speaker 2 (20:13):
Yeah. Uh.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
And here she is pictured with Halle Berry, who, by
the way, is making news uh as she attacks Gavin Newsom,
which was pretty freaking great. Yeah. So Sarah purcell I
had forgotten him. There, Well there's there's the glamour shot.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
Yeah, you probably love it. Yeah, oh yeah, that's the
way I remember her. Yeah, and uh but no so
so yeah, they would they would change.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
How about that one? That's how that's how you remember her?

Speaker 2 (20:39):
Right? They would champion the oh yeah, there you go.
They would champion the blue collar worker as well. You know,
back in back in the seventies.

Speaker 1 (20:48):
Real people. Man, it was a cool show. Yeah show
well yeah, and so Mike Rowe and and people like that.
I think there's a fascinating why why do you think
human nature we are fascinated by the normal? Is it
because for a sense of belonging, for a sense of

(21:10):
that hey somebody else's circumstances, like you know, just because
if you think your job is crappy, why don't you
try being a horse Radish producer. Can you gotta get
in a freaking hasthmad suit every single day just to
do your job?

Speaker 2 (21:24):
Yeah? I just think it's because, you know, we just
normally go through life and we know what we know.
But how plumbing works, how farming works, you know, where
does milk come from? It's you know, all that stuff
is just foreign to us. We couldn't if somebody told
you how to frame a house, you sit down and

(21:48):
write it out. How do you do it? There's no
freaking way you would do it. Nail boards together, Okay,
it's gonna be sturdy, dude. So you know, it's just
the stuff that the vast majority of us don't know. Now,
you ask the guy who's framing that house, hey, can
you pull the transmission on this seventy two C ten?

(22:11):
And he will probably well he'll probably.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
Figure it out, probably figure it out exactly.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
But and I think that's you know, that's the difference
you see, not blasting women at all, but you see
so many tiktoks and stuff like that of women saying,
you know, I don't need a man, we can do
it all ourselves. It's just a different mindset. I mean,
that's why when you know trans people say I'm going

(22:37):
to be a woman, or a trans woman says I'm
going to be a man, Well, they just they don't
think like each other. They're they're just not wired the same.
Men very logical, women more emotional, thank god. But men
will just simply say I'll figure it out. And you know,

(22:59):
you look at something hard enough and you've got enough
of a desire to figure it out, you will.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
Dude, look at this on your screen. You know what
that is. That's the picture that that's the cast of
real people on the color of TV Guide. Yeah, forty
cents for TV Guide.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
They're offering that.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
According to eBay, Yeah, they're offering out an eBay for
ten bucks, this particular edition volks for ten bucks. But
I remember going every week to do the shopping, and
I would always have to remind my mom or she
would remind me, grab a TV guide, right, grab a
TV Guide, dude. I saw a post on social media

(23:44):
the other day about, hey that if you if you
can remember all of these, you know, nine out of
ten of these or eight out of ten of these,
then you are likely you know a gen xerpt sure right,
TV Guide and then went down this whole list of
things atari uh uh uh, Thomas Brothers maps, you know. Uh.

(24:04):
It was just this whole list of things we don't
use anymore.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
Well, this time of year, the TV Guide was so
vitally important because you had to know when Charlie Brown, Christmas.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
Brown Christmas was coming up.

Speaker 2 (24:19):
You had to know when all the ranking Bass Christmas
specials were coming.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
The Claymation or whatever they write, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (24:27):
Exactly, yeah, and so, but you had to you had
to sit back, you had to plan it out. You
had to make sure. You know, mom, you can't go
to that PTA meeting on Wednesday night because fricking Charlie Brown's.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
On, or Rudolph Rudolph the Red Nose Reindeer is going
to be Santa Claus. Dude, I just stumbled on this.
Look at that. There is an entire eBay, uh, I
don't know, presence account that is dedicated to old TV guides.
Look at some of these shows, Dude, Claude Ankins and

(25:03):
Frank what's his name?

Speaker 2 (25:06):
Who? Moving On?

Speaker 1 (25:08):
Is that what the name of the show is? Yeah,
that you're right moving on the cast of Moving On.
That's crazy.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
There's a there's a comedian that I follow, and he's
got a millennial daughter or yeah, probably close to being
gen Z. But he's they they film each other. I
think it's called Daughter Problems is their podcast. But he
shows her clips of all in the family. So he

(25:47):
shows her, you know, clips of Archie Bunker being Archie Bunker,
and wow, she wondered her her mind is completely blown.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
And look at this w k r P and Cincinnati.

Speaker 2 (26:02):
There's two on.

Speaker 1 (26:03):
Yeah. There was Lonnie Anderson, the the hot you're gonna
talk about somebody. It was hot Lonnie Anderson. Then you
got Lost in Space.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
Bailey was the much hotter one.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Lost in Space. Look at that.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (26:16):
Oh Man Lou Ferrigno and Bill Bixby the Hulk.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
And then there was Bill Bixby and the kid and
I can remember the kid's name, but that was mister
mister Eddie's father or Eddie's father or something like that.
Remember that people wantn't you tell me beout you beg oh?

Speaker 2 (26:36):
Yeah? Yeah.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
And then there's Alice. We got I got the theme
song to All Night Rider. Look at that. That's when
they when they got rid of Bonnie and they had
April as the She was hot, but she couldn't act.
She she looked hot, but she couldn't act. There's Alice God,
what the hell was her name? Linda Lavin, right, Linda Lemon,

(27:02):
Yeah yeah. And then then there's Bewitched Elizabeth Montgomery. Look
at that from the nineteen sixties. She's got TV guides
with all of this stuff.

Speaker 2 (27:10):
Yeah, it's fun. I'm not going to collect something that's
kind of fun. I guess that is cruel. The problem
is that you'd want to display it cover out, so
that's going to take up a bunch of room.

Speaker 1 (27:21):
But ted Baxter. What was the name of the show?

Speaker 2 (27:25):
Too Close for Comfort?

Speaker 1 (27:26):
Too Close for Comfort? Yep, never watched it. I always
saw it advertised, never watched it.

Speaker 2 (27:31):
Blonde was something else?

Speaker 1 (27:33):
She yeah, well look at that. Oh oh gosh, Balky,
And what the hell is this dude's name?

Speaker 2 (27:42):
Yeah? Perfect Strangers? Strangers, Yeah, with the Yeah, I remember
we played anyway.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
Yeah, well he was. I was just telling my daughter
about this the other day. I played this scene from
Beverly Hills cop uh huh where he was playing Surge.
You know remember that. Would you like me to get
you an espresso? No, I'm okay, man, No, it's not that.
Another problem. But I get you a little limit. I
make it a very tall, a little lemon twist, and

(28:14):
it's it's good. You love it? No, no, thank you,
I'm fine.

Speaker 2 (28:17):
He went on to Uh. He went on to have
a series on PBS. I think it was about he
bought some old mansion up in New England and restored
it and you talk about, you know, dirty jobs. He
restored it using the original style of plaster and all that.

(28:39):
It was really fascinating because there's not many people in
the world that can do old school plaster like was
done in this house. So it was really fascinating to
watch this house come together.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
Bronson Pinshow Pin Show and Mark Linn Baker Perfect Show.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Oh yeah, that's I mean, that's like the other guy
from Wham. Who could name him.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
You know, right, George Michael, the other guy.

Speaker 2 (29:04):
Oh dude, look at this.

Speaker 1 (29:06):
They got Reagan on the cover in eighty one of
TV Funny Reagan and oh look, Battlestar go acting a
holy crap. Sanford and Son talk about something that couldn't
be made the day Sanford.

Speaker 2 (29:18):
And Son, Well, yeah, I mean you watch you watch
any of those and to me having grown up on them, yeah,
it's it's nothing. I mean, that's just it was just funny.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
Dude, talk about a woman who stayed hot like her
whole life. Susanne Summers.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
There you go on. I mean you were having a
ball with this TV guy.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
Ebaby, this is I just stumbled onto this and this
is pretty I mean, these are some shows I hadn't
thought of in your cheers.

Speaker 2 (29:45):
Oh yeah, you and.

Speaker 1 (29:46):
I talked about this a couple of weeks ago. You
know how you reminded me of Norm uh, your sense
of humor very much like Norm. Yeah. You got Johnny Carson,
Bob Hope, George Burns on the cover of TV Guide.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
Holy over Barney Miller. That was a staple in our house.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
My Barney Miller.

Speaker 2 (30:04):
Loved Barney Miller.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
Great.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
The episode of that, I remember. It's so weird when
you see these things, just these flashes of memory that
come back, Yeah, you know from them. And there was
one guy who was in jail and he insisted he
could exist only on air, that he didn't need to
eat or drink or anything. He is so weird.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
That's what made that show so damn funny is you
can actually see that happen in the lock up in
New York. You actually see that happening, you know.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
Yeah, he starts hyper ventilating over something and what was
his name, what was it, Hinsky? Oh gosh, the big
dumb one. Yeah, the big dumb Polish dude. Yeah, He's like,
hold on, you're gonna get too full. He was breathing so.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
Heady, get too full then George C. Scott on the
cover of the nineteen sixty three TV he got I
just watched a Christmas care with him, as Ebenezer Scroogee.

Speaker 2 (31:04):
Did so he played.

Speaker 1 (31:09):
Patten, was obviously Patten.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
Yes, what's a good Pearl Harbor movie? Other than the
not so great Pearl Harbor with Ben Affleck?

Speaker 1 (31:20):
There is a well that's not Pearl Harbor. It's a
Battle Midway. There's a decent film there called Midway.

Speaker 2 (31:28):
I mean there's a lot of World War two movies
that they're fantastic.

Speaker 1 (31:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (31:31):
Yeah, in Cold War movies, you know, Run Silent on Deep,
that's a great one.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
White Christmas, did you know do you remember how.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
That's not a Pearl Harbor?

Speaker 1 (31:39):
No, no, it's not it's not a Pearl Harbor. I'm just
gonna say that. Did you remember how much military presence
was in White Christmas? Do you remember that?

Speaker 2 (31:47):
It's been so long since I've seen that. You haven't
watched that.

Speaker 5 (31:51):
No.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
One of the reasons I haven't watched it.

Speaker 1 (31:54):
Why is that woman's.

Speaker 2 (31:56):
Waist freaks me out? So it's like a thirteen inch waist.
It's really gross almost it's weird.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
This this actress? Remember her, Suzanne Caputo? Nope, Morgan Brittany,
look at that. I got these faces?

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Remember that?

Speaker 1 (32:14):
You don't remember her?

Speaker 2 (32:15):
Oh? Yeah? Wow?

Speaker 1 (32:18):
Anyway, dude, yeah that thanks for this trip down amnesia, Lenn.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
That was uh, that.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
Was freaking crap. Talk about a diversion. I mean, you know,
and we we try not to get too political in
the show behind the show, but you know this, who
the hell is that is?

Speaker 2 (32:32):
That?

Speaker 1 (32:32):
Is that Candice? No? Who is that?

Speaker 2 (32:36):
That is?

Speaker 1 (32:38):
Marlena Dietrick Marlena Dietrich. Wow that you know what that
looks like? Yeah, you know what that looks like? What
was that? What was that chick that was in that
was in Saved by the Bell and she got out
of that and did that one? Just terrible movie. Everybody
panned that showed her showing leg just like that. But

(32:59):
that was the promotional poster.

Speaker 2 (33:01):
What the show.

Speaker 1 (33:03):
Girls or yeah I think it was show Girls is
what it was called. Yeah, showed a little more than Yeah,
well that's all she showed in the in the promotional poster.
That's all you saw was the leg. Everything else was
in black and then her face. Right yeah, anyway, god,
this is this is is amazing different strokes. Gary Coleman,

(33:24):
did you know what I gotta find that, because the
hell is that pictures of Sarah who? Let's see Gary Coleman.
Did you know what he was doing in the last
days of his life before he.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
Died, reaching for gum at the grocery store.

Speaker 1 (33:41):
No, let me see if I can find this online.
Gary Coleman, what would you?

Speaker 2 (33:47):
What would you?

Speaker 1 (33:48):
What would that be?

Speaker 2 (33:49):
Under?

Speaker 1 (33:51):
He was doing, uh, these pay pay for phone calls
dirty talk basically, and there was that. There was he was, Yeah,
he was, he was. I had a there was a
radio show out in San Diego that got one of

(34:13):
these recordings and it was Gary Coleman. You could buy
Gary Coleman talking dirty to you, right, dude?

Speaker 2 (34:22):
Yeah, that is one specific and right.

Speaker 1 (34:27):
And I don't even know if they if they even
publish it, Gary Coleman Dirty Talk. Let me see if
I can find this, because there was one. There was
one that was I don't know. I probably shoudn't putting
this on in Christmas, but he it was. It was
so hilarious because his voice didn't change right, and and

(34:50):
it was all I remember is it was Gary Coleman. Yeah,
I'm gonna do you from behind. It was hilarious and
it was but yeah, he was totally serious and that
was that's what he was doing before he died child actor.
And then of course I think that's a that's a

(35:11):
fair sight above what some of this.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
Bit.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
No, it was real, Gary Coleman, That's that's what he
was doing. And it was his voice, dude. And yeah,
and it was well Dan Dana Plato, remember her. She
couldn't handle the startum. She ended up committing suicide, remember.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
That, right?

Speaker 1 (35:32):
And then Todd Bridges ended up being some sort.

Speaker 2 (35:35):
Of bridges in prison and juvenile delinquent. Yeah right, uh huh.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
Couldn't handle the fame man.

Speaker 2 (35:42):
Well, I can't imagine what fame's like, especially as a child,
you know. I mean, radio is the lowest rung on
the fame ladder, right, and it would make me uncomfortable
when people would recognize me. I mean, and I was
just a boordo. I can't imagine being, you know, a

(36:03):
number one talk show host in a town like the
size of Dallas, or a national host or anything like that.
I mean, when people would recognize me just because of
my voice, it would freak me out. And then I
was always one of the guys that when I was
on the radio, it was just me, So I didn't

(36:25):
have a personality as far as a made up personality
like some guys do. Some guys there are two different people,
one off the air and one on the air. The
most successful people I think I've always known, you know,
guys like our friend how Ow Jay. He lives his
life on the air. What you hear on the air,
which is what you get, That is how And I

(36:49):
think at least around here in the Metroplex, the guys
that have been successful and have stayed here for thirty
and forty years have been that way. That just they
aren't the same people on as they are off the air.

Speaker 1 (37:02):
You know, they said that Gary Coleman made so Gary
Coleman made eighteen million dollars as a childhood star and
his parents blew it all. Yeah, blew it all.

Speaker 2 (37:13):
And then he talked dirty about them. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:15):
Well, but to the point, I mean, can you name
remember Drew Barrymore, Remember she was a child childhood actress.
She got really effed up, and she came out the
other side, right, She didn't end up offering herself for
getting really totally screwed up? What happened to Well? She
was more music first. But what's her name, Hannah Montana.

(37:38):
I'm looking right at Hermie Cyrus. Yeah, Miley Cyrus went
through that whole crazy episode, right. How how many children
have we watched just implode because they.

Speaker 2 (37:52):
Could story about living your life on the air?

Speaker 1 (37:55):
I guess No, No, I'm just looking at stuff. I remember, Well,
you were saying that you get with what you get with?

Speaker 2 (38:02):
Is so so? Anyway, I was talking about fame. Yeah,
fame and being freaked out. Can you imagine being famous
where you can't go to a grocery store, where you
can't have dinner without one hundred people want your autograph
or want a selfie or whatever just go. That would
just make me insane. I would hate it. You are

(38:26):
so obsessed with Gary Coleman talking dirty, looking.

Speaker 1 (38:30):
At I want to try. I'm trying to.

Speaker 2 (38:33):
Find because I could see your screen.

Speaker 1 (38:35):
Yeah, I know. I'm trying to find this SoundBite because
a bunch of people recorded him.

Speaker 2 (38:41):
And I'm telling you it was a radio bit.

Speaker 1 (38:44):
It was not a radio bit. It was real, dude,
I swear it was real. It was real. And this
is how this this is he had gone from super
stardom and even started buck Rogers too. An episode of Buck,
a couple episodes of buck Rogers, and he this high
highest paid child star on TV died penniless. Yeah, penniless.

(39:08):
And that's how he was making money is he was.
He was doing these you know, these sex talk tapes
and you.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
Can't find anything on it. I'm gonna say, radio bit.

Speaker 1 (39:19):
It was not or it was dude, it was real
that this was before AI, this was before all this stuff,
and it was old.

Speaker 2 (39:25):
But you can have a guy who's I mean, look
at all the radio bits that that I wrote that
we did that you know sounded like other people.

Speaker 1 (39:35):
Dude, do you know how hard it is to mimic
Gary Coleman's voice. Do you know how hard that is
to replicate? Before AI? Seriously? Okay, Gary Coleman's wife says, old, no, no, no,
that's gonna be a whole bunch of advertisements. Gary Coleman's
wife says she didn't sell his deathbed pick. Holy crap,

(39:59):
that was a thing, man, I don't I don't even know.
I mean, that's gonna straw my whole image. I mean,
the dirty talk was I mean, you gotta do, which
you can in a small town, right, Boy, did you
know that Gary Coleman's wife was white? Full size too?

Speaker 2 (40:14):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (40:14):
I didn't know that. Yeah, strange man. So hey, what's
what's going on in your preparations for the Christmas season?
What are you doing?

Speaker 2 (40:24):
It's gonna be another lonely one? Well, actually not, because
I just found out yesterday. I'm gonna go up and
see my mother, who I haven't seen in my mother
and sisters who I haven't seen in what three years
now since they've moved, right, So yeah, so that'll be
nice to do that.

Speaker 1 (40:42):
So you're gonna hang You're gonna spend Christmas with your mom?

Speaker 2 (40:45):
Yeah, which is actually actually her birthday as well.

Speaker 1 (40:48):
Oh well that's right, that's right. And then praise God,
it's gonna be the the typical games because you every
single year you talk about the games you guys play
and all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 2 (40:57):
Yeah, it'll be nice game. I'm gonna be up there
for like three or four days. And one of the
things they talked about doing because my sister, who is
a professor, is obviously off that whole time. Okay, as
a professor, she gets like two months off Oh that's
cool around Christmas time. You know, it's crazy, but they

(41:20):
have always wanted to And since I'll be up there,
I think we're going to do it. Drive like three
hours away to go do the Goonies tour? The What
Goonies Tour?

Speaker 1 (41:31):
As in the movie The Goonies?

Speaker 2 (41:33):
As in the movie The Goonies.

Speaker 1 (41:34):
So what do you do with that tour?

Speaker 2 (41:36):
Well, like where the house is, see their house and
see the the restaurant and all that stuff.

Speaker 1 (41:43):
What town is that in?

Speaker 2 (41:44):
Again? I have no idea.

Speaker 1 (41:46):
Okay, there was something that rolled across my desk and
it's a it's an older report from earlier this year.
But as everybody is going to be talking about healthcare,
it's going to be the big debate. Republicans are coming
out with their healthcare plan this week, justin time for Christmas.
Here come the Republicans doing something they haven't done for

(42:07):
the last two decades, you know, come up with an
alternative to socialized medicine. And we'll see if it's socialism
light or it remembers that that little thing we call
the free market. Right, But an average wait time for
an appointment to see a doctor now in America over
a month thirty one days. Wow, that's the average to

(42:28):
see a doctor. And I remember when we were debating
this when Obamacare and was I working at was I
we you and I working together at the time when
Obamacare was passed, Yeah, two thousand and nine, twenty ten
in that area. Yeah, and so we were sounding the

(42:51):
alarm saying this is going to cause weight times to
go through the roof. I remember Massachusetts.

Speaker 2 (42:56):
Oh yeah, I mean wait times. And yeah, everything that
he promised nothing came to you. The one thing I
remember about the debate was from a debate or a
town hall meeting when the woman stood up and said,
you know, my ninety seven year old mom has a
will to live. Will I be able to keep her alive?

(43:19):
And and you know, Obama said, well, we can make
her comfortable exactly if she needed some surgery, some life
saving surgery even at ninety seven, but she, you know,
had the will to live, want to be around, we
can make her comfortable. And it's like, good Lord, the government.

(43:40):
If they just like your food, if they control your healthcare,
they can control your life exactly.

Speaker 1 (43:47):
That's the Faustian bargain that so many of our people
don't get. It's like, okay, So the minute you say
I want government or somebody else to pay for my
health care, then you lose all of your right to say, well,
this is what I want to spend this money on,
because it's not your money. Right When when it's between

(44:07):
you and your doctor, if you're ninety seven years old
and you want to pay for a life saving surgery
or to get a knee replacement or something like that
for your higher quality of life, then it's your call, right, Yeah,
it's it's seen you and your doctor. But the minute
you get somebody else to pay for it, somebody else says, well,
you know what, the actuarial table here says that your

(44:29):
quality of life isn't going to be that great, and
it's and it's you're going to only live You're already
past your expiration date anyway, so it'll be just be
a waste of money. And and that that's how the
government puts a price on people. And it's all a
moot point if you're paying for your own shit, right,

(44:51):
But as song as somebody else is doing it, then
somebody else is making the call. And that's what nobody
in this country gets, except you know, Concerner.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
So what's the Republican proposal. We don't have a lot
of faith.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
Well, I don't have a lot of faith.

Speaker 2 (45:05):
I mean, it seems to me that if the government
was completely out of it, if we were left to
our own devices as far as the insurance companies go.
And I don't know what kind of what kind of
government incentives the or subsidies that the insurance companies get,
but if there's any, it needs to cease immediately. Dude.

Speaker 1 (45:25):
Everything about Obamacare is a insurance company.

Speaker 2 (45:28):
So right, I know now, But I mean, trily were
of dollars before when you know, you could go to
the doctor for thirty bucks, you know, until insurance companies
got involved, and then you know, then you're talking about
a thirty dollars aspen. So I don't know. I think
that the marketplace is never wrong. So if it's a

(45:49):
true marketplace, somebody's going to come out with a cheaper
insurance and that will spur everyone else to be cheaper,
and it'll just be like it was back in the
day when you could afford to go to the doctor.

Speaker 1 (46:01):
Dude, Look, insurance, what we have right now that we
call health insurance is not insurance. Okay, what it is
is pulling risk not pulling risks, sorry, pulling money to
help divert the costs of normal every day to aches

(46:25):
and pains. Insurance is when I'm driving my car and
I get hit, okay, and it's too much for me
to pay for it out of my pocket, you go
to your insurance company. They replace your car. Okay, that's insurance.
It's called catastrophic loss. That is the definition of insurance.
Getting the sniffles and then going to a doctor and

(46:46):
only paying twenty bucks, that's just that's just having somebody
else help you pay for it. Right, that's not insurance. Okay.
So my opinion is we got to get government and
the insurance companies out of healthcare. There's only one thing
you should need an insurance company as it pertains to

(47:08):
your health for, and it's called catastrophic loss. Right, you
get the cancer diagnosis, you get in a massive car
wreck and you're disabled. Right, that's a catastrophic event that
the actuarial tables will tell you. Is it an everyday thing?

Speaker 2 (47:23):
Right?

Speaker 1 (47:24):
For your everyday shit at the sniffles, your checkups, all
that stuff should be paid for by you as a
point of service to a doctor. Right, and the minute that,
the minute we accept as a society, that's the way
it's going to be. Everything resets. Doctors charge. You know,

(47:44):
is the doctor going to charge you one thousand bucks
to see you at an office visit?

Speaker 2 (47:48):
No?

Speaker 1 (47:49):
Because you can afford to pay that? Nobody can.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
Yeah, exactly right.

Speaker 1 (47:53):
So what are the doctor going to do?

Speaker 2 (47:54):
Well?

Speaker 1 (47:55):
I better make up for in volume, and I better charge.
I better charge one hundred folks one hundred dollars, right,
something they can afford, so I can. So that that's
what the market will support, right, So and and then
the government ought to do us a solid and say,
you know what, you can save your health save these
accounts tax free, and you can deduct all of your

(48:16):
medical expenses off your off your income tax. Right, that's it.
So and so get it out that now anything shorter.

Speaker 2 (48:24):
That get better? Yet, have a flat tax where you
don't have any deductions of anything.

Speaker 1 (48:29):
How about no income tax? I think it's the stupidest
thing in the world, the tax income. That's I mean
you when you tax something, you say you want less
of it, right if you if you want more of something,
you subsidize it. So, look, the stupidest thing we ever
allowed the government to do well. There are several things,
but income tax making money is a good thing. Earning

(48:54):
money is a good thing, and we have allowed the
government to punish it. The more entrepreneur you are, the
more success you have, the more the government punishes you.
And that's what we've accepted is normal, and that's it's
bs dude. So look, whatever the Republicans come up with,
I know I'm going to be disappointed, because you know what,

(49:15):
My My goal is kick the government out of healthcare,
kick insurance out of health care.

Speaker 2 (49:20):
That's it. Yep, bye bye, I'm good with that. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (49:23):
And then and then get the hell out of my way.
I'll save my own health savings account with you know,
twenty five dollars and fifty dollars that I set aside
every paycheck, and it grows and grows and grows. I
can use it at the end of the year. I
get one check up at the end of the year,
and there you go. For a family of for a

(49:45):
family of four, you can save two hundred bucks every paycheck,
right right, and it grows tax free. And I'm sure
there are plenty of banks that will give you a
great interest rate. Once this is all set up, and
everything's fine, and everything's fine. Handle all your and I
think I told you this a couple of weeks ago.
I went to the hospital, remember, and got the bill

(50:08):
six thousand dollars. Yeah, and then I paid cash for it.
Oh well, then it's only going to be three thousand dollars. Wow,
that's how much insurance adds to the cost of everything.
It is insane, it is. So that's that's coming up
this week. But thirty one days and it's only going

(50:28):
to get worse, right because I remember they did a
comparison when romney Care went into an effect in Massachusetts.
They're the average waytime for I'm just pulling this out
of my out of my rear because I don't remember
the exact days, but it was something like in Massachusetts
you could see a doctor and within two to three
days after romney Care it was over a month. And

(50:51):
then they still did it anyway on the national level, noah,
So and I still been the Republicans. They Mitch McConnell
refused to let the Republicans come up with an alternative. Refused,
And so that's coming up this week. So that that's
a lot of fun. I get ready to get disappointed

(51:13):
because that's what the Republicans do. And then I don't
know if you caught this. Remember a few weeks ago
I played for you Bill Gates. Do you remember this,
Bill Gates?

Speaker 2 (51:24):
Yeah, because I was pissed off about. Yeah, the thought
of how many lives that dude has negatively affected with
his belief in climate change.

Speaker 1 (51:34):
Yeah, check out it and check this headline out climate
change study that overestimated economic impact has been pulled. Yeah,
but of course the Biden regime substantiated all the punishment
to the American taxpayers based on this study, which isn't
worth the paper it's printed on.

Speaker 2 (51:54):
Yeah, I mean there were how many thousands of workers
just from the pipeline let's just talk about that pipeline
that Biden shut down day one? Yeah, how many thousands
of workers did that affect?

Speaker 1 (52:06):
Keystone?

Speaker 2 (52:07):
Yeah, it was Keystone Pipeline.

Speaker 1 (52:09):
It was immediately three thousand jobs and.

Speaker 2 (52:11):
That was all because of climate change. There's three thousand people,
and you know that some of those people unlive themselves
because of the stress of that.

Speaker 1 (52:23):
Well, because everybody had invested in it, right, everybody had
sunk a lot of money into that, into that coming
online and for government control's sake. They holy crap, cancelation
of the Keystone pipeline resulted in the loss of thousands
of jobs.

Speaker 2 (52:44):
Estimation it was way up there.

Speaker 1 (52:45):
Yeah, estimates ranging sixteen thousand to fifty nine thousand jobs affected. Now,
the sixteen thousand is probably the direct jobs with the
construction of the pipeline. The fifty nine thousand are all
the industries that would have benefited.

Speaker 2 (52:58):
Ancillary businesses, like we've talked about with the machining that
I'm involved with now, there are a ton of ancillary
businesses that we depend on to get the final product
out and the things that you would never think of,
things that when you drive through an industrial park, you know,
you see these business little business after business after business,

(53:20):
and those all go to support other businesses. So, yeah,
fifty nine thousand people right there, that's just one. That's
just one thing that was climate change related, just one.
I mean, think of all the thousands of other things
that that people have lost their jobs over because of
guys like Bill Gates saying that the world's going to end,

(53:42):
and you know what, and it just God, that just
really upsets me, man, really upsets me.

Speaker 1 (53:46):
It should and it's not just Gates, it's that entire industry.
And the only reason why he's backing off now, as
I told you, is that AI is the next big
money maker and AI needs what power. And they're like, oh, okay,
well are climate change bs uh isn't going to get
that isn't going to be able to allow me to
make money. So guess what, a mammee. Global warming isn't

(54:07):
so big a deal after all, you know. And by
the way, alexandri O Casio Cortez said that all life
on planet Earth would be gone in twelve years, and
we're rapidly coming up on that anniversary, and she's being
called out, Hey, we're all still here, dumb shit, We're
all still here.

Speaker 2 (54:23):
Yeah. Yeah, Well, the people who have uh talked about
the world ending have been wrong.

Speaker 1 (54:30):
So oh and this reminds me about about all this
climate change bs me. Bush did it too, Remember when
Bush outlawed the incandescent light bulb?

Speaker 3 (54:39):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (54:39):
Yeah, I mean yeah, everybody is involved here. Yeah, and
so my one of my favorite things that Rush Limbaugh
used to do was just talk about the humorous of
man thinking that we could change the climate.

Speaker 1 (54:53):
It was never it was never about that, you know,
it was that that was the excuse they used, and
that maybe that's how they conned a whole bunch of
other people, But it was never about that. And the
other day, and you know, you remember my when you
come into my house. I've got that chandelier that is
hanging from the ceiling, right, and it's an element. It's

(55:13):
a loft and ceiling. So I've got one ladder that
can reach the light bulbs on that chandelier. Okay, and
one we're putting up Christmas decorations. I look up and
guess what one of the ten year light bulbs that
George W. Bush said we had to start buying instead
those those ten year light bulbs. Guess what the fin

(55:34):
thing was was out after two and a half years.
So I dude, literally, when I get up on this ladder,
I scare the shit out of myself. Every single time
I'm on the very I'm on the very top rung,
and I'm using you know that little Some of these
workman ladders you can pull down a you can make

(55:56):
a ledge for your Basically, if you want to put
a can of paint or tools on the top of it,
you can put it there right, So that's why I do.
I put that straight up and I stand at the
very top. Wrong, it's completely dangerous, but it's the only
way I can reach the damn chandelier. Well, I having
to call somebody else in and charge me an arm
and a leg to replace.

Speaker 2 (56:12):
Somebody who's somebody who's a average height.

Speaker 1 (56:14):
Shut up, I am five eight, I'm an average height.

Speaker 2 (56:18):
But anyway, so yeah, it's the eighteen hundred.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
Oh shut up. So the dude not the point of
the story. So when away, I'm scaring the crap out
of myself thinking, you know, I mean taking my life
into my hands, basically to replace a flipping light bulb,
which I was told would be lasting ten years. But
guess what they don't. You're lucky to get two years
out of these freaking ten year light bulbs.

Speaker 2 (56:41):
You saved, You saved the planet though.

Speaker 1 (56:42):
Oh for crying out loud, nobody believes that. But see, yeah,
pisses me off too.

Speaker 2 (56:49):
No. I mean, just a guy like Bill Gates, with
all the money in the world that he'll never have
to worry about anything ever, for him to put fifty
nine thou people out of work because of climate change.

Speaker 1 (57:03):
Screw that.

Speaker 2 (57:03):
Guy, It just it just pisses me off him and
anybody else involved in this climate change and on all.

Speaker 1 (57:11):
The rest of them too, you know what, And it's
all a scam, and it has been a scam. Look,
it's just another mechanism to impose socialism and government control
over your life. And that's all anybody needs to know.
Last thing. You've been watching this whole narco terrorist boats
getting blown out of the water. Yeah, scam quote unquote scandal.

(57:33):
It's not really but the leftist Yeah.

Speaker 2 (57:36):
And to be honest, I don't know how I feel
about that really really. I mean, well I would because
we're not privy to the intelligence on it. I'm not
going to come out and say I'm totally against it.
My guess is that we know exactly who these people are,
exactly when they're leaving the docks full of full chemicals

(58:00):
that come and are full of FENTONYL or whatever they've got,
and so I'm sure the intelligence is really good. It
just seems like, I don't know, to blow a boat
out of the waters without any kind of police work,
I guess it makes me a little uncomfortable.

Speaker 1 (58:22):
You are a former military guy, right, tell me why
the United States Navy would be blowing up fishing boats.

Speaker 2 (58:32):
No, I'm not saying you're blowing up fishing boats. I
realized that these are, without a doubt, drug boat.

Speaker 1 (58:38):
Yes, yes, absolutely. Now I've got something for you. This
is this is tangentially related. I'm gonna I'm gonna tell
you why because there's a meme on social media that
deals with this. Uh you may have heard they caught
the pipe bomber. Right, I'm throw aroun I'm going to
go back to the Narco boats. But they caught the
pipe bomber. And I want you to listen to how

(58:59):
Jake Tapper of CNN described the alleged pipe bomber. Listen,
Capital Attack. Brian Cole Jr. A thirty year old white
man from the DC suburbs, is now you're you're looking
at you your screen.

Speaker 2 (59:15):
Picture up there while he was saying that.

Speaker 1 (59:17):
No, the picture was added later. Okay, the picture was
added later, but CNN was the first one to publish
said picture of the white man. Now CNN says this
coal guy is a white man, and Democrats say those
boats that are being blown out of the water by

(59:38):
the United States military are fishing boats.

Speaker 2 (59:42):
No, I without a doubt their drug boat. I know that. Yes,
it's just that, I mean, can a cop just blow
away a dude in a park for selling some weed?

Speaker 1 (59:56):
Well?

Speaker 2 (59:58):
No, But when you see this is where I get
a little uncomfortable. It's just that there's no trials, there's
no arrest, there's no police work. Now again, I'll go
back to the intelligence. If they've got undercover guys in
there that are doing the police work, saying, hey, here's
you know, Jose and Juan in their Danzig or chang

(01:00:23):
full of full of meth. You know here they're heading
go ahead, But well tell me. So that just makes me.
It's why I'm not saying I'm against it, right, I'm
just saying it makes me a little uncomfortable.

Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
The administration says that these are narco terrorists. These individuals
are killing Americans at a greater rate, about ten times
twenty times greater than al Qaeda, than al Shabab, than
the radical Islamic fundamentals terrorists. Now, nobody is suggesting, even
even when Barack Hussein Obama was blowing even American citizens

(01:01:02):
away because they were terrorists, that they deserve, you know,
due process in a trial and all that kind of stuff.
So if an al Qaeda member has maybe the blood
of one hundred Americans on his hands, we don't say
a word boo about him being blown away. Right, Why
would a narco terrorist who's responsible for he and his

(01:01:25):
compatriots one hundred thousand American deaths on average every year,
why would they deserve the trial.

Speaker 2 (01:01:33):
Why shouldn't a state trooper who pulls over a guy
with the one hundred pounds of fentanyl in his truck
be able to just not be able to just blow
him away?

Speaker 1 (01:01:43):
Well, proximity, I mean, you're in the when you're on
terra firma.

Speaker 2 (01:01:48):
I mean, seriously, what's the difference in the United States?
If you've got if you've got enough fentanyl to kill
a thousand people, then what's the difference? Why do we
put that guy on trial? Why are we not rounding
up these people? Uh in the middle of the ocean.

Speaker 1 (01:02:08):
Well, well, again, one is on American soil where people
have rights. The other one is being done in international
waters where US law by definition doesn't apply.

Speaker 2 (01:02:21):
I mean, I get it. I'm just telling you. That's
why I feel uncomfortable, is that if we can blow
them up, it seems to me, we can round them up,
and what.

Speaker 1 (01:02:30):
If what if a nuclear what if they were transporting
a nuclear weapon and that they would kill, they would detonate.
Do we should we stop them uh and then arrest
them before they can get the nuclear weapon dropped off?
Or should we or a bio weapon? Should we destroy
them before they are allowed to get into the streets
and get into America and kill our people?

Speaker 2 (01:02:52):
Well, again, the intelligence is gonna it's going to tell
a lot. And since I'm not proving to the intelligence
of these drug boats, that's why I'm I'm holding back
from being totally against it.

Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
Right, But we know, we know that the poison they're
carrying is deadly to our people. We have an average
of one hundred thousand people a year dying. We know
that we also would know a bio weapon would do
similar damage. So what would we want our military to
to uh interdict and to arrest rather than eliminate the threat?

(01:03:26):
I guess that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:03:27):
And for me to know where that bioweapon came from
and who else is behind it, wasn't it?

Speaker 1 (01:03:32):
Well yes, so yes, it's.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
Pretty tough to do. When but what if there was
the crab food at the bottom of the ocean.

Speaker 1 (01:03:39):
Right, and if but if there was a risk that
that the what would you rather k.

Speaker 2 (01:03:44):
It's okay, the risk is that it kills Americas set off.

Speaker 1 (01:03:48):
Yeah, that kills Americans, right, Yeah, the risk is when
it's set off, So you're you're the commander.

Speaker 2 (01:03:52):
When the risk is when the fentanyl is consumed.

Speaker 1 (01:03:55):
Right, You're you're the You're the commander in chief and
you're in front.

Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
So it's not like this, this boat just runs up
and you know, gets close to Long Beach and you know,
half the Western United States is gone. It's not gonna
happen that way. It doesn't happen. So, I mean, if
you can, if you can stop these narco terrorists, find out,

(01:04:21):
you know, up the chain, because you know, the guys
driving those cigarette boats, they're nothing. They're nineteen year olds
hired to do something so their families won't kill get killed.

Speaker 1 (01:04:33):
Yeah, maybe they should stop doing that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:35):
Well, you sure go tell them that. Maybe they I'm
just I'm just telling you that's why I'm uncomfortable with
the whole thing.

Speaker 1 (01:04:42):
Well, I think, well, I think there's a lot of
Democrats out there that they get really really pissed off
a lot of Democrats. See see these drugs sinking to
the bottom of the ocean, and it's like you've just
taken away their money.

Speaker 3 (01:04:52):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (01:04:52):
I don't think anybody's thinking that. Of course, of course,
I mean, be stupid, dude.

Speaker 1 (01:04:58):
I don't see any Republican or anything servant about their
losing their ship over over drugs being sunk to the
bottom of the ocean. I think the Democrats are there
beside themselves.

Speaker 2 (01:05:10):
There's just no talking to you. Sometimes that's just ridiculous.
Nobody's nobody is crying about the drugs being blown away,
talking about the people being blown away.

Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
Here, here's democrats, here's democrats. Jim Hins, let's listen to
Jim Himes all this thing.

Speaker 4 (01:05:26):
There is no such thing as a narco terrorist. There
are very very bad narcotics people, cartels, et cetera. But
they're desperate to make this look like it's Isis or
a La Kaida, because that's the very thin line on
which they're illegal. Use of the United States military to
take these people out resides.

Speaker 1 (01:05:44):
Yeah, he's he's beside himself.

Speaker 2 (01:05:46):
Oh yeah, he's he's so upset in that sound clip
about the drugs going to the bottom of the ocean.
Don't be an idiot, Chris. Don't be stupid. Okay, I'm not.
If you're gonna make the argument, just don't be stupid.
Nobody's been crying about the drugs being Okay, okay, because
there's there's literally.

Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
No again, I'm done.

Speaker 2 (01:06:07):
No, I'm done. I'm being I've stated my case, You've
stated I know, I know Democrats are whining about drugs
bleeding flown out.

Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
Okay, okay, I mean but again, now I'm done.

Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
I'm told that I'm done.

Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
You want on the other on the other side of
the equation on what as I was trying to address
what you were talking about, which is these narco terrorists,
which I think they are appropriately named, why why is
it that they should be they should be allowed access
to our courts rather than treated like any other terrorists

(01:06:40):
out there that would kill American lives. That's that's the question.
What makes them better.

Speaker 2 (01:06:47):
If they're If if they're narco terrorists, then I don't
see why the dude with the Trump bullet fantanol isn't
a narco terrorist and why he isn't put to death immediately.

Speaker 1 (01:06:58):
Yeah, well, uh, Trump is on record saying that he
believes any drug dealer that this caught should get the
death penalty.

Speaker 2 (01:07:07):
Mm hm, I mean what I mean. Here in Texas
we passed laws that it is now murder if you
are caught selling fentanyl to kill somebody. Yeah. Yeah, so
got no problem with that.

Speaker 1 (01:07:20):
It's a zero tolerance. And here's Jack Reid. He's a Democrat.
Listen to how he's humanizing these narco terrorists. Listen, Listen
to this.

Speaker 5 (01:07:29):
You know, one of the factors that drives youth in
the United States and is demand. And most knacko traffickers
are are not in those boats. They pay people to
do that, and usually people who are not significantly involved
with nacko trading. It's it's the way they make money.

Speaker 1 (01:07:52):
Just some guys out there making money, you know, so
they should.

Speaker 2 (01:07:55):
Well, I mean, he's not wrong, dude. The guys driving
the bus are driving the boats. They're not the big
dougs of the operation. Like I said, they're nineteen year
old dudes whose families will be killed if they don't
make this run. So he's not wrong at all. It's

(01:08:15):
what I'm saying is why aren't we going after the
bigger picture of it? I think I think we are okay,
But but withn't the intelligence of those nineteen year olds
driving that boat. Wouldn't that kind of help?

Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
Well, there's I think I understand the tactics if you're
if you're looking at the tactics. First off, these narco
terrorists are going to have a hard time recruiting boat drivers,
increasingly hard time recruiting because every single time one of
these things blows up a the cartel's losing money, be

(01:08:52):
the cartels losing personnel. See when it's when it's a
death sentence, you're not going to be in the mood
to sign up, whether it's for the profit motive or
whether it's to save your families, like you're dead either way.

Speaker 2 (01:09:08):
So so you see these you're in Ecuador or whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:09:13):
They're coming from Venezuela, Venezuela.

Speaker 2 (01:09:17):
You you, Chris, you Chris are down in Venezuela, and
you see these pictures of boats being blown up, blown up,
blown up, And then one of the cartels members come
and say, hey, uh, you need to make this boat
trip or your wife is dead, you're making the boat trip.

Speaker 1 (01:09:35):
I don't know, Okay, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:09:38):
I think these guys aren't messing around and your wife
is dead.

Speaker 1 (01:09:42):
Guess what you're under Trump? The United States isn't messing
around either, you know. And that's that's that's what's the.

Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
Mess I'm saying is that you you say they're going
to have trouble recruiting people. No they're not. They'll have
they'll have guys lined up around the block like it's
home depot on a Saturday morning.

Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
And and.

Speaker 2 (01:10:02):
Then the other thing is the amount that they're losing
is nothing. That's I mean, it's for every boat that
gets blown out, there's probably ten that make it, so
they it's all accounted for. I mean, well, go watch
breaking bad.

Speaker 1 (01:10:21):
Well no, you're saying that you know our satellite sophistication,
you know that the United States military is able to
track everything that's in particular in a specific geographic area. Sure,
they can affix surveillance any boat. And by the way,
this is why I know the intelligence is good. They

(01:10:42):
know exactly where the drugs are coming from, they know
exactly where they're being loaded. And this is a war.
This is a war that President Trump, and frankly only
President Trump, is determined to win. And I guess it
all depends on who's got the stronger will. Here's one
more back to Jim Hymes. He is on this jihad

(01:11:05):
trying to stop these drug boats from being blown out
of the water.

Speaker 6 (01:11:08):
Listen, now there's a whole set of contextual items that
the admiral explained. Yes, they were carrying drugs, they were
not in the position to continue their mission in any way.

Speaker 2 (01:11:19):
We don't, we don't.

Speaker 6 (01:11:22):
People will Sunday see in this video and they will
see that that video shows if you don't have the
broader contexts, an attack on shipwrecked sailors.

Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
Yeah, shipwrecked sailors is what he called them. An attack.
This is the set the alleged second attack. What what
really transpired, according to New York Times and to ABC News,
to their credit, was these guys got blown out of
the water. They were they were survived. There were survivors
who then tried to salvage the narcotics, and and they

(01:11:55):
continue the threat and there's like, oh, instead of swimming
away right from their drugs, they tried to save the
drugs and then they were blown out of water for
their trouble, which to me is appropriate, one hundred percent appropriate,
just saying.

Speaker 2 (01:12:13):
Yeah, I know, I know you're just saying I said
what I said. I said, I'm done with this topic
because you're an idiot.

Speaker 1 (01:12:20):
Okay, I'm not trying to be an idiot. I am
playing devil's advocate in a couple of things. And it's
either either you decide that drugs are going to flow
into your country or you say no. And I think
it's our right as.

Speaker 2 (01:12:31):
To say no. Sure, I got no problem with saying no.
I'm just saying that if if, if that's what's going
to happen, if they're going to flow in, then why
aren't we murdering people or why aren't we killing the
drug dealers that we have here? Well we don't we ask.

Speaker 1 (01:12:50):
Them so, right, because they're on American soil and they're subject.

Speaker 2 (01:12:53):
To Okay, yeah, and I don't know, you know the
difference the interdicting my not be a bad thing. I mean,
so you've spent uh, you know, five hundred thousand dollars
on drones and missiles to blow out, to blow a
boat up with one hundred thousand dollars with the fentanyl.

Speaker 1 (01:13:12):
Tell me tell me what, Well, actually, you know what
you made. You made a statement, and I'm just gonna
ask the question, point blank, how does it benefit us
to capture these narco terrorist drug runners, because you've already
said that they're the they're the little peons.

Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
I mean, how does it benefit Any bit of intelligence
is going to help any bit So that's what you
get from them?

Speaker 1 (01:13:39):
How so, And you don't think we don't know where
these drug pins are, these drug king pins are. You
don't You don't think we don't we don't know where
their distribution points are.

Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
I'm sure we do.

Speaker 1 (01:13:47):
We do, we do, but there's an international law that
prevents us from going in without the without the expressed approval.

Speaker 2 (01:13:57):
Of the government. Okay, I'm really I'm just saying I
just I've said my point.

Speaker 1 (01:14:02):
I know, But again, I'm really trying to understand why
what benefit to the United States is capturing these cats
give us. That's what I'm trying to find. That's what
I'm trying to figure out. I don't know, Chris, intelligence
and two less boat drivers, I guess, oh, well yeah,
and again, and we don't have to provide them with

(01:14:23):
two hots and three hots in a cot by putting
up in an American penitentiary for the rest of their
lives or for ten or twenty years this way, this way,
they're gone and they're not going to be running any
more drugs. So that's that's kind of how I look
at it. But anyway, maybe I'm not being as charitable
as I should be, But I really don't see, I

(01:14:47):
really don't see. I think most of America is kind
of with me on this. It's like, well, they're they're druving.

Speaker 2 (01:14:54):
And again I'll state that I'm not totally against it.
It's just it's fair looking at it with a raised eyebrow,
you know, that's that are there better ways? And then
you know why those people are coming to America is
because there's a demand that seems to me to be
the equation, part of the equation that we have never

(01:15:15):
tuxed well.

Speaker 1 (01:15:15):
And that's that's where the libertarian in me kicks in.
You remember how I feel about the quote unquote war
on drugs. I thought we should divert all that money
to education. And if you still want to coke out,
you still want to, you know. And the problem there's
also a problem with my philosophy is because the laced
fentanyl on certain narcotics where people think it's quote unquote safe.

(01:15:38):
I just had somebody, a very good good friend of
mine lost to a family member to coke that was
laced with fentanyl. Didn't know it dead right. So as
much as I would like to say, hey, you know what,
you want to go coke yourself out and be a loser,
go right ahead, right, But then there's the problem with
that is all the stuff coming in. And I know

(01:16:00):
that China has this as part of their of their
attack on our country. It's part of their portfolio. They're
still trying to get even for the opioid wars. And
we didn't even do it, but there, but I guess
we're the representative of the West. And and by the way, buddy,
I would recommend this, highly recommend it over the holidays.
Reading Blood Money by Peter Schweitzer. It will open your

(01:16:21):
eyes everything that's that's being provided with in the drug
wars against us started back in Vietnam, and it's all
China and and and they lost.

Speaker 2 (01:16:32):
Well, the only way to defeat the drug war is
to uh cease demand. Yeah, true enough, true, And I
mean I have no idea how you do that other
than I think the only way to do it is
you start developing ten cities out in West Texas and

(01:16:52):
anybody caught with a joint in their pocket, it goes
to jail. And and maybe then you know, people will
start realizing, hey, I don't want to smoke dope. But
then in the seventies you got guys that you know,
in the same scenario had it joined in their pocket
and we're in for thirty years. So I don't know
that that does any good. I don't know how to

(01:17:13):
fix the demand side of things. I have no clue.

Speaker 1 (01:17:16):
China, China got well, they got tough. That this is
how they finally ended up defeating the opioid wars. But
they blamed the West, Great Britain and France in particular
for one hundred years of lost productivity in China because
seventy I think this is right, seventy five percent of
their population was addicted to opium. Seventy five percent of

(01:17:40):
their population, and like you, they didn't know how to
beat it, and so they got total they went totalitarian.
Then they beat it. But and then and then they
have blamed the West ever since. And that's dude. And
when you read this book, you're going to be shocked
as hell about what they're doing. And I think that's

(01:18:01):
at the end of the day, Venezuela is at the target.
At the end of the day, China is. And every
single time we take out an ARCO boat, every single
time we interdict in in these these countries where China
has been getting a foothold to set up base in
our in our hemisphere, we kick their treacherous communist asses out.

(01:18:22):
And that's what it's really all about. That's that's my belief.
And I've had a couple of military guys tell me
that's really what the game is here, kicking China, Iran
and Russia out of our hemisphere.

Speaker 2 (01:18:34):
And I keep the military industrial complex making missiles so
we can blow one hundred thousand dollars a dope worth.

Speaker 1 (01:18:41):
On well, you know, you know what too, buddy. I'm
just going to say that I'd much rather have our
military might protecting us here a little closer to home,
than overseas protecting another country's borders. Frankly, I'd rather I'd
rather see a missile blowing up and protecting me and
mine than somebody else for a change. And that's that
from me. The fleet of ships that are down right now,

(01:19:05):
down in our own hemisphere kicking these treacherous a holes
from China, Russia and Iran out of our hemisphere. Go
to it, boys, go to it, get it done. They
don't belong here. Kick their asses out. That's how I
feel about it. So anyway, hey, yeah, I know, joyful
way to end a show. Behind the show. Merry Christmas, everybody.

Speaker 2 (01:19:27):
Yeah, go back and look at your TV guys and
masturbate whatever you were looking at all.

Speaker 1 (01:19:32):
Oh, shut up, I just I just discovered that as
you and I were talking.

Speaker 2 (01:19:37):
Yeah, you'll be clicking right back on it here in
a minute.

Speaker 1 (01:19:40):
I am going to be finding that Gary Coleman, come
hell or high water, I'm gonna find just so I
can prove to you that's what he was doing. And
even iBOT to call you up privately and play.

Speaker 2 (01:19:51):
It for you over the phone.

Speaker 1 (01:19:52):
I will do that, Hey, buddy, have a great rest
of your week. All right to that right there is
going to put a wrap on this Salsado stormpot until
we visit again. My friends. Remember this, A society's worth
is not measured by how much power is stolen by government.
A society's worth is measured by how much power is
reserved for you and me, We the people, keep fighting

(01:20:13):
for freedom out there, my friends
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.