Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hello, anybody home today, I want you to open your mind.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
I've almost tone of the conclusion that the story is
subdamning that the mass Apple people can't deal with it.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
We are in process of developing a whole series of
techniques to bid people actually to love their certitude.
Speaker 4 (00:24):
We face a hostile ideology, global in scope, atheistic in character,
ruthless in purpose, and insiduous in methode.
Speaker 5 (00:32):
So we are opposed around the world by a monolithic
and ruthless conspiracy that relies primarily on covet means for
expanding its sphere of influence.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
To change the minds and the attitudes and the beliefs
of the people to bring about one world socialist totalitarian government.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists.
Speaker 6 (00:53):
It is patterned itself after every dictator who has ever
planted the ripping imprint of a boot on the pages
of history the beginning of time.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
If you can get people to consent to the state
of affairs in which they are living, then you have
a much more easily controllable society than you would if
you were relying poorly on clubs and firing squads and
concentration camps.
Speaker 6 (01:15):
Tools that conquest that necessarily came with bots and extortions
and foot there are weapons that re simply fights prejudices.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
As you connect the dots between.
Speaker 3 (01:26):
Different people, organizations, religions, history, suddenly the picture starts to form.
Speaker 7 (01:32):
The Kingdom of God is within men, not one man
nor a group of men.
Speaker 4 (01:36):
Someone born in the United States is not more special
than someone born in Mexico.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Someone who is white is not more special than someone
who is black. They're just vehicles for the consciousness to experience.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
They do not want your children to be educated.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
They do not want you to think too much.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
It was learned that the aliens had men and were
then manipulating matters of people through secret societies, witchcraft, magic,
the occult, and religion.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
They're reaching to our.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Children in music, television.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
Books, right my children's eistence. How can I just still lies?
Set a stamp with an efficiency.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
So if you have the opportunity to stand next to
one of.
Speaker 4 (02:15):
These machines, it feels like an altar to an alien god.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Genetic powers the most awesome forced the planet's ever seen.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
But you wielded like a kid that's found his dad's gun.
You are on the airport. Who has been ou but
applying this there is now in the provestion of the army.
Speaker 6 (02:27):
Too many others know what's happening out there, and no one,
no government agency has jurisdiction over the truth. Any state,
any entity, any ideology that fails to recognize the worth,
the dignity the rights of man, that state is absolute,
a case to be found under m from mankind in
the Twilight Center.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
A lot time, some of you got acquainted with the
real hard truth.
Speaker 2 (02:51):
It's the haw that says I will not acquiesce.
Speaker 5 (02:55):
Freedom is the primager to be right, Freedom from the disasters, mistakes.
Speaker 7 (03:00):
If you don't connect the dots, just a mass.
Speaker 1 (03:03):
Of what's all this about? You are listening to The
Secret Teachings Radio. I'm your host, Ryan Gable, and i'd
like to welcome you to this live Friday edition of
the show August fifteenth, two thousand and twenty five. TST
(03:24):
Radio dot info is the show website. If you would
like to find our full archive, check out my books
as well as our document archive and show montages. That's
TST radio dot info. And if you'd like to contact
me directly, you can email R. D. G. A. B. L.
E at yahoo dot com, the same email we've had
(03:46):
four over fifteen years already Gable at yahoo dot com.
For those of you in the audio only archive, thank
you for listening to the advertisements that keeps us on
air Monday through Friday, independent, and it also allows us
to do these live video shows streaming through x, Facebook
and YouTube at tst official. The links to all of
(04:10):
the social media accounts are also on the website at
tstradio dot info. For everybody who is in the chat room,
welcome to the show. I appreciate you tuning into the broadcast.
It's not consistent on Friday, so the fact that anybody
comes into the show and pays attention to the promos,
it's very much appreciated. Patriot Girl is here, Bad Whiskey
is here, Debra is here as well as Diane Perry.
(04:34):
I'm just what is this one? I'm just one nut.
I don't know why I have trouble reading that every
single week. I'm just one nut. Also, we have another listener,
Blue dough One. I don't know if Blue Dough one
has been in the chat before that I've seen them.
PT is here as well, King Sweetest here. Thank you
(04:54):
so much for joining us. If you're in the chat,
please say hello. Tonight's show, as I'm sure you can
tell by the show promo is called Baskin in Poison,
and the show is about not just Baskin Robbins. We're
going to talk about far more than just some ice
(05:16):
cream tonight, or ingredients in that ice cream. You know,
there are a lot of things that be them political,
or be them religious, or be them even about nutrition
and food health. There's a lot of things that are
(05:37):
It's just it's everything's a dichotomy. You know, you're supposed
to pick a side, like I'm supposed to eat Baskin
Robins because Sidney Sweeney has big tits or something. I
guess that's the message in the advertisement. I actually thought
the advertisement with Sidney Sweeney was fake. I thought that
it was playing on the Blue Gene commercial, and then
(06:00):
I went and watched it, and I thought, you know,
it's really weird for someone like Sydney Swingey to do
a Baskin Robin's commercial considering that she doesn't really eat
that stuff herself, which means that she took money from
Baskin Robins to eat garbage on camera and flaunt her
(06:20):
body around to for money. She doesn't even eat this stuff.
She doesn't even drink sugary drinks, so she doesn't I
don't think even sometimes she said she eats ice cream,
but probably for commercials for money. She doesn't eat this stuff.
So you just have some Hollywood celebrity taking money to
(06:41):
hawk a product that she doesn't even really eat herself.
So it's just so bizarre and so weird to me
that they see this kind of stuff and you're supposed
to react in a certain way. This is the point
that I'm getting at here. You're supposed to react in
a certain way, like you're supposed to either like it
or hate it, and if you don't like it, you're
(07:03):
a liberal, and if you like it, you're a conservative.
And America's back, baby, I don't really think that's America
is back, because if you look back into American history,
people genuinely and genuinely didn't have the same kinds of
health problems that they have today, different sorts of problems
(07:25):
that were maybe hygienic, that were maybe a matter of cleanliness.
But today we have problems that just should not exist.
And when you compare the United States to the rest
of the world. You find that most of the rest
of the world, pretty much anywhere you look, does not
have the same levels of problems we do in America.
In regard to health. We take the most pharmaceutical drugs.
(07:49):
I'm pretty sure that's a marker for us also taking
the most illegal drugs, and we consume probably the most
poison processed food on planet Earth. In any country that
adopts it, tends to adopt along with the lifestyle and
the standard American diet, they tend to also adopt the
health consequences of this. But see, the thing is, other
(08:10):
countries know why, other people know why. Americans just must
lie themselves all the time. I don't know if you
remember when Donald Trump was first speaking when he got
back in office with an about RFK junior and saying,
We're going to figure out what's causing all this diabetes.
We're going to figure out what's causing all this heart disease.
It's like, we don't need to we don't need a commission,
(08:33):
we don't need to spend money on it. We know
what's causing it. It's the same diet that the president consumes,
and everybody thinks it's funny it's the soda, it's the
fast food, it's the Sydney Sweeney advertisements. It's disgusting and
that is the reason why we have so many problems
in this country. And here to discuss this with me
tonight is my good friend, I can't believe it's been
(08:55):
almost three weeks now, or it has been three weeks now,
My good friend and longtime host, Mike d He's with
us because Mike's one of the very few people I
know who's done radio, who has a good head on himself,
and he sees the stuff the way that I do.
We've seen this stuff together for fifteen years and just
(09:15):
I don't get it. Mike. I was reading. Let me
put it this way. Let me introduce you, Mike d
Our co host. First of all, welcome to the show.
Thank you for joining us.
Speaker 2 (09:24):
Hey, Ryan, good to be here again. Yeah it's three weeks. Aw,
that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
He's crazy, isn't it.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
So here's my question to you, Mike. I was reading
a story and I'm going to put it on screen
about how in the United States, the Make America Healthy
movement whatever it is, is pushing for better school lunches,
which is something I can get behind. I'm all about
better school lunches because our lunches in the US are
(09:54):
just totally disgusting. I think down in Florida, my school,
Northside Christians contracts with Dominoes, Taco Bell, McDonald's, and I
want to say Pizza Hut was also involved. That's what
we used to have for lunch. You too, Yes, So
I read this story. It's it's it's from the Hill
(10:15):
and it says that school's brace from Maha changes to lunches.
And I'm going to read some of this to you,
but in a nutshell, it basically says that if we're
going to do this, it's going to cost too much money.
It's going to require people to actually, you know, handmake
the food. This is impossible. We can't do this. There's
(10:37):
not enough employees, there's not enough money, we don't have
enough resources. And this is the wealthiest and most I
mean historically speaking, the wealthiest and like most successful country
in the history of the world in economic terms, and
we can't make a fucking school lunch. I mean that
is just depressing and sad. What is that? What does
(10:58):
that say about the country? Does that say about our
perceptions of health and food and community. It says a
lot of bad things.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
So no one knows how to chop up an apple.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
No, apparently not mash.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
Some sweet potato, a nice organic sweet potato. We don't
know how to get back to the moon, either, So
I can see how this figures in.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
Let me read some of this too.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
We lost we lost the instruction tapes on how to
get back to the moon.
Speaker 1 (11:27):
Yes, we don't know how to cut apples. We don't
know how to get to the moon. And that's kind
of the point I'm getting at here. It's not just
a matter of the lunches and and and nutrition and
health and all that. It's just a matter of either
genuinely not knowing or pretending like we don't know what
the problem is. Like, You've got cities all across the country,
mic including Tucson, where I lived, where you've got mayors
(11:49):
that say, well, we're going to try to We're going
to put a commission together to figure out how to
clean up the trash. We're not really sure how to
do that. You got the president saying, we're not really
sure what's causing all this die beads and all of
this heart disease. We're going to put a commission together
to figure it out. We know what the problem is
with trash, we know what the It's not trash cans,
it's people that aren't respectful and don't care. And we
(12:12):
know what the problem is with with our health issues.
It's it's the diet. We want to spend billions of
dollars to try to try to figure these things out.
It's very stupid.
Speaker 2 (12:24):
Yeah, totally. I love how they put the the acronyms
in there, the MAHA, MAGA, you know, neuro linguistic programming.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
To make America healthy again. Yeah, it's just too different.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
We can't do we can't do it.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
So this is what the article says, and I'm gonna
I'm going to read this and then we'll have more
of a back and forth commentary throughout the rest of
the show. But this article is just so crazy. It
says this is the hill the make America Healthy Again movement,
as if that's the only thing or the only reason,
the only movement in which people are saying let's have
healthier school lunches, as if it's a political thing when
(13:07):
it's not. But exactly, the MAHA movement is taking aim
at school lunches, and a move advocates say is unrealistic
without devoting more federal resources to K through twelve students. Well,
some schools can only afford to buy frozen meals that
are heated up and served, which is just disgusting. The
tun donuts, it sounds like, yeah, we'll get to that later.
(13:28):
It sounds like because they don't make fresh donuts, do they,
it's frozen?
Speaker 2 (13:34):
Yeah, no, there no, I'd say I'm the majority, the
vast majority of those franchises do not make fresh donuts.
Speaker 5 (13:42):
I know.
Speaker 1 (13:43):
Olive Garden is also frozen, heated up meals. They put
a lot of that stuff in the microwave. But it's
fresh Italian food. It'swave microwave faux Italian food.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
And by the way, all of us don't grow in
a garden.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
Yeah, I remember you said that to me along time ago.
That's right. But they got that.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
They got the macaroni Macaroni grill was another place that's
shut down a long time ago. But macaroni grill once,
let's be grill macaroni.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
But that might be something that Chuck Schumer does, but
I don't. I don't think the average American grill's macaroni. Well,
some schools can only afford to buy frozen meals. How
does I don't understand this. We have a Pentagon, that's
that that has lost close to a trillion dollars and
(14:30):
schools can only afford to buy frozen meals. Talk about
misplaced priorities. It says the Maha Commission was required to
send over recommendations to the White House to combat childhood
chronic diseases. And if you read this article, they go
on to talk about how if we were going to
adopt these policies, we need more money, we need more resources,
(14:56):
we need equipment. They say, we need equipment to do
this kind of stuff. So you don't need equipment to
you just need a knife to chop the vegetables, to
chop the fruit. This stuff has made so overly complicated.
I'm wondering, what do you think, Mike, because I'm kind
of out on a limb here. I'm not really sure.
Is this a matter of we don't know how to
do it, or we're pretending like we don't know how
(15:18):
to do it, or what is the issue here?
Speaker 2 (15:20):
Yeah, I think these schools and these school officials, they
just don't want to change it's a lot easier to
serve the garbage that they're getting right now. And then
also these like we said, those contracts of these corporations,
they're getting money of course to have coke machines put
in every floor of the school, right so Pizza Hut
is also getting money for being there. They don't want
(15:42):
to end the money train, and they and and they're
and they're lazy because this will take a little bit
of effort just to set it up. But like you said,
it's not Once the process and the logistics are laid out,
it should be easy to serve fresh fruit there. You
can contract with local farmers and everybody else, everybody else
to get food there. That's not that shouldn't be a problem.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
Shouldn't be a problem. It should be really easy. I mean,
if we can get guns to Israel, if we can
get guns and missiles to Ukraine, we should be able
to get apples to schools. This should not be a
difficult thing. Yeah, exactly, it says, along with changes to
food costs, schools would have to pay more employees to
make the food, and in some cases would need to
(16:26):
acquire equipment to be able to handle making fresh food
for hundreds of students.
Speaker 2 (16:31):
What do you mean an oven?
Speaker 1 (16:33):
What equipment?
Speaker 2 (16:35):
I mean, what do they need or what do you need?
Some basic items like some type of cooler, refrigerator, some
type of heating, baking oven.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
They already have ovens, they already have refrigerators, they already
have freezers. Yeah, so what do you need equipment for?
They always try to make it sound so complicated, and
you know, you're you're totally right about this having to
do with the contracts. Like when we went to school,
we had contracted fast food at our schools in Florida.
(17:04):
And that's what I think, that's what this is because
if this is the same exact argument that you and
I used to hear and we used to talk about
fifteen years ago, where we used to have these stories
about say Monsanto and Monsanto now Monsanto Bayer would make
the argument that if you don't want to eat their
genetically engineered food, you're an elitist because not everybody can
(17:27):
have access to non genetically modified food. It's like, well,
because you've patented everything, you've taken control of the farms,
you've taken control of the marketplace. What's elitist is thinking
that you can modify in patent nature. That's elitist. This
is the same kind of talking point. Oh, it's going
to be so comp we'd have to water the plants more,
(17:47):
we'd have to pay more attention to the insects on them,
We'd have to get equipment. These old lunch ladies would
have to actually cut the fruit and vegetables themselves. They
can't do that. It's too difficult.
Speaker 7 (18:01):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Yeah, Like you said, Monsanto, I mean, they fought spent
millions and millions of dollars trying not to get trying
not to get the stating that any type of product
that uses genetically modified ingredients would be put on a label.
So they fought to get that off the label. They
didn't even want you to know that I was in
your food. Then they fought for that because they didn't
(18:24):
want you to know. But they lost, and they have
to state if a food, a can of soup or whatever,
contains genetically modified ingredients demos.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
Some companies, like say the company that runs I think
it's the Mars. Is it the Mars Corporation.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
Oh yeah, they're great, they're great, great people there.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Some of their products I believe they voluntarily put the
label on there about genetic engineering. But guess what, people
still buy it and need. It doesn't matter like the taste
of it. Huey Burrito in the chat says, if I
go out to eat, it's usually local mom and pop spots.
They don't have equipment exactly, but they're not feeding a
bunch of kids. Hughey, So when you're feeding kids, you
(19:05):
have to have expensive vegetarian equipment. I guess they're not
even talking about vegetarianism. For the record, this includes meat too.
They're probably gonna.
Speaker 2 (19:14):
Have to have specialize equipment to feed children.
Speaker 1 (19:17):
Yeah. Wow. But see the reason I bring this up.
I'm want to show you something because when I was
when I was reading this article and I looked at
some school lunches. This is what a st Can you
see this on the screen? Mic, I know our listeners can. Okay,
this is what a standard American lunch looks like. Look
at that. This is supposed to be pizza.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
This is I didn't even know what it was.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Well, let's play a game here. What's this? Because is
that sloppy joe.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
Ah cat food.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
It looks like something Charlie Kelly would eat for lunch.
Look at that.
Speaker 2 (19:54):
What's next to it?
Speaker 1 (19:56):
I think that's a bun and then like five packets
a catch up it. It looks like cat food.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
It's so gross, disgusting. What are they almost like a.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Oh well, this is what I'm thinking of when I
think of like a quote healthy American lunch. This is
what I see. A corn dog, this hash brown. Oh
it's just potatoes, right, No, it's it's got fifteen other preservatives,
chemicals and flavors in it because they have to add
potato flavor to it, and then they deep fry it,
(20:30):
and then they have to add additional preservatives because this
potatoes from like nineteen eighty seven, they've preserved it in
a freezer. And then they give that to you with
this hot dog corn dog dipping sauce. And then the
thing is like, oh oh look there's a pot there's
pineapple on the plate. That looks healthy. Well, it would
be if they didn't cover it in high fruitose, corn
syrup and sugar, which is what most of the fruit
(20:51):
is in schools. They cover it in SYRP, which is
stupid because it's already sweet. But this is the standard
American lunch. And I mean, I've seen worse I've seen
better too, but I've seen worse standard American lunches we had,
Like again, I'm guessing this is pizza here on the screen.
But anyway, the point is the reason I wanted to
(21:12):
show you this is because I came across Japanese school lunches.
I want you to look at this, Mike. This is
a relatively recent story in Japan. These lunches are called
yu shoku. And look at these lunches. They cost about
two hundred and fifty YenS, so it's about I mean,
what is that. That's less than three dollars American. And
(21:35):
look at these school lunches. You're getting fermented foods. You're
getting noodles that are made out of usually rice. They
could be wheat, but the wheat here is usually controlled
in domestic it's not modified like US wheat is. You're
getting pickles, you're getting rice, you're getting vegetables. You're getting
here's your miso soup. You're getting fresh fruit cut, no
syerps on it. They do have milk, which I don't
(21:56):
like and disagree with, but they have tea for lunch.
Look at these lunches, with the exception of this piece
of bread. Here compared to whatever the hell this is
on this this is cat food that they feed kids.
And again the reason I'm showing you this is because
these lunches traditionally and this is as of twenty twenty two,
(22:16):
this Japanese school lunch website, I found they make most
of this stuff by hand. And I don't think that
they have giant industrial facilities in most of these schools
because guess what, most of these Japanese schools have even
less money than American schools do so with less money
(22:39):
and with I would assume probably less resources, they can
make this. But with all the money in the world,
the most successful we tell the world we're the best,
and we're the most successful and wealthy all the time
we serve our kids fucking cat food and whatever. This
is pizza or whatever. This looks like it's going to
crawl off the plate. This is a big problem. Comments
(23:03):
on that, Mic.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
I see in the Japanese Are those porson plates right?
They're not. It doesn't look like it's plastic. It's like
a chromerica. It's like a porcelain.
Speaker 1 (23:15):
Yes, yes, this one here is this bowl of vegetables
and noodles is yeah, I think most of these are.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
And then when I look at the American it's like straight,
everything is like a plastic sloppy. You know, it doesn't
look appealing. It's sloppy, it's thrown together. It's gmode. It's disgusting. Actually,
it's a shame. Actually it's what it what it is.
Speaker 1 (23:38):
By some slob in the kitchen who doesn't care.
Speaker 2 (23:41):
Which Look at that and see how it's nicely like organized,
two on the plates and portioned.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
Yes, look at that. They also do this in prisons
in Japan. This is also prison food. Prison literally, prison
food in Japan is better than food it in the
United States. And they have less resources here. I mean,
Japan is one of the biggest economies in the world.
But their school system they're notoriously like the US school system.
(24:08):
They're not that they don't have a lot of money,
and yet they can still do this. You notice that
they actually use real fruit and they don't use this
syrup bullshit that the US uses. All there's pineapple, yeah,
covered in high fruit, toast corn serp. Look, that's an
actual orange or a mandarin. That's an actual kiwi. It's
an actual piece of watermelon. Up there in the corner.
(24:29):
Look at that. So this this is the real We
don't need a billion dollar commission, is my point to
figure out why kids are sick and overweight. This is
why it's very simple to figure this out. This is why.
And the lazy mothers on TikTok that are like, I
just don't have time, so I put chicken nuggets in
the microwave and then feed that to my kid with
(24:50):
high fruit toast corn serp catsup because I just have
other things to do.
Speaker 2 (24:55):
I think people are pissed because I think I just
saw an artwa. I did see article that they raised
the price of the chicken McNuggets McDonald's did recently, And
people are pissed because that was the most that was
one of the items that didn't go full blown like
up crazy.
Speaker 1 (25:14):
Oh really I didn't know that.
Speaker 2 (25:15):
Yeah, so and they and then they just raised the
the cost of chicken McNuggets, which god, do you remember
those back in the day?
Speaker 1 (25:24):
Those I remember that?
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Do you remember that? Like the shape like what kind
of shape chicken shape is that? And it was so
super breaded. Oh, it's just just nesty.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
Well, that's what that is is that's the the they
actually use the machine they use a machine for that.
At McDonald's they have it's like a I think we
did a show in that it's the mg rib press.
So the mg rib is just like all this random, slimy,
gross meat that they press into something that looks like ribs.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
Yes, yes, it's a press.
Speaker 1 (25:56):
Oh, here we go.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
These these foot snobs are talking again. Look at these
lead us food snobs. Food. So I used to eat
the crap and so did Ryan till we figured out, Hey,
I don't really want to die super early in life,
and we want to eat healthy. You want to feel
better every day, you know, you don't want to wake
up in pain. You don't want to, you know, be
three hundred pounds.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
You just you just don't know who who does? Who
does want to be that? I don't think anybody.
Speaker 2 (26:23):
Mental disorders, that's for sure, because it makes life, you know,
a hell about a lot harder when you're three hundred pounds.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
Yep, yes it does. And then of course that contributes
to all the medical costs we have, which are the
highest in the world, on top of taking the most
drugs in the world, and the world, well why don't
why aren't we getting better? Because you keep going the
same thing over and over again, and it doesn't solve
the problem. It makes the problem worse. I noticed this too.
You know they serve milk, they serve tea, but you
(26:50):
see they serve milk in Japan. Yes, that is a
that is a new thing that that comes out. That's
because Japan lost the war. They adopted milk milk. And
I've read I've read that most not just in Japan,
but most Asians, which this also applies to Europeans and Americans,
et cetera, they say that most Asians are completely lactose intolerant.
(27:14):
It's like, yeah, because you're not supposed to consume that product.
You're not supposed to drink that, especially in the quantities
that we drink it. But this is the result of
losing World War two. They get the milk, the result
of losing World War two, they get they get the
kinds of things that are making us sick, which is
contributing to the slow decline and overall health here in
(27:36):
this country because of a Western diet. But if you
look at this, look you got vegetables, you got broth,
you got tea, you got what I'm what I'm guessing
here is kind of like a salads could be probably pickled.
You got too small fish and you got rice. I mean,
this is like a balanced proportional meal. You don't have
to have fish for lunch, but this is a balanced
(27:56):
proportional meal. And you notice they don't have soda, but
we used to have Coca cola for lunch. And that's
because those contracts that you mentioned. It's fucking disgusting.
Speaker 2 (28:06):
Mike, my god, totally. Matt, Yeah, totally.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
Blair m says better to be a food snob than
a food knob. I'd say better to be a food snob.
I would say better to be a food snob than
a food slob, because if this is a food snob,
then this is food slop. This is slop. Like this
is literally a slop.
Speaker 2 (28:27):
Ryan. Remember when we started to talk about this, we
would get comments and feedbacks is like, oh, you know,
you're an elitist. What do you eat? You know, how
do you how do you do? You have all this money,
you can eat organic.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Not cat food.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
And then you had to actually do a show. I
think you did a show that just basically said this
is how you can eat organically for cheap. Yes, yes,
to do the stews and everything else and whatnot, so
or is.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
Not even organic? Just to eat eat food, Yeah, cheap, Yes,
that's right. Patriot Girl in the chat says, well, she's
congratulating Hue who maybe who He said somewhere back here
in the chat, he maybe he lost weight or something
like that. Oh yeah, he said, lost sixty four pounds
in the last year, not eating garbage, no exercise at all.
Patriot Girl says, congratulations, more energy to once you awake
(29:16):
to food, you can't go back. Deborah also says she
lost seventy five pounds. You don't even have to exercise,
so this means that there's no there's no weight loss
drug mic, there's no exercise, so you're not spending money
on fancy programs or fancy medications. You don't have to
pay for insurance, you don't have to go buy something.
You just literally stop eating garbage. And they these people
(29:39):
have shed collectively almost three hundred pounds. Congratulations, that's really
great news. Everybody in the chat. Patriot Girl says she
lost forty pounds. That's amazing. Look at that.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
I mean I would I would throw in just walking
to you can just walk, just walk around your neighborhood,
walk outside. You got to get outside on know, in
certain places. Yeah, it's hot in the summer, but if
you get out early enough, you can beat the heat,
you know. That's what That's what I have to do
in Florida.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
Yes, and places like Arizona as well. That reminds me.
I just brought this up on the screen. Can you
see this this article? Look at this, So you say,
just walking, Well we even turn in the US, we
even turned that into some kind of commodity. So there's
a new trend called Japanese walking. And look, I can
(30:31):
tell you living over here, nobody there's no there's no
such thing as Japanese walking. There's just walking. But this
is now a US trend. I wonder how the Japanese walk.
They do it on two feet, that's it. They just move,
You don't. This is Look, this is just the height
of ignorance. Well, what are those people over there doing.
(30:52):
They must have a fancy style of walking. No, they
just walk. They must have a fancy style. No, they
just don't eat food and high fruit, toast cornsirt catchup
for lunch with whatever the hell this is is that
a bun? It could be a cephalo pot. I don't
know what that is.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
I know it might be like a giant mushroom springing
out from the plastic.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
Yeah, so they gotta have aything Japanese walking. It doesn't exist.
Speaker 2 (31:21):
Yeah, Japanese walking. Put one foot in front of the other.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
Oh my god, it's so stupid, so stupid. Okay, so
let's move on. We have a comment from last night
that I saved Blake s I don't know is Blake
in the chat? Look at this comment though, This is
such a great comment. This is the comment of the week.
Can you why don't you read that to the listeners
if you can see it.
Speaker 2 (31:43):
Yes, we can occupy Japan for eighty years and yet
can't compete with them on school lunches.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
So accurate. Thank you Blake for that comment. Totally true.
We can occupy Japan eighty years, can't beat them on schoolunches.
Look at that slop My god. But no, it must
be that they're walking fancy. There's a fancy walk go
to commodify everything. There's probably books written on it.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
How do I watch? I p sure they're they're eating
healthier in Israel also, that's for sure.
Speaker 1 (32:16):
Well, they eat a lot of they eat a lot
of falafel. I've heard a lot of falafel. I don't
know the last time I I I watched American horror
story two Israeli guys reading each other's ass. So that's
what I learned about Israel. Israel's diets.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
You know what the federal taxes, if we're going to
pay them. I mean, this is a little off subject,
but I'll just bring it up real quick. Go ahead,
we're gonna pay federal taxes, then you need to send
me an itemized list of what my money is being
spent for. You know, if it says roads, bridges, infrastructure
in the United States, check check check money sent to Israel. No, no, no, no,
(32:58):
you're not I'm not paying I'm not pain. Well.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
In the state of Texas, that's illegal, the governor says.
If you pass a resolution and condemn the pain of
taxes to a foreign country, then they say that's illegal.
It is illegal under Texas state law. That's fun, isn't it?
Freedom winning? Really really winning? Did you read that story
(33:24):
about lunchables recently in the news, Because I listen, Hughey
and the chat just said you lunchables. Patriot girl says, gross.
Uh yeah, look at these. Look at this story, just
like the girl Scout cookies we did. Look at this.
This is USA today. Lunchable shouldn't be on school menus
due to lead, sodium, et cetera. Consumer Reports tell us USDA.
(33:47):
That's great, so they're feeding kids lunch. Have you ever
seen a lunchable?
Speaker 2 (33:51):
Mike?
Speaker 1 (33:51):
When's the last time you saw lunchable?
Speaker 2 (33:53):
Remember? I think they were like in plastic little things
and separated like you get like a meat and crackers
or some crap something like that. Yep, it's been a
while since I've seen what it what it looks like. Yeah,
oh yeah yeah.
Speaker 1 (34:05):
Look at this ham and cheese, cracker, stacker and oreos.
But there's eleven grams of protein.
Speaker 8 (34:11):
Bro.
Speaker 2 (34:12):
Yeah yeah, your five year old is lifting heavyweights every day,
needs that eleven protein.
Speaker 1 (34:19):
Yeah, look at look at dude, Look at this one
ham and cheese. This is a classic. I think I
ate this one ham and cheese, crackers with raw and
waters wild cherry, waterfall, caprisan, and a cookie. This is
all subsidized. This is fake meat, this is fake cheese.
It's subsidized dairy. This is subsidized corn. And this is
(34:40):
subsidized sugar industry. That's all. It's just all subsidized garbage
packaged into a box that is disgusting.
Speaker 2 (34:48):
Flavored water beverage, Yeah, have you ever seen water beverage?
Speaker 1 (34:55):
Have you seen those little waters that parents buy their
kids that have cartoon characters on them, like princesses from
Disney or stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (35:06):
I think so.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
I don't know what the name of them are. Anybody
in the chat know what those are called. Let's see
water characters flavored type in America. I'm sure it'll probably
bring it up. Well, it's kind of stuff like this,
oh like.
Speaker 2 (35:25):
Yeah, like the movie tie ins for everything.
Speaker 1 (35:28):
Yes, but some of them, the one I'm thinking of
is different. They have it's not all Disney, but they
have like plastic characters. They're almost like toys on the
top of the water. Anyway, the point is I read
one of these one time. It's supposed to just be water.
It turns out it's like a natural water flavored drink
and they put syrups and dyes and sugars and other
(35:52):
chemicals in it. But it's made for kids. It's water
because your kids need water. Mic Yeah.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
See, you're not supposed to eat stuff that comes from
the lab that's created.
Speaker 1 (36:06):
No, I don't think we get that blue How.
Speaker 2 (36:08):
Can we get that blueberry taste when it's not blueberries?
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Well we'll use anti freeze.
Speaker 2 (36:15):
Yeah, yeah, we'll try to fool you.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
Lead, cadmium, and sodium. This is what consumer groups found
in lunchables. It's like, well that's that's not even the worst.
Speaker 2 (36:28):
Yeah, and you wonder why you know, the kids have
all these types of diseases and mental disorders. Beating this, yep,
lead poison to your brain. Where do you think it
goes to? Goes all in your body, goes to your brain.
Speaker 1 (36:44):
Most of these heavy metals cross the blood brain barrier. Yep.
And you know for sure this is absolutely a major
contributing factor to neuro degenerative diseases. It's a major contributing
factor to things like dementia, Alzheimer's etclater in life, and
autism as a younger, when you're young, younger. Because it's
not just kids eating this, it's parents. Adults eat this.
(37:05):
They even actually they actually have adult lunchables. Now have
you ever seen that publics? Probably No, I have not. Yeah,
it's fancy, mic. Let's see adult lunchables. Well, these are
like homemade adult lunchables. Here's the this is what they
sell in store. You can buy this like publics. So
it's it's a fancier cheese, it's a fancier piece of
(37:28):
quote meat. They're charging three twenty nine American for that.
There's like four crackers.
Speaker 2 (37:39):
Yeah, those processed meats are just are They're not good
for you, folks. They're not pepperoni burshutto all that stuff.
It's just it's it's it's it's a cancer causing agent.
You know, Hey, but I only eat it, you know,
I don't really eat it. Well, how many times do
you order a pizza or eat the you know, yeah,
pepperoni or some type of meat, processed meat, you know,
(38:01):
if you're not really thinking about it, you're eating it.
Speaker 1 (38:05):
God, that's so disgusting. And that's another thing. Look how
much they're charging for this. Three dollars for a lunchable.
I mean that that is maybe worth three cents three
dollars and.
Speaker 2 (38:19):
You're look at the look at the packaging lies on
it like rustic harvests zoom in yeah, tusc and flair.
Speaker 1 (38:28):
It says it's.
Speaker 2 (38:29):
Like a high priced like million dollar home, neighborhood, tusk
and flair, rustic harvest. I live in rustic.
Speaker 1 (38:35):
Carves, rustic carves, hickory, smoked chicken, breast with cheddar, cheese,
with cranberries or cramp Yeah, cranberry cider, spiced nuts, and
multi grain crisps. They're not crackers, they're crisps. Yeah, you're right,
it's all marketing. But hey, look, Mike, they're all natural,
it says.
Speaker 2 (38:56):
Still still using that all bullshit from what thirty years ago,
forty years ago? All all natural, still.
Speaker 1 (39:03):
Using it, still sticking that on the label. So three
dollars for a lunchable and three twenty nine for the
adult lunchable. That is so crazy expensive. And it's like
going back to these Japanese lunches. What are they charging
kids for one of these lunches? Like, look look at
that lunch that costs two hundred and fifty yen. Now
(39:26):
for the Japanese. If you are living in that economy
and that's the money you're making, it's gonna be worth
a little bit less than the US dollar, but still
two point fifty is equivalent. This particular article says it's
equivalent to two dollars and fifty cents. That's not accurate,
but that was three years ago. It's more like, I
don't know, two hundred and fifty YenS, more like maybe
(39:47):
like two dollars, two US dollars something like that, which
it's about about two dollars maybe a dollar ninety for this,
Like I would pay probably ten dollars for that at
a restaurant. You're telling me kids are kids are paying
two dollars for this in school.
Speaker 2 (40:03):
It's making me hungry right now looking at it.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
Look at yeah, this this delicious soup of vegetables and
tofu and mushrooms and carrots. Look at these pickles rice
with I think that I'm guessing that's probably either sesame
seeds or she So there's this is here's a pickled side,
and they have tea. It's making me hungry too.
Speaker 2 (40:22):
Yeah, the pickled stuff is always good for your gut.
Speaker 1 (40:24):
Yep, they have pickled.
Speaker 2 (40:26):
The pickled stuff, the sauer krau, the kimchi, kimchi, it's
all great for your gut gut lining.
Speaker 1 (40:33):
I could ask my wife, she's in the other room,
what did what did you have for lunches? I actually
asked her about lunch this morning. In school. I should
bring her in here and say, hey, what what what
do you think about these American lunches? I should ask her, Hey,
maybe she's not in the other room. I thought she
wasn't in there. She's she's she must have her headphones
(40:55):
in or something if she If she walks over here,
they'll all ask her what she thinks about school lunches
in America.
Speaker 2 (41:01):
She probably wouldn't be able to identify what that is? Like,
what am I looking at it?
Speaker 9 (41:04):
Like?
Speaker 2 (41:04):
Don't tell her what it is? Just like, can you
tell me what that? What is that is?
Speaker 1 (41:09):
It literally looks like catfood. It looks like it looks
like it looks like what you know if you watch
It's Always sunny in Philadelphia. It looks like what Frank
and Charlie you know, scar scar be a.
Speaker 2 (41:18):
Ground beef is supposed to be a ground beef sandwich.
That looks nothing like a good ground beef. That's absolutely disgusting.
Speaker 1 (41:25):
I don't know what's worse that or the pizza. That's gross.
Speaker 2 (41:28):
Pizza pizza stop? What does that say underneath it? Pizza?
There's lezza stuff?
Speaker 1 (41:35):
It plays us. I don't know what that is. Taco's surprise,
the surprise is it's not fucking tacos.
Speaker 2 (41:41):
The surprises you're gonna die.
Speaker 1 (41:44):
Well, here's another one. I didn't even see this. Here's
the see they put green beans. All those are healthy. Right,
I'm sure you've noticed this, mic, and I'm sure listeners
have noticed this. Has anybody in the chat ever noticed that?
A lot? Even if you go to like natural grocers,
they put sugar in the green beans. They put shut
like grain granule, sugar in the peas in the corn.
(42:08):
You ever seen that?
Speaker 2 (42:09):
Yeah, yeah, you gotta be careful when buying green beans.
But there are there are companies with green beans in
a can. You can get organic where it's just green
beans and water water green beans.
Speaker 1 (42:19):
Yes, that's it.
Speaker 2 (42:20):
That's that's it. That's what that's what you that's what
you're getting. How easy is that?
Speaker 1 (42:27):
So I'm gonna look at the chat here real quick.
Blair m says celery is awesome. It also comes with
its own floss, right, yeah, I love celery cellar. Don't
if you're gonna juice celery. I learned this. If you're
gonna juice celery, juice at last, because the floss gets
caught in the juicer. But yeah, celery is great. Ryan
Telberg says, abs are made in the kitchen. Yep, let's
(42:49):
see what else. We have a lot of people in
the chat I should, I should. I wish, I wish
I had a way to let you control the chat
mic because I got to con roll a bunch of
stuff here.
Speaker 2 (43:01):
We'll figure we'll figure it out. This is only the
second show.
Speaker 1 (43:04):
That you've done with us yet or live with us. Yep,
oh here, Blair m says, I used to work in
a cheese factory. We supplied to one hundred percent of
the cheese to McDonald's, ninety five percent of the Burger Kings.
It's not real cheese. We have an insider, Mike, not
real cheese.
Speaker 2 (43:22):
That makes sense.
Speaker 1 (43:24):
See what else we have? I have a pole bunch
of people in the chatroom.
Speaker 2 (43:30):
Okay. You know, even as even as a kid, when
I was looking at those those cheese slices into plastic,
even as a kid, that the super bright orange made
really no sense to me. I'm looking at this, I'm like,
is this is this really the color of the cheese?
Just like neon orange? Like it's so disgusting, it's so gross,
wrapped like squorshed in that like plastic where you had
(43:52):
to like wrap it out, wrap pull it off a bit.
Speaker 1 (43:56):
It's so disgusting. I'm just one nut, says melted cheese
on styrofoam. It's basically like yellow yellow styrofoam. Yeah, God,
it's so disgusting. Query McDonald joined us. Hey, guys, how
to Corey. See who else we have in the chat.
A lot of people in the chat.
Speaker 2 (44:19):
Brat share, Yeah, share the show with friends, continue to
share and want to kind of grow, kind of want
to grow.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
This Flux says, we have a whistleblower. Yes, Blair is
our whistleblower. It's not real cheese.
Speaker 2 (44:31):
You better like and subscribe please, Yeah.
Speaker 1 (44:34):
And you can subscribe to YouTube. I'm not talking. I
don't care about YouTube, though. Subscribe to the archive to
get access to the full archive of shows. This is
just a.
Speaker 2 (44:42):
Yes, but like like this likes to give a thumbs
up for this.
Speaker 1 (44:46):
Yes, please, it'll really help the show out. Leave us
a reveal, if you leave a review on Apple, you subscribe,
or you listen to the free archive. Those are the
best ways. Again, most of our listeners are in the
audio archive, so this is just a special thing we
do for listeners on Fridays. What else do we have
in the chat? Cindy says, that doesn't even look like food. Well,
(45:07):
that's because it's not. It's not food. King Sweet says,
hybridized veggies or flavorless got to get people to eat
it somehow. Sugar triggers a response, makes people unable to
resist it subconsciously. Yeah, yeah, that's why.
Speaker 2 (45:22):
That's why I canna coad's got thirty six grams of
sugar in it, thirty through something close thirty through or whatever.
That's still wayby. I shouldn't have any should be any
You shouldn't be drinking it, and first off at all
because it's disgusting, you know, But hey, I drink it.
I get the Mexican sugar, real sugar.
Speaker 1 (45:42):
Yeah that's better.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
That's not better.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Yeah, that's it's.
Speaker 2 (45:46):
Better for Meation Farms. I think a Chinese company owns Hillshire.
Speaker 1 (45:49):
Now really I didn't know that. He'll Shy Gnarley Sheen says,
the leading brand and meat product.
Speaker 2 (45:56):
Can you look it up real quick, just do it?
He'll Shire Chinese?
Speaker 1 (45:59):
Yeah, who owns hill Shire Farms. It's owned by Tyson
so by Tyson Foods. Yeah, by the way. They also
there's a lot of good documentaries on this. You know,
Tyson Foods and some of these other meat companies. They
basically enslave the farmers. Have you ever seen those documentaries
(46:24):
what they do to those farmers. They basically can they have.
It's like a music industry contract. They completely control their lives.
One bad harvest, you're done. The contracts they sign with
some of these farmers. All right, So yeah, Deborah says,
plastic slices. That's pretty much what they are. Okay, Mike,
(46:48):
So we've looked at these school lunches. I'm still trying
to identify what that is. I'm not really sure. We
got the comment of the week we can occupy Japan
for eighty years, yet can't compete with them on school lunches. Yeah,
and they tell you, oh, you know, these these people
outside the US, everybody is just so stupid. Americans are
so smart. Now we have an IQ that is on
(47:08):
the downfall. You know, if you want high IQs and
healthy people that look young, you come to the Eastern world.
And it's not exclusive to the Eastern world. It's just
that that's typically you know, people are living a much
more traditional lifestyle and yet we make fun of like
ancient Chinese medicine, we make fun of like acupuncture, and
you know even certain kinds of massage therapy. Insurance won't
(47:31):
cover it. It's it's it's pseudoscience. It's so ridiculous and disgusting. Okay, Mike,
So here this brings us. I think this brings us
to a conclusion on everything we've discussed in this first hour.
I wanted to show you some of these stories. Look
at this article here, like it's some kind of big news.
Reuter's reports weight loss before in vitro fertilization and also
(47:53):
before you get pregnant may improve the odds of pregnancy,
like if you're not overweight, in fact, it might be
easier to get pregnant. I love it. It's like we're
rediscovering things, like we're rediscovering the wheel, we're rediscovering fire,
we're rediscovering like hygiene, Like, yeah, it's easier to get
(48:16):
to get pregnant if you're not overweight and sick. It
shouldn't be a surprise. And here's another one. There's a
story here about I think I still have it up.
Where's it at? Nope, let me pull it up. Scientific American,
and then we're going to move on to the basket
robin stuff Scientific American breastfeeding. Look at this article. This
(48:39):
is a relatively recent article from Scientific American. It's okay
not to breastfeed. Exclusive breastfeeding is not imperative and the
breast is Best mantra can be harmful to babies and parents,
especially for marginalized people. So we're telling we're telling young
women don't breastfeed because it's racist.
Speaker 2 (49:00):
Which marginalized.
Speaker 1 (49:02):
I don't understand what is going on in the world. Man,
I don't think that. And it's an opinion piece, but
people read this and believe it. In fact, it's not
just an opinion piece. The United States told the UN
eight nine years ago that breastfeeding was bad and that
you should put your kids on formula. It's like, no,
that would actually hurt marginalized people. You know how expensive
formula is. That shit's outrageous. You should breastfeed. It's free.
(49:28):
Sh But we're rediscovering things and here's I wanted to
ask you a question about this story. And then we're gonna,
like I said, we're gonna go to the basket robin story.
But I saw this, I think I can play it.
I don't know if you can hear it, but this
is about a teenager who built an application that lets
(49:48):
you scan your food and then it tells you how
many calories are in it. And I don't know if
you can hear this, but you can at least see
it on the screen. And I don't know if it
has captions, but I'm gonna play this ol Ai.
Speaker 9 (50:00):
It tracks your calorie intake using artificial intelligence.
Speaker 1 (50:03):
It's also one of the top health and fitness apps
in Apples app Store.
Speaker 7 (50:07):
It wasn't sustainable for my lifestyle to type in everything
I was eating, so along with one of my co founders,
we hypoth size that we could build an app where
you can just take a picture of your food and
then it will tell you the calories and macros of
what you're eating.
Speaker 1 (50:22):
Now, I like the idea, but the thing is you
don't have to do that. You shouldn't have to do that,
just eat real food. And we have to create new apps,
and we have to have look at these weight loss
drugs like ozimpic and now there's a condition called ozimpic
face and ozempic breast and ozimpic butt because people have
lost so much money or so much excuse me, forty
(50:44):
and slip. They've lost so much weight. Now they're having
to spend a bunch of money on surgeries. There's a
cosmetic surgery boom because of ozimpic face. It just is
one problem after another, problem after another problem. When it's
so simple, it doesn't matter how many calories are in
your blueberries, just fucking blueberries. You know.
Speaker 2 (51:01):
What I mean is the face thing. They're losing weight
so yeah, that it's distorting their face, and then they
have to get the surgery to make it kind of
look normal again.
Speaker 1 (51:11):
Correct, that's correct. That's crazy, losing a lot of weight
and so they have to get certain. The thing is, though,
that when you'd have ozimpic for the people that don't
have severe reactions to it, because it's basically poisoned. You like, oh,
but I lost weight on it. I bet you did.
If you cut off your right leg, you're gonna lose
weight too. That doesn't mean that you know you're gonna
be able to you won't be able to do that
(51:32):
Japanese walking anymore, but you'll have lost weight because you
cut off your leg. Like you know, people say, oh,
it makes me feel better. Well, so does heroin. I've
heard sodaes fentanyl. That doesn't mean that you should take
heroin and fentanyl. Plus if you get off of it
or you don't. I mean, some of this stuff is
fake even I think, how do I say fake because
the zimpic is technically fake too, But people are taking
(51:53):
things that are like off market, those are extra dangerous
and then the weight just comes back because you're living
the same lifestyle. And so this ozimpic is it's if
it doesn't cause drastic health effects in the immediate it
does in the long term, and then people are going
just imagine going to get surgery, Mike, this is what
I was thinking. This is why I sent you the article.
(52:15):
You go get surgery, and then the ozimpic doesn't work anymore,
and then all of it comes back. What's it going
to do? Like rip your face apart if you've had
your face stapled and glued and taped, and then the
fat comes back and people are going to just explode.
It's gross. Everything is fine in the chat says breastfed
kids are way healthier. Yet they're way healthier, less diseases,
(52:38):
less mental problems. It's very, very, very very very well knowing. Okay, Mike,
so and oh I wanted to show you this. You
want to read that headline to yourself to get a laugh.
Fifty thousand esthetic surgeries have been performed in Israel since
the war began. I guess that they're trying to look
less Jewish.
Speaker 2 (52:59):
Wow, it's a.
Speaker 1 (53:01):
Lot of cosmetic surgery since the war began. Maybe they
don't want to be identified as Jewish, so they're getting it.
Speaker 2 (53:09):
Looks like those ladies getting like botox or in our
lips or something.
Speaker 1 (53:13):
I think that's one of the Yeah, that's one of
those stock images.
Speaker 2 (53:17):
Yeah, they can. They had to find a goy picture.
Speaker 1 (53:21):
Well, we didn't get through a show without mentioning it.
Speaker 2 (53:23):
So goislop. We got to mention that. It's what that
school lunches on the Insiders called goyslop.
Speaker 1 (53:30):
Yes, I have an appendix in my new book about that,
a goy slop appendix. It's in there by the way.
I sent that to you if you get a chance
to skim through it. Okay, yes, So do you have
any comments, any thoughts or or a pre thought to
the Basket of Robins stories.
Speaker 2 (53:49):
Yeah. When this came out, a lot of like right
leaning programs like Neurotic and the Quartering h We're pleased
that this that the the industry, the advertising industry in general,
is going in the direction of being non woke. So
they were kind of looking at this as like, hey,
she's proud to be white. There's a play on genetics
(54:10):
and Jens and she's got blue eyes. And they were
saying that the left, this is all this is all
Yang Yang, this is all yin yang, low consciousness, right,
going back and forth on this, but they were saying that, oh,
the left is going crazy because it's a white person
that's proud to be who she has and her blue eyes,
and so both sides were playing that's what this really
(54:33):
when it first came out her gene thing, that's you know,
that's what was going back and forth. But it was
just a low conscious debate on just bullshit. You know,
it's obviously that the advertiser was just trying to cash
in and doing something opposite directly about what's most commercials
are still in that kind of woke ganeer. They said, Okay,
let's do something different, because to try to make money
(54:56):
off this and do something totally opposite, that's what it
all was it was just an marketing advertising scheme.
Speaker 1 (55:02):
Yes. And as a matter of fact, I just watched
the new episode If It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia and
they were arguing about going woke and going broke, and
as they were arguing about that, Dennis made the realization.
When the characters made the realization, He's like, wait a minute,
so if you go woke, you go broke, isn't that
the same thing? It's like cancel culture. And then they
(55:23):
started debating that, and it is. It's the same exact thing.
So when people are like, well, you know, we're going
to take back America and we're going to put some
blonde girl in a commercial and if you don't like it,
then get out of here. I don't see that as productive.
I see that as a petty, juvenile thing. I don't
know if that's kind of what you're getting that, but
(55:43):
that's the way that I perceive it. It's very childish
and juvenile. I mean, I get that people would I'd
rather look at Sydney Sweeney than some of these three
hundred pound, green haired, you know, feminists, but that it
doesn't solve a problem, and in fact, I think it
actually contributes to the album frankly, but go ahead, Mike.
Speaker 2 (56:02):
Yeah, kind of like you said, still making that divide
between left and right, you know, and who's right who's wrong? Yes, obviously. Yeah.
Do you want to see someone that's athletic rather than
someone that's fat that's trying to sell I don't know
whatever could be, you know, but it doesn't make sense
like that. A lot of these commercials that you've got
(56:24):
overweight women trying to sell ice cream, you know.
Speaker 1 (56:30):
Oh god, I remember that commercial. God that was gross.
Speaker 2 (56:34):
Yeah it was remember that commercial?
Speaker 1 (56:37):
Yeah, I remember that commercial.
Speaker 2 (56:40):
It was like a lady dancing in her bra and panties,
like totally fat, jiggling, and she was proud of her
body and she was proud that she was going to
go eat some ice cream.
Speaker 1 (56:50):
There was another one I know that with with Fitbit.
For some reason, they had a very large black woman
on a surfboard.
Speaker 2 (56:59):
Yes, remember that one, and.
Speaker 1 (57:01):
They had it. There was another one it might maybe
it was. Was it the fitbit commercial where they had
the big black woman pole dancing.
Speaker 2 (57:08):
Yes, yeah, yeah, so yeah, it was something something like.
Speaker 1 (57:11):
That, which is so ridiculous because even if you're like
a thin girl, it's very pole dancing is hard. It's
it's not something that you can easily do. They act like, oh,
if you get a fitbit, you can pole dance. It's
I hate. I think Bill Hicks was right. If you're
an advertiser, just kill yourself. Frankly, seriously, it's not a jokes,
(57:32):
no punchline. So I want I wanted to I wanted
to show you something that this is an interesting pole.
This is that there are tens of millions of people
I think close to seventy five million people that took
this pole. I'm going to show it to you on
the screen. This is about Sidney Sweeney and this She's
not really random. She's a model in Japan. But this
(57:55):
picture of this Japanese woman was It's a real picture.
She was going to like a business meeting or something
for some event, and they just snapped a picture of her.
And of seventy five seventy six million people and including
Elon Musk that posted this asking who was more beautiful
in America? Like the mass, I think seventy seven point
(58:15):
one percent selected the random Japanese girl over Sydney Sweeney.
Now I don't know what that means to you, but
I thought that was really interesting. In other words, like
a lot of Americans are also rejecting Sydney' sweeney, I guess,
And maybe that's because they realize what we realize, and
that it's just another form of divide and conquer. It's
another they're just selling you something fake. It's not real.
(58:38):
It's it's I mean, neither is this this other woman,
But it's it's not real.
Speaker 2 (58:43):
It's fake exactly. It's like if you were seeing ads
by CNN for three year straight and all of a
sudden Fox News starts to do ads. You know, then
people are like, yeah, what I wanted, But it's still
it's still divide and conquer, right.
Speaker 1 (58:57):
Yep, it is. So I thought this was fake, the
Sydney Sweeney Baskin Robbins advertise. I thought it was fake
because of the genes controversy. I thought it was AI
or something like that. So anyway, I looked it up
and it's real. And I saw her eating this disc.
I thought it was gross. She's eating one of these
Baskin Robins cones, which has like gummy bears and food
(59:19):
coloring and all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (59:21):
Bruss off. She ain't gonna eat that.
Speaker 1 (59:25):
No, she probably spit it out after the commercial.
Speaker 2 (59:27):
Yeah, no, she probably they'd probably just took it away
from her right after the photo shoot end and said
thank you, and she's like, where's my check?
Speaker 1 (59:33):
I think she took a bite of it, but I
don't think she swallowed it. And I looked it up.
Speaker 2 (59:39):
That's what she said.
Speaker 1 (59:40):
That's what she say. Yeah. I was going to say that,
but Mike beat me to it, so I looked up
what does she actually eat? Just out of curiosity. So
she has like she does berries for breakfast, morning workouts,
no sugary drinks. So, in other words, this girl is
a sellout because if you don't, if you eat healthy
and then your t making money to promote a product
(01:00:01):
that is poisoning Americans, you're a piece of garbage. I
don't care how big your tits are. That's what makes
me upset about this. I don't partake of the left right,
you know, arguments and paradigms. I don't like it. I
don't hate it because she's blonde or something. I dislike
it because this woman is kind of like a health
(01:00:23):
nut in a way, and yet she's taking money to
sell poison to people. That's disgusting. That's gross.
Speaker 2 (01:00:30):
Remember remember when Britney Spears was asked she had that
Pepsi sponsorship and she was asked if she drinks pepsi
and her head kind of exploded. Oh my god. If
you YouTube did like Britney Spears pepsi, you can bring
it up. But it's like her head explodes. She's like,
oh yeah, she's shaking her head no no, but then
shaking yes, Yes, I drink pepsi. It's crazy. You gotta
(01:00:55):
look it up funny later later look it up.
Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
You'll be like, yeah, I'll look it up after the
show for sure.
Speaker 2 (01:01:00):
Yes, I mean they, I mean obviously they don't you
think like Michael Jordan back in the day when he
was doing McDonald's commercials being a multi millionaire, that guy
was eating McDonald's. Are you kidding me? Yeah, he can
eat anything. He can eat anything he wants. You think
he's gonna go to McDonald's.
Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
Antonio says, who, Ryan Telberg says, yep, I'm one nut,
says sellout. Corey McDonald says exactly, and Fluck says hypocrite. See,
I just don't think it. I don't think it's funny.
And you get these like conservatory Republican people that oh,
it's she's beautiful. It brings back America. I mean it doesn't.
(01:01:39):
If it does bring back America, it doesn't bring back
a very good message. It's a bad message. Sell out
your values for a few dollars to poison people.
Speaker 2 (01:01:51):
It's like once, the last time he actually went into
Dunkin Donuts, she probably couldn't answer the.
Speaker 1 (01:01:56):
Question Basking Robins or Dunkin Donuts.
Speaker 2 (01:01:58):
Yeah, yeah, exactly. She'll sell it for you though, for
the right price.
Speaker 1 (01:02:03):
You know, But that's caspitalism.
Speaker 2 (01:02:06):
What you're doing is again, like you said, Baskin Robbins,
uh is poison. Dunkin Donuts is poisoned. Gross and look
about the ingredients on their on their websites.
Speaker 1 (01:02:19):
I want to see if I can find some more
and we will just one moment. I'm going to look
up Baskin Robbins ad with Sydney Sween so you can
see some of these other pictures. I don't want to.
I don't want to play it because I don't know
on YouTube, since we don't normally do YouTube, I don't
know if it's an issue to do that. But here
are some of the other images. Let's see if we
(01:02:39):
can find some of the advertising images. If I spelled
Robins right, Basking Robin's ad Sidney Sweeney. Yeah, so she's
got like a sugary drink which she explicitly doesn't consume,
and then she has this disgusting cone. You know, people
ask me questions in the past, you know, like what
what kind of women do you find attractive? And I
(01:03:00):
said ones that don't eat stuff like this. I don't
care how beautiful you are. If you eat this, you're
a disgusting person as far as I'm concerned. It's gross.
Speaker 2 (01:03:09):
It's probably like a four thousand dollars dress. You think
she's going to go into dunkin Donuts with that and
eat that with that dress on?
Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
Yeah, but see people, Yeah, you're right, but people are
Someone in the chat said this too. People are so
unconscious that the advertisers are just like, well, put her
big tits in a dress and push them up and
give her a sugary drink and people will buy it.
And it's true, they will. The ad is extremely successful.
Speaker 2 (01:03:35):
Notice how they're using a lot of pink for the feminine,
so it gets away from like the masculine male. Masculine
feminine ads that you would see of these women. Now
it's back to like the pink, you know, look at her,
she's like, you know the girl next door.
Speaker 1 (01:03:51):
Oh my god, oh my.
Speaker 2 (01:03:52):
God, I'm eating. And that's a weird photo to take
of your mouth open already. I mean you got to
your mouth that wide to suck on us straw.
Speaker 1 (01:04:01):
That's kind of that's a little well, you know what
that is. That's just they're using sex to it. Maybe
if I buy Baskin Robbins, she'll give me a bje.
Speaker 2 (01:04:11):
Look at all those cute gummies on that ice cream cloud.
Speaker 1 (01:04:15):
Well, you know, I don't, we don't. I don't. We're
gonna look at the ingredients. I don't want to get
into this. But you know who founded Baskin Robbins, right,
and Dunkin Donuts and Hogendas, Right, we did it. We
talked about that on a relatively recent show. It's the tribe.
They they they founded all of that. They founded. Baskin
Robbins founded by Burt Baskin, uh and IRV Robbins. Duncan
(01:04:40):
Donuts was founded by William Rosenberg. So yeah, they're gonna
make They're gonna make it sexual.
Speaker 2 (01:04:46):
The good old Rosenberg.
Speaker 1 (01:04:49):
They're gonna make it sexual. They're gonna sell you the
goy slot. I mean, if this is what it takes.
Speaker 2 (01:04:55):
Will increase if I changed my last name was silver Stein.
The bank gave me a loan with no interest.
Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
I already beat you to it. Change, welcome coming back.
Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
We have but we have a no interest loan. How
much money do.
Speaker 1 (01:05:07):
You need but silver Goldenberg. So anyway, I find I
find this to be disgusting because I'm supposed to look
at her legs or something, or tits or something, when
really I'm looking at the ingredient list. That's what I
want to That's what I want to know. And so
I looked at and we're gonna look at Dunkin Donuts
two here. I looked up Baskin Robbins Mike. I looked
(01:05:30):
up their ingredients and I love how they have And
this is the link to their website too. They they're like,
what we don't like. We don't like high saturated fats.
We don't like things, you know that are high in sugars.
What what do you think that is that's not high
in sugar. It's the cone is made of sugar. These
(01:05:55):
marketers man kill yourself. It's crazy. We also don't like
select flavors, can say contain high fruitles, corn syrup, carrigan
and and or artificial flavors. We don't like those things.
Speaker 2 (01:06:09):
Well, they should have said, we don't like GMOs either, preservatives.
Speaker 1 (01:06:13):
It's funny they say that, because let's look at some
of their ice cream. Here's the caramel turtle truffle ice cream.
Look at these ingredients. Look at how disgusting that is.
But they don't like these things, but it's still in
the ice cream. Look at that natural flavors. So they
just said, we don't like natural flavors, artificial flavors, but here,
here they are in the ice cream. So they mark,
(01:06:36):
they mark it to you that they don't do the stuff.
That's that that that they're actually doing. Isn't that consumer fraud?
Speaker 2 (01:06:42):
A lot of corn in there from those first couple
of ingredients, and then people under people say why can't
I eat this ice cream? I break out in hives.
Well maybe you're allergic to corn because look at your ingredients.
It's in there. Yeah, and obviously it's obviously it's GMO.
Speaker 1 (01:06:58):
God, that is so gross. Some of these I've never
even I've never heard of some of these greedies before.
Look at this, Oh my god.
Speaker 2 (01:07:04):
Poll sorbate eighty is in so much crap. I always
see that come up, the polysorbate eighty.
Speaker 1 (01:07:10):
Yes, it's in vaccines too.
Speaker 2 (01:07:13):
What is that? Is that like a preservative of some type.
Speaker 1 (01:07:17):
It's used as a preservative. I think it's also dangerous
for pregnant women if I recall, it's a synthetic compound
used as a surfecant and emulsifier and various products including
cosmetics and pharmaceuticals and food. It helps to mix ingredients
that typically don't blend well. Yeah, because they're because it's
not food.
Speaker 2 (01:07:36):
Yeah. They love those emulsifiers in there, they love them.
Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
So let's look at that again. What we don't like?
See that what we don't like, we don't like artificial flavors.
And then you scroll down and what do you think
is in this artificial flavors? If you don't like them,
why are they in the ice cream? See? If I
was Sydney Sweeney and I had big tits, what I
(01:08:03):
would do is I would do the ad. I would
take money from them, and then I would use the
money to start a campaign against them. That's what I
would do if I didn't already have a bunch of
money anyway, But I would bring it. I would bring
awareness to it with my big tits. That's what I
would do. That's that's how I would. I would look
(01:08:24):
at it. Let's see what else we have here, and
we'll look at Duncan don't you're going to take us
through Dunkin Donuts because you sent me that list. Here's
another one, your friend Polly Serb at eighties and the
chocolate ice cream at Baskin Robins.
Speaker 2 (01:08:36):
Yeah, there we go, gotta have it.
Speaker 1 (01:08:38):
But Mike, there's only one hundred and seventy calories and
a scoop ice cream. Oh my god, there's three grams
of protein. Look at that? Are you tired of hearing
about that? Are you tired of hearing about the protein thing?
I love how most Americans eighty percent of Americans, I think,
are deficient in vitamin D. We're deficient and vitamin C,
vitamin A, vitamin E. We're deficient into fiber. But we
(01:09:01):
got a lot of protein.
Speaker 2 (01:09:04):
Yeah you need yeah again. Yeah. They love to to
advertise the protein. God, can you let me play this
for the the Britney spears. Let me see if you
can hear this real quick. When she's asked if she
she just did like a multi million dollar deal with Pepsi,
and was asked by the interview if she likes pepsi.
(01:09:24):
Let me play it for you.
Speaker 1 (01:09:27):
Go ahead, Okay, I can barely hear it. It's kind
of low.
Speaker 2 (01:09:40):
Okay. Well, she was like, uh. She she She's like, oh,
I love pepsi. Uh. And then she's like, he asked
what kin and she's like, Pepsi's pepsi. She didn't know, She.
Speaker 1 (01:09:56):
Doesn't no idea. Gnarley Sheen says, it's a personal preference.
Of course we don't like them, but that doesn't mean
we won't give it to you. That's true. That's that's
basically the tribal philosophy, isn't it. Mike, Yeah, we don't.
We don't like the artificial flavors. But it's okay.
Speaker 2 (01:10:17):
If you eat them, it's Charlie. It's Charlie Sheen. If
if there's drugs in the house, please find them and
give them to me. That's the interview lady asked them,
are there are you do you do drugs? Are there
drugs here? He's like, if there are, please find them
and give them to me.
Speaker 1 (01:10:34):
Blair em look at people making jokes in the chat.
Blurim says, it's jew food, sugar and spice and everything,
world domination. Everybody in the chat's really on fire tonight.
Speaker 2 (01:10:48):
I'm looking the sugar. The sugar is a big problem.
So there you have cream, right, you have non filkeed milk,
you have sugar. Then you have sugar again with the
corn syrup.
Speaker 1 (01:10:57):
All subsidized dairy sugar and were in all subsidized industries.
Speaker 2 (01:11:02):
Yeah, and Annato I said that right, is a carcidgen
that's been proven to cause cancer.
Speaker 1 (01:11:09):
Oh, I didn't know that, is it?
Speaker 2 (01:11:11):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:11:11):
It sounds natural though, Mike, look artificial and natural flavor.
Speaker 2 (01:11:18):
You need both to make it taste good. You need
natural whatever, natural whatever natural means, and artificial. So you
don't even know. You don't even know what this natural
is because they can put anything called big of a
dog shit in there and say that's natural. The natural
and artificial flavor. What's a natural flavor compared to the
It's like a mind f because they wanted to say, oh,
(01:11:38):
it's natural flavor. Oh, and then we have artificial, but
we have natural flavor. Okay, we've got the artificial that
might turn you off, but listen, we have natural flavor also, so.
Speaker 1 (01:11:48):
It's totally natural, and they mix it. They mix it
together too. It's not separate about it.
Speaker 2 (01:11:53):
You know. We got to add these stabilizers in there,
in a multifiers so it doesn't like mel it's in
your hand.
Speaker 1 (01:12:02):
I've got a really great I played this one time
on the show, so I know that I can get
away with playing it on YouTube. It's not an issue.
I want to show you something, Mike. We'll go into
the dunkin donut ingredients. Give me one moment. I don't
I don't know, I don't know if you can. Could
you hear that other video I played about the application?
You could? Okay, great, So hold on a second. I'm
(01:12:25):
going to play this old SpongeBob clip here. I think
it's silly, but listen to it. It's really good. Let's see.
I found it last time. I don't want to spend
too much time trying to find it, but if I can't,
if I can find it, this is such a great
clip because it absolutely explains I'll try one more here, SpongeBob.
(01:12:52):
I'm trying to find the for anybody that knows SpongeBob,
I'm trying to find the one where mister Crab sells
the Krusty Krab, and there's just this company takes it
over and they start pumping out sandwiches using like a
gray slot machine, and then they spray paint it. I
guess we'll just have to skip over this. I can't
(01:13:12):
I can't seem to find it. Oh no, no, I found it.
I found it. Okay, Mike, can you see this? Because this,
this is exactly what I'm talking about. This is this
sums up our our show tonight, Isn't that? Isn't that
(01:13:38):
the American food supply?
Speaker 2 (01:13:40):
Totally? Totally? They know what do you think they're showing you?
Speaker 1 (01:13:45):
Yeah? Okay, So anyway, uh well, here we got cotton candy.
I'll look at this. Cotton candy one cream candy.
Speaker 2 (01:13:53):
What?
Speaker 1 (01:13:53):
Okay? So look at this. This is the one I
had read before the show, cotton candy flavored bass. And
then they have a separate ingrediently for the cotton candy
flavored based So this is a drop down menu. This
is a sub ingredient list within an ingredient list. Do
you see that a sub ingredient list. It's made. I'm
sorry you should read it. You're funnier than I am.
(01:14:16):
Read that.
Speaker 2 (01:14:16):
See what it is, todd candy flavor bases made with
corn syrup, water, sugar, artificial flavor, sodium citrate, and citric acid.
Speaker 1 (01:14:24):
And if I'm reading that right or you're reading that right,
that's a sub menu from the actually ingredient list.
Speaker 2 (01:14:31):
Yeah, so it's an added it's added added extras for you.
But look, we have vegetable juice for color beet in
red sweet potato.
Speaker 1 (01:14:39):
Yeah. That's healthy, isn't it. And they also put spirollina extract,
so you get your spiro allina dose in there too.
Oh god, so great. And polysorbid eighty. Oh look at this.
I didn't notice this too. Look they have a it's
called stabilizer emuls or blend, and that's also a drop
down sub ingredient list. So the stabilizery Malser blend also
(01:15:03):
contains polysorbid eighty, guru, gum cellulose, gum mono, and diglycerides.
So that's even if you read the ingredient list and
you're like, well this isn't so bad, you have to
read two separate ingredient lists to understand the original ingredient list.
This should be illegal.
Speaker 2 (01:15:21):
It's like a drop down menu for a website. Got
to keep finding stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:15:26):
Yeah, wow, how do they? I don't understand how you
get away with this stuff? This has to be against
the law or they got a team of lawyers that,
like with dairy Queen, which isn't real ice cream, you know,
that select certain words so that it's technically legally correct
and they can get away with selling it. But I
(01:15:47):
think it's consumer fraud. When you tell the public that
we don't like X, Y, and z, and then you
still put that in your food, that's got to be
fraud because it obviously you're advertising that. It implies that
you don't con you don't have those ingredients, and then
that's actually what's in it. Anyway, that's that's got to
be consumer fraud. All right, anyway, tell us about dunkin Donuts.
I'm gonna give the floor to you now, Mike, tell
(01:16:08):
us about dunkin Donuts.
Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
Everybody seems to love dunkin Donuts, especially.
Speaker 1 (01:16:12):
Like America runs on duncan.
Speaker 2 (01:16:14):
Yeah, especially like these millennials now they always have like
TikTok and Instagram pictures of them getting going into Dunkin Donuts.
But if you look again, if you go and look
at their ingredients, it's just the same old crap. And
the thing that I also researched was because I remember
those commercials as a kid. It was like that fat,
(01:16:35):
short guy, that's time to make the donuts. So he'd
get in there at like five am in the morning
and start making the donuts. Remember you remember those old
commercial Dunkin Donuts, but you might be I don't remember.
As a kid, there was like this guy who was
like short, fat and he was like a had his
like chef gear on, baker gear on. He's like, time
to make the donuts. Time to make the donut. I
(01:16:55):
don't really he'd get up at the crack of doll
to make the donuts. Was back in the probably well
those commercials are still in the Those were like the
early nineties or whatever. But I always thought to myself,
all right, do they really make the donuts there? I mean,
do they cook? Do they do? They? Do they do that?
Because there is a lot of donuts to make, you know,
but it could be done. You could make donuts fresh
(01:17:18):
every every morning before the store opens and still.
Speaker 1 (01:17:21):
Make Baker Baker used to do that, right, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:17:24):
Them still make enough to satisfy your your your customer account.
So looking it up, I learned from a franchise e
who talked about it is that many majority of the
Dunkin donut chains do not make their own donuts. What
they do some of them, they form, these franchises form
kind of like a group together where then they'll rent
(01:17:48):
a place to make the donuts, like they'll rent like
a manufacturing facility. They'll split the costs and they'll make
the donuts there then ship them to the stores. But
he said, the vast majority of these franchises who are
trying to make that extra cheap dollar, get the donuts
flash frozen in. So obviously, obviously, you know, if you're
(01:18:10):
trying to make the most money, most of these places
probably in my assuming I'm assuming, But you can go
you can go into your local Uncle Donuts and ask
them are these donuts, uh, you know, freezed donuts? Or
do you make the donuts every morning yourself? There's only
three answers they can give you, right, Yes, we make
the donuts, Yes we get the don't we make the
(01:18:34):
donuts from a facility and they get shipped here in
the morning, but we don't make them in the store.
Or yes, we get the donuts, we get them shipped
and frozen and we reheat them, which I think option
I think option three is probably most stores.
Speaker 1 (01:18:49):
So it's basically a frozen It's it's dough and sugar
and chemicals that have been frozen and then falled.
Speaker 2 (01:19:00):
Yeah, they frat, they flash freeze.
Speaker 1 (01:19:02):
It's see, I just a listener in the chat. Flux
just said, don't they spray paint the grill lines on
the burgers at Burger King? And when I was reading
I remember that Flux, I forgot about it. But you're right.
They do spray. They spray paint or they have like
a little metal grate they put over the burger. But
that's what they used to some of the small restaurants
(01:19:23):
do that. What they do at Burger King is that
just like Mike was saying, is that they bring so
they cook these things with like blasts of hot air
and the patties, like the donuts come with this well
usually that they come with like this, you know, grill
mark on it. So it's it's not even a real
grill Mark, it's fake, and which means that anybody arguing
(01:19:47):
that we shouldn't have like alternative burgers because they're not
real meat, well neither is what you're eating at Burger King.
It's not real burger it's not it's not grilled, and
the donuts aren't real. Like, what is real? Mike?
Speaker 2 (01:20:02):
What is real? That's a good question. I mean, if
you're really looking for a donuts, we can make a don't.
You can make your donuts at home by yourself. Really
you wanted to make a donut, or you can find
make them. Maybe find a local homegrown chops that probably
make their donuts in store, like you know, like a
mom and pop donut shop. Not to say that donuts
(01:20:23):
are the most healthiest thing in the world to eat anyway, right,
but if you're feeding for donuts, you definitely shouldn't go
do the Dunkin Donuts drive through.
Speaker 1 (01:20:33):
The last time I went to Dunkin Donuts, I'll never
forget this. I went to Dunkin Donuts and Orlando when
I was at in film school at Full Sale and
my friend and I at the time where we were writing.
We both wanted to be writers, so we were writing
like a treatment script and it was a comedy and
we thought it was like three in the morning. We
thought like we gotta get something to eat or drink.
(01:20:56):
And I was still eating bad food that we're talking
like two thousand and nine. So I was eating bad
food and we went to Dunkin Donuts and I remember
we end up writing like a skit about it for
school because we go to Dunkin Donuts and it's it's
drive through only and the woman and I never heard
this before. The woman said, we ordered a drink and
she said, okay, do you want What kind of sugar
(01:21:16):
do you want? And I said, just whatever the flavor is.
And she said, well, we have liquid sugar, we have
like invert sugar, we have like chemical sugar. And I
was like, what the what the just regular sugar. Even then,
when I was eating this scars like what the fuck
is invert sugar? Just regular sugar? They got a long
list of these sugars they're adding to a t.
Speaker 2 (01:21:38):
Well, you know, these college towns, like from the from
the get go, these fast food places were all there, right,
So every college town you can find all these fast
food places because you know, students were broke and they
were just trying to eat whatever. And then you had
the McDonald's there. Yes, that's right, but not anymore right
because now the thing is from I don't go there,
(01:21:59):
so I don't know the prices of these fast food places.
But from what I'm reading and seeing is that these
fast food places have all raised their their prices, and
you're better off going you know, a couple of steps
levels up to maybe like a five guys or something
rather than McDonald's, and you get a better quality burger
because when you're paying, they've raised their prices so much
(01:22:22):
that is not even cheap anymore. For most people. They
don't have things like extra value meals anymore.
Speaker 1 (01:22:29):
Stuff's expensive too. The cost of like a value any
kind of quote value meal at any restaurant, fast foods
so expensive.
Speaker 8 (01:22:38):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:22:39):
So I wonder, just as an experience, I know we
did with this with the Girl Scouts cookies, but I
wonder if even Baskin Robbins back in the day, let's say,
like the seventies, eighties, I wonder if their ice cream
ingredients were different. That's good, we could research that. We
should research that and see because I think maybe they
maybe it was, maybe it was before the the invention
(01:23:02):
of all these chemical dies and preservatives. Maybe in that
like the seventies and eighties, they actually had five ingredients
in their ice cream.
Speaker 1 (01:23:12):
Well, it was founded by the tribe, so but maybe
we could we could we could look these up asking Robins. Oh,
here we go, History of Basking Robbins. This is their website.
I don't know if it has ingredient lists though, I
now I don't think that has an ingredient list, just
the history of them. But that's something we could do
(01:23:33):
in a future show.
Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
Yeah, I think that would be pretty cool because I
am assuming I'm assuming that it probably was different ingredients,
just like we did for the the Girl Scout's cookies, right,
the gir Girl Scout cookies were completely.
Speaker 1 (01:23:49):
Different, completely different. Yeah, I mean they still weren't the best,
but they were much much different. Yeah, they definitely did.
Speaker 2 (01:23:55):
It wasn't good in nineteen sixty, but it's better than
what it was now.
Speaker 1 (01:24:00):
Yes, well that, yeah, and they definitely didn't have probably
didn't have a lot of glycossate in them back then.
I'm going to I want to look up one more time.
Let's see what is the ingredient list of campfire s'mores
ice cream from Basking Robins in nineteen seventy five. I
(01:24:20):
think that was it said that was debuted. I'm looking
that up right now. Let's see if we can find
anything about it. Okay, yeah, yeah, I found a small
list made of wheat flour, sugar, butter oil, honey, baking soda,
and salt. So it was better. At least the gram
cracker was. The ice cream was cream, sugar, cacao. They
(01:24:43):
did well. They did use corn syrup even back then.
I don't know you could arguably say that. I guess
it depends on which of the ice creams it was.
It might be the same, but some of them looked
a little bit better. Maybe not much, but maybe a
little bit better. That's all done for financial reasons to
make money.
Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
Oh yeah, for sure, just like the you know, when
they franchise the stores out These franchise owners want to
make as much money as possible. Right, So what do
you do? Do you spend the time and effort to
make the donuts fresh or you know, or do you
figure the general public doesn't care, they're going to get
their donut, let me get let me order them, you know,
frozen and will heat them up.
Speaker 1 (01:25:25):
So what what is that? What does that tell us?
If you think of dunkin Donuts, they say America runs
on Duncan, Well that must must That actually explains a lot.
If America runs on Duncan, then America runs on processed
sugar dough, wheat, modified chemical fried garbage that's frozen and
then reheated the next day. That is disgusting. And caffeine
(01:25:52):
and and lots of caffeine, right, yeah, lots and lots.
Speaker 3 (01:25:54):
Of We know.
Speaker 2 (01:25:55):
What dunkin Donuts does is like every month they do
some type of advertising crazy thing, will have some type
of new product, you know, or some movie tie in
you know.
Speaker 1 (01:26:07):
Oh really, I didn't know that.
Speaker 2 (01:26:09):
Ghostbusters will have like green donuts, like a green Donuts
for the slime. Oh. So they do this like they
tie in with these movies and these these the asre
attachments to try to probably get more so teenagers, young
people to buy. Oh look at that. It's like, you know,
it's kind of like what the Starbucks did with the
what was it, the unicorn.
Speaker 1 (01:26:29):
Yeah, the unicorn frappucino.
Speaker 2 (01:26:32):
Yeah, unicorn frapucina. Try to get the ladies in there,
to get the Unicorn frappucino.
Speaker 1 (01:26:37):
As a matter of fact, the Unicorn Frappucino was the
first time I had ever seen one of those drop
down ingredient lists. I'm looking it up again right now
because I know that you remember this mic. Remember it
says on the ingredient list that it's like, uh, what
do they call it? Blue drizzle? I think was the
ingredients some of drizzle. Yeah, and then the blue drizzle
(01:27:00):
had its own kind of drop down menu and it
was it was like its own separate ingredient list.
Speaker 2 (01:27:07):
You remember what Remember how that's first started. It was
like a viral sensation on Instagram that somebody took some
photos of it and look at me, look at me,
I have this like new drink from Starbucks, the unicorn yep,
and it went viral, and uh, you know, for some reason,
everybody had to go in and get one.
Speaker 1 (01:27:26):
Because the influencers told them to.
Speaker 2 (01:27:28):
Yeah, because look at me, I'm so cool and popular
and pretty that I'm drinking this. You should go get
one too.
Speaker 1 (01:27:35):
Sh Christ, that reminds me of I'm pulling up a
few things here that reminds me of that article I
had found it. At one point, I might have to
use Google to find it. Remember that story we did,
it was about the Tom Brady diet, and this couple
had said, we tried the Tom Brady diet. It was
absolutely impossible. You can't there's no way anybody could do
(01:27:56):
this diet. And then they showed the image of the
girl who who was writing the article for her and
her husband, and she had like a Coca cola on
the table, kind of strategically placed.
Speaker 2 (01:28:07):
Yeah, I remember see. And that was also because remember
Brady was kind of leaning, saying some kind of leaning right,
saying some right right wing stuff. Not that's so stupid
to say that, but saying he was leaning. He was
taking he was more a conservative based talking conservative points.
So when that lady, you know, just looking at her,
you can tell that she didn't like him mainly because
(01:28:29):
of his political stance yep, rather than the healthy diet
he was trying to. You know, look at this guy,
he's conservative, trying to put out a healthy diet.
Speaker 1 (01:28:37):
Yep. Here it is. I found I found the article.
Remember this, this is the asshole. And here look at this.
The woman's like, well I made this dinner. Yeah, that
looks like an American school lunch it's gross. Learn how
to cook. So she instead she sent that. I guess
she just didn't eat that. And then they ordered this
slop and then there's an image down here.
Speaker 2 (01:29:00):
It's like nines and that.
Speaker 1 (01:29:03):
Yeah, it's mostly deep fra. It's just yeah, it's fries.
And here's the image. And then we find out, oh,
Tom Brady had gone on a Boston radio show and said,
I can't believe people feed their kids cereal. It's not
real food, it's poison. And he talked about soda and
then lo and behold, this woman has a Coca Cola.
(01:29:24):
Turns out she's probably paid by Coca Cola as an
influencer because Coca Cola can't attack the Golden Boy who
makes billions of dollars for the NFL. That would look
bad for Coca Cola, so instead they pay some influencer
hack to do it for them. And then they slide
a Coca Cola in the frame. It's fucking disgusting.
Speaker 2 (01:29:45):
Yeah, I mean, you can you can tell that's a
product placement just because you can see the label and
that's placed between the two glasses.
Speaker 1 (01:29:54):
Yep. And you notice they have a red strip over here.
And then this is red, and there's a little red here,
so it pulls your eyes. You see, your eyes are
directly pulled to the red. That's the filter they have
on this.
Speaker 2 (01:30:05):
And look at her faith. Look at how she's look
at this deposture of her, like her.
Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
Arm right down people, look at this eye right down
to the Coca cola.
Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
True, look at you gotta be aware. I mean these advertisers,
like you said, they are bastards. And of course we
can do a whole show on it. But a lot
of the pioneers of this, of this brainwashing propaganda. Yeah,
they're a tribe, mamma.
Speaker 1 (01:30:28):
They're also that's right, yep.
Speaker 2 (01:30:32):
And you can look that up yourself. And when you
start putting again, like going back to the tribe thing,
when you start putting the dots together and you see
the vast amount of control and just weirdness, you will
start to ask yourself questions.
Speaker 1 (01:30:50):
I've asked a lot of questions. I've gotten a lot
of trouble. That's all. That's all I know. Here's the Yeah,
I found the ingredient list. Blue Drizzle sounds like a
Snoop Dogg album. Blue Drizzle that's in there. Frappuccino that actually,
you know, that reminds me. There's another story real quick,
I want to throw in here about We'll go back
(01:31:10):
to the dunkin Donuts as well quickly. What was it?
A tea trend? My goodness, what was it called? Is
a tea trend? Hold on a second, I'm going to
find this article. I think I saved it for the
show tonight. I wanted to show this to you. Hold on, um,
(01:31:31):
maybe I did not say I thought I saved it.
It's like a tea trend, men drinking tea to attract
women or something. It's some kind of weird like tea.
Can't find it. Basically, it was like women like to
drink this weird tea, which is just total nonsense. Oh
here it is woke men mocked by women for obnoxious
(01:31:53):
performance drinking habit. So women are like, if you drink machia,
you'll be healthy and connected to the spirit. And now
men are just drinking macha to get women, I guess.
And I thought that that was interesting because that's basically like,
that's what these influencers are. It's men or women usually
women that are like, well, I can't eat healthy food.
(01:32:15):
I got to eat these nachos and drink this soda.
But they actually don't even eat and drink that kind
of stuff like Sidney Sweeney. They're just used. It's selling
garbage through the image of sex, and it's really really disgusting.
And these are people that are especially like the frappuccino
women that are like, yeah, look at this frappuccino. Who
do you think drinks that? That's a liberal drink. So
(01:32:37):
these liberals that are like, don't sell sex, you know,
women are empowered are still are the ones that are like, well,
you should have only fans and we're going to sell
our bodies to sell food. But then they're also mad
at Sidney Sweeney for doing the same thing. Every they're
all hypocrites and it's gross.
Speaker 2 (01:32:52):
Totally totally, So like, you know, you can have your values,
but you've got to understand that both sides are playing you.
All right, whatever, whatever your your your stance is, there,
you're getting played.
Speaker 1 (01:33:08):
Yes there is I found it. Yes that old you
want to see it?
Speaker 2 (01:33:14):
Thought he had? I thought he had, Yeah, I thought yeah,
I see it. I thought he had newer ones. But
go ahead play that to.
Speaker 1 (01:33:19):
Make are always fresh.
Speaker 2 (01:33:23):
I made the donut. We make them at least twice
every day. Time to make the does wrong.
Speaker 10 (01:33:28):
Not a few skys like supermarket, time to make the dough,
but fifty two variety the donuts, time to make the donut.
I made the donuts to fifty two varieties fresh day
and night.
Speaker 1 (01:33:46):
No supermarket, Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:33:48):
No supermarkets.
Speaker 1 (01:33:50):
No supermarket can say that. Well, publics definitely can't say
it because they that that's.
Speaker 2 (01:33:56):
Time to make the goys.
Speaker 1 (01:34:00):
So let's go back to the Dunkin Donuts fast. I
know you have to go unless you want to stay
for the rest of the show. But I know that
you said you have to go a little earlier.
Speaker 2 (01:34:07):
I could. I could stay for another half hour. I'm good,
we can keep going.
Speaker 1 (01:34:11):
Okay, here's the Dunkin Donut list. I'm gonna I'm going
to give you the microphone.
Speaker 2 (01:34:16):
Yes, because that's just that's a cold brew. I want
to get to a donut.
Speaker 1 (01:34:22):
Was a whole bunch offers here.
Speaker 2 (01:34:24):
Star spangled, battered, sprinkled donut America.
Speaker 1 (01:34:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:34:30):
Whenever you see the world rich, Yeah, whenever you see
the word enriched again, it's a it's a bullshit word.
It's it's what they do, is they strip out all
the nutrients, and then they enrich it back with uh
this reduced iron and the nyasin, which is all bullshit
because why would you strip it out in the first place.
And then they add they add, supposedly add back the
(01:34:53):
wheat flour with these nutrients, but you see the palm oil,
that's not that's no no bueno.
Speaker 1 (01:35:00):
I'm gonna need I'm gonna need the Hubble telescope to
be able to figure out what's this list? Look at
this list. This is some very very small print.
Speaker 2 (01:35:07):
I mean, where's the when when we were looking at
the doughnuts for you know, back in the day, it's
just like you have the wheat first, then you have water,
then you have palm oil, then you have yeast donut concentrate.
I guess that's where you're getting the soy flour and
the phosphate sodium acid phosphate in the baking soda. Then
(01:35:30):
you're getting again where they've got to add more. We've
got to add some more wheat starch to it. We
already have wheat flour, but we gotta add the wheat starch.
Then we're going to add the way to it. And
then again we're going to add some more non fat
dry milk. And then we got to blend all this
shit together. So we're gonna gum blend it with your
gum gar and your I can't even pronounce what is
a zine axinea gum or whatever.
Speaker 3 (01:35:51):
And then.
Speaker 2 (01:35:54):
Then you have three lists of again non pronounceable ingredients.
And then it'll contains two per less of soybean oil,
a whole egg. They got to throw in a whole
egg in there. Natural again, you have the natural flavor.
You've got this and netto extract, which is not good
for You've got the mono and diglyssa rides again. You've
(01:36:15):
got vanilla flavored butter cream filling, palm oil again, canola
oil again. So you had palm oil and then you know,
you got palm oil again, you got canola oil. Then
you got water again. Then you've got a high fruitose
corn syrup again. Oh my god, it's just telling you
what the high fruit too corn syrup contains again. But
(01:36:38):
then again you're getting another shot of mono diglysiums and
you're getting potassium server. We see that in everything that
potassium sorbate, that preservative. There you go the polysorbrate sixty
again polysorbate sixty is your best friend because it shows
up in all this shit. Then you got blue icing.
Then you're gonna you're gonna get more palm oil all
(01:37:00):
the extra shit in there. Then you're gonna get palm
oil again. You're gonna get palm kettle.
Speaker 1 (01:37:04):
I mean, this is just this is a This is
a criminal act, is what this is.
Speaker 2 (01:37:10):
It's your patriotic donut, your star spangled donut. I pledge
to the five ingredients.
Speaker 1 (01:37:18):
I pledge allegiance to the high fruit toast corn syrup.
Speaker 2 (01:37:22):
And if you're gonna, let's say you do this, how
you do the donut where it's got five ingredients and
you want to put like a blue blue icing on it,
you can just do a natural you can just do
sugar right and blueberry blue blueberry juice to to you know,
to make it blue. And then there now you got
Then you got seven ingredients.
Speaker 1 (01:37:42):
Now dunkin Donuts is the same one that did the
they got caught with using titanium oxide. Remember this or
this story. This is twenty fifteen. I remember this like
it was yesterday. We were doing the show about this
Dunkin Donuts ditch. Finally ditches titanium dioxide. What is it
really that bad? Yeah, it's really that bad.
Speaker 2 (01:38:04):
Question mark.
Speaker 1 (01:38:07):
Titanium dioxide. These people were poisoning you.
Speaker 2 (01:38:11):
This is use common sense. You're eating a doughnut. Do
you think your donut should contain uh, titanium dict dioxide?
Do you think that should be ingredient when you're eating
a donut? Just just look at it rationally. The answer
your question with a question mark is no. I mean,
is it actually common Yes, I should say it's as
is a yes.
Speaker 1 (01:38:31):
Yes. Well it's like articles that say, is mercury really
that bad for you? Yes, yes it is. You should
not consume mercury. Well, the thing about this was it
wasn't like there was random quote titanium dioxide. It was
that the powdered sugar was comprised of titanium dioxide. So
(01:38:54):
you're like, well, it's just some sugar. It's not even sugar.
They put titanium dioxide in their sugar, in.
Speaker 2 (01:39:04):
The sugar, in the powdered sugar. You need titanium dioxide
for some reason. It's powdered sugar. God, that's the ingredient.
The ingredient is powdered sugar.
Speaker 1 (01:39:14):
And they use it, and they also use it well,
they mostly use it in paper and paint as well
as plastic.
Speaker 2 (01:39:23):
Yeah, they wanted to make it. They wanted to make
it a little thicker and dnse. So it says it's
what makes the powdered sugar coating on the donuts appear
so dense and snow white. God, titanium dioxide gives it
a boost.
Speaker 1 (01:39:36):
Oh my god, I can't. I don't understand. Why is
it the titanium dioxide? Is it the blue drizzle? Is
it the star spangled banner donut? Are these things poisoning
our minds as well? That prevent us from wondering, not
even realizing, but just wondering, like, Hey, maybe it's this
stuff that we're eating that's causing all the dementia causing
(01:40:00):
all the Alzheimer's, causing all of the diabetes, causing all
of the heart disease, causing all of the inflammation, causing
all of the diseases that we have. That maybe it's
that we're not supposed to be eating or consuming any
of this stuff, and that when we do do it,
the solution to getting healthy again is not to continue
(01:40:20):
doin it and then to take a zimbic or to
continue doin it and then to just like get some
kind of pharmaceutical drug to combat the side effects of
eating all this trash. It must be poisoning our minds too.
Speaker 2 (01:40:37):
It has to be right, Yeah, totally. You know what's up? Member?
What was that place that we used to eat that
was like organic downtown down? I got shut down off
of like Robinson Down. What was that place called? Remember
that's organic restaurants you can eat outside most right across
(01:40:57):
from the crystal shop? Was this? It was Orlando downtown Orlando,
like the Dandelion, the one that closed down. Yes, yes,
now I'm saying that because I'm going to bring up
the divide again. I don't I don't know if you
ever did wear a shirt that was like maybe Hillary
(01:41:20):
went to prison or something.
Speaker 1 (01:41:21):
I wore that shirt a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:41:23):
Yeah, I got kicked out of the people in there
would give you such looks because eating healthy is only
a liberal thing and that in that particular restaurant. Wasn't
that so weird?
Speaker 1 (01:41:33):
Yeah? That's right, it was only a liberal thing to
eat healthy exactly.
Speaker 2 (01:41:38):
I think we were talking about we should go what
would happen if we were like maga hats. What would happen?
Would they refuse to service if we wear maga hats
in there?
Speaker 1 (01:41:46):
That's right? And I got kicked out of a co
op because I had that Hillary Clinton shirt on.
Speaker 2 (01:41:51):
Yeah, like, just like that just brings up the divide
of even like eating healthy. You know, well you have
this political view, so you shouldn't need healthy.
Speaker 1 (01:42:01):
Well, that's because they say they say that that eating
healthy is a white supremacist ideology. Have you ever ever
seen that before?
Speaker 2 (01:42:12):
Yes, I've seen that before too.
Speaker 1 (01:42:14):
In fact, I'm going to pull that up to white
supremacy eating healthy it's a Nazi idea. Those damn Nazis
ate vegetables. Look at this, how toxic diet culture is
rooted in white supremacy and racism. Unbelievable. Why do we
say diet culture instead.
Speaker 2 (01:42:30):
Of stromacy culture and food systems?
Speaker 1 (01:42:33):
Why do we say diet culture instead of the patriarchy? Okay,
so real quick, Mike, My wife came in the room.
She's not on video, but I've got her here to
analyze the school lunches in America. So this is my wife, Hadna.
You can come up and speak. What do you think
of these school lunches and what do you guys have
(01:42:54):
in Japan that you ate when you were younger? You
got to speak up here in the mic. Up here,
So what do you think of lunch? Yeah, you gotta
speak it here, come up, come up here, you gotta
speak in the mic. What do you think of American lunch?
Speaker 7 (01:43:14):
And the high colery?
Speaker 1 (01:43:15):
And does this look delicious? What is that? Can you
identify what this is for us? Because I can my
friend and I cannot figure out what this is? Bird feed? Yes?
Does that look like pizza? No, it doesn't fake pizza, yeah,
fake pizza. Now what about serious question? Japanese lunch? Uhan?
(01:43:43):
What is Japanese lunch? And you have to speak here?
And healthy pickles and healthy supris so kana so different
than American food. I think this looks like cat food.
(01:44:10):
Looks like cat food. Yeah, all right, So my wife
gave us the inside scoop. She thought that was bird feed. Mic. Yes,
it looks like, oh my god, it's so gross. Okay,
I'm sorry about that. I wanted to get and I
wanted to get her opinion on this. Okay. So what
else do we have in dunkin Donuts? We have this
(01:44:31):
long list of ingredients.
Speaker 2 (01:44:33):
I mean, every every donut is. You're going to get
a paragraph or more than two paragraphs of just garbage.
Speaker 1 (01:44:43):
Gnarley. She said, I promise you birds eat better than us.
Oh yeah, they do, they do eat better than us.
I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (01:44:57):
Go ahead, Mike, some crows of bringing the right food
to eat.
Speaker 1 (01:45:02):
Fight milk the first alcoholic protein based milk. Milk based.
Speaker 2 (01:45:08):
I mean the Sunny Shows. I mean the Sunny Shows
were the first couple. The first probably six six seasons
are just prime prime political. There's actually episodes that were banned.
That's uh, they don't show. I remember one where Frank
dressed up as a I don't know if it was
(01:45:31):
supposed to be a black woman or a Hispanic woman.
Speaker 1 (01:45:34):
Oh he played Martina Martinez.
Speaker 2 (01:45:37):
Well no, yeah, but no, that's a different one. He
was talking about how the clams the clams, or he
was the clam. He was blaming his stomach issue on
the clams. Remember that.
Speaker 1 (01:45:45):
Yeah, that was Dee's old character from the original episodes
where she dressed up like Taiwan Tammy and Martina Martinez. Yes, yeah,
Frank was Martin mart It's not the clams, that's so.
Speaker 2 (01:46:00):
I mean I mean that's that show is just is classic.
Speaker 1 (01:46:06):
Yeah, the original episodes especially, but even the new episodes
are so funny.
Speaker 2 (01:46:10):
Remember when he did the podcast and he's trying to
change his voice and he's like, there's a war on Wars.
There's wars Wars. Aren't you talking about Wars?
Speaker 1 (01:46:20):
I just watched the new season too. They have a
really great scene where they're talking about nine to eleven.
Did you see the new season yet or did you
see that clip?
Speaker 2 (01:46:27):
No? No, but I want to.
Speaker 1 (01:46:29):
Oh my god, I'm gonna I'm gonna play a little
bit of this clip for you, guys. I'm arguing about
nine to eleven. They arguing themselves into conspiracy theory, and
by the end of the conversation they start saying things
like I don't even think there were planes. I don't
think they were even buildings. This is this is so funny.
I'll play that these.
Speaker 8 (01:46:46):
People were passionate but dumb at shit, because at some
point they argue themselves right into conspiracy theories. So so
it had to be helped.
Speaker 6 (01:46:53):
Well, yeah, I mean Steele would not melt at that time.
Speaker 1 (01:46:56):
Sure, I mean, take fire to steal and see.
Speaker 2 (01:46:59):
If it melts it won't know what a missile sent
by your own government is probably what it was.
Speaker 1 (01:47:04):
And there wasn't even a plane. I'm starting to think
there wasn't even towers.
Speaker 8 (01:47:07):
Dude, I've never been anybody seen the towers.
Speaker 2 (01:47:09):
Their own eyes, not a picture. Seems funny because they're
bringing up like the you know, the confusion of the
of the theories, yes, where some of them were meant
to a sy ops, you know, to try to confuse
people about actually what happened. That's right, you know, was
was it a missile? Was it a plane?
Speaker 1 (01:47:28):
Have you even have you even seen the buildings? Not
not pictures, but really I don't think the buildings were
even real.
Speaker 2 (01:47:34):
Yeah, exactly. It's like a they're playing off like the
sy op mine.
Speaker 1 (01:47:39):
Yep, that's Sonny is such a good show. By the way,
that one guy that plays Dennis, he's like us. He
brings his own water when he goes on trip trips,
he brings his own food when he goes on trips.
His I found out his wife, the guy's real wife
is the woman who did that doc. She's like the
producer of those some of those GMO documentaries. That's how
(01:48:00):
they I guess they met at a party or something.
But she did a lot of those anti GMO documentaries.
I thought, yeah, they're really and they give all that
that fake health advice on the show. Remember when you
know they're always telling each other like, well, you smoke
some cigarettes, it'll suppress the toxins in your stomach.
Speaker 2 (01:48:18):
Yes, yes, I can't believe that they because it was
wasn't originally on It wasn't originally on FX. It was
on something else first and then they switched over to FX.
Speaker 1 (01:48:28):
I think it was on FX and it switched to
f x X.
Speaker 2 (01:48:32):
Okay, I think because I was just like even back
in the you know, even the back in the day,
they were getting away with a lot of different things
that were that was funny.
Speaker 1 (01:48:39):
The first episode was about racism, gay black dudes. That
was a hilarious episode.
Speaker 2 (01:48:46):
Yeah, because Frank didn't show up until season two.
Speaker 1 (01:48:48):
I think, no, he didn't. There's there's such a there's
such a great line when remember when they're doing the basketball, uh,
the community service for basketball and Max having all those
kids drink the red bull, the kids drinking the rads, Like,
my stomach hurts. He's like, that's the vitamins. It's just
that the vitamins, ripping the bad stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:49:10):
Yeah, that's yeah. It's like, uh, you know, you're going
to start to see articles by these these uh internet
reporters that heavy metals actually helped the function of your brain.
Speaker 1 (01:49:24):
Yes, seriously, heavy.
Speaker 2 (01:49:25):
Metals give you cognitive new abilities. The plastic in you.
It's good for it's good for you. It built your
bone strength.
Speaker 1 (01:49:34):
Yeah. Remember that old that old Uh what was that
a see an end clip or n S NBC or
something where they said something to the effect of mercury
may help not harm kids, or they were saying mercury
was actually healthy for you.
Speaker 2 (01:49:48):
Yeah. Yeah, they were talking about I remember that. That
was that was a while ago.
Speaker 1 (01:49:53):
Have you seen We could just reminisce about this if
anybody hasn't seen the show, it's so funny. But there's
an episode where Dinn spies the Boba tea some people.
Speaker 2 (01:50:02):
Oh my god, yeah, and he goes he goes into
order it's andy. You got to buy it on the app.
They don't take cash. It just makes him a little
crazy because of the process to order it. Plus he
was like called a liquid sugar heart attack or diabetes drink.
Speaker 1 (01:50:17):
Oh he said, yeah, I'll take the tea without the
covert diabetes delivery mechanism. Please, yes, here I found one
one piece.
Speaker 2 (01:50:25):
He didn't want those sugar sugar lumps put in it
with this, you know?
Speaker 1 (01:50:29):
Oh yeah, she said, do you want the boba? He said,
those little tappy sugar balls. She's like yeah. He's like, yeah,
I just want the tea.
Speaker 2 (01:50:37):
Yeah. So you gotta pay for with the app.
Speaker 1 (01:50:40):
The app.
Speaker 2 (01:50:41):
You gotta download the app I found.
Speaker 1 (01:50:43):
Here's one piece of sunny health advice is this? And
the reason I'm playing this is because, I mean, this
is basically what Mike and I are talking about. This
is the American and that they're making fun of the
American public. Listen to. This is exactly what we deal
with on a daily basis.
Speaker 2 (01:50:59):
Eat apples, some apple seeds today. Did you make yourself
throw up? I tried, but I couldn't. Smoke some cigarettes.
The smoke will suffocate the bacteria in your stomach. That's like, yeah,
that's a news article coming out.
Speaker 1 (01:51:19):
Yeah, Marlborough, Marlborough, or how do you say it, Marborough?
Speaker 2 (01:51:23):
R J. Reynolds kill the bad bacteria or your stomach
starts smoking cigarettes.
Speaker 1 (01:51:29):
Okay, So I want to play you one other thing.
Okay this have you ever seen the movie Over the Hedge?
It's a cartoon? No, okay, Mike, So this is I'm
going to show you the the image. I don't want to.
I might get in trouble for playing the actual clip.
But this is the movie. The movie. It's like cartoon animals.
It's pretty funny. You might think it's really silly, but
I want you to listen to this clip because this
(01:51:51):
is what This is what we're talking about. Listening to
this stopping by, We're not interested, not interested in the
most delicious food you've ever tasted.
Speaker 2 (01:51:58):
No, come on interested?
Speaker 1 (01:52:03):
Okay, I get it. Trying the raccoon's trying to get
him hooked on chip? Is this something that you're just
not open to? And then he goes on to explain
what's in the chips? Mic?
Speaker 2 (01:52:22):
What is that.
Speaker 4 (01:52:24):
That, my friend?
Speaker 10 (01:52:25):
Is a magical combination of corn flour, dehydrated cheese solids BHAVHD,
and good msg ka the chips.
Speaker 2 (01:52:35):
Yeah, it's it's so funny. These The FDA wants to
ban some natural oils, but they still let MSG in
the food yep, yep, and BHT for the bump for
the buns. You might because I was researching this and
I was like, man, is there really is even these
like better places to eat let's say five guys where
it's more expensive, it's supposed to be a better quality mule. Yes,
(01:52:57):
I looked it up. I wanted to see what was
in the buns. They had bht and the buns, and
it's just like, you can't eat. You got to make
your own, you know, or at least try to limit
yourself to these places.
Speaker 1 (01:53:11):
Yes, yes, and and and another thing is that when
you're looking at ingredient lists, you know, most of these
companies recently started providing the ingredient lists because of too
many people like us complaining about, you know, their products,
and most of those ingredient lists, they'll like Panera Bread
has what they call it the No No List. Then
(01:53:33):
we're like, we don't. I think there's a lot. It's
a giant list. I could pull it up and show you.
It's a huge list. It's called the No No List pdf.
Panera I think I showed on the Dairy Queen Show.
Speaker 2 (01:53:45):
Yeah. Probably because they were busted by the moms across
America for having just garbage toxins in their foods, including
herbicides and pesticides that were beyond uh what the federal
government limits.
Speaker 1 (01:54:02):
Yes, and this is this list here, so once once
they give you the ingredient list, once you demand it.
I mean, they usually publish this stuff. It's just not
really available. You have to dig and dig and dig
and dig for it, like the dairy queen stuff. So
they publish it. And then when people are like, well,
what are all these bad ingredients, They're like, well, if
you don't like them, we'll get rid of them. Why
(01:54:23):
weren't why were they in there in the first place?
And what did they replace the place?
Speaker 2 (01:54:27):
Yeah, this is supposed to be a super high end
type of type of restaurant where you're paying a premium
price and you're still getting poisoned. You're still getting poisoned there.
Speaker 1 (01:54:35):
Well, you remember who found it, Panera Bread. It was
also founded.
Speaker 2 (01:54:39):
By the tribe, probably some type of rosen Rosenfeld.
Speaker 1 (01:54:43):
It was founded, but well it was profouded by largely
attributed to Ron Sheish, who is also a part of the.
Speaker 2 (01:54:51):
Tribe Ron sister.
Speaker 1 (01:54:53):
Exactly exactly.
Speaker 8 (01:54:57):
One herbal tea please which lea flavor jasmine, but sorry,
I meant for the boba. The little spheres of tapioca
and sugar.
Speaker 2 (01:55:06):
The tea comes with boba, Well it.
Speaker 8 (01:55:09):
Doesn't because I see the tea right there, and I
see the bobo over there, So why don't we just
not combine them? Yeah, so I'll take the tea without
the covert diabetes delivery mechanism.
Speaker 2 (01:55:18):
Please.
Speaker 9 (01:55:19):
The system won't let me do that.
Speaker 2 (01:55:25):
So we got to show you. Gotta show them getting
angry though, yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:55:28):
Yeah, okay, yeah, no, fine? Is this show perfectly epitomizes
what this is, like a comedy sketch version of the
Secret Teachings. We'll call it a mental health day treat
self care, right?
Speaker 8 (01:55:45):
Isn't that what people call it whenever they need an
excuse to do.
Speaker 1 (01:55:47):
Whatever they want?
Speaker 8 (01:55:49):
Yeah, of course you don't.
Speaker 2 (01:55:50):
Of course you don't.
Speaker 1 (01:55:51):
One chewy sugar tea please?
Speaker 2 (01:55:53):
All right?
Speaker 9 (01:55:54):
You can scan the code? Why because the code takes
you to the app.
Speaker 1 (01:56:00):
That's two apps today.
Speaker 8 (01:56:01):
Yeah, got apps for everything, you know, even though I'm
already talking to the person that could just take my
order right here, but I got to download an app.
Speaker 1 (01:56:08):
Right, how about this? I have cash, you have tea.
Why don't we just streamline things?
Speaker 9 (01:56:14):
We don't take cash though.
Speaker 1 (01:56:17):
Yeah, how about cards take cards?
Speaker 9 (01:56:19):
Yes, oh great, but there is a ten dollars minimum.
There's no minimum on the app though.
Speaker 1 (01:56:28):
That beeping is his heart monitor.
Speaker 8 (01:56:34):
Sorry, it's a It's not your fault. You know, you
didn't create the system. The system is just it is
what it is, and we're both victims here.
Speaker 1 (01:56:41):
So what nothing too, Boba Tea's please? Yeah, oh man,
that's good stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:56:55):
We need to make her feel better, trying to make
her feel a better as in part of the system.
She doesn't know any better. But she didn't even understand.
She didn't even understand where that was coming from.
Speaker 7 (01:57:06):
Yep.
Speaker 1 (01:57:07):
I as a listeners, some listeners in the chat, I
think it's I think it's pretty funny. I hope, I
hope you've seen Sonny. If you haven't seen Sonny, I don't.
I don't get money to say that. I'm just I
think it's a brilliant show. They trash both sides, so good. Uh.
Mark says, I was hoping for a World War two
Japanese surrender show. You know, I usually do like a
hit or Shema show, but I didn't do one of
(01:57:28):
those this year because we talked about something else.
Speaker 2 (01:57:31):
What does that mean? What does he mean by that?
I don't know what you mean.
Speaker 1 (01:57:33):
I don't know, Mark, Like, what do.
Speaker 2 (01:57:36):
You mean as in what happened after they surrendered?
Speaker 1 (01:57:39):
Or I'll show you what happens after they surrendered is
their health started going downhill?
Speaker 2 (01:57:44):
That's what happened.
Speaker 1 (01:57:46):
They got milk. Uh yet, Mark's I think Mark's been
a long time listener. Mark's a good guy. Some assuming
he just means the history of it. Okay, So we
got a bunch of people in the chat. Ryan Telberg
is still here Mental Health Detreat Love It. D Starr
(01:58:06):
says one of the best shows ever, hands down. Yes,
Sonny is definitely one of the best shows ever without Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:58:11):
Man, I'll tell you were talking about this episode, but
we'll take.
Speaker 1 (01:58:13):
It well too. Maybe he meant the show, the show,
this show, this show. I actually thought that's what he
meant too, but I didn't want to be that unhumble.
You mean this show, d D Star, We mean tst
I've got.
Speaker 2 (01:58:28):
The If anybody in the chat has suggestions for shows
for us to do together, you can put them in.
I mean open to suggestions.
Speaker 1 (01:58:37):
Yes, let's do that. Let's have suggestions. As a matter
of fact, I think real fast because we're running out
of time. I think I can do if I get
into the if I have to, I have to go
to YouTube. If I go into YouTube during the live show,
I believe, so I don't get an echo here. If
I go in to mute this, I think I can
(01:58:59):
do like it's a moderation reaction time stamp there. Oh
here it is. Yeah, there's an option for me to
do a poll or a Q and a type thing.
So I maybe maybe next time we could do like
a show topics. Yeah, yeah, yeah, Flux says, this show
(01:59:25):
for sure, thank you Fluck.
Speaker 2 (01:59:26):
Yeah. I hope people, I mean, I hope people don't
get tired of this this topic. I mean, there's so
many other topics we can talk about, but we do
love doing the food topic because, uh, you know a
lot of our listeners are already smart, they already know
the deal, but just getting that information out there to
maybe that's someone that doesn't know, or you can share
this knowledge to for people.
Speaker 1 (01:59:49):
That's true, and that's why we do the show. And
this particular episode is free for everybody. You can listen
to it over and over again, share it with your friends, family.
I mean, we try to inject humor into it. If
I don't have humor, I'm gonna go crazy reading these
ingredient lists. But the point is, look up. See when
they say don't look at a woman's breast, look at
her eyes. See what Sidney Sweeney has on her eyes?
(02:00:10):
It says ingredients on our promo picture. So fucking read it.
Speaker 2 (02:00:14):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (02:00:15):
Maybe we should just, I don't know, put like a
naked woman next to the ingredient list. People going to
read it.
Speaker 2 (02:00:22):
I wonder how long it took to to get that
Poe is perfect for the picture. I got it. You
got to point that ice fin cone a little to
the left.
Speaker 1 (02:00:30):
I don't really want it this close to my face though. Yeah,
but we're paying a lot of money.
Speaker 2 (02:00:36):
You're hot, you're new. We want you to promote our
ice cream cone.
Speaker 1 (02:00:40):
Yeah you know what. She also, I don't know if
you saw this, Mike, this is an interesting little side note.
She is. Remember the Vigilant Citizen.
Speaker 2 (02:00:49):
Oh I loved Yeah, I used to. I used to.
I used to go to that site all the time.
Speaker 1 (02:00:52):
Yeah, I love the Vigilant Citizen. I still check them
out on occasion. And they have a whole write up
about this which totally true. Look at this normal normal
is offensive. A fat black guy giving birth to a
baby with a white liberal woman over it. I don't
know what that is.
Speaker 2 (02:01:08):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (02:01:09):
But then but then, you know, beyond I didn't even
know this Beyonce, I mean I knew it before I
read the Vigilant Citizen article. But Beyonce had done that
blonde hair ad. Remember that she did a jeans ad.
Speaker 2 (02:01:22):
Yeah, I think that's I think it was. I think
I was a little lower. You missed it?
Speaker 1 (02:01:26):
Did I miss it?
Speaker 2 (02:01:27):
Yeah? I saw the word about Beyonce.
Speaker 1 (02:01:28):
If you go down, I'll type in Beyonce. Oh yeah,
well here she is. So she did it, and she
dyed her hair blonde, and she's gotten whiter over the years.
Speaker 2 (02:01:39):
Beyonce good swinging bad? Okay? Why why?
Speaker 1 (02:01:43):
Yep?
Speaker 2 (02:01:45):
Because Leva's jeans is of course the j brand, right tribrand.
Speaker 1 (02:01:49):
Probably, so I don't know that for sure, But the
Vigilant Citizen points this out that he kind of making
the argument that she's the new Marilyn Monroe. You know,
she's this controlled puppet, she's a sex symbol and she
this is a photo shoot that she did. It's the
same kind of a thing. She's a marionette, you know,
the one eye, the three personalities in the dark. This
(02:02:12):
is in twenty fourteen. This is the same exact kind
of imagery that all of these pop stars and celebrities
go through so you can celebrate and be all excited.
Oh look, Sidney Sweeney's got an ice cream cone. No,
she's the same controlled. Oh she's she's a Republican too,
Oh my god, it's so great. No, h this is
(02:02:32):
this is this is Sidney Sweeney.
Speaker 2 (02:02:34):
Did you see how they were trying to make her
more right right wing? She's at a gun range shooting.
Speaker 1 (02:02:41):
No, I didn't see that.
Speaker 2 (02:02:42):
Oh yeah she had. They have shots of her the
gun range firing guns.
Speaker 1 (02:02:49):
I saw that.
Speaker 2 (02:02:51):
Oh go ahead, sorry again, to give her that more
kind of you know, leverage for super right. Look, oh
she shoots guns too. Oh my gosh, she's the American woman.
Speaker 1 (02:03:00):
What like that? That that one woman on Uh? Is
that what's her name? I haven't posted on my X page.
Who the one with the quote flat ass shooting guns?
Did you see that one run for Congress?
Speaker 9 (02:03:16):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (02:03:16):
Was that Lumer? Laura Lumer? Or No?
Speaker 1 (02:03:19):
No, she eats dog food, not her, not the dog
food woman. I'm gonna find it. Really, it's not too
far down to my feet. Here. It is Nancy Mace,
I think is her name. Yeah, Nancy Mace. Did you
see that ad? No, it's the same. It's the same
thing with her. It's like, Nancy Mace has a gun
and blue jeans. She's got blue jeans? Is that blue jeans?
Speaker 2 (02:03:41):
Now?
Speaker 1 (02:03:42):
Blue jeans? It's it's brilliant marketing. It's just kind of disgusting.
But she's got you know, she's shooting a gun. It's like, hey,
vote for me, I have a gun and blue jeans. Like, no,
you should vote for people because of their policies and
how well they understand the rule of law, not because
of their blue jeans, because of their bodily features, or
because of their the size of their rifle. Right, it's
(02:04:03):
just so.
Speaker 2 (02:04:04):
Stupid and even not what they say is what they do, right, Yes,
they always say one thing and do another.
Speaker 1 (02:04:12):
They're like aliens. Look, I have a rifle, I have
blue jeans. I'm just like you. This is like her
official promotional page for governor on X.
Speaker 2 (02:04:22):
Yeah. It's like if you can, I wish you could
bring it up. But remember the because it's out there.
But remember Elizabeth Warren when she did the beer. Oh
she did the was it a Twitter thing that she
put out where she's like, hey, we're just like us,
we drink beer.
Speaker 1 (02:04:38):
Oh yeah, I remember that.
Speaker 2 (02:04:40):
Hey Helpy, give me that beer. Oh my god, there
it is. That was so cringe. That was that was
just oh my god, Oh that was horrible.
Speaker 1 (02:04:50):
And remember they didn't she didn't even take. I think
they popped the cap for her, so she doesn't she
doesn't even take. If I remember that correctly, didn't they
like pop the cap. It was already apped, So she
just like basically knocks the cap off. I'm pretty sure
they had loosened the cap for her. Someone pointed that
out because she there's no like sound.
Speaker 2 (02:05:10):
Oh no, no, I don't remember what she says. Hey, Hubby,
I'm gonna I'm gonna go. I'm gonna go get me
a beer, Get me a beer, Chris. This is how
she thinks. Like the average American talks. I'm gonna go get.
Speaker 1 (02:05:22):
Hold on, get rid of this advertisement here. Yeah, I'm
gonna play it for you. Yeah, I'm gonna get me
a burr.
Speaker 2 (02:05:28):
That's that's how we speak.
Speaker 1 (02:05:30):
This is so alien. Look at this. Oh, I'm glad
for They probably have like a film crew in here,
and they put a filter on this to make like
looks like TikTok. It's great to hear from you.
Speaker 2 (02:05:46):
Hold on a second, I'm gonna get me. That's that's
what she does.
Speaker 1 (02:05:57):
Look up, What did you say, Mike the husband?
Speaker 2 (02:06:02):
Yeah, just watch it when the husband.
Speaker 1 (02:06:05):
Maybe I thought it didn't have a sound. Maybe it
does have a sound. Maybe she did open it. It's
a twist top or they added the sound later in
post Look.
Speaker 2 (02:06:15):
She's opening too, though. It's like, that's that's weird. That's
a weird way to what the hell.
Speaker 1 (02:06:20):
It's like how a kid holds a spoon who doesn't
know how to.
Speaker 2 (02:06:22):
Use as that's how you open it.
Speaker 1 (02:06:24):
Here, I'm gonna take a drink of my tea. Here,
Mike upside down hand. All right, that's my new theory
on this video. I'm pretty sure that it was already
opened and then they added the sound and post production. Yeah,
my husband's here.
Speaker 2 (02:06:45):
My husband is here. You want to be.
Speaker 1 (02:06:49):
It's it's it's their own house. Oh look, my husband
Bruce is in the house.
Speaker 2 (02:06:56):
So this is my speedy is the best.
Speaker 1 (02:07:03):
It's so fake. And then you've got Chuck Schumer.
Speaker 2 (02:07:06):
Husband, husband is giving off some yeah Olympus vibes to
be And.
Speaker 1 (02:07:13):
Then here's Chuck Schumer with a piece of cheese on
a raw patty.
Speaker 2 (02:07:17):
Look at We're just like you. We know your struggles
and your pain. We know it takes two months to
see a healthcare specialist.
Speaker 9 (02:07:26):
We know this.
Speaker 1 (02:07:27):
Yeah, we're just like you.
Speaker 2 (02:07:28):
We know that you're paying super high premiums for your insurance. Oh,
we get our insurance free. We get our transportation to
Congress free. We can get an suv, we can get
a limousine. We don't care how much gas costs. We're
just like you. We vote on our own raises every year.
Let's vote on a raise. Yeah, vote on it, and
we get raises.
Speaker 1 (02:07:49):
There's better, better, or work done the same thing. He
cooks burgers. I don't think it's extremely weird necessarily to
put burgers on it, because I don't. I mean, I
don't eat burgers, so what do I know? But put
them on English muffin. But he puts He puts like
a cheeseburger on an English muffin with like broccoli, and
all I can think about when I see this kind
(02:08:09):
of stuff. I think about that line in the Matrix.
You know, the machines couldn't figure out what things tasted like,
so everything tastes like chicken, or I think of like
Rick and Morty when the simulation's kind of breaking down
to the mailman's like, my man, my man, it's fake.
They can't fully figure out what human civilization is like,
so they kind of mimic it. Yes, that's what this is.
Speaker 2 (02:08:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:08:33):
Like NPCs, seriously, they really are, They really are. They
should get the team at Rockstar though, because they make
Apparently the NPCs are going to be super intelligent in
the New GTA.
Speaker 2 (02:08:45):
I mean that the Cathors. We're talking about NPCs thousands
of years ago.
Speaker 1 (02:08:50):
The who Cathorst the Cathars. Yes, oh I thought for
some reason I thought you said Kazars, No Cathars. Cathars. Okay, yeah, uh.
Speaker 2 (02:09:04):
Remember the Pope, member of the pope sense they were
murdered right well, yes, twenty thousand of them, women, children, everybody.
And that's that's where the quote came from. Us.
Speaker 9 (02:09:13):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (02:09:14):
They say that killed them all, that God soaked them out,
because there was Christians actually mixed in with these Cathors.
But they they they were given the command to kill
everybody in the in the village. Now, yes, they talked
about they talked about people. Uh, not to get into it,
because that could be a whole show. But the inverse
of how this planet is and how this the god
(02:09:35):
that you think that you're praying to is actually Satan
that runs this planet. That's right, but that's a weekend.
Different people.
Speaker 1 (02:09:42):
People are interested, apparently Boomers Sooner in the chat says
Tim Walls did a video or getting a video changing
a filter on a truck. I didn't see that. Look,
I changed the filter on my pickup truck.
Speaker 2 (02:09:57):
Well, I changed the oil on my truck. See, I'm
just like you.
Speaker 1 (02:10:01):
Is it true? Oh yeah, well he's got one. There's
a couple of them here. Yeah yeah, okay, I guess
it's a thing. I wasn't doubting you, Boomer Sooner. I
was just I haven't seen that. I was trying to
find it online.
Speaker 2 (02:10:16):
It's just like Hillary Clinton line of these speeches where
she went where she'd add a southern accent or talking
like a bonnet, exactly talking to a black, black audience.
Speaker 1 (02:10:25):
Yep, it's exact same thing.
Speaker 2 (02:10:27):
It's disgusting oh, here's.
Speaker 1 (02:10:29):
Here's one of the walls videos election.
Speaker 4 (02:10:32):
But that's my pro tip of the day out on
the road. I got to show you this. This right
here is the headlight harness on a twenty fourteen Ford
Edge for this is unacceptable. It burned out hot on the.
Speaker 1 (02:10:45):
This whole video, he's giving what they call what they
call auto tips on how to fix cars as part
of his campaign. Just like you, I fix trucks. I
drink beer in the kitchen with my hubby.
Speaker 2 (02:10:57):
Yeah, yeah, you want a beer. It's like that's probably
the first time she's ever even asked him. That's why
it was like he was like, there's like a there
was a couple of seconds there where he didn't like
policy answer pubby you hobby, you want a beer?
Speaker 1 (02:11:10):
You want to beer? We don't. We don't normally drink beer. Honey,
we're on video. Oh yeah yeah beer, you sure? Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:11:19):
Yeah. She came in into power after the two thousand
and eight banking mortgage crisis, yes, where people were losing
their homes because they were you're basically got more money
than they can afford, right, yeah, by the banks.
Speaker 1 (02:11:33):
Well they got ripped off by the predatory lenders.
Speaker 2 (02:11:35):
Yeah, she was the ones that were like I went
after the banks. She didn't go after the banks. She
did nothing. They're doing and the banks are doing this again.
You're probably going to see another real estate collapse in
the coming years. Are doing the same thing again.
Speaker 1 (02:11:52):
Probably members of the tribe MIC. So how you consolidate
all the wealth?
Speaker 2 (02:11:59):
There's an actually PC demon right there.
Speaker 1 (02:12:01):
Here's the here's that. This is one of my favorite
Hillary Clinton alien videos, but something.
Speaker 2 (02:12:05):
That you always carry with you. Hot sauce really.
Speaker 1 (02:12:09):
Yeah, Yeah, the black people like pitch, get the fuck
out of here.
Speaker 8 (02:12:14):
Information right now, hot sauce in my bag's way, Hot
sauce really yes.
Speaker 2 (02:12:22):
I want you to know.
Speaker 8 (02:12:22):
People are going to see it and say, Okay, she's
pandering to black people.
Speaker 1 (02:12:26):
Yeah, because that is what she's doing. She's definitely pander
into black If.
Speaker 2 (02:12:29):
You got it, if you got it, you always carry
on and let you should have it in your purse
right now. Let's see the hop.
Speaker 1 (02:12:34):
Yeah, whip that hot sauce out.
Speaker 2 (02:12:36):
She's fighting for us though, Ryan, she was fighting for us.
Speaker 1 (02:12:39):
Did she go down to Yeah, you said she'd go
down to the South to do those those accents? What
was that one she did that really office, She's like
I didn't know my daddy or.
Speaker 2 (02:12:48):
Something like yeah, something so cringe and just horrible, so gross.
These politicians that supposedly get voted in by the people
are just so disgusting. Well, I mean, do they really
do they even really get voted in?
Speaker 1 (02:13:05):
Well, I mean listen when you're right, and when you're
when this is what you would look at the screen
right now, when this is what you grow up eating,
and you grow up watching TikTok and Instagram, and you
grow up with parents that have been subject to their
own version of these things and including these kinds of lunches.
Is it really any surprise that the United States is
(02:13:26):
the fattest, sickest, most unhealthiest, does the most drugs, has
the most diseases of any country on the planet, especially
for an industrial country. Is it really a surprise when
our leading politicians are like, I'm going to get a
beer and fixate truck because I am like you. It's
not really a surprise. People believe that because this is
what you're eating for lunch and calling it food.
Speaker 2 (02:13:48):
Yeah, yeah, exactly. And then you have top that off
with poor parenting, right or even like an abusive environment
for the for the child, or just straight up poor
parenting too, where you don't teach the child any type
of values and moorrows, or even how to do basic
things like fold a bag or make how to how
to make your bed, or you know how to navigate
(02:14:11):
to get a better interest rate on your credit card,
things like that that you should be showing your children.
A lot of these parents just don't do, and they
just say, hey, well here's your school launch slop. Enjoy it.
Speaker 1 (02:14:22):
I wanted to show you something, Mike before I'll let
you go because we're way over. I can't believe we
went fourteen minutes over. I'm guessing you're having fun.
Speaker 2 (02:14:32):
Yeah, I am having I'm standing and sitting. I'm having
I guess.
Speaker 1 (02:14:35):
Hey, by the way, I don't want to argue with you.
I don't want to argue with you about it like
you did at that radio station. But Howard Stern's show's
going to be canceled? Did you hear about that?
Speaker 2 (02:14:43):
That's about time. I don't like that guy. I don't
I don't like the you know, back in the day,
when I was a teenager, I thought some of the
skits were funny, just because I was a teenager. Right, yeah,
and you're kind of you're a little bit dumber then.
But I've seen what he's done to guess and what
he's done. He's grow to the people that he called freaks,
(02:15:04):
you know, his free casts. I think most of them
are dead. How he used them to mock them, make
fun of them to get higher rating.
Speaker 1 (02:15:13):
You mean, like Sasha bar Cone mocks people and.
Speaker 2 (02:15:17):
Stuff like that, and how he One of the main
things for him was there was an old show in
the eighties called Different Strokes, and it was like some
which which white guy that adopted like black kids. But
they she there was a lady, there was a girl
on there that was her daughter. I think her name
was Natalie. I don't forget her name, but she was
on Howard Stern. She was going through some tough times
(02:15:38):
of like I think she had to pose for Playboy
or something to make moneys all sorts of stuff, and
she went to Howard Stern and he just like berated
her and the next day after the show, she committed suicide.
Speaker 1 (02:15:50):
Well I didn't know that. He's he's just disgusting.
Speaker 2 (02:15:54):
He is totally disgusting.
Speaker 1 (02:15:56):
He's a Everything is fine. The chat says he's a
demon his whole career, being cruel to his guests.
Speaker 2 (02:16:02):
Yes, yes, he's a piece of garbage, but so sad.
I used to think those shows we were funny as
a teenager, but again, you grow up and you learn,
you know.
Speaker 1 (02:16:13):
You learned about the tribe, and then you're like, oh, wow,
this isn't funny.
Speaker 2 (02:16:15):
I mean, same thing, same thing with Curb your Enthusiasm.
I thought as a teenager those shows were. They're funnier too,
but then there's there's elements in there that, once you
kind of see behind the veil, I didn't like, and
I didn't think we're funny.
Speaker 1 (02:16:29):
Agreed, Same thing with Seinfeld too.
Speaker 2 (02:16:32):
Yes, oh there is that Dana Plato. Yeah, and the
chat Edward Preston. Yeah, that poor that poor woman. That's
very sad. I think she mentioned that she'd like he
was bringing up that she only had like a thousand
dollars in her checking account and made her feel like shit.
Speaker 1 (02:16:50):
And so basically some tribe member berating a boy until
they killed themselves.
Speaker 2 (02:16:56):
Yeah, yeah, remember that guy, that guy after nine to
eleven was my god. He was pushing for the war.
Speaker 1 (02:17:05):
Of course, yeah, and.
Speaker 2 (02:17:07):
Pushing to kill, to kill, kill, kill kill, uh, you know,
and to go into Iraq and was pushing this whole
sodom the SAME's got weapons of mass destruction. We should
go in there and get rid of them. He was
pushing all that propaganda back then.
Speaker 1 (02:17:24):
Who in the media wasn't pushing all that propaganda. It's
like anybody I know had a paycheck.
Speaker 2 (02:17:28):
Yeah there was, you know, every New York Times article
back then in the Wall Street Journal was like, we
got to go in Tyraq. Sad Um stand must be killed. Yeah,
you killed him, but how many how many women and
children did you also kill? Because your bomb bag dad
the hell you killed millions of civilians. I mean, that's people.
It's disgusting, dude, and the food. That's what Trump got
(02:17:50):
the backlash or even bombing going bombing so unquote nuclear
facility in Iran because people are like, no, we don't
want this.
Speaker 1 (02:17:58):
Which is by the way, why the Times of Israel
there was an article right up about how that's that's
the reason, because we didn't go full regime change. That's
the reason why the Epstein story began to involve Trump
in the Jewish media. Did you read that article?
Speaker 2 (02:18:14):
I didn't see that, but it makes it's plausible. It
makes sense.
Speaker 1 (02:18:17):
Oh yeah, Times of If you type in Times of
Israel Epstein Trump even type in maybe punishment, and the
articles like, well this is this is yeah, here it is.
I found it. It's and this relates to the food too.
I think it's written by Joseph Jannalist Janowski for the
Times of Israel, and in essence, it says that because
(02:18:39):
Trump has questioned Israel, he said, perhaps Trump will realize
that it really doesn't paid to start up with Israel.
He's being punished with the Epstein files. So they're just
openly threatening the president of the United States in the
Times of Israel.
Speaker 2 (02:18:55):
Okay, that's crazy, It's okay, yeah, it's.
Speaker 1 (02:18:57):
Okay, no big deal.
Speaker 2 (02:18:59):
Sen your troops to Iran.
Speaker 1 (02:19:01):
I noticed something.
Speaker 2 (02:19:02):
We'll also do a false flag and help you blow
up a building and blame it on Iran Iranian terrorists.
Iranian terrorists blows blows up a city block with a
yellow cake nuclear device for repute retribution on Trent Trump's bombing.
They did it, so now you gotta now you gotta go.
Speaker 1 (02:19:18):
In no choice now, I mean, hey, look, yellow cakes delicious,
Americans love yellow cake. What are you talking about? Breakfast,
lunch and dinner, breakfast, lunch and dinner. I looked I
wanted to show you this as well in relation to
what we were talking about. So here's that, here's that
Japanese school lunch, and this is it's the same in
South Korea. South Korea and Japan, I think are considered
(02:19:41):
some of the most healthiest school lunches in the world.
I've I've read, I don't I don't know if that's
I don't know. I don't know about Russia or other countries.
I just know because I've read about this, but I
looked up i Q numbers. You know how Americans and
Israelis always tell you how smart they are. Do you
see America or Israel in this list the top? No,
(02:20:02):
you see China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Makyle, South Korea, Japan, Iran, Singapore, Russia,
Mongolia or Minia, Australia, Spain, New Zealand, And the list
goes on and on and then somewhere down here, if
you keep scrolling and don't get carpal tunnel, you find
the US, And then if you keep scrolling, you'll find
Israel down here too. Not in the greatest IQ's compared.
Speaker 2 (02:20:26):
I bet you, I bet you. Honestly, we're lower on
the list than what that says.
Speaker 1 (02:20:30):
I absolutely, I would agree with that. I mean, hell,
if you look at look at look at this statistic
about reading, it's like forty is it forty percent American's
sixth grade level. It's a crazy number.
Speaker 2 (02:20:44):
Mike. Yeah, they can't you know, kids can't read, but
they can do the latest TikTok dance.
Speaker 1 (02:20:50):
Yep, No, exactly exactly.
Speaker 2 (02:20:52):
Here's well, the TikTok in China is totally different than
the TikTok and the United States. The TikTok and China
is all educational videos. Yep, there's nothing like the slop
that we have on our TikTok where it shows airport
fights and the new dance craze or some kind of
trend for some chicks to show their hooge and it's
just it's just ours is just totally go. It's go again.
(02:21:16):
It's goystlop gystlop.
Speaker 1 (02:21:18):
Yes it is. Okay, So I just pulled this up.
I'm going to show this to you, and I'm also
pulling up something on my ex. I took it off
the screen. Gist for a moment. Where's it at. It's
it's close, close close close? Oh here it is okay,
I found it. Okay, So look at this. This is
a this is mainstream. This is not a debatable thing.
(02:21:42):
It's it's well recognized. So this is there's different reference
sources here, the a PM Research Lab, I think it's
Apartment of Education, the US two, the National Literacy Institute.
Look at what this says. Look, this is scary. Can
you read that?
Speaker 2 (02:21:58):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (02:21:59):
See it would Would you read that for us? Please?
Speaker 7 (02:22:02):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (02:22:02):
Yes? About fifty four percent of American adults read below
the equivalent of a sixth grade level, indicating a significant
literary challenge in the US. The low literacy rate can
lead to various social and economic issues. Really, when you.
Speaker 1 (02:22:14):
Can't read, I would say so, so that probably is
an Oregon cuts math and reading requirements.
Speaker 2 (02:22:22):
You read about that, Yes, that happened, like I think
a year ago.
Speaker 1 (02:22:27):
Don't need to master reading.
Speaker 2 (02:22:31):
Now, you don't. You can go give your degree. You
don't have to learn that. You don't have to be
able to read if we give you a degree. Yep.
Speaker 1 (02:22:36):
And so this is what I saw. You know, these
videos of all these girls dancing at the colleges. See,
people are like, what's the big deal, Well, what the
big deal is? You couldn't dance and address You got
to dance like a like a stripper, like a whore,
like you're on a porn video. And the thing is,
the people that are responsible for creating this mess of
(02:22:56):
drugs and slop and crime and murder and death and
disease are the same people responsible for creating these dumb,
fake blonde horrors at all these universities. And so, like
you were saying, you can do a fucking TikTok dance,
but you can't read Captain Underpants, which I'm pretty sure
is like a sixth grade book.
Speaker 2 (02:23:16):
Yeah, you know who, you know all the what the celebrities,
the dresses that they buy and what they do and
their lifestyle. But you can't read a book. You can't.
You don't even know how to shop for a lower
interest rate credit card. You're just.
Speaker 1 (02:23:34):
Terrible, terrible, unbelievable. But no, this means America's back, Mike.
They said America's back because a bunch of horror are
dancing in front of a sorority where they fuck their
way through the football team.
Speaker 2 (02:23:45):
Well this is this was again the division because now
if you look at that right, it's.
Speaker 1 (02:23:49):
White, yeah, mostly white, fake blonde tan.
Speaker 2 (02:23:53):
So then you have like, hey, look what you know.
You know, we've been suppressed with this wokeness. Now we're
coming back strong with the white for turn fraternities again.
It's all it's all division and propaganda and just just
a mind fulk a scion.
Speaker 1 (02:24:10):
Yes it is Corey McDonald in the chat summed it up.
Can you read that?
Speaker 2 (02:24:15):
Here? Can the vision? Because now you have you can
have black people that say, oh, look at this, this
is all white. There's no black people. This is racist.
You know, it's just it just builds the divide up.
Speaker 1 (02:24:27):
Yes, it does. That's why I said. The same people
responsible for both of those images. McDonald says, that's the tribe.
Also here, Cynthia stock Stock still says what they're feeding
my friend in the hospital is beyond unhealthy.
Speaker 2 (02:24:41):
I was in the hospital a few months ago. Yeah,
what they gave me was again like here you go,
it's like, you know, chocolate cake as dessert, and like, wow,
that's the same kind of.
Speaker 1 (02:24:53):
Crap, chocolate cake, not yellow cake, chocolate.
Speaker 2 (02:25:00):
Cake as as And when I was in the hospital
for like a dessert. Well, yeah, they didn't. But yet
on the second day I had to ask for a toothbrush.
I was like, can I get Can I get a toothbrush? Please?
Speaker 1 (02:25:11):
We don't got those fancy teeth brush things.
Speaker 2 (02:25:14):
I was yeah, because I was better than dude. So
I was in the hospital and I was like the
second day, I was like, you know, I really want
to brush my teeth here because I can do it
my arms work. I was like, can I get a toothbrush?
And like, oh yeah, sure. I was like, how come
they didn't offer me a toothbrush before, but yet they
gave me chocolate cake.
Speaker 1 (02:25:31):
Well, you know that's it's the same reason why scientific
Americans said, hey, breastfeeding really isn't a big big issue.
You don't need to breastfeed, And hey Mike, you don't
really need to brush your teeth. That's probably racist actually
to brush your teeth.
Speaker 2 (02:25:44):
Yeah, you figure the hospital would have, like, you know,
would understand a correation of dental health with your overall health.
Speaker 1 (02:25:50):
I went to uh, well, I've been to a couple
of them now. I went just like a standard well
I won't say standard, but it was like a it's
like a went to an Onsen like the Hot Springs.
I've been to two of them. One was really fancy,
one was just pretty standard and just free toothbrushes. As
many toothbrushes as you wanted to take these tooth I
(02:26:12):
swear to God like these toothbrushes from the Japanese on
sin were better quality than any toothbrush that I ever
paid for in the United States. And I used to
buy the specialty fin bristles at like natural grocers four
or five dollars. The hotels over here have for free,
have better toothbrushes than high end toothbrushes in the United States.
(02:26:33):
It's shocking, crazy, it's shocking what you're talking about guitars too, right, Yeah,
I was talking about guitars.
Speaker 2 (02:26:41):
There's a market for Japanese guitars because the guitar market
in the US, the quality has gone down so bad
that even a guitar, let's say that's five grand, is
not worth definitely not worth the five grand. But you
can get a Japanese issue maybe from five years six
years back, for two grand, and it's higher quality sounds.
(02:27:03):
Because a lot of a lot of the guitars coming
from Japan starting in the nineties and the two thousands
were high quality, high quality guitar. How they were manufactured
because the manufacturing facility was in Japan. That's where the
guitars were made, and there was a there was a
a perfection to detail of the guitar. So now you're
(02:27:28):
you're you have a market where you have this American
guitar guy. They go over to Japan and they buy
a bunch of japan guitars and then they come back
and they sell them in the US and make money
because they can still make money off of buying it
in Japan and selling it in the US.
Speaker 1 (02:27:43):
That's crazy.
Speaker 2 (02:27:44):
Oh yeah, oh then much higher, much higher, much higher
now than what you would get even for let's say
a custom shop made in the US guitar. You know,
you can get the same quality or better of buying
a made in Japan.
Speaker 1 (02:27:57):
You know what's really interesting, Mike, I'm gonna ask you
this question. You'll see this in my new book. I
have a chapter on this. You know how nobody points
out we talked about Panera, bread Baskin Robbins, the tribe
is in charge of all of this. But if you
were to look at electronics, cars, guitars, musical instruments, pop culture,
(02:28:17):
how much of that is inspired or directly result of,
like Japanese culture, Like every car, motorcycle, you know, off
road vehicle, I mean, you name it. There's a long,
long list. Does anybody ever accuse the Japanese of controlling
the world. No, So what's the difference between Toyota and
(02:28:39):
all of the other Japanese car products, all the culture
of bushido, samurai, ninja, you name it, all that, and
not just in Japan, but just Eastern culture, all those things.
Nobody accuses these people of controlling the world because what
the export is quality. What the export is like a
culture of for the most part, like decency, and they're
(02:29:03):
known for respect, doesn't It doesn't mean that that's what
you always get here, but like that's what they're known for.
So I think that people don't care if every car,
every video game, everything in pop culture is Japanese because
it doesn't undermine the moral fabric of society. But Baskin
Robbins does, and so does Dunkin Donuts, and so does
(02:29:25):
all the other things the tribe touches. You ever thought
about that? Like everything so much, like everything I did
as a kid was Japanese I didn't. I had no idea.
Speaker 2 (02:29:34):
Yeah, because what you're paying, which there is a certain
amount of respect for the consumer, and so they want
to make the most high quality product while charging you
a fair price for it. If you look, this is
Narlie Sheen. There's a guy. It's a great YouTube channel.
It's called flash Flood of Gear. He's got a bunch
(02:29:56):
of different makes of guitars where he actually has a
couple of videos where he shows you the makes of
Japanese guitars. You can check out his YouTube video. It's
called a flash Flood of Gear and he'll show you
Japanese models perfectly. Well, that's the guy I'm talking about.
He's actually based in Florida. But like I was saying,
like there is a expectation of what we're going to
(02:30:16):
sell you is going to be the most highest quality.
If you're looking on the other side of what the
controllers of the world, there's an expectation of we're gonna
we're gonna rip you off the hardest we can rip
you off. We're going to sell you the least quality,
and at the same time we're going to poison you
so you get sucked into our system of healthcare of doctors,
(02:30:38):
of cancer, treatment of chemo, all controlled pharmaceuticals, all controlled
by the same group of people. Japanese don't own. The
Japanese don't own Visor.
Speaker 1 (02:30:49):
That's right. It doesn't run by I mean the CEO
and the chief scientist, Pfizer and Maderna, three of four
are members of the tribe. They also don't run the CDC.
They don't run. Go ahead, Mike. They don't run the.
Speaker 2 (02:31:03):
Media they do, they don't run. If you see some
of these memes of CNN where it's got like the
that puts the star David on the reporters and the
people involved, the whole network is run by the tribe.
It's just it's got to be talked about and it's
got to be discussed.
Speaker 1 (02:31:25):
Have you ever seen the I don't know if I
played it for you before, but there's a Japanese news
broadcasts over here where they talk about how Israel controls
the United States.
Speaker 2 (02:31:36):
Those I've actually seen videos where the Japanese. Uh, there's
videos of how how the tribe runs the US.
Speaker 1 (02:31:44):
YEP.
Speaker 2 (02:31:45):
It gets pretty in depth too with the whole monetary system.
Speaker 1 (02:31:48):
Also, Yeah, because everybody knows it, and you might think
we're getting away from the subject of basking Robins, but
we're not because those people created Baskin Robbins and Dunkin
Donuts and Hoggend and so on and so forth. It's
the same types of philosophies that are behind the food poison.
(02:32:12):
You rip you off, and then.
Speaker 2 (02:32:14):
It's like if you go ahead, yeah, make you sick.
Speaker 1 (02:32:18):
Actually, this funny thing is, this is a great example
of what we're talking about. I think a Japanese woman
just one, let me if I can find this. So
you know you're Italian. You know gelato, right, Yes, I
don't need it, but yeah, I know it. I think
that So this woman, I think it was a woman,
means I can find it. Japanese woman wins, Ah, where's
(02:32:45):
it at? I think, yeah, I think some first Japanese
hailing from Yeah, there's a Japanese person, a woman. Man,
I forget what the story is, my goodness, where is
the story? Anyway, they went to they went to Italy,
I think, and they opened up a gelato place and
they won awards. A foreigner came to Italy, opened up
(02:33:08):
in the gelato place and won awards because they're gelato.
Based on the Japanese you know model of I guess
kaizen was even better than the local domestic stuff. And
that's that's what we're talking about. They tried to make
it better better, not undermining and undercutting and charging you
extra for poison.
Speaker 2 (02:33:29):
Exactly. There's a huge difference.
Speaker 1 (02:33:33):
Sorry, go ahead, I'm sorry.
Speaker 2 (02:33:34):
No, I said, you're right, there's a huge difference.
Speaker 1 (02:33:38):
This is the I think this is the guy, Takata Satoshi.
He's won two different international gelato competitions and they say
he wold judges in Italy. There you have it, so
that that's the difference. See, this guy made a better
gelato when the guy that did Hagendas, the guy that
(02:34:01):
founded Hagendas, he used a fake name to give the
impression that his product wasn't Jewish, and then he used cheap,
bullshit ingredients and charged excessive prices. I think it was
like ten times the price, kind of like hot dogs
that were sold on Coney Island in order to make
a profit off of the perception that the product was
(02:34:23):
high quality when it wasn't. And that's the difference. Nobody
cares if this guy, if Satoshi son is making gelato,
he made a better gelato. That's what matters. But people
do care when they learn out that Hogendas is a
bullshit company. Yes, like, oh this is gross.
Speaker 2 (02:34:43):
Not to get off the point again, but did you
see recently there was a video of Christians going through
Israel and they were getting spat on. Oh yeah, and
this was like a few days ago, and heckel and threatened.
Speaker 1 (02:35:01):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (02:35:02):
I mean, how is that for a religion to say
they're the chosen people? But another a group of Christians
can't go go through the streets and and and just
show their religion.
Speaker 1 (02:35:14):
It's considered by the way, the guy's name was Reuben Mattis. No,
it's no, because Christians are considered a I guess an abomination.
They're considered a blasphemers in Israel, which to some degree
I can understand. Actually, as a matter of fact, I
can kind of understand that. But that's not really the point.
The point. The point is you're you're totally right. In fact,
(02:35:36):
I just pulled this up in my new book this
is the story of Hagendas in the book here and
speaking of spitting on Christians, I have that article uh
here in the book actually here it is Israeli settler
far right activist spitting on Christians is a Jewish custom.
Here's another one. Radical Jewish groups had advocates burning churches.
(02:35:57):
Here's another one Middle East. I spitting on Christians and
Jerusalem is not criminal, says Ben Vere. Here's another one.
Time's visral spinning on Christians, extracting the DNA of hatred.
Figuring out why I think this guy to be fair,
Gotenstein heat said that it was wrong and that you
shouldn't do it. So there's a couple of people over
in Israel that think it's wrong. But no, you're right.
They spit on them, they burn churches, they attack churches,
they attack Christians. How This here in my book is
(02:36:20):
a letter that Mike Huckabee just wrote condemning the fact
that Israel isn't giving out visas to people who are Christian.
They're cutting off the visa programs. They don't want more
Christians coming. It's disgusting.
Speaker 2 (02:36:32):
Yeah, it's that's a whole nother show.
Speaker 1 (02:36:38):
That's a whole book. Yeah, yeah, you can get soon.
Speaker 2 (02:36:41):
Mike.
Speaker 1 (02:36:41):
Please do a proofread of that for me when you
get a chance, sitting, standing, laying down, however you want
to do it, I will, I will I would really
appreciate that. Do you have any we went way over.
I so appreciate that you stayed longer and that we
had a good conversation. I think it all links back.
It all connects back to Baskin, Robbins, Baskin and Poison.
(02:37:03):
Do you have any final comments, thoughts, theories, opinions.
Speaker 2 (02:37:08):
No, that basically, again, it was a good show, and
we basically showed that. You know, they're pushing this garbage
however they can, whether it's the left side or the
right side, or trying to get you to say this
it's all American, you know, it's until you actually read
the ingredients, you should really think twice about eating any
(02:37:32):
of this crap.
Speaker 1 (02:37:33):
Yes, here's a did you see this on the screen?
I forgot to show this to you. I'm not going
to say anything. It's real too.
Speaker 2 (02:37:43):
Oh my god.
Speaker 1 (02:37:44):
It's Randy Fine, who has had a lot of ice
cream in his life and a lot of fast food.
Speaker 2 (02:37:49):
Randy Fine excited to wear it. He's excited to wear it.
Speaker 1 (02:37:54):
Kip America, Great, it's Kippa. That's great, slob Randy Fine,
just a piece of sub human garbage, all right? Anyway,
pull that's the screen.
Speaker 2 (02:38:10):
So yes, we'll do We'll do another show again if
maybe next week, come up with a poll and then
we can do a show where that people want.
Speaker 1 (02:38:19):
To I've got it. I know what we can talk about.
Do you want to talk about You want to talk
about the UFO whistleblower conman?
Speaker 2 (02:38:27):
Oh, yeah, we can do that. We can do that
for sure. There's many pictures we can show, Yes, doctor
Greer's experiences.
Speaker 1 (02:38:38):
Don't don't tell me. You're gonna tell me those alien
pictures were fake.
Speaker 2 (02:38:43):
I'm not. We'll just let the audience judge on them
when we talk about it. I mean, but he's a
you know, he's a he's a doctor, and he's been
shouting the stuff for what thirty plus years? But still
the truth is still truth. I'm still out there. Yeah,
it still X files.
Speaker 1 (02:39:01):
And buy out there. It's definitely not in a Stephen
Greer documentary can tell you that for sure. Okay, So, Mike,
I think in relation to health, one piece of advice
and as a tip for our next like a little
hint at our next show, I have for you here
(02:39:22):
a great screenshot from one of David Wilcox's recent videos.
Are you ready to see this.
Speaker 2 (02:39:29):
Oh jeez, yes, all right, here we go.
Speaker 1 (02:39:31):
This, this is this is real too. I'm not making
I'm not making this up. Still real to me, Still
real to me, damn it. This is a recent Willcock
video and this is what he says. He had a
prophetic dream. He says he's dreaming about diarrhea. And here's
his recent one of his prophetic dreams. He said that
recently came true.
Speaker 8 (02:39:50):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (02:39:51):
He said, after investigating and researching about treatments and being purified,
you know, health, he said, you know they're looking for
these are the angels or the raw or whatever part
of himself. He's talking to treatment that would be done
on me in order to purify me. So he needs
to purify himself. Right after investigating and researching this for
a long time, I realized they were going to consolidate
(02:40:12):
all the minerals in my body. And would you be
kind enough to read that last line? What are they
going to do with all those minerals in his body.
Speaker 2 (02:40:20):
And remove them all at once through my rectum?
Speaker 1 (02:40:25):
Yep? David Wilcox said he's going to have all the
minerals in his body ripped out of his asshole. So
I don't recommend that or laying in bathtubs full of piss.
Speaker 2 (02:40:34):
I wish you could have asked him that when he
showed up at the conference.
Speaker 1 (02:40:39):
How's that rectal mineral?
Speaker 2 (02:40:41):
Yeah, how's your rectal? Heals this since nineteen ninety nine.
That guy is such a again sigh op agent living
in a multi million dollar cabin with two three garag.
Speaker 1 (02:41:01):
He's spending a lot of plates to get that cap. Well,
you know, there's a lot of bad stuff happening for
Wilcock right now. I don't know if you know anything
about it, but there's a lot of bad stuff going down.
Speaker 2 (02:41:09):
It's probably because he doesn't really post any more on YouTube.
Speaker 1 (02:41:15):
Some stuff it just sort of.
Speaker 2 (02:41:18):
Supposedly on his podcast that he does on Sundays, but
I've never watched that.
Speaker 1 (02:41:24):
I didn't know that he had a podcast on Sundays.
I wasn't aware of that. Here's some stuff John. We
had John Christian Spotovaccia on the show recently and he
he's been sharing all this stuff irs eighteen months day.
Wilcox has been talking to the public that he's in
this tax step because he decided to take money that
he owed a tax authorities invested in Stavadi Aerospace so
(02:41:46):
he could bring humanity free energy. Turns out he's been
lying about paying the IRS too, because he said, it's
you know, recent that he took all this money and
invested it, and that's why he doesn't have it for
that's what he's telling the IRS, by the way, I
invested the money into aerospace research so that I could
bring free energy to humanity. And the IRS said, you
(02:42:09):
still owe us a million dollars. And then it turns
out John Christian Spatavaccia found that David Wilcock owes taxes
going back to twenty twelve, which was before he ever
invested in Stavadi, so he's been lying about that too.
And this is a this is one of the copies
from the tax lean Oh my.
Speaker 2 (02:42:28):
Gosh, Well, you know, I mean, they're the taxes and
the government. They will get they will get you, doesn't
matter who you are.
Speaker 1 (02:42:36):
But he's bringing free energy to the world. And then
he and then Spotoveccia also found this. This is so funny.
Stavadi Aerospace is three million dollars in debt, but he
claims they're going to get hundreds of billions of dollars
in contracts to build new ships or I don't know
what they are, ships or planes or something for the military.
Speaker 2 (02:42:57):
Yeah, and when he was talking about that, that's that
airplane he was they were talking about how the how
they can put missiles on it and kill people.
Speaker 3 (02:43:05):
I thought this.
Speaker 2 (02:43:05):
I thought this guy was like supposed to be like
spiritual guru and he's he's showing this this this airplane
where they're gonna put missiles on it and kill people.
Speaker 1 (02:43:13):
No, you're totally right. Yeah, that that that razor plane
that they have they're talking about. He went from being
a spiritual guru who does crystal bowls with his hippie
wife too after she left him for investing all his
money in Stavati. Now he's selling arms to the military's.
Speaker 2 (02:43:29):
At least at least trying to. Yeah, it's like because
I saw the comments on his because he's got the
video on his YouTube of him talking to uh I
guess one of his engineers, and they're talking about, you
know how the place of putting how many missiles? It's
told in the comments are like, David, I thought you
were better than this. Your aircraft is a war machine.
(02:43:50):
There's nothing spiritual about it. The comments are hilarious.
Speaker 1 (02:43:53):
Yeah, that's best car. That's the CEO quote unquote CEO
of Stavati, that's who he was talking to. That's the
he gave all his money.
Speaker 2 (02:44:01):
The g with the ponytail.
Speaker 1 (02:44:02):
Yep, yep, yep, that's the gal. And it turns out
that they've never actually only the only thing they've ever
made is they've used their warehouse for people to dump
literal garbage. And I think they did like sewage disposal
or something. So literally, the Stavati Aerospace facility, not only
are they not making planes, it's cleared out of anything
(02:44:26):
that would be used for aerospace development, and it's it's
literally not a joke. It's literally filled with garbage like
trash and reportedly raw sewage. That's what they're That's the
only money they've ever made is by allowing people to
still leave garbage in their hangar. It's unbelievable. But then again,
(02:44:47):
you know, people eat these school lunches and they believe Wilcox.
It's got to be a connection.
Speaker 2 (02:44:52):
Yeah, I mean, I mean, if you believe anything David
Wilcox says in twenty twenty five, there is something wrong
with you.
Speaker 1 (02:45:00):
Yes, there is. Hey, look some people like the show, Mike.
Some people like the show. All right, love light and
death and destruction.
Speaker 2 (02:45:10):
That's right, Love lights and depth into jacks exactly.
Speaker 1 (02:45:14):
No, see what they're gonna. They're gonna they're gonna fight
the deep state with those laser candis.
Speaker 2 (02:45:18):
We're gonna put Saint Michael's picture on these planes when
we drop the bombs.
Speaker 1 (02:45:26):
Yes, Michael the arcane, Yeah, Michael the archangel told me
to build weapons of mass destructure.
Speaker 7 (02:45:32):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:45:33):
Yeah. He is God's warrior, so he has to destroy.
Speaker 1 (02:45:37):
Yep, that's true. He kills Satan, so will Cox probably
he's fulfilling that prophecy unbelievable. Joe roup is in the
chat Joe Rupe said a little bit ago here, he said,
maybe you should do a do a segment what will
will Cox say next? That should be a segment every week.
He said. Every time this guy does something stupid, he
(02:45:59):
finds a way to top it.
Speaker 2 (02:46:00):
You are, oh, yeah, it's it's unbelievable. If you look
at his videos from like a year ago, though I
think the last one was like a year ago. He's
using like English accents when he's talking about his cabin
and making chicken wings. It's it's just bizarre. It's bizarre.
Speaker 1 (02:46:19):
You know what is I learned this. I watched some
of those videos too. He has a rat infestation problem
or like a mouse infestation problem at his house. Do
you know that or did you hear about that? And
why and why he has an infestation problem because he
admits that his house is filthy. He said, you know,
I don't have time to clean it. It's so dirty
(02:46:40):
and gross. I've got now I'm dealing with mice, I'm
dealing with rats. His house is just riddled with filth
and and rodents. Apparently very spiritual.
Speaker 2 (02:46:49):
I like in the video, like he puts like his
guitar in the background to show like, hey look at me.
I'm i'm I can play I'm I can play the guitar.
I'm a musician. But I bet you if he actually
picked it up, he couldn't even strum an achord.
Speaker 1 (02:47:02):
You mean like Jimmy Church when he had like fifteen
guitars behind him doing Fade to Black or Fade to
Midnight or whatever it was. I think you said that
about him ten years ago.
Speaker 2 (02:47:12):
He was, you know, a roadie for a Motley Crue.
Speaker 1 (02:47:17):
Down there on the Sunset Strip.
Speaker 2 (02:47:19):
Right, Yeah, maybe we can do with this show. We
can do also include where these shysters are right now?
Speaker 1 (02:47:26):
You know, yeah, where are they today? Like when you
when you're on six hundred pounds life and you lose
three hundred pounds and then where are they today?
Speaker 2 (02:47:33):
Yeah? So I want to do like him, what's the
other one, Elizabeth or what's the Eisenhower?
Speaker 1 (02:47:42):
Oh god, Loura Eisenhower. Yeah, I want to do her,
Laura Bradshaw, I mean sorry.
Speaker 2 (02:47:51):
Yeah, I want to do Willcox. I want to do
George Snorri. See what he if? He's still pushing the
same bullshit shows.
Speaker 1 (02:47:58):
You mean, like vaccines.
Speaker 2 (02:48:00):
Yeah, god, I want to show all that show so badly.
When that guy dismissed the guy for not wearing wanting
to wear a mask running of the scene, he totally
cut the guy off. It was a guest that he
had on the show, and they was talking about the
COVID situation, and the guy said, you know what, there's
no need for a mask and you shouldn't get vaccinated.
And then right after he said that, Snorri said, well,
(02:48:21):
you know, we're out of time right now, so we
gotta go take that take care and just hung up
on the guy, and I was like, you piece of crap.
Speaker 1 (02:48:28):
Can't we can't potentially offend people and step out of line.
Remember remember I don't know if you were there when
this happened, but remember when Jim Mars was on one
of the shows with us, and I think he told
he told us this on air. He said, when he
was on Coast to Coast, they used to have they
have he'd have had to go to a hotel or
something to get the you know, the clean phone line,
(02:48:49):
and he'd have like an earpiece or something or like
a separate line where they would tell him what he
couldn't couldn't say as he was talking. Do you remember that?
Speaker 2 (02:48:58):
Yeah, that's yeah, us, that's so ugly, so ugly.
Speaker 1 (02:49:03):
I think what did he say? I think it was
about Bush. He called them carpetbaggers, fake you know, blue bloods.
Speaker 2 (02:49:09):
That came down fake, fake, fake Texans.
Speaker 1 (02:49:12):
Yep, and they had someone in his ear. Mister Mars,
you can't say that, mister Mars. Don't mention the Bushes,
mister Mars, you can't say that.
Speaker 2 (02:49:19):
Yeah, George Snor and then the kind of like I'm
not you know, we had our differences with Art Bell,
But I liked a lot of Arts so Ould programs
honestly as as as a kid. But the way that
he kind of screwed over Art Bell to take over
Coast to Coast too totally was very bad. And Art
even talked about it when he came back, kind of
(02:49:39):
mentioned it a little bit, And there was definitely Somemanda
massen to between the two because Snory basically stole the
job from him.
Speaker 1 (02:49:47):
It's so disgusting the radio. That's the thing too about
whether we're talking on food occult ism UFOs, that it
doesn't really matter. All of those fields are so corrupted.
Like the UFO field is totally corrupted. The nutrition health
field is filled with influencers paid by industries and corporations.
Like nothing is real. It's almost all fake. Almost all
(02:50:11):
of it's fake. I remember when I went to a
gym in Boise, Idaho, and I got a gym membership
for the first time, and I remember the person telling
they sit down and had nutritional consultation, and I thought,
I should be consulting you. And this woman said something
about you know, diets, and she's like, so you don't
eat meat? And I said nope, And She said, it's
not really good for you, right, And I said, I
(02:50:33):
don't really want to get into this with you. She's like, well,
where's your sources of information that suggests that that's bad?
And I said, well, you could read the China Study.
She said that study has been debunked and I said, well,
that's funny because number one, it's not ACE. That's just
the name of the book. The China Study looked at
thousands of individual studies in rural China. It's completely unrelated
(02:50:53):
to a singular study. And she said that's been debunked.
And I said, really, who debunked it? So she sends
it she sent me in our article. Later, I gave
you my email. You know who debunked it? A representative
of the fucking Coca Cola corporation. There you go, that's
who debunked it. And I told that to her. She said, well,
I don't really think it matters that they work for coke.
(02:51:13):
You don't think it matters that they work for coke?
Speaker 2 (02:51:18):
No, yeah, you don't think. You don't think it matters
that they flip up on these board of directors of
these corporations where they go from the you know, the
FDA to the chemical company that they pushed and allowed
the chemicals in their food through having a position on
the board of the FDA. You're fucking retarded. Come on,
you know these people would rather have a house with
(02:51:39):
seven bathrooms than to help people and to cure people.
They would rather have fifteen cars. It's funny because you know,
when you kick the bucket, you can't take any of
that with you.
Speaker 1 (02:51:50):
Nope.
Speaker 2 (02:51:50):
And when you're lying on your deathbed and you're trying
to cling onto your your nice gold chains that you
have on your neck, Uh, you got to wonder what's
what's what's in it for me in the afterlife? Right?
Speaker 1 (02:52:02):
Nothing? That's why they want to live forever. That's why
does the heart?
Speaker 2 (02:52:06):
Does your heart way more than the feather?
Speaker 7 (02:52:09):
No?
Speaker 1 (02:52:10):
No, And considering all the fast food people eat, there's
definitely a weight problem.
Speaker 2 (02:52:17):
Anyway, man, I got I gotta go. But it was
a great show. Happy to be here, and we'll try
to do this. I guess maybe before three weeks or
maybe two weeks. I go so fast.
Speaker 1 (02:52:26):
You let me know when you want to talk about
David Wilcox's mineral cleanse, and I'm I'm here for it.
Every day, any day you want to do it.
Speaker 2 (02:52:34):
Oh yeah, I can't wait to share and talk about
doctor Stephen Greer's uh Alien Pictures, Alien counter Pictures because
the audience, you guys will laugh, You'll laugh when we
go through this. You'll you really have a good time.
So be on the lookout for that show.
Speaker 1 (02:52:52):
They are so ridiculously fake. I don't even know have
called it fake. They're just it looks like if you
just took a picture and you just moved the camera
real quick while you were taking the picture and made
it look like, you know, there's streaks of light or something.
It's so bad.
Speaker 2 (02:53:07):
It's pixelated, it's distorted, it's scaled, it's everything that you
can do with photoshop to make it.
Speaker 1 (02:53:16):
Yeah, you ever accidentally taking a picture, just like you know,
putting your phone away, That's what it looks like.
Speaker 2 (02:53:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (02:53:23):
Oh my god, Oh my god, Michael, I'm so sorry.
Look what I just found. I found. Oh my goodness.
I was trying to find something about our old radio
station and look what I just found. You're gonna like
I never showed this to you. This is the remnants
of my press pass that that Jimmy Church's goon ripped
up in his mouth. That's what was left of it.
Speaker 2 (02:53:50):
I was told I was low roboration and bringing negative
energy to the event. That is hilarious. What year is that?
Speaker 1 (02:53:58):
That was two years ago, November twenty twenty three.
Speaker 2 (02:54:02):
God, I thought it was longer than that, but I
guess again, time is just Yeah. I thought I could
have sworm was longer than that, but that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (02:54:09):
Yep. The guy took it in his mouth and ripped
it off and said I was being low vibration. I said,
I think that's pretty low vibration to rip my press
pass off me.
Speaker 2 (02:54:17):
Yeah, yeah, you told me the whole story. He was
kind of like he was in your face, and.
Speaker 1 (02:54:22):
He said, we don't. He said you were harassing. I
got the whole thing on like audio audio clip of
it fifty something minutes. But yeah, he said we don't.
You were harassing mister Church or something. He said, we
don't allow that here. We want good vibes and energy.
Ne to rips it off. And it's made of plastic,
so you can't really tear it like a piece of paper.
So he puts it in his mouth and choose on
it like a fucking animal.
Speaker 2 (02:54:44):
That's what's funny. It's like it's like inverted. You were
actually bringing high vibration into truth to it that they
say you're low vibration and negative energy. That's so true, son,
You're trying to save people from not spending money on
bullshit and then but your low vibr you should Yep.
Speaker 1 (02:55:03):
So there it is. I wanted to show that to
you last time, but I couldn't find it. But I
found it this time. There it is.
Speaker 2 (02:55:08):
That's what's left hilarious. Get out of here, low vibration.
Speaker 1 (02:55:13):
I'm just edia. I lost the Yeah, oh, dare you talk.
Speaker 2 (02:55:18):
About you know Jamie Church's bacon bacon, Starbucks frappuccinos that
he loves to drink. That was the Jim Mars was.
I saw that quote. Jim Mars was a great man.
Speaker 1 (02:55:29):
Yes, Jim Mars was. They didn't like him either. I
got behind the scenes. The people at these conferences did
not like him either, a lot of them because he
because he was real oh.
Speaker 2 (02:55:40):
Yes, sighted everything In the back of his books, He's
got like sixteen pages of citations of where he was
getting his info.
Speaker 1 (02:55:46):
So they don't like him.
Speaker 2 (02:55:48):
Did will Cock ever do that? No, just make up
things and said he went into the inner Earth and
talked to Chichala, the inner Earth god.
Speaker 1 (02:55:57):
Oh what what was her name? Her name was? What
was that god? As he told talk to Kyrie Kyri
Kyrie h the inner Earth. It sounds like an Asian
version of Kali, but they can't say Khali Karri. So Kyri, Yeah,
that was his his inner Earth gud.
Speaker 2 (02:56:14):
Jimmy or Jimmy Church was going to put on scuba
gear and go to that Malibu underwater alien base.
Speaker 1 (02:56:21):
Yes, the Malibu base. That's see.
Speaker 8 (02:56:25):
No.
Speaker 1 (02:56:25):
Remember that was the reason that I got in trouble
with on Dark Matter originally because I had said to
Jimmy that I said, I think that's fake. I think
your story's fake because you didn't have that story until
you signed a deal with Coast to Coast and then
suddenly you've got a big UFO story that's on the
front page of their website. Sounds like pr to me.
It sounds like Coast to Coast told you, Okay, we've
(02:56:45):
got this, we've got this story, and we're gonna it's
gonna it's gonna be the first thing that you cover,
and it's gonna be all you and it's in your backyard.
And you found it and it's Jimmy's Malibu UFO base
And people are still citing that stuff today. Someone just
said it to me to comm in two years ago,
I think was at the Vegas conference. You've seen the
Malibu bass man, the one that Jimmy Church made up. Yeah,
(02:57:07):
I've seen it. It's fake, It's totally fake.
Speaker 2 (02:57:10):
Yeah, he's got one picture that that is what. It
just shows like a enclave and like a cave, a
big deal. Yeah, you don't have anything any other proof
to say that's an alien bass other than you know,
it's just what there's these people like, like we proved right,
these they were all working together. They were all working together,
(02:57:34):
all of them, Yes.
Speaker 1 (02:57:36):
In some capacity, if not directly, in some capacity. Blair
m says, I'm the guy that punched Jimmy fake guitar Church.
Did someone punch him? I don't know about this. Did
Did someone punch him, Mike?
Speaker 2 (02:57:49):
I don't know, but that would be great if you did.
Speaker 1 (02:57:50):
They're a listener of the show locked the.
Speaker 2 (02:57:53):
Black hair dyed grease right off of his head.
Speaker 1 (02:57:56):
Jimmy is a very narcissistic yep, oh god, yes, yeah,
Why do you even care if the stories are fake, I'll.
Speaker 2 (02:58:04):
Say allegedly, So I don't get this allegedly. Kid.
Speaker 1 (02:58:08):
Hey, listen, I saw that shit at that after party
I went to. Someone was in there with an iPad filming.
This was really before any This was like twenty seventeen,
twenty sixteen. And I went to that that They rented
this big house out in Palm Springs and I went
to that event and someone was filming and Jimmy breaks
out the drugs. Put that camera away. Don't film this.
(02:58:34):
That's that's real. I'm not making that's not fake. It's
not fake.
Speaker 2 (02:58:39):
There you go.
Speaker 1 (02:58:40):
What a piece of trash.
Speaker 2 (02:58:44):
Yeah, I don't know who you are. Yeah, you know,
you know exactly who he was, and you know he
had he was on your show. You're a complete liar someone.
He was like, you know, why are you doing you
know why he's why are you doing this? Why are
you doing Because I'm trying to get the truth, asshole.
That's what you're That's what this is. The whole movement
is supposed to be about truth.
Speaker 1 (02:59:03):
Yep, Blair says, I did in roswell. Did you get
arrested for that? What happened? Is there a video? Is
there a news report. Is there a post? Is there
something I didn't know that someone? Well, this person punched
Jimmy cho Why did you punch him? Did he try
to rip your press? Pass off to let's let's see
what Joe Ryder says? Where is there a video of it?
(02:59:24):
I didn't know that. That's interesting. I didn't know that story.
Speaker 2 (02:59:28):
Did you punch him in the face or in the
fat gut?
Speaker 1 (02:59:31):
It's hard to probably miss that fat gut.
Speaker 2 (02:59:35):
You punched him in a gut and he split up
a donut.
Speaker 1 (02:59:38):
Bacon coffee from Starbucks?
Speaker 2 (02:59:39):
Mic, but it was it was the kick keep with
the show was a spooky Halloween Yah.
Speaker 1 (02:59:46):
Yeah, it was a pumpkin spice. Pumpkin spice.
Speaker 2 (02:59:49):
You know we did We did all the research on
him where he was kind of doing nat sports. He
had a sports show and then transitioned into the quote
unquote paranormal.
Speaker 1 (03:00:01):
Wasn't he Nascar?
Speaker 2 (03:00:03):
I think I don't know if he was Nascar, but
he was like sports. He might have been NASCAR, but
I thought he was like a sports in general kind
of show. And then that wasn't paying the bill, so
he switched over to his paranormal.
Speaker 1 (03:00:17):
Oh, Blair says he this is what Blair says, he's
a sex predator. He tried to make a move on
a friend of mine.
Speaker 2 (03:00:26):
Oh wow, well we got the we got the news here.
Speaker 1 (03:00:32):
If you can get me, is there a police report,
Are there eyewitnesses? If you can get me some sort
of evidence or proof, I'll have you on the show
to talk about it. Because that sounds juicy.
Speaker 2 (03:00:44):
He seems like he would be. So you know, in life,
you're gonna come in a profession that you have, or
any type of social situation you're and you're gonna get
You're gonna meet a psychopath, You're gonna meet a social path,
You're gonna meet a narcissist, and some of them are
gonna try to you, right, especially the social path and
the narcissists, to try to gain control over you, right.
(03:01:08):
And they're looking for people with like you know that
are that are nice but have weaker energies that they
can use and then control. You're going to get these
people in every aspect of your life.
Speaker 1 (03:01:19):
People that are psychos tend to rise to the top two.
Speaker 2 (03:01:23):
Yeah, and you've got to figure out You've got to
figure out ways in your own personal life to deal
with these these these narcissists and these psychopaths and these
social paths.
Speaker 1 (03:01:32):
You know, I don't know for sure. I'm going to
make an observation, and you can tell me if I'm
wrong or right or what your opinion is. And listeners
can more so for listeners to tell me their opinion.
But I want to make an observation. I have never
invested money in advertising for this show. I've just done
it consistently for fifteen years, before this kind of thing
was even popular outside of like an art Bell Coast
to Coast and Clyde Lewis too, he's done it for
(03:01:55):
thirty years, or Alex Jones for thirty years. So I
think I was like second wave of this. And I've
never put any money into this at all. I used
to print on a piece of computer paper business cards
and cut them by hand. I've never spent any money
at all on any of this stuff. And yet my
show is an extremely recognizable show. And I'm thinking it's
(03:02:18):
because over the years, Jimmy Church is coming gone, David
Wilcock is essentially coming gone, Corey Good is coming gone,
the Lord Eisenhower's have come and gone. These frauds they
get all the money, all the attention, all the sponsorship.
They come, they're proven wrong, they lie, they cheat, they steal,
and then they disappear, and shows like this are still
(03:02:40):
here doing the same thing and saying the same thing
we were doing and saying fifteen years ago. I think
that's why so many people listen to us, and I
really appreciate all the listeners. I mean, it's I can't
I can't believe how many people listen to this show
around the world. It's crazy. I think that's the reason why, though,
we've been consistent, and it's a little frustrating to watch
these people come, make money, leave, lie, cheat, still, et cetera.
(03:03:03):
But we've been here doing the same thing for fifteen years.
Speaker 2 (03:03:07):
Yeah. Yeah, definitely paid some dues for sure. I think
I think I printed you off a some business cards
on that first second pro I had, like I had
like a friend and I got business cards, made some business.
Speaker 1 (03:03:20):
Oh you did, Yeah, you did do that. Yeah, I
actually just I found the original business cards recently on Facebook.
The I don't know if you call them business cards really,
but I used to. I used to make all of
this stuff by myself. There was no editing software, no
program I just did it in the like paint. These
(03:03:41):
were some of the original promos. I made this on
like a Microsoft word. I don't know if you can
see this image here. I have to reload the page. Yeah,
I made them like microsoftware. That was my first business card, yep,
one of the first ones. We used to have, Mike,
Mike D. Your name'still on here, Mike D.
Speaker 2 (03:04:01):
Yeah, I think I yeah, yeah, I printed those off
for your helped design that and.
Speaker 1 (03:04:07):
Nick carry out. You remember Nick. Nick used to be
a co host.
Speaker 2 (03:04:11):
Nick helped remember, because we did shows from the bunker.
Speaker 1 (03:04:18):
Oh his his studio, that's right, we did.
Speaker 2 (03:04:20):
Yeah, and then you actually kind of slept in there
some days too.
Speaker 1 (03:04:24):
Yeah. I was almost for a couple of years.
Speaker 4 (03:04:27):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:04:27):
I don't know if people know that. Maybe you talked
about it, maybe you haven't. Maybe that's the show to do.
But those were crazy times, you know. And then you're
and then yeah, living out of the you had the
watch them call it the electric car.
Speaker 1 (03:04:45):
We had the Prius.
Speaker 2 (03:04:47):
Yeah, you had the.
Speaker 1 (03:04:47):
Prius driving that Prius over there to Whole Foods. Try
to dig through the organic non organic salad and figure
out which one was which.
Speaker 2 (03:04:55):
God I used to hear from my ex I coming
home from the show, like, why are you leaving at
but five o'clock in the morning. Where are you going?
I'll go and do a radio show. I don't think subconsciously,
I don't think she believed me. I think she thought
I was going somewhere else. Gave me these looks when
I come back got home at like nine eight a.
Speaker 1 (03:05:15):
M Well, you had proof of it, though, you have
the recording from the show exactly.
Speaker 2 (03:05:19):
She was super insecure. But that's a a whole nother story,
I guess.
Speaker 1 (03:05:23):
Yeah, those were those are the great old days, good
old days when those liberals at WPRK used to vandalize
my car or threaten to kill me in the morning.
Those were good old days, Mike.
Speaker 2 (03:05:33):
Yeah, are you trying to blame member? They put that
like penis up on the door of the guy and
then kind of used your cards to see like you
did it. Yeah, they're trying they're trying to set you up.
Speaker 1 (03:05:43):
That white card I just showed you on screen. It's
just a for people that are listening only it's like
it's a piece of computer paper. Yeah, someone drew a
giant penis on it and then glued it to the
manager's door, and then he thought I did it, like
I'm going to use my own card to do that,
Like like I'm juvenile anyway, if you listen to my show,
am I that juvenile?
Speaker 10 (03:06:02):
No?
Speaker 2 (03:06:04):
Try up? Yeah, yeah, they tried to set you up.
But I'll tell you that one thing about that station
was it was cool, like going underground, like going to
the steps to the door. Yes, and the studio itself
that we had set up. And I remember I used
to bring in the lights, the like the blue pink lights.
Speaker 1 (03:06:23):
Oh yeah, you did. Used to bring in the That
was cool.
Speaker 2 (03:06:25):
Yo, give us some mood setting. Even though there was
no video. It was just us in there with the lights,
but just to give us a mood setting.
Speaker 1 (03:06:33):
I just tried to see if there was anything about
There is one old picture on Google Images. It's a
really old picture on Google Images of me. I was
trying to find the one of you and I we
had taken a long time ago or something, just just
the studio itself. That's that's like the original twenty ten
picture with me. That's a real old picture. Man. Yeah, yeah,
(03:06:56):
that's a really old picture. Some people are still using that.
Stop using that picture. If you're still using that Jesus
Christ six fifteen, sixteen years ago? Oh my god, wasn't yeh. See,
let's see if we can look at I'll show the listen.
They destroyed the studio though, it's gone. Did you know
that they got rid of it?
Speaker 2 (03:07:15):
I didn't. I heard something. What happened to that?
Speaker 1 (03:07:18):
They automated it all. They took away the manual process,
I think, and it's all automated.
Speaker 2 (03:07:24):
And that there's no longer a studio there too.
Speaker 1 (03:07:27):
If there is, it's not the old one's gone. This
is the old studio. Yeah, yep, it's gone. They used
had all these CDs that were really cool. We go
pulled the CD and play it. They digitized all that.
Everybody's like, oh, it's so cool. It's so efficient, it's
so fast, it's so great. I said, well, if you
keep doing that, there's not going to be a studio
at all. They're going to digitize everything. No, no, no,
they just got to make the discs easier to access.
(03:07:47):
And then they got done with that. Guess what happened
in the studio gone? Now they just play automated Well,
the last time I heard they play automated shows now
it's all digital, it's all automated. They probably play AI
stuff for all I know. There are probably still some
people that go in there and tweak it. But yeah,
this is this is all gone. Real talk was gone.
Speaker 2 (03:08:06):
That's yeah, that's sad, but sad. What happens happens with time.
Speaker 1 (03:08:12):
Yep. It's why you can't buy a tea with cash.
You gotta get the you get. You gotta have the
bobo with it, and you have to put on.
Speaker 2 (03:08:18):
A so many different characters for the different shows that
used to come in you know, after us too. That
one reggae white guy Hawkey I think was named.
Speaker 1 (03:08:29):
Hey, guys, its real great, great to see you the
first time. I always wanted to meet you.
Speaker 2 (03:08:33):
I was. Yeah. I would show us like us UFO
pictures on his phone and were like, yeah, we gotta go, man,
we got we got some go.
Speaker 1 (03:08:41):
That guy was so high he met us every week
our show was on. He was on right before us
every week, every single week, and he was so high
that every time we would come in, he'd be like,
it's great to meet you guys. I listened to your
show before, Like, dude, I met you five years ago.
Speaker 2 (03:08:58):
Yeah, he'd say the same ship. He was out of
his mind.
Speaker 1 (03:09:01):
Yeah, that's hilarious.
Speaker 2 (03:09:04):
It was fun. It was good times. Good at least
we got that experience them even though it ended, Actually
it ended way better for you, like I told you
it would like when we got it out of there,
you know, it just kept progressing. So that was a
good thing.
Speaker 1 (03:09:18):
You know what I'm like, I'm like a Holocaust survivor
because I went through the WPRK termination and then that
studio was literally destroyed, and then I went to Dark
Matter and then they kicked me off and then that
network collapsed. Then I went to L and M and
that network collapsed because of Heather Weighed, and then I
(03:09:39):
bounced to the Fringe, which the Fringe is still on.
Joe still has the thren she does doesn't really do
is show much. And then I Joe was the only
person who let me do what I wanted to do
before I went onto ground zero. And then that Jewish
guy got upset and destroyed the network with another fraud
up in Canada who was stealing money, and then that
network collapsed. I've survived like five concentration camps.
Speaker 2 (03:09:58):
Mike and I Trial by fire.
Speaker 1 (03:10:02):
It is it is, and we just keep keep moving
on and now we're independent, completely independent, so they're gonna
have to take take the internet down.
Speaker 3 (03:10:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (03:10:12):
So it was amazing that a lot of your listeners
followed you through those paths.
Speaker 1 (03:10:21):
It's amazing how many people listen, how many people in
the chat have listened to this show since w p
r K. I know a handful of people. That's wild.
I deserve reparations now, says Flux and Patriot Girl. I
do deserve reparations. I deserve to be paid from by
w all. These networks should have been paying me out
for reparations. Absolutely. Joe Ryder says the same thing. Look
(03:10:42):
at that should get reparations. Mike, you should too. You
were there for one of them.
Speaker 7 (03:10:50):
I know.
Speaker 2 (03:10:50):
I mean I've I've been doing the show on and
off for years. You know. My thing is never about
as you know, money, right, So my thing was just
it was fun. It was topics that I wanted to
talk about, and his topics that I enjoyed talking about,
and his topics that I like sharing with people. And
money was never a thing with me. It was never like, hey, Ryan,
(03:11:11):
you know, can I get like some money for doing
the show this week or let me you know, it
was never about that. It was just about doing the
show and having fun.
Speaker 1 (03:11:20):
And you know what I would have told you, I
don't have any money either, so I.
Speaker 2 (03:11:26):
Can buy you breakfast if I see you again. But
I can't. There's no money.
Speaker 1 (03:11:31):
There's no money in it. There's no money. But if
but if I was a sellout piece of garbage who
sold all the fake stories, I you know, I could
probably make some money that way.
Speaker 2 (03:11:41):
Oh you could have. You could have easily got into
the mix of that whole stuff, you know, starting with
the dark matter, right, we could have easily. You could
easily been the neo dark Man and say, yeah, okay,
I won't talk about this, but i'll uh, you know,
I will talk about David Wilcock. Is that okay? Oh yeah, sure,
we'll get him on your show. You know, we'll get
you on a conference you can, you can do some
(03:12:03):
talks with him. Then you get on Jamie Church some more.
You know, you and David Wilcock maybe form some type
of like group together. You know, all that shit is
probably what they would have tried to do.
Speaker 1 (03:12:13):
You're right, I think that's probably what would have happened
if I wouldn't have opened my mouth and said that
stuff about the fake UFO Malibu base, I'd have probably
been in the door. Keith Rowland said that we had
I mean our show was right next to Jimmy's and Michael's.
I think we even had second place most nights in
terms of listenership, and that was with Jimmy had a network.
We had no network. We would do I was literally
(03:12:35):
doing this show on my kitchen table and a fucking
trailer in Polk County and our numbers.
Speaker 2 (03:12:41):
Yeah, I did a show. I did a show with
you where I drove all the way there and did
a show with you there once, and I was like Jesus,
it took me two hours to get to you.
Speaker 1 (03:12:50):
Yeah, it was a dump. And my numbers in that
trailer were that dump was literally better than what all
the other including that Barnes guy from the History Channel.
Our numbers were better than him. I was doing this
off of like a like a Q ten microphone that
costs twenty dollars at the Guitar Center.
Speaker 2 (03:13:08):
Yeah, we had Kevin Sullivan, I think his name is
guy that was writing all the Masonic books. Sullivan was
his name, the author.
Speaker 1 (03:13:15):
Yeah, I'm still friends with him. On Facebook.
Speaker 2 (03:13:18):
Yes, we did an interview with him on his book
that we bought it, and then we also gave him
the hint I was like, you should do a book
on like the occult symbolism in these and movies that
we see like Eyes Wide Shot, and he's like, you know,
that's a good idea. I think he ended up doing it.
I think he ended up doing a book like that.
Speaker 1 (03:13:34):
Get Gnarley Sheen says, I'm very familiar with Polpe County.
If you're from Florida, you live in florida've been to Florid.
Everybody knows Polpe County. Polk County is as a special place.
It's a special place, you know, Polk County. Mike, Yeah,
it's a great place.
Speaker 2 (03:13:51):
Try to avoid it.
Speaker 1 (03:13:52):
There's a lot of chrystal. I think they call it
the crystal math capital of the world, don't they, or
at least of the US. Hayley Paul County is great though,
because you've got that sheriff down there. Why'd you shoot
the guy forty seven times? Because we only had forty
seven bullets.
Speaker 2 (03:14:07):
Next question, Yeah, Sheriff Grady, I think his name.
Speaker 1 (03:14:11):
Yes, Grady, I think is the guy's name. That's right.
We've we've been through a lot. We've been through a lot.
I appreciate it. It's nice to kind of reminisce with you, Mike.
We never get to do the anniversary shows, which are
in March, so this is nice to have a little
conversation with you about it. I think, imagine what we
could do with like a million dollar budget and a studio.
Speaker 2 (03:14:33):
How about shifty gs about fifty thousand just for the
year as a budget, you know, we could do We
could bring in millions of listeners, millions.
Speaker 1 (03:14:44):
That's why we've always been blacklisted from everything, because we
are a threat to the status quo of the UFO
New Age conspiracy Illuminati community. That's my theory. Anyway. I'm
trying to be humble about it, but I'm pretty sure
that's the reason why people are really offended or very
I don't know, intimidated by the show because we don't
(03:15:06):
there's no there's no bullshit.
Speaker 2 (03:15:08):
Yeah, I remember us. We were tired of we were
tired of all the Bigfoot news. A couple of years ago,
it was just Bigfoot, big Foot, Bigfoot. I was like,
you know what, fuck Bigfoot. I want to talk about
dog Man because that's the one that is interesting to me.
There's there's the sightings of this frigging giant werewolf that
these hunters are seeing. And we got what's her name
(03:15:31):
on the show. We did an interview with what's her name?
She wrote a couple of books on she was the
definitive person.
Speaker 1 (03:15:36):
She passed away. Yeah, that was uh.
Speaker 2 (03:15:40):
She passed away like three years ago, I think Linda
Godfrey Linda Godfred, Yes, And we got her on the
show and we talked about that because we were just
tired of all these other shows talking about the same ship.
I was like, no, I want to talk about dog Man,
and this is before dog this is before Now you
have YouTube shows that all they do is talk about
dog Man.
Speaker 1 (03:15:59):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (03:15:59):
We talked about dog Man years and years ago as
a you know, the paranormal aspect of it. And that
was a great interview and it was a great it
was a great time.
Speaker 6 (03:16:10):
That is uh.
Speaker 1 (03:16:11):
I've noticed that about a lot of shows we've done.
I mean I've been three months ahead of the Labooboo trend.
Those little demon dolls. I did a showing that shit
back in like May. Now it's trending all over social media.
We're way ahead of ahead of the curve here. But hey,
I miss a lot of things, and listeners fill me
in a lot of things, and it's it's nice to
(03:16:31):
be able to just be real and not have to
play a part, not have to grease my hair back,
get a bacon coffee and bang an eighteen year old
girl named Gomez or whatever that girl's name was that
made his wife leave him. Jimmy Church, you scumbag, fraud,
piece of garbage, cheating, lion, backstabbing.
Speaker 2 (03:16:53):
Yeah, he is a piece of trap. But yeah, imagine like,
h you know, imagine fifty g's without the greasy handshake
of like here, there's no strings attached. I like what
you guys are doing. I'm not a radio person, but
here's fifty g's. As you're advertising marketing budget, I want
to of course, I want to itemize and to see
how you're using that money, which certainly would be happy
(03:17:13):
to do. Yeah, and that would I mean, that would
be But again, it's not about the money, right. The
money would make it easier. But we've been through so much,
how can things get harder? Harder?
Speaker 7 (03:17:27):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (03:17:27):
I don't need money. I don't need money.
Speaker 2 (03:17:29):
No, Yeah, I mean you're in Japan. It's much better
than Tucson.
Speaker 1 (03:17:33):
Yeah. I don't have to worry about my microphone or
computer getting stolen everything I leave the house. That's nice.
Speaker 2 (03:17:37):
Oh so yeah, I mean even without the money things
things worked out.
Speaker 1 (03:17:42):
So yep, all I need is a microphone. You know,
I didn't even have a microphone boom arm until relatively recently.
You believe that.
Speaker 2 (03:17:53):
Remember yoube teenage sing these YouTube teenagers have those.
Speaker 1 (03:17:57):
Yeah. I just got this damn mixing board when Joe
Rup showed it to me back in twenty nineteen. I
didn't even have a good My mixing boards were so
trashy and guard Remember all those sounds. We would have issues.
I'd have to like rewire every time we do is show,
you'd hear like a hissing sound or something. Yes, I
just figured that out, you know. Twenty sixteen got a
(03:18:21):
I got my first really good microphone arm two years ago.
This is some This is some we do on a
white trash radio or something paulk County White Trash.
Speaker 2 (03:18:34):
You're like a capricorn. You're climbing slowly up the.
Speaker 1 (03:18:36):
Mountain, except I'm an aquarius.
Speaker 2 (03:18:41):
Maybe I'm the track because I'm the Capricorn.
Speaker 1 (03:18:44):
I can okay, I can see that Mike's of Capricorn.
I'm an Aquarius. I can say that makes sense. I
think that those two go together pretty well. I got
to imagine that most of our listeners in the chat,
the vocal ones are probably more like you, probably more
Capricorn or Aquarius. Ryan. With reparations, You, with reparations, you
can have more than enough money. Yeah, I don't need
(03:19:08):
the money, though, I think the I think it's better
to just not have the money. It's also got enough
to pay the bills. That's fine. It's all the matters,
you know. And also if the mic dies or something
by a new Mike.
Speaker 2 (03:19:21):
About it exactly.
Speaker 1 (03:19:23):
That's about it. That's all I need. Don't need a giant,
multimillion dollar Malibu house like David Wilcock and Jimmy Church have.
Speaker 2 (03:19:32):
All these frauds are it's all coming back to the mass,
you can see. That's why the update show would be great,
like we do the Stephen Greer bit, and then we
talk about some of these frauds and what's going on
with them where they're at, you know, dig deepen up.
There's going to be stuff like the listener said about
(03:19:54):
him being a pervert.
Speaker 1 (03:19:55):
Also, yeah, yep, Patriot Girl says she's a lead. Joe
says cance oh a cancer flux says cancer. Well, David
Willcox at cancer too. That's what a coincidence. All you
need is love? All right, Yeah, let's do the uh,
let's do that review show. I'll talk to you for
(03:20:17):
another hour, Mike, but I'm sure that you got to go,
and I'm actually going. I don't know if Joe Rup
is still here, but Joe Rup and I were planning
on doing a live stream, like right now after the
show's over, a live stream of we're gonna play some
Fallout seventy six together. I've never streamed a game, so
he's gonna stream it. We're gonna play the game together.
So if anybody is a is a gamer fan, you
can go to Lighting the Void on YouTube, and I
(03:20:37):
think you can watch it over there on YouTube. So
we're gonna do a do some Fallout I guess, I
guess are we still going to do that? Joe? If
Joe's in the chat, he's probably playing now. I told
him an hour ago i'd be on the game with him.
But anyway you can you can watch us play games.
If that's I guess that's interesting for people.
Speaker 2 (03:20:57):
Yeah, yeah, people, I mean people make millions of dollars
people watching people play games.
Speaker 1 (03:21:03):
Yes, Blair, thank you for Blair says they're going to subscribe.
I wish I could give you a I Punch Jimmy
Church discount, but I don't. I don't have the ability
to do that. Thank you.
Speaker 2 (03:21:14):
Well, let's uh, you know, we won't make it as
long as three weeks, but maybe you know in the
next two weeks, Well, I'll be able to do the
show and come back with the information of how we'll
talk about how we want to lay it, lay it
all together. But yeah, I think that the themes that
we have will be a good show and people will
enjoy it. We can bring things up on the screen.
(03:21:34):
Let's do it, and I think also I think also
in the future, I can also share my screen of
all things I want to show too.
Speaker 1 (03:21:40):
Totally. Do you want to do video or you want
to stay off the video. I totally understand if you
don't want to.
Speaker 2 (03:21:45):
I want to stay off the video, but I can
use like an avatar. But I want to share. I
want to be able to share my screen. Also in
the future, So what can we can walk all that out?
It's easy.
Speaker 1 (03:21:53):
If it's easy to do, I could probably. Yeah, I
think I can even add all that stuff. I just
never That's the thing. I don't care. I don't need
the money. I don't need a fancy setting. What matters
is the information. That's what matters it. What does it
matter if I have a gold microphone and Mike has
a fancy avatar, If I'm sitting here telling you that
it's okay to eat McDonald's because it's fried in beef tallow,
doesn't really matter.
Speaker 2 (03:22:13):
Yeah. My avatar right now is I'm in the multiverse,
so you can see you can see it kind of yeah,
kind of moving around the black I'm I'm in the void.
Speaker 1 (03:22:22):
He's on the void. Yeah, he's in the void. You
hear that, Joe Joe Rupe, Mike D's also walking in
the void. Polk County is just weird, says an Early Sheen. Yeah,
Polk County is a is a dump a lot of
crystal myth m. Everyone looks like Kid Rock in Polk County.
That is partly true. But the people I knew there
(03:22:46):
were looked like Kid Rock eight five other Kid rocks.
They were massive. People everybody shopped. That's that's you know,
that's where people shop in Polk County, Mike, is they
shop at Dollar General for their food.
Speaker 2 (03:23:02):
Yeah, not a dollar. Not nothing in there is a
dollar anymore.
Speaker 1 (03:23:05):
Nothing, nothing's even a dollar. Lunchables are three dollars. Three
dollars for a lunchable. That's insane.
Speaker 2 (03:23:13):
Yeah, that's why people were getting pissed at these Dollars General.
And what's the other one? There's another one, But people
were getting angry because they're raising their prices all in
there too. There's nothing that's a dollar.
Speaker 1 (03:23:27):
What did the disgusting cess pit all the food companies
and all the stores that sell that kind of stuff
in the United States, And we have the audacity to
we blame anything and everything except the food. It's it's
it's atrocious.
Speaker 2 (03:23:46):
It's embarrassing seally Iranians. Iranians are eating healthier than us,
for sure.
Speaker 1 (03:23:50):
You better believe. Hey, my friend from Saudi Arabia, Ashraar
she if I'm pronounced her name right, I've said it
for a while. Astraar, she came to the United States
and I don't want to tell too much for personal story,
but she came to the US, she gained weight, went
back to Jetta Saudi Arabia, lost weight, then came back
gained weight again, eating normal stuff. And I remember I
(03:24:12):
went to her house for dinner with her and some
of her friends had friends over from Iraq and some
other countries. I did Ramadan with them. Actually I fasted
each day and I had dinner with them at least
once or twice. And I went over to her house
in Boise and she's got like tahini and mustard and
stuff in the fridge. And I and she said, it's
(03:24:32):
different than the tahini I normally buy. But you know,
you if you want to use some, you can use some.
I don't know if you'd eat it. And I looked
at and I said, yeah, this is this is definitely
different than the tahini you buy, because the tahini you
buy normally in Saudi Arabia is probably just seeds, right,
maybe salt oil, lemon. This has got it had like
sesame flavor in it. I said, astro, this isn't even
(03:24:53):
these aren't even sesame seeds, just naturally eating the same
things she ate over there. She gained weight in the
United States same thing.
Speaker 2 (03:25:01):
I mean, you know, we'll see. I mean, I'm not
going to diss the guy yet because it's kind of early.
But RFK has a lot of work to do, right,
So he's got a lot a lot of work to
do to make America quote unquote healthy again.
Speaker 1 (03:25:18):
I don't know if you can do that. I don't
know if it's possible. He's also backing mRNA vaccines. They
cut twenty two programs, but he's allowing the other ones
to go forward, including the Stargate mRNA covid vaccine, cancer vaccine,
and they're pushing universal covid and flu vaccines. Have you
heard that or seen that?
Speaker 8 (03:25:38):
No?
Speaker 1 (03:25:39):
Oh my god, Mike, if you haven't heard or seen this,
please let me do this and then we'll let and
I'll hang up the call here and we'll get off
the air because this is just going to go on forever.
HHS universal covid flu vaccines. Let me give you a
short crash course here, ABC News, mRNA funding RFK Junior,
(03:26:00):
and then I have it on my fate and on
my X page here. I'll scroll down and get the
actual clip of him saying it, so you don't just
see the press release, give me one moment and I
will find this. It's somewhere on the front page here.
So anyway, the point is RFK Junior is saying that
(03:26:21):
we're going to have universal covid flu vaccines. Here does
I found it? Let me put this on screen. Okay,
listen to this, And so it's saying, here we go,
hold on, scroll back, go back, hold on, hold on,
hold on. Why is it doing this? Must be the
(03:26:43):
damn cabal.
Speaker 2 (03:26:46):
I'm on a bullet. They put a bullet in my kitchen,
on my counter.
Speaker 1 (03:26:50):
All right, here we go.
Speaker 5 (03:26:51):
We're developing a universal vaccine at an agent, which is
a vaccine that address is the entire phylum of viruses,
and so it's a it's a vaccine that mimics natural immunity.
Speaker 2 (03:27:05):
That's great and.
Speaker 1 (03:27:07):
Lovely.
Speaker 5 (03:27:08):
It is effective against any condo mutation, so it doesn't
drive the virus to mutity, and it could be effective.
We believe it's going to be effective about against not
only coronaviruses but also flu.
Speaker 1 (03:27:21):
There it is, and then here's the press release from
the HHS website where they say the next generation universal
vaccine platform and it is for the development in house
an IH development of universal influenza and coronavirus vaccines, which
were the brain children of Anthony Fauci. And then here's
what all the mega people are celebrating. Rfcjunior cancels at
(03:27:43):
least five hundred million dollars in mRNA vaccine funding. That
includes twenty two investment projects where the five hundred million. However,
final stage contracts will be allowed to be completed. No
new mRNA based projects will be initiated. Which when I
first covered the story, Mike, I did the old George books,
No new taxes, We'll just raise the old taxes, And
(03:28:04):
that's basically what they're doing. No new mRNA vaccines, but
will proceed with the other ones.
Speaker 2 (03:28:10):
Yeah, whenever they say mimics, that's what you're going to be.
Speaker 1 (03:28:13):
Cautious mimics, mimics, mimics, projecting, mirroring.
Speaker 2 (03:28:20):
You don't need you, you don't need your natural immunity.
You need this thing that mimics your immunity.
Speaker 1 (03:28:25):
You know what's really fascinating too, is that the Stargate
project is a five hundred billion dollar project for the
cancer vaccines and other things. But you know how much
the original investment is in it. It's five hundred billions
the total, but they've only invested a few hundred million.
They've invested the amount of money in it that he
just cut from the mRNA budget. So, in other words,
(03:28:48):
what he cut is the initial funding for the Stargate project. Meanwhile,
they're launching universal COVID and flu vaccines. So once again
you got duped, America. Once again you got conned. He
got you got deceived and lied to by scumbags and criminals.
And I thought you could trust RFK Junior a little
bit better. Apparently not.
Speaker 2 (03:29:11):
There you go, and there it is. I did not
know that.
Speaker 1 (03:29:15):
The best the best thing that you can do really
is just follow the X Files theme, and that is
trust no one. Don't.
Speaker 2 (03:29:23):
Yeah, I never, I've never. Yeah, I didn't really trust
that guy either. I was just waiting for some things
to happen, giving him the benefit of the doubt.
Speaker 1 (03:29:30):
Me too.
Speaker 2 (03:29:30):
But maybe maybe he'll make some changes that he said
in his campaigns. He knows the dangers of all this stuff.
But again, either he sold out, he's blackmailed, or they
got him on you know, they bought him out.
Speaker 1 (03:29:43):
He does spend a strange amount of time with Rabbi
Shmooley and he did say that one of the biggest
threats to US health is h anti Semitism. Did you
see that he actually said that.
Speaker 2 (03:29:58):
No, but I'm sure I'm sure said it. Yep, no
problem putting pushing goyslop.
Speaker 1 (03:30:07):
Nope, it's unbelievable. All right, Mike, thank you so much
for joining me. Thanks for going through walking down memory
Lane with me. W p r K the best in
basement Radio ninety one point five FM.
Speaker 2 (03:30:22):
Gird's got to give the weather. Make sure you're giving
the weather and the traffic report every fifteen minutes.
Speaker 1 (03:30:27):
Yeah, people are listening and you're talking.
Speaker 2 (03:30:29):
You're talking too much. Play more music.
Speaker 1 (03:30:32):
He wanted the traffic report like I wanted.
Speaker 2 (03:30:35):
A traffic report every fifty to twenty minutes or fifteen minutes. Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:30:38):
Let me go to our news chopper at this fucking
radio station that doesn't even have like this wood paneling
is from nineteen fifty four when the station was built.
Speaker 2 (03:30:47):
Let me go to our news students to that they
live on campus. Do they they care about a traffic report?
Speaker 1 (03:30:54):
He that guy, that guy's name was Ron. He was
just trying to do anything and everything to get us
to not talk. You got to have traffic report. It's
got to play seven songs an hour. You got to
do an update on this, an update on that. He
just come in the studio. We got an emergency on
on campus. I have to do this, this emergency announcement.
Speaker 2 (03:31:10):
Yeah, thank god. What's a piece of trash.
Speaker 1 (03:31:13):
God, I'm so glad some listeners. A lot of listeners
around the world find this show to be really interesting
or intriguing or entertaining. A lot of people hate us.
A lot of people really hate us. So thank you
for supporting us. And you haven't left us to review.
Leave a review because some people hate us and leave
really bad reviews for no reason. So if you really
like the show, please leave us a review, subscribe, grab
(03:31:34):
a book, etc. I think we're pretty much done with
the show. We went an hour and a half. You
went two hours over Mike, Oh my.
Speaker 2 (03:31:41):
God, I'm still the same my same table, sitting and standing.
I gotta go, dude, I gotta sit out on my couch.
Speaker 1 (03:31:47):
All right. Well, you have a good night, and for
anybody in the chat, you can watch on if we
get to do it. I'm guessing we can still do it.
We get to play I want to play fall Out
seventy six with Joe over on lighting the Void channel.
All Right, Mike, thank you so much.
Speaker 2 (03:32:02):
Yes, take care, Thank you listeners. Have a good night.
Speaker 1 (03:32:04):
All right, Bye bye Mike, Bye bye bye. Joe Rider
in the chat says, I wanted to thank you for
giving me that book, Ryan, I appreciate it. I honestly
don't remember what book, whatever book it was. You're welcome, though,
Thank you, Patriot Girl, Flux, Corey McDonald, Deborah Narley, Sheen,
everybody in the chat room. I appreciate you tuning in.
Please subscribe, Please grab a book, na a mystos docos.
(03:32:30):
Have a great night. I'll bring up the music here.
I know you probably can't hear it much on the
live stream, but in the audio version of the show
it sounds good. Cindy, have a great night. Thank you
for joining us on the show. TST radio dot info
ardigable at yahoo dot com. That's TST radio dot info
ardigable at yahoo dot com. Stay safe, stay informed, stay healthy.
(03:32:54):
I will talk to you on the next broadcast.