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March 19, 2025 • 111 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Welcome to the common Sense Conservatives, a political discussion group
about current events and other government related matters, every Wednesday
evening from seven to eight pm right here on WSMN
fifteen ninety AM, WUSMN ninety five point three FM and
streaming live on WUSMN dot Live. Making sense of the
inverted reality we are subject to you every day. The

(00:24):
common Sense Conservatives are here to help bring you back
to reality.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Now.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
Your hosts, Chris Wyatt, Todd McKinley, and John Gorvin.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
Hello, everyone, and welcome to the Competence Conservatives right here WSMN.
It looks like we have a full house minus a guest.
We we're gonna have a guest tonight, but he could
not make it due to the flu that seems to
be going around. So I hope everybody's taking proper precautions.
But I'm not gonna go full liberal on you and
tell y'all about mask and nose swabs and all sorts
of other nonsense. But well, we're on the horn here

(00:57):
and give a chance to say, Hi, Todd, you've been
able to mark yourself safe from missing your security detail.

Speaker 3 (01:04):
Yes, I'm safe. I secured myself. I'm my own security detail,
and he's right here. My two fists. Whenever I put
them in my pockets, they're registered deadly weapons. My friends watch.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
Out, all registered and everything.

Speaker 3 (01:15):
Huh everything, Yeah, they're right. I register them, bare arms, right,
ready to go?

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Bare arms? Is that officer left? Fist? An officer right? Fist?

Speaker 3 (01:23):
There you go, ready to go?

Speaker 2 (01:25):
All right? So, how thing's going out there in Tennessee?
Everything going okay? Marshall Blackburn treating you well?

Speaker 3 (01:31):
Oh? I think I believe she may be looking to
run for governor this next term. It's going to be
an open seat. Our governor's term limit to two terms.
In our current governor, Governor Lee is no longer Els
would run for reelection. Not not that he would run
win for win reelection, but I think she's going to
run for it. We'll see. So she's been making the
rounds across the state. But we're gonna see how that
plays out.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
Awesome, So, Chris Man, you, how's your security detail? They're
holding up? Okay, all eighteen of them or nineteen twenty?

Speaker 4 (01:57):
What do you go? Well, you stole my thunder. I
was going to tell you I had a fl inbound
came through Atlanta to Harrisburg. Earlier in the day, I
was asked to pick up eighteen people and bring them
to my house. Have no idea what they're doing here.
They claim to be from the Secret Service and they've
been relieved from the Hunter byden Detail and assigned to
the future South Africa BASSADS. So that's all I know.
That's all I know.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
Yeah, received a call to become the ambassador.

Speaker 4 (02:19):
Yet maybe I could be able to Joel Pollock and
just tell everybody I'm the next bassador. And then the
Predia say that all day long.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
And it just makes it so right because they keep
reporting on it. They're like, exactly, it's a fading complain.

Speaker 4 (02:31):
Listen, I you know, we always heard me in the
show that they've viewsed opinions of the host of the show.
I have nothing to do with the radio station. Seriously,
I'm out of here, man. But nobody's backing us up.
Nobody's got our back.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
Yeah, I was. I was thinking earlier for being honest
here on common sense and Conservatives's good to have some
honest voices and real radio and hey, we may not
be the most professional performers out here, but we're true.
We're true grit.

Speaker 4 (02:56):
Look come on, no feet on the on the ottoman please,
you guys can stay now, get the.

Speaker 3 (03:01):
Whole st off seaker service.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
You're gonna you know you're gonna rip. You're gonna rip
my couch. Mait terial, take the whole stra off. Sorry, guys,
I got distracted.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
And for a second there I thought that was your
your show crew behind the scenes getting a paperwork together
for you.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
Now. I do have a funny question though.

Speaker 4 (03:17):
Think about it.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
Let's say you were a side of security detail. Think
about how young they would actually be. You know, these
people were probably and you know, not even in diapers
whenever you were in the joining the military. You know
what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
That would be everybody of the army pretty much right now.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
Right.

Speaker 4 (03:32):
I look.

Speaker 3 (03:33):
I look at command starts, at majors, and I look
at colonels and some general officers, and I'm like, especially
some of these the general officers, and I'm like, wow,
we're the same age. It's like, how did I get older?
Did you get old? Which? What happened here? You know,
it's wild because the general officers, you thought, especially colonels,
you thought, man, those guys are old. And it's like,
you know, some of them were they're just you know,
high thirties maybe forties, and it's like they weren't really

(03:54):
that old. They just kind of looked at it to
a twenty year old, you know what I mean?

Speaker 4 (03:57):
Well, I mean lieutenant colonels. You know you think of
them as old. You know when I was enlisted by
lieutenant was on like thirty five, thirty six years old. Yeah,
oh yeah, that's a little a little bit behind me.
The roar of your mere at this stage.

Speaker 3 (04:08):
Oh yeah, absolutely. Now you look at those lieutenant colonels,
you're like, man to be young again.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
Yeah, you're young at heart. That's what matters.

Speaker 3 (04:15):
There, You go a good deal.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
There ain't no such thing as old age. It's just
a state of mind.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
Come on right, well, States, speaking of states, New Hampshire
house things looking up.

Speaker 2 (04:24):
There, my friend going get up here in New Hampshire.
I guess the Dems and the GOP are fighting it
out trying to decide how much money we're going to
spend on education for children. On GOP as you, as
you would expect, wants to stop the out of control spending. Well,
the Democrats are rant and raving. I'm sure it's happening
in tendency too, right, They just want to keep enough
to spending and less education, more spending.

Speaker 3 (04:46):
Yeah, well that's the whole thing, you know. It's like
if we're spending money somehow that's doing something. It's like
you put a big price tag on it. People are
like a statised by the price tag, and they're thinking, Wow,
that money is going to do a lot of good.
Because people think in their own lives, if I had
that amount of money, what good I could do with it?
You know, but look at all the tragic you know,
you know lottery stories that you hear. You know, could
you do a better job? I mean, certainly do a

(05:07):
better job than government. Uh, you know, get the money
out of government's hands, for sure. But just because you
put a high number next to it doesn't mean it's
gonna be a good program exactly.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
You know, there's an old thing you get what you
paid for, well, government, government's involved. You don't get near
what you're paying for.

Speaker 3 (05:21):
Oh no, no, no, of course quite a few other
people are getting what you're paying for as well. The
under the table money, you know, the old the old
trope with the brown envelope. Somebody puts it inside your coat.
Or in a newspaper hands it to you. You know, uh,
that actually goes on, but it goes on in different
ways that than just out in front, you know, with
with somebody handing you a brown envelope, But it does
go on.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
One they tend to put out grant money in that
grant money funnels back to them or some Yeah, it's just.

Speaker 4 (05:48):
Another example of the tragedy to the commons. If you
have skin in the game, you get a different result.
If you don't have skin in the game, well then
you use other people's money. And that's what happens here.
Just like people living in public housing, know the places,
they run it down, they treat it like crap, they
don't take care of it. When you rent a place
from someone, you have a security deposit, not because it's
a nice idea, but because that is a measure to

(06:10):
ensure if in German, I love the work for in German,
it's called a CalCon a caution, a caution, and so
that's a purposecurity deposit so that people don't destroy the
place there because people are responsible now by a token.
By the same time, if you own something, you tend
to take care of it, You tend to maintain it up,
keep it, or falls apart, and then you get nothing
for what you've got. So it's the same thing when
it comes to government money. That's not their money, it's

(06:33):
our money, and they don't think for a moment. Very
few people are responsible to take care of that money.
If they don't care because it's no skin in the game,
they just appropriate more money and it is taking more
people just borrow more money, and the consequences never suffered
by the people spending this money. It is the rare
individual in uniform. It is a rare individual working government
who's actually responsible for the taxpayers money.

Speaker 3 (06:53):
Rare right, right, absolutely. I had a Navy chief these
many years ago, and I was training for a new
job White House Communications Agency, and this Navy chief told me,
you know, it's like, we have to be good custodians
to the taxpayer's dollars. Just because we have all these
different credit cards that they'd given us and they give
us a fun site to spend, you know, hundreds of
thousands of dollars doesn't mean we should We should try
to turn it as much in as we can at

(07:14):
the end of this trip. And they were right, you know,
turn it in. You'll get it back the next time
whenever you request it, you know, because you know you're
gonna be a good custodian of it.

Speaker 4 (07:21):
Well. I remember my first trip to be regional famiorization
in Africa as a foreign Arey officer. Was based in
Tunisia and using the per diium and the estimates for
the travel yeah and rentals, I was authorized nine thousand,
seven hundred dollars for that trip, a three week trip.
I spent four thy five hundred and returned the rest
back to the government by staying inexpensive lodges, which gave
me a much better feel for what it was like

(07:43):
to actually be on the ground in parts of Africa.
Rather than staying in the first class hotels that I
was authorized to stay in. I stayed in those other
places and saved our country, you know, more than more
than half the costs.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
Yeah, there you go. Yeah, I know I know guys
that actually would would would make money on trips at
the White House. They would say that money they would
use it either for rent or they would pay a
down payment on a home or whatever. I know, before
the big, the big housing bubble, I know some guys
that actually bought you know, hundreds and two hundred three
and fifty thousand dollars homes that end up doubling tripling
their money whenever they left that assignment, just based on

(08:13):
per diem money, and that was just amazing money management.

Speaker 4 (08:17):
Well, no, I'm saying, this is money that I was authorizing.
I didn't know.

Speaker 3 (08:20):
I get. We're saying, yeah, yeah, I get. We stayed
the deal.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
I mean I could. I could have taken, you know,
and stayed all these great places instead of paying the
one hundred and ninety dollars of my night I was
authorized for that location. I found a place to cost
forty bucks a night.

Speaker 3 (08:31):
You know, good deal. Yes, smart, Holden says here, why
wasn't the Secret Service told to just go ahead and
arrest Hunter Biden? Save some time? Whether the Secret Service
is there to protect him, not to investigate him or arresting,
that's not the role of the Secrete Whenever they're providing protection,
it would be the FBI, US marshal somebody like that,
not the Secret Service. Their job may be to deliver
you somewhere stagely like they did Trump for example, to

(08:53):
be booked, whatever whatever the case may be. But he
is a protectee. For well, I think he may be
more months. I'm saying, by by law before he had
it removed, he would only have six months anyway because
he's over eighteen.

Speaker 4 (09:06):
But that's that's just by discretion. It doesn't have the
extended Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 3 (09:10):
That's true. Yeah, like vice presidents usually gets six months.
Sometimes they get an extension for six months, so they
keep it for a year. Former presidents is for life,
Former first Ladies is for lice unless they divorced.

Speaker 2 (09:20):
Yeah, they Uh, but also you have to have a
crime to arrest for right with the pardon still lingering,
and uh, the fact that he wasn't doing anything illegal
by being there, because the judge already extended his time for.

Speaker 4 (09:33):
Actually actually John the state of California, and I believe
New York and negligent. His felony firearms possession is a
state law, and he is guilty of violating state law
and should have been prosecuted for it. He's got a
pardon from his father, he does does not evolve him
for his crimes committed in California.

Speaker 3 (09:50):
That's true.

Speaker 2 (09:50):
That that warrant for California police to arrest him, as
opposed to.

Speaker 4 (09:55):
That warrant would be nationwide and with reciproc it would
be expected for any law enforcement agency and by tension
at war, it should be issued through interpoal in the
National Political Police Organization and saw that government would have
an obligation to cooperate and grab him an extradited back
to the States.

Speaker 3 (10:08):
Yep, right, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (10:09):
They don't want nothing to do with this anymore.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
Remember, Yeah, but given that he's not necessarily a violent
offender fleeing prosecution, it would have to be an in
contact with law enforcement to be able to pop on
on their little background check right to be able to
be arrested.

Speaker 4 (10:22):
I mean, I mean, he's not going to go in
the most wanted interpoal, that's for sure.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
Right right right?

Speaker 2 (10:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (10:28):
Yeah, But if he got they pulled over and they
ran it, ran his name, and they're like okay, yeah
you're wanting here, we go after rest you you know.

Speaker 4 (10:34):
Notice, but finding hunder Biden in Cape Town won't be hard.
We all know where the crack cocaine dens are located at.

Speaker 2 (10:41):
Yeah, you're gonna get you on the mind. I mean
they're just running around all the little seed parts of
the neighborhood. I mean his face and stand out. Everybody
knows that. Did you see the video online of him
with the phone and the camera and he's got the
he's got the camera in his face, right, he's police
playing a live video. He's got the camera in his face.
It's almost look he looks paranoid, like where's my detail?
Where a my And he's walking backwards and stuff, almost

(11:03):
like if I get if I get hit, it's gonna
come from behind me and I'm gonna make sure they're
in video.

Speaker 4 (11:08):
Well, I mean, look that that paranoids just to look
that people who hooked and crack CA can't have all
the time anyway, so wouldn't necessarily know the difference there.
But listen, it's uh, it wouldn't be hard to find him.
I mean, every CoP's got a snitch. We just get
a hold of our our drug snitch and find out
where he's at buying his coke at now. It's look,
it's embarrassing. I'll tell you what. Poor South Africa guys.
I mean, I know you pay a little bit attention

(11:30):
to but imagine this. Every turn, every chance they get
their pissing off Donald Trump by insulting him, calling him
the leader of a global white supremacist movement and America races.
This time, they didn't do anything. South Africa didn't do anything,
and they catch Trump. They catch him and they says, uh,
mister President, uh one hundred. Biden's in Cape Town with
eight team member of Secret Service detail? Are you gonna

(11:51):
pull his detail? And he goes, where's he at in
South Africa? Well, you know, you know, South Africa is
on a watch list.

Speaker 3 (11:57):
Whoa where did that come from?

Speaker 4 (12:00):
They didn't do anything and they're on the they're on
the naughty list for Christmas. Boy, Santa is gonna give
him coalh My goodness, that's that's not good. That's not good.
So South Africa didn't do anything wrong this time and
they still got the doghouse. I love it.

Speaker 3 (12:14):
Yeah, they're on the watch list.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
Get him out here when it raids it pours, I'll
tell you what man tough break for.

Speaker 3 (12:19):
So yeah, yeah, but it's funny. It reminds me of
the you know, people bring up South Africa reminds me
a lethal weapon. I forget which one's number two?

Speaker 4 (12:29):
Number two, number two, Yeah, diplomatic, I'm to you.

Speaker 3 (12:32):
And it's like it works that way. You don't get
a murder people in front of the police and say that, Yeah,
well apparently.

Speaker 4 (12:38):
You get to drop containers on people and freight ships too.

Speaker 3 (12:41):
Yeah. I love it. I love it. It's so funny. Yeah,
it's that we're gonna take care of you. We're gonna
drop containers on you. Bad that to you.

Speaker 4 (12:47):
I love it.

Speaker 3 (12:50):
Yeah, back in the day, that's one.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
Of the best lines ever. Joe Pesci And the other
one that comes he wants you got to get him
to uh, hey, my friend wants to immigrate to South Africa.
Pretty good friend, and we talked to him. He comes in,
This is my friend guy Stea. Yeah, I want to
immigrate to South aunt. But but but you a block.

Speaker 3 (13:07):
Right, Yeah, Leo gets yeah, yeah, whatever you want, Leo
gets get it. Leo gets I love that.

Speaker 4 (13:13):
I like the way that comes out there with it.
Was it Chris Tucker when he's roight, Yeah, Chris Chris
Chris Rock. Chris Tucker, Chris Chris Rock. And he's like, yeah,
there there's Jessi's the story with the cell phones. They're
strewd to his cell phones through you never get the price,
you never get drup.

Speaker 3 (13:30):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (13:32):
One of the great characters ever. In the movies.

Speaker 3 (13:35):
Oh yeah, one of the great He could play a
comedic role, no problem, you believe it. But he can
play a tough guy playing a six foot five guy
who and he's only like five foot you know, eight,
five foot seven or whatever he is, you know. But
in Good Fellas he played a guy who was actually
in real life six foot five or something like that.
You know, big tough guy. Now you believed it.

Speaker 4 (13:52):
So we got another whacky dude, all this time threatening
to cut the president up and uh, you know, burn
his burn his body parts, achievement.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
The guy the CIA building and language.

Speaker 4 (14:01):
No, no, this is another way.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
Oh geez, oh man, another one.

Speaker 4 (14:06):
Yeah, no that we could doles come by the way, folks,
some whereas Pam Bonni and the benchwarts for the rest
of these domestic terrorists, this needs to be gotten under
control very quickly. For this Tesla attack.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
Yeah, I agree. Yeah, that's nothing more than than domestic
terrorism for sure. And how stupid you're going to go
out there just because you don't like Elon Musk. You're
gonna go burn a Tesla dealership or somebody's Tesla in
in their driveway, burn down all these you know, charging
stations that you apparently support. But now all of a sudden,
because it's the tesla a charging station, you want to
burn it down. Makes no sense.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
They were just they were just getting ahead of the
battery catching fire.

Speaker 3 (14:39):
Yeah, oh sure, yeah by a few years, right, a
few year.

Speaker 4 (14:42):
This is what happens when you tolerate violence. The summer
it all started Seattle at the World Trade Organization meeting
when they attack Starbucks and McDonald's. And those people didn't
get ten year prison sentence in the penitentiary. This is
what they should have got because that was an insurrectionary act.
Stop tolerating this violence. What happened the summer twenty twenty,
it's what begat the Biden administration is what begat. That's
why the world's just screwed up now because we tolerated

(15:04):
that garbage in utter nonsense. Uh you know this, this
this crap that because someone's skin pigmentation is a certain color,
you get to get away with murder. That's unaccepted whether
your skin is white, brown, or black. You commit these
violent acts, you go to prison, you get locked away,
you don't see the light of day because you are
a danger to public safety. And stop tolering. I've had
enough of it. I want them locked up now. And
while we're at it, Pam Bonni Bench warrants or at

(15:25):
least of grand grand jury panel and paneled to arrest
Michelle Wu, Brandon Johnson, and whoever that clown in uh
Paulus or whatever is that that's the governor of the
clown in Denver. They all need to be arrested for
offering a federal immigration law and and and harboring federal fugureves.
We now see people being injured and wounded because exactly
what I said was going to happen, because these people
are tipping off these criminal alienvators. And how in the

(15:47):
world are they run around looking for sympathy for these people.
Convicted child molester, convicted rapists, rape, rape, some with a
foreign object. I mean, these are sick, twisted people, murders.
These are the people being deported. I saw Carol Levevitay,
She's with her smallest of these violent offenders and all
these and they're defending this. They keep lying everybody like, well,
you know they're just immigrants. No they're not. They're danger

(16:07):
public safety and they shouldn't be in this country.

Speaker 3 (16:09):
Yeah, I mean the MS thirteen as an example. You
want to say that these people are immigrants. These are
people that would have no problem coming in your house,
raping your baby right in front of you and stabbing
your husband while you're sit there and have to look
at it, and they would force it.

Speaker 2 (16:21):
They they've done worse. They've done and done.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
Worse and done worst while setting one of your children
on fire. But these are the people you want in
your country? Are thirteen?

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Do do you guys think it's got an issue to
do a decent society, decinsitization that people really just don't
feel anything anymore.

Speaker 5 (16:36):
Now.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
It's not that these people don't care. They'll say and
do anything for political power and the fact that the
dollars are being cut off from their favorite charities and
NGOs and defense contractors and all their buddies and friends
that fuel their campaigns to keep them in office so
they can lie, and the same in the media to
keep money flowing to these media companies. That's what it's
all about. They don't care. They he the way Hilaroy

(16:59):
come out today. They would don't track record. And let's
say Hitler did a ten year prison sentence and he's forgiven,
he's back on the street and they'd be out there
cheering for Hitler. Hey, hey, this is the guy we
want because he's not Trump. Yeah exactly, Yeah, we don't
need any more fact to give it to Trump. The
fascist bring us Adolf Hitler and Mussolini and Joseph Stalin.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
Goodness, that's the speed rate about now. Did you happen
to notice all these boycotts, now, all these corporations that
we're supporting DEI through the years, and all of a
suddenly now we have a change and tied and corporations
tend to go, you know, they rolled with die however
politics flow, they kind of flow with it. And now
all of a sudden they want to boycott Amazon that
they want in a huge corporation. Now all the people
on the left want to boycott them and try to

(17:37):
try to punish them. They claim that they've cost Elon
Musk like a trillion dollars or something.

Speaker 4 (17:42):
I doubt they even just Okay, first off, here, let's
let's be clear about this. The Tesla is the most
American made car that exists. Tesla is more American than
any of the car Chrysler's GMS, Fords get their parts
from Mexico, Canada, they assemble into America, plus some parts
of America, even parts from Japan. Tesla's almost entirely made
in America. Every time you harm a Tesla or Harmon's reputation,

(18:04):
you harm an American worker and many more workers are
supported by that, and you harm investors, who are overwhelming
Americans who bought the stock. You're not harming Ilamus. The
guy sold forty four billion dollars worth of stock three
years ago, a pocket a twenty six billion of that,
plus he's got tens of billions more. You're not harming him.
He'll never go broke. He'll never go broke, he'll never
feel it. Says stop it. If you don't like Ilamas,

(18:26):
then get over it.

Speaker 2 (18:27):
Yeah, the funny thing should bring this up. And Elon
Musk is the guy. He's building these little tiny homes,
these collapsible homes. You can full them up, ship them,
then open them back up and put them where you
want them. And they're pretty awesome and affordable. And I
remember years ago he when these, when this started, he
was living in them. He was the type of guy says,
I don't need the big mancheon I's gonna live in
this tunny home for one and enjoy it and get

(18:48):
a feel for it.

Speaker 4 (18:50):
Well, look, it's it's not just that Elon Musk gets
so many different things. This is absolutely insane. These people
are just brain dead, ignorant misses who need to be
locked up and quite for. You know, all these celebrities
fine moved to Canada, moved to Ireland, moved to England.
They're all fascist states at this point. Anyway, I hope
you enjoy yourself there. When we talk about free speech,
you got more free speech here than they ever have there.

(19:11):
The fact that we're actually hearing from you proves you
got free speech. By the way, he's got the Darth
Vader mask on. If somebody got asthma tonight, here's some
heavy breathing. Is that you job?

Speaker 2 (19:20):
I didn't think I was.

Speaker 3 (19:22):
Yeah, I hear some I hear some interference. It's not
anybody we're doing here.

Speaker 4 (19:27):
It sounds like, you know, yeah, look I am your father.

Speaker 2 (19:31):
That would not be me. I was not doing that.

Speaker 4 (19:34):
Well, nobody's saying that.

Speaker 2 (19:36):
I'm just saying. He says that you John, I'm not No,
that was definitely not me. I'm not hearing what you're hearing.

Speaker 4 (19:41):
Oh well, let's stop now now that I pointed it out.
Whoever's listening in the channel from NSA, you got to
be a job of my control. Yeah, exactly what whisper
black helicopters hang on?

Speaker 2 (19:50):
I haven't heard the clicking noises usually get associated with that.
Have they stopped doing that now?

Speaker 4 (19:55):
I think Todd's guilty of the clicking sounds on his
keyboard for call him out. There's no clicking tonight Todd
likes anyway.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
Yeah, but when you activate the echelon program, you say
the three three words on trip there. You've heard of this, right,
the echelon program, you say if you're on the phone
and you happen to say three words like say you
mentioned the president, you start talking about explosives that you
throw another one in there about that and they might
not they might not really be related, but the fact
that you use those three trigger words. So now it's

(20:27):
opposed to it's supposed to be like AI technology listening
to your phone call. And when you do this, then
it rewrots you to a human listener where they listen
to assession or conversation to make a determination if you're
a threat or just a moron having a conversation.

Speaker 4 (20:39):
Well, I'm still kind of hung up on on the
whole pentabrin You know, they meet fortnightly in the meadows,
the Getty's, the Rothschilds, and Colonel Sanders before he went up.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
Now, I heard a necko there nsa.

Speaker 4 (20:53):
I heard that one too.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
It could be this internet thing. Could be the in
say like like they got a spy on this, right,
I mean we're doing the public broadcast.

Speaker 4 (21:06):
Yeah, who knows. You never know what's going on here.
So but anyway, listen this this this stuff's crazy, guys.
I mean, this is domestic terrorism. I've been saying that
for days. I'm glad to see that the Attorney General
finally said it's domestic terrorism. It's about time, and these
people need to be prosecuted as terrorists. Let's get to it.
Let's get to it. And then the ones who who
docksed all the test owners, those people have committed federal crimes.

(21:28):
I hope they spend thirty years in a federal penitentiary. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:31):
Yeah, no, Now we got these people swatting conservatives.

Speaker 4 (21:35):
That's been a lot forever.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
Yeah yeah, well yeah, Marjorie Taylor Green years ago was
getting swatted during the Biden Biden administration, but now it
was suddenly any of these influences on X or No, that's.

Speaker 4 (21:44):
Been going on for a long time too, Temple. It
happened so often people get to wonder if he was
doing it to himself. But Timpole's studio got swatted then
not Charlie Kirk, the other guy, uh, the one I
can't understand. But some of these guys get swatted for
a long time. So yeah, that's why when people talk
about stuff like you guys just understand. There's a reason
why people have common sense. Don't when they do content creation,

(22:06):
don't share where they live or what they're gameplay employed in,
whether they're married or they're not married, divorced, if they
got kids or not. It's just not wise because there
are crazy people out there who don't care what harm
they do to other people.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:19):
Absolutely, kind of where how people can unconsciably do things.

Speaker 4 (22:23):
Yeah, unconscioably with no conscious They're they're just they're just psychotic.
I mean, it's just that's ridiculous. Yeah, there was a
fun way. It's a fantastic video and I think I
saw this by some dude called Kaizen ashould do. Yeah,
I see, though I'm not sure he is. But he
put this on Twitter and it was a whole about
three and a half minutes talking about how because Connor

(22:44):
McGregor is being attacked for being a racist because he
was at the White House in the press conference with
with Carolyn Levitt and he said that, you know, we
need someone to pay attention to Ireland because the whole
country is being overwhelmed with these local aliens who are
you know, overwhelming the towns and they call them a
racist because that well, Ireland is now twenty five percent
four and born and they're not They're not Poles, They're
from the rest of the world. They want to defend

(23:04):
their culture. They won't have an Irish culture, and this
guy's like, hey, they should have a right to have
an Irish culture. Otherwise Ireland just becomes a theme part
that you visit spot On.

Speaker 3 (23:13):
Oh absolutely, Yeah, it's it's people people that visit and
they talk about, you know, how Irish they are by
going to a pub or something like that. You know,
that's kind of what it's going to be like. It's
just going to be one big Irish pub and pub crawl.

Speaker 4 (23:26):
Yeah, no, I got you one hundred percent. So did
you guys?

Speaker 2 (23:28):
See what did they kind of do that to themselves?
I mean they let all these people into their country.
They just open the borders and let them in there.
I mean, or are these people invading kind of like
you know or southern border.

Speaker 4 (23:40):
Well, Ireland's a little bit of a different story. They're
actually flying them in there. It's not like they're swimming over.
They get across the England or UK pretty easy, but
to Ireland they just fly in and they're just let
these people in, which is ironic. I remember when I
went to Ireland years ago and I was at a
conference and I had a few days of leave, and
so I took my leave and I flew into Ireland.
And you have to travel the same passport. So I

(24:00):
was stationed Africa with the diplomatic passport.

Speaker 3 (24:02):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (24:03):
And the reason you have to travel the same passport
is you can't enter on a different passport and you
go back it's the same one you left on. And
I was there on a diplomatic purpose. I have to
do it. So I left there and en route I
went to Germany. Germans had no problem. See in my
bank passport I flew to Ireland on my leave and
I spent twenty five minutes being harassed by the major
who worked for the Irish Immigration Services. What are you

(24:23):
doing here? Well, I'm on holiday. Why it's under your business?
I mean I didn't say that, but I mean he's like,
well what about this one about why why are you
a diplomat? You're not a diplomat in Ireland, I said,
I never claimed to be a dependent island. Well, you
can't use this passport. Well, of course I can use
the passport I have to. If I use a different passport,
I can't enter the country I left. Then there's it's
it's it's it's immigration fraud. Yeah, but you're not on
a dipite missionari, I said, no, I'm on holiday. Every

(24:45):
country go to. You have a responsibility to expedite my travel.
You're actually not expediting. You're delaying me now And as
a consequest, I missed the bus. I had to wait
two hours for the next bus.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
Yeah wow, yeah, yeah. I love when people sit there
and want to sit there and argue with you, and
then I'll all of a sudden you end up winning.
But it messages you over in some way it inconveniences
that little bit. You missed the flight, you missed the bus, whatever.
But you're gonna get through no matter what. But they
just have to be the person who let you know
that they're going to contest you. You're not gonna let
just this American through. I'm I'm gonna be that guy today.

Speaker 4 (25:15):
Well, eventually he got around, he saying to have another
identification on him thinking, I've never been in a border
control anywhere in the world. Klee a from Attlease when
someone asked for a second form of ID. You have
my passport. You confirmed this legitimate by checking the biometrics
on it through the computer. You need another form I D.
So I pulled out my military and he goes, oh,
you're in the military. Why didn't you say so? Because
I'm not here on a military purpose. He's like, why
do you have a military card? I'm required to carry

(25:37):
it at all times. I'm in the Army. I'm shut up, dude,
don't you have a life? Go watch Jeopardy.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
Apparently they didn't educate him very well.

Speaker 4 (25:45):
Now he was just being a jerk because he was
Irish and I'm American, And it's some of this the
liberal annoying irishman, just like that Canadian. When I was
in Estonian, I met this guy on the ferry going
over to one of the islands, Himu and SARAMAI the
big islands off the coast, and I had a rental
car but he was hitchhiking an So we're standing on
the deck of the boat. As we're approaching. We start
chatting to have a nice conversation, and I said, hey,
you don't want to lift? He goes, yeah, sure, thanks,

(26:06):
I getting my ride. We get in the car and
he starts going on and complaining about George Bush and
the war, and it wore. I'm like, dude, get out,
I'll give you a ride. You know, I know who
you are, and because you're Canadian, fellow North American, you
want to sit here and preach to me about about
something you know nothing about, Like just shut up, nice people.

Speaker 3 (26:24):
Yeah, it's like you're you talking to George Bush every
night or something.

Speaker 4 (26:29):
You know, exactly like George but like like you know,
like juicy Trudeau is his fault.

Speaker 3 (26:33):
Now you didn't think I'll let him know the next
time we chat on the phone.

Speaker 4 (26:38):
Sure, yeah, exactly, Yeah, let me I'll get right on that.
Thank you. You're right, we're wrong. I'll tell you what tomorrow,
will withdraw from Iraq and quit spending money there. That's fine,
Thank you. So so glad you informed me that we
didn't know what was going on in Iraq. Got this
annoying Canadian in Estonia.

Speaker 2 (26:53):
It sounded to be like you were having a conversation
on TikTok long before there was TikTok.

Speaker 4 (26:58):
Yeah, that's right. It was long before there was TikTok.
That's what it was. Yeah, No, it's TikTok conversation, just
added thin air. Anyway, Look, there's stupid people should wear signs,
Billian Vall got it right. You know, if they wear signs,
you won't ask him questions. Hey, so I was curious
about wherey from me o king hein. Oh, I'm sorry,
never mind, I didn't see your sign.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
Man, yikes.

Speaker 4 (27:19):
Anyway, Yeah, so what else we got here, guys? Sammy
with Oh? Yeah. Trump has paused one hundred and seventy
five million dollars in federal funds for the University of
Pennsylvania over transgender athletes. Yeah, one hundred and seventy five
million for you, penn Good good, good, good, good love it.
I love it for Title nine violations.

Speaker 2 (27:38):
So I would like to know where this judge gets
his authority to tell Tom to turn a plane around.

Speaker 4 (27:45):
He doesn't have that authority. This is this is a
rogue judicial branch. And I also think that we need
to point out that Chief Justice John Roberts is being
rogue and unconstitutional. He's also exceeding his mandate by running
his mouth here. It's perfectly within the her view of
a political officers and members of Congress to call for
the impeachment of a federal judge. Who else is supposed

(28:07):
to do it is up to the mob with tar
and feathers. Oh, let's impeach Kitunjie Brown Jackson or Jackson
Brown or Jackson five or Tito and Jermaine, whatever her
name is, let's impeach her. It's not for people with
tar feathers. That's for members of Congress or for the
president to call for the impeachment. So John Roberts is
out in front of his keys. He really is, and

(28:28):
so are these judges. They are exceeding their judicial authority.
Now they're trying to cloak this latest one got smart.
He said, well, what they're doing is unconstitutional. Finally, someone
referenced the Constitution. Usually want a reference case law which
has no bearing on this. This is ridiculous. These justices
are out of control, These courts are out of control.
Trump is complying with all these ridiculous things in his
first administration and wait until they were overturned, which almost
everything was always overturned. There's no time for that stuff now.

(28:50):
These people aren't following the Constitution. It does take a
rocket science read to the Constitution to understand and understand precedent.
I know Marbury, Bearriston, Madison, I know McCulloch versus Maryland,
I know Plusy versus Ferguson, I know Brown versus Board Education.
Don't have the constitutional scholar to know that those decisions
are in a cord or not in acord with the constitutions.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
Bottom line, that's basically what it's about. They No, they're
trying to trap them. They want to They want to
try to trap them and get them into a circumstance
where they can impeach them. That's that's exactly what they
want to do. No, they can't do it this this
two years, but the next two years, if they can
overturn the House.

Speaker 4 (29:21):
But they don't need anything. Again, an impeachment is a
political trial. You can just say we don't like to
tie the present way teach them. They essentially they didn't
have anything before. They peach him over stopping arm sales
to Ukraine. He didn't stop arm sales Ukraine. It's a lie.
The weapons were delivered, the contracts are completed by the
end of physical year. They lie and got away with it.

(29:43):
They tried to teach them with a Russia collusion. There
was the Russia colusion was bought and pay for garbage.
They don't need anything. They just make it all up.
And by the way, what's the most consequence of things
happened the past week. Donald Trump has said that the
autoped has negated and invalidated the fake pardons, and he
has said they're null and volle wait. This will be challenged,
as it should be. But here's my argument. They're not

(30:04):
challenging the power of the president for pardon. That's sakerscanct
that's in a country, there's in case all that that exists.
What Trump is challenging is the fact that Biden didn't
sign these documents. Biden didn't give the pardons. She didn't
even know about them. That is, that is fraud. Therefore
they're null and void. And I'll bet you the President
wins this when it goes to the courts.

Speaker 3 (30:21):
Oh, I'd imagine he would. He would have to. And
it's gonna expose a lot of people, and if it
gets a true hearing, you're gonna have a lot of
people flipping on one another. I think.

Speaker 4 (30:29):
So.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
I think it's gonna be a tough battle because it's
after the fact, and so you got to you got
to h They're gonna have to challenge on Biden's mental
faculties of the.

Speaker 4 (30:40):
Past and challenge that that challenges faculties. He wasn't present,
He wasn't.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
Present or authorized the signing of the pardons. There's you
can have some serious witnesses come forth.

Speaker 4 (30:52):
Oh yeah, the rats, the rats will run from a citizenship.
You just what's already happening. Look at all the rats
in the business and banking and Hollywood have come and
kiss the ring for Trump. They all will. They all
want to make money, they all want to all want
their fame, they want to write their books. They they
don't want to go to jail. They will, they will
give it up they will give up trus. It's yeah, look,
this is this is this is this is not earth shouting,

(31:13):
but it's certainly groundbreaking what Trump is doing here, and
he's right to do it. These are bogus bogus first off, preempty,
that's nonsense too. I I I pardon you for any
crimes you might have committed in the last ten years.
What is that crap that?

Speaker 3 (31:24):
That's yes, but Biden, Biden or the Biden's period don't
have any more political capital at all, So for people
to roll on them, it's not gonna be a problem
for them do that, especially if they have their own
lives and their livelihood, if you will, their own their
own jobs, They're gonna have no problem rolling I think
I think this.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
Who was behind this? I mean, oh sure I'm behind this,
behind this.

Speaker 3 (31:42):
I mean no, roll on somebody, somebody, somebody or some
or a few people will probably go down for it.
But you're gonna have the lower level people that are
gonna get spoken to by the FBI. You're gonna have
you know, attorney's generals are gonna be saying we're gonna
do this, this, this, and this. They're gonna be like, uh,
let me tell you who did this and this and
this and this is what they did. Bill Biden had
nothing to do with. He had no clue. It was
these people. And he's gonna they're gonna name name all people.

(32:03):
They're gona write him nam and they're gonna say, all right,
we're gonna give you a deal. We're gonna we're not
gonna charge you with anything. If you'll testify, they're gonna
sign it. They're gonna walk out the door and they'll
testify for sure.

Speaker 4 (32:11):
And by the way, Biden didn't pardon himself for his
classified document theft, did he I don't recall that. That's
right there, you go if if if, if he will,
if they won't give it up, we'll go after Biden,
make him give it up, go after for sure. All
to take the statement from Biden saying I did not
I did not sign that, did not authorize that.

Speaker 3 (32:29):
What's an auto call? What's an auto pin?

Speaker 4 (32:32):
Is that like an auto injector?

Speaker 3 (32:34):
What's an autopen?

Speaker 5 (32:35):
Hey?

Speaker 3 (32:35):
Hey, fella, should I fight you? Oh, we'll go outside
the after gym, after after after reasons, We'll fight. Yeah,
Joe Biden's style.

Speaker 4 (32:42):
And did you leave my pen in my Corvette.

Speaker 3 (32:46):
Yeah, yeah, I got a Corvette. Yeah, I drive It's
a cool car. Yeah, auto pen that thing. All right,
what's up down?

Speaker 2 (32:55):
We do have a caller or our usual suspect does
want to chime in a little about some of the
stuff we were talking about. Yeah, I think the thumbs
up that.

Speaker 3 (33:06):
Yeah, there's a term of endearment there, right.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
Oh yeah, of course I wouldn't talk trash about Danny. Hey, Danny,
how you doing, Buddy good?

Speaker 5 (33:15):
Good? How are you guys good?

Speaker 2 (33:17):
So you know, Chris, Chris heard you want I think
it was Will Broadcasting shows. What's that, Chris?

Speaker 4 (33:24):
I think it was on the Will Cow Show, The
Will Cow, the Willkeell Show.

Speaker 5 (33:29):
Okay, Yeah. I called into a lot of shows, sometimes
up to three thirty three shows a week. So I
do get around the country. I do even call into
Tennessee and uh Todd uh I forget his last name?
Uh at Ann show in Tennessee.

Speaker 3 (33:50):
Yeah, at an Ashvill thank Yeah.

Speaker 5 (33:53):
Yeah, call into some shows in South Carolina and North Carolina. Yeah,
so pretty much all a little bit of a Maryland.

Speaker 4 (34:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (34:01):
So we try to get around hits the smaller network,
hit him, hit him high and low. That's what I say.

Speaker 2 (34:07):
There you go, man, So you're you're a nationwide show crasher.
That's what That's what I'm here.

Speaker 5 (34:12):
Well I just keep adding. But uh yeah, I was
wanted to turn in on the judges because you know,
the first of all, I mean, I know you got
you guys know this that the judge is taken over
to uphold the constitution and not the political party. Uh
they disupposed to rule on the constitutional law. But you

(34:34):
got four judges that slapped uh an injunction on President
Trump on birth right citizenship. Now three people, you know,
a lot of these networks are saying, oh, the liberal judges.
You know, three of them are mass the mass chooses one,
the Maryland one, the Washington one. But in New Hampshire

(34:57):
it's a it's a bush judge. George Force put him
in in two thousand and seven. Okay, his name is
Joseph la Plant. Okay. And this guy during the primary, okay,
the first of all, the dirty arm and t I
talked about this left the primary open. And then dirty

(35:18):
secretary of State in New Hampshire and some of the
other states did this as well. They extended the cutoff
date of when you could switch party from the first
Wednesday in June. They extended extra four months to the October.
First Wednesday in October. Okay, that you can't move the

(35:42):
gold post here on the rules in the laws of
an election. So this is the guy we took my
friends took this to court and he he heard the
case and he said, he told us we didn't have president.
We didn't show a uh, we didn't have a standard.
He didn't you know, we had no standing. We couldn't

(36:04):
we couldn't established the president. Well, how about you guys,
you know, this is kind of the stuff that they do.
Joseph McCarthy talked about this, how that and even President Iosenhauer,
how they that all the communists, the communists infiltrated all
branches of the government. Okay, now if you look, okay,

(36:27):
on top of this, Okay, when you're looking at this
Obama judge, Okay, that was put in in twenty eleven.
This what's his name, Jamie Boseburg. Okay, Now you gotta
if you look back further, George pushed the first appointed

(36:49):
them in two thousand and two to the Superior Court,
but Obama put him in in twenty eleven as a
federal judge. Okay. So now John Roberts, that he's Justice,
is the only one that can appoint okay, someone to
the fighter court. And who put him in James Boldsburg there,
it was John Roberts. Okay. So you got unponti in

(37:14):
corrupt politics, you know, corrupt politicians, but you also have
it in this freaking judges. There's only three good judges
okay that follow the constitutional law. Okay, and it's Thomas
and Alito are the two best, okay. And the other
one is just he's not quite as good as them,

(37:36):
but he's just he's pretty close. And that's gor TeV
or whatever his name is. Okay, Yeah, of course, excuse me.
So and when you look at this stuff, okay, it's
the corrupt politicians, national media, corrupt judges are all linked
to the George Soros network trying to start President Trump

(38:01):
from deporting illegal criminal Okay. So a lot of this
network ties into Act Blue okay. And when you start
looking at AC Blue, okay, this the first tier of
the money players at George Sorow, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg,
the Christa family clash wab. The second tier you got

(38:24):
Bezo using his Shell companies and n g os, Melinda
Gates who owns The Atlantic. Okay, see Steve Jobs wife
Disney who owned ESPN and AVC. Right, and you got
the leaders like the generals and the leaders in the
Act Blue. You got Norm Elson Okay, Emily Kirby, Kristin Ford.

(38:46):
Now when you Emily Kirby, her husband has ties to h.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
Ai.

Speaker 5 (38:54):
Uh, his name is Joe George Hasbun okay. And Kristin
Ford okay, she she worked, she was a manager of
the media relations for the Garneghe Okay. And you got
Allegra Chapman Okay. Now, Allegra Chapman and Kristin Ford have
big they're heavily involved with AOC and helping her get elected.

(39:18):
You got David Axelrod who's heavily involved and that this
is also you got the key player okay down at
the bottom of this Okay, who's who has ties to
the Flower Group? Okay? Her name is the nearer at Tandence. Okay.
Now when you talk about the Maypel the Flower Group, Okay,

(39:40):
David axod was he was he was involved in both
of this stuff.

Speaker 3 (39:44):
Okay.

Speaker 5 (39:44):
Who is the uh, the political strategist and Teeni advisor
for Obama right who who he was director of the
University of Chicago. Okay, he was the writer for Chicago Tribune. Okay.
On top of it, he was also an advisor to

(40:05):
the McCain Institute of Global Leaders. So you see how
you see how they're tied in together. Now he also
did speaking engagements in twenty twenty one with every flight
shot so that these people overlapped each other. So it's

(40:26):
it's just real crazy. And when you start looking at
this stuff, okay, you you this is nearer Candam okay,
wash if you look back, if you go further back,
Bill Ayres was heavily and tied to the Clintons, Okay,
with the weather Vange group Okay, and it was the

(40:46):
old Chicago connection with them, and then and then it
became they evolved into the Flower group and weather Vang
dropped off. Okay, So near At Tandon is really connected
with the Clinton Since Bill Ayres has died, she's like,
that's their group go to persons. Okay. So they're all interconnected,

(41:09):
and the Clintons are pushing a lot of this stuff.
They're heavily heavily involved in the Obama as well. Because
again he was from Chicago as well. So this is
what's going on and there, and they're some of these
they greeting these judges. Okay, I talked about how dirty. Okay,

(41:34):
the other one, uh Amy Cony Barrett. Okay, So these
these judges are no good. They have to be impeached,
they have to you have to get rid of these
these political hacks. Okay, they're they're not ruling on the
constitutional law. They're they're they're part of a corrupt political
uh organization.

Speaker 2 (41:56):
Yeah, they're kind of like plants there to push a
political agenda. And we've seen this often in the courts
were they're trying to legislate from the bench and Ben
then warped the meaning of the words the Constitution. We've
seen this before.

Speaker 5 (42:13):
Yeah, it's no difference when we talk about the UTA Party.
I forget his name, the guy from Pennsylvania that's in
your group, I forget his first name. But look in
your state, the worst US congressman is from Pennsylvania. His
name is Brian Fitzpatrick. In the two last years, okay,

(42:34):
twenty twenty three and twenty twenty four, his voting score
voting grade was a twenty and in eighteen last year.
I mean, this guy is in he's right in that
window that I've talked about, in that zero to twenty
or zero to twenty five blocks with the Marxist Socialist
Communist Democrats. This guy's not a Republican, you know, but

(42:56):
people don't look at the voting grade. And you got
the other fraud down in Pennsylvania, Maria Salazar, who's given
you a thirty and a thirty three in the last
two years, okay, and then you got another guy like
in New York, Mike Lawler, who's giving you a thirty
five two years ago and this year. This past year,

(43:18):
he was a thirty three. So these guys aren't. These
people aren't. And then when you start looking at what
they're connected to, so a lot of them are connected
to AI pass So and other corrupt stuff. So I
don't know. So what I'm trying to say is these
judges are it's kind of like a uniparty, kind of

(43:41):
like you see him with a politician, they're intertied with
each other.

Speaker 2 (43:47):
Well, that's the corruption that we've been talking about right
all these years, ye is that deep state corruption and
all that and how they funnel the money you know,
we've learned a lot about how they have these five
to one s three organizations at the scrant money. You know,
it's people what they had one hundred dollars in their
coffers and all of a suddenly they're tied in with
the Democrat Party and they've got millions to billions of

(44:08):
dollars in there in there and grants coming from the
government and some of that money being funneled back through
Act Blue and all these other packs and organizations. And
there's no reason the judges can't be on the take too, right.
I'm not saying they are because that would be inappropriate.
I don't know that for a fact, but speculatively speaking,
they could be.

Speaker 3 (44:27):
Well, the mass supports that that being true. You know,
just for the percentage wise, some of them are corrupt
just based on percentages. Yeah, they.

Speaker 5 (44:39):
Got corrupt ties. And you know, that's what happens. They
got corrupt ties to people. They that's how they move
up and move up and political favors for each other,
and they keep moving up and they move up the branches.
It happens with the judges as well, and they you know,
they all went a lot of them shout out as lawyers,

(45:00):
you know. Yeah, so that's that's what goes on. It's
one of Barrett worked under uh Antonio Antoni, uh Scalia.
He was a great judge. She is nothing like him.
She's she's violating the Constitution. He was a true constitutionalist,

(45:22):
just like Alito and Thomas.

Speaker 2 (45:25):
Yeah, it's like Ginsburg did the same thing when she
was alive. She she was twisting and warping the meaning
of the Constitution, trying to tell you that these are
not individual rights, these are collective rights. I think it's
pretty well established their individual rights, and I think I's
Supreme Court ruled on that and and acknowledged it.

Speaker 5 (45:44):
And I'll leave you with this. It's pretty bad when
our judges are coming after our president who's following the
Constitution and they're violating. So I'll leave you with that.
I don't want to disrupt the show. I just wanted
to bring bring some uh some life. So maybe some
stuff that we should all be looking at.

Speaker 2 (46:05):
Yeah, definitely appreciate your calling in and bringing us to
speed on that.

Speaker 4 (46:12):
Roll.

Speaker 2 (46:13):
Something.

Speaker 3 (46:14):
All right, perfect, good good deal. Yeah. I always like
having a good caller. That's good stuff.

Speaker 4 (46:20):
Love it.

Speaker 2 (46:22):
Yeah, I see Chris Cobusy over there. I see him
typing away.

Speaker 3 (46:26):
He's typing away. He's probably got some people he's responding to.
You know, the comments are lighting up over here on
this one stream talking about the judges in South Africa,
you know, like, welcome to South Africa. You know, if
your judges on the take. Yeah, well, we've had a
lot of corrupt judges and politicians for many since the
beginning of the country. Let's face it, you know, we're

(46:47):
even some of our founding fathers were probably on the
take one way or another. You know, not not all
of them necessarily, but I dare say some of them
probably were corrupted, you know, not just been addict Arnold.

Speaker 4 (46:58):
I think some of the problem stems from more recent
develops where we've been putting people on the bench who
are in their thirties instead of waiting for people in
their fifties. When you have a lifetime appointment, you're put
onto a bench in your thirties. That just leads to
the head opportunity el yeah, well, and not just head swelling,
but a opportunity to be their long time, get comfortable
and become corrupt and become become corruptible. Whereas if you

(47:19):
have an accomplished life, and you have a reputation, a
lot on the line, and you've served at all levels,
and then here you are entering that at a later age.
I think that's much smarter. But I mean, you know,
when you see people are television personalities in their Judge
and they're in their fifties, you're like, how is this
person at judge and they're already you know, that's well,
that's when they should be starting.

Speaker 2 (47:37):
Yeah. No, you're right. There's a week we could capitalize
off of people's life experience in the wisdom as opposed
to getting somebody who's young, who's really had to have
had that struggle yet. You know, I'm not saying young
people don't struggle, but everybody has struggles. But when they've
had some experience struggling through life, then they they bring
something to the table.

Speaker 4 (47:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (47:57):
I was.

Speaker 4 (47:57):
I wasn't. I wasn't the keyboard. I said that I
was on the red phone and Langley. No, No, I
was texting over WhatsApp through my PC the Secret Service
agent's living room because they're asking me where the dip
was for the chips.

Speaker 3 (48:09):
Oh god, Oh have you taught him how to use
the dustbuster. Yeah, there's crumbs everywhere.

Speaker 4 (48:14):
I say, probably I gotta get one of those diesels,
you know.

Speaker 2 (48:18):
Yeah, So did you get to finish a Florida man story?
I think you were talking about that. I just came
across that article. Apparently it was a Florida man who
threatened to cut up Trump and put him on acid
and fight him naked.

Speaker 4 (48:33):
Oh no, I just mentioned. I mean, you guys, if
you're onto that story, I feel free to share that.
It's corazl I.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
I just remember you were saying something about the title.
Here's Florida man ar resident after thrust to cut Trump
up with a chain saw, fighting naked to death.

Speaker 3 (48:49):
That's the That's like the ultimate fighting championship right there, right.

Speaker 4 (48:54):
Forty two year old keg Aaron Todd. Why did they
always give all three names when it's yeah, John Wayne Gacy,
you know, yeah, it's always all three of them except
Ted Bundy. We never got Ted Bundy's middle name. What's
up with that?

Speaker 3 (49:12):
What about did we get John Hankley? Did we get
a middle name?

Speaker 4 (49:14):
Thereah, You're right, that's saying maybe there's a couple exceptions.
I have to think about every year old Kendall. Aaron
Todd was reportive issued regarding this threat to the president,
and it led the Saint Lucy County Sheriff's Office this
execute search warrant, leading to his arrest and the charge
of written threat to kill or do bodily harm. Because
of Trump, every single person world was cursed. Donald Trump
is the anti Christ. These person business which have heard

(49:38):
so many different reincarnated Jesus. Oh, my goodness, well are they.

Speaker 3 (49:41):
We're going to use p Diddy baby oil? I thought
they were going to use that they had that they
have left over.

Speaker 4 (49:47):
My goodness, that that we're gonna save all the baby
for all those people who are burning tesselas.

Speaker 3 (49:51):
Yeah right, yeah, hey, you go all over your body
and go up there naked and lie.

Speaker 4 (49:57):
No, they're gonna want the baby in the prison cells.

Speaker 2 (50:00):
Put the baby oil on, rub yourself with baby oil,
and grab each each end electrode of the battery. Right,
I fell alive.

Speaker 3 (50:10):
Oh okay, somebody said here, John Hinckley didn't succeed, so
I guess if you succeed, they use your middle name. Okay,
maybe this.

Speaker 2 (50:17):
Nut job didn't succeed anything but running in his mouth too.

Speaker 4 (50:20):
But yeah, well Ted Bundy succeeded. We don't remember his name,
so he's exceptional, I guess.

Speaker 3 (50:26):
Yeah, very true.

Speaker 4 (50:29):
But anyway, so this guy, this guy was, this guy
was arrested in Florida. So that's two assassination attempts and
one arrested. Wacky Doddle. Now, if they just go after
Nancy Pelosi and get her would be straight.

Speaker 3 (50:41):
Not not assassinated. He didn't say, he said arrested. That's
what you're meaning. That's what the colonel was talking about.
Get her arrested, put her, put her in cuffs, right,
put her in federal protection somewhere right.

Speaker 2 (50:51):
That's what I took it when he said it. Yeah,
he didn't say, we're dealing with we have logic mind
logical minds.

Speaker 3 (50:57):
The colonel. The colonel is looking over he's doing something.
He's looking at his his card catalog. I'm sure he's looking.

Speaker 4 (51:02):
For reading the Kennedy files. They just came.

Speaker 2 (51:05):
Okay, yeah, I was starting to read the takeaways, but
I just don't can't get into it.

Speaker 4 (51:10):
Well, one takeaway in South Africa. They immediately golomped down
to this day. They found a page that said it
was information on on the on the event and it
was addressed to the CIA outstations around the world, and
you know, we found a page. It's was a routine what.

Speaker 3 (51:23):
Do they call that?

Speaker 4 (51:23):
What it was directed to? If they haven't he let
me say. They said, yeah, the material was. One of
the documents was titled field distribution. Dude, that's not the
title of the document. That's the distribution of morons. And
it went to these different offices and they said the
subheading was af division. So I did a video early
and I said, just don't tell anybody that I could

(51:45):
go to jail for this. But af it means Africa division.
And I said, but I mean, I wonder what EU
means eurp division.

Speaker 3 (51:55):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (51:55):
Right. These people are just such juvenile journist that's unblieve.
Junior journalists, like they're all it's like they got their
easy bake ovens and they want to be journalists.

Speaker 3 (52:04):
Well, people run the the you know a lot of
those doctors through AI and and they're running stories based
on what AI told them about it. They didn't review
it themselves. It's like, come on, now, you got to
review it yourselves. Uh.

Speaker 4 (52:15):
One of the viewers said that the difference with Bundy's
is a mass murder, not an assassin. Well, John Wayne
Geese was a mass murder too, Charles, So I just
shot your theory through holes.

Speaker 3 (52:23):
Yeah, but he also dressed like a clown, you know.
So I don't know who's the guy that did eight people?

Speaker 4 (52:30):
What was his name?

Speaker 3 (52:33):
Jeffrey Dahmer and Ed ed Gean too, playing field, Wisconsin.
Just completely crazy.

Speaker 2 (52:41):
There's been a few of them.

Speaker 4 (52:43):
Yeah, crazy stuff. Imagine if if if Charlie Manson had
his way, and that's you know, having caught so quickly,
the probably would have taken a lot more people as wacking.

Speaker 2 (52:50):
Yeah, oh yeah, I think I think it's kind of
interesting how they call it Gaysey. Here's a guy who
was basically hiding the bodies in his house, like in
the floor words and stuff for in the walls or something. Yeah,
in addition of his house just to hide the bodies,
and he's inviting the police over for card games and stuff.

Speaker 4 (53:07):
Well, the thing that always struck me as odd is
that one of the guys that eventually got killed escaped
and the cops were there and he told him he
was trying to kill him, and this another and Gasey
played it off as if they were gay lovers. Gay
lovers in the seventies. I mean, that's the time he
surround up homosexuals and lock him up just for being gay.
And then the cops came and he said, no, it's
my lover, and the cops didn't think that weird anyway,

(53:28):
That that one there. I never understood that one.

Speaker 3 (53:31):
Yeah, or the guy that got away from uh, you know,
the the cannibal, you know, and like the cops let
him go back up to the house, like, oh, he's
just high or whatever. It's like, no, I just escaped
from this guy's house. Go look, you know, he has
people in bats up there.

Speaker 2 (53:44):
Slipper nineteen seventies four movie. And you're saying, this stuff's real.

Speaker 4 (53:48):
That's true. He's burying him in the crawl space under
his house. I mean, Gaysey was a fat dude too.
I don't know how much crawl spacer was under that house.

Speaker 2 (53:55):
No, from my understanding, he was like adding on to
his house so he could bury him to the walls. Stuff.
And that's that's what happened. Supposedly they were playing card
games and the officer could smell the you know, smell
of human decay.

Speaker 4 (54:07):
I smelled it was it was underlooked. That's the story
I know unfortunately too well. It was it was in
the floorboards.

Speaker 3 (54:13):
Yeah, yeah, he said there's animals that died under there
or something that.

Speaker 4 (54:17):
That's what he said, said as a raccoon crawl up
under there, something like that.

Speaker 3 (54:21):
Yeah, And he invited them over to play cards for that.
What they ever got a report he could be like,
they would be like, oh no, that's just the raccoon,
that's what that was.

Speaker 4 (54:28):
Yeah, pretty scary stuff. Nasty people, yeah, jeez.

Speaker 3 (54:32):
And a lot of a lot of times you don't
want to see what's right in front of you too.
You just you don't see. And it's always like I
didn't even know, you know, like you always talk about
the neighbor. It's like, seems like a nice guy. I
brought his lawnmower and his chainsaw and all this stuff.

Speaker 2 (54:44):
He was always the nicest, quiet guy, kept to himself,
very quiet. Yep, we have the best subject matter here
at the Commons.

Speaker 4 (54:51):
Since we didn't know if anything is wrong, he just
used the wind chipper a lot.

Speaker 2 (54:56):
Yeah, he said it jammed up frequently. We just didn't understand,
you know.

Speaker 4 (55:01):
It's just red dye red number two.

Speaker 3 (55:04):
Oh, yeah, so and so fail in the woodchipper. Guy.
I keep telling everybody to keep their distance, you know,
and they fall right into my wood chipper every time.
Oh you know, I'm clumsy. Gosh, Bobby, we'll be over
for cards this Saturday. You be careful though.

Speaker 2 (55:19):
On a better note, that's there's an article here talking
about gen Z deste to be the richest generation here
in about ten years twenty thirty six to the reestimating
about a seventy something trillion dollar economy for gen Z.

Speaker 4 (55:33):
Yeah. Not because they've earned it, because they're going to
hear it all the hard work we did for the
past half century.

Speaker 3 (55:38):
Oh yeah, and.

Speaker 2 (55:40):
Want to leave our kids well off, Chris, We don't
you know. That's that's the way to be. Always wanted
better things for your children.

Speaker 4 (55:45):
So when you're moving all my money to my hamster.

Speaker 2 (55:48):
Well, your hamster is going to have a happy but
short hamster life.

Speaker 4 (55:52):
That's true. That only very long. I'll get another hamster
and we'll just start a chain of hamsters. This is
little Tommy. He's the thirty fifth generation descended from the
inheritance from.

Speaker 2 (56:06):
Oh, well, you know what, it is, time to take
a break. We're going to the top of our news everybody,
so we shall be back. Don't go nowhere. Stay tuned,

(56:41):
all right, ladies and gentlemen. If you're just tuning in,
you're listening to the common sense conservatives right here. WSMN
broadcasting out of downtown nash One new him. Sure. Well
we uh we talk about all sorts of interesting things
like the h well, the events of John Wayne Gacy,
and then we listened to the volum.

Speaker 4 (57:00):
But uh, monuments, I don't know, but I want some
of that Gatesy monuments monument.

Speaker 3 (57:07):
Well distinct for people who care. That's a great, great look, Yeah,
that's a great like that. I wonder what Roger Pellerin
sounds like. You know, he probably has a Hey, I
have a deeper voice, you know. I don't know. It's
a good commercial though. They've been in business for one
hundreds some years. That's awesome.

Speaker 4 (57:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (57:26):
They're generational, definitely.

Speaker 3 (57:28):
Yeah, well they know what probably know what they're doing.
I imagine you stay in business that long.

Speaker 2 (57:31):
Come on, yeah, man, yeah, you know, a generation to generation.
Hope hopefully it's through the same family. But I do
not know. You know, the United States Department Transportation Sean
Duffy has been getting some hate, no from UH from
the UH Congress people on the left here because apparently

(57:51):
Sean Duffy has fired people in the FAA. He's cutting back, UH,
reducing spending. I mean, I wonder if if he takes
these letters and frames them and hangs them on his
wall and when people come into his office and with
many points, see that one there. That one made me
the laugh the most because it's kind of like they're
they're they're not given to the maining credit. Maybe he's
doing these cutbacks because you can get more done with

(58:13):
less money. You know, it's cut the wasteful spending, cut
the nonsense. And some of these these UH studies are
incredibly stupid. Yea millions of dollars or when Congress my favorite,
you know, truck driver needs parking terribly and it's like
eleven to one ratio, right, eleven trucks per one parking
spot out there, eld On the trucks and christ and

(58:35):
they uh, they they restrict their ability, got trucks shutting
down at the same time now instead of having some
sort of rotation for a parking spaces, so they exasperated
the d there's a solution with take millions and millions
of dollars and put it out there and grant money,
and we'll make electronic signs selling truck drivers if there's
a parking available the next rest area.

Speaker 3 (58:52):
What good did that do?

Speaker 2 (58:53):
That doesn't put asphalt on the ground. That nothing. But
this is the logic of our government for us. This
is the logic of the transportation up until Sean Duffy.
Now he's doing cutbacks. I would I would think he's
got some strategies in mind and he's probably thinking, Wow,
you guys write me these letters, thinking like I'm supposed
to answer you and entertain these ideas. You don't give
me any credit as maybe actually know what I'm doing.

(59:14):
It can manage these funds.

Speaker 3 (59:16):
Right, yeah, But think about this with apps. You apps
are good for for a number of things, you know,
putting out information and being able to buy things, you know,
look up information, whatever. But it doesn't, like you said,
put down concrete or asphalt. It's like, oh, we created
an app, but how is that create solving the parking problem?
It does nothing but makes somebody in Washington feel like
they've done their job. Hey, we created this app for

(59:38):
you guys. What do you think about that. You know,
truck driver driving down the road doesn't have time to
scroll on an app to see, oh, is there parking
space ten miles or five miles up the road. I mean,
come on, now, that's so stud One.

Speaker 2 (59:48):
Of their one of their issues are you are are
cutting funds, you're cutting spending, and this is this is
not for good for job creations. It's not the government's
job to use people's money to create job jobs for
other people. And all they're doing is, you know, going
back to the signs, all they're doing is rich and
enriching their buddies. So they're investing in the so called
fourth Industrial Revolution of technology, and they're trying to fix

(01:00:12):
everything with technology when technology doesn't need to be a plaue.
Can we just use the standard, tried and improven methods, like, hey,
I know, let's lay asphalt.

Speaker 4 (01:00:22):
Yeah, well, I mean I just want to Can I
just get some fricking sharks with lasers on them? That's
all I want to know.

Speaker 2 (01:00:27):
Yeah, but have to go with your g men in
the back room there.

Speaker 4 (01:00:31):
Yeah, that's right, lay asphalt.

Speaker 3 (01:00:33):
But at the same time, let let truck drivers go
out there and use good common sense Hey, am I tired? Okay,
I need some rest. It's been so many hours I've
been on the road. Let me go ahead and pull over.
I'm about to violate the law. Don't need some EO
detailing me somebody big brother or some spy looking over
my shoulder. Now, if a private company or individual wants
to use those, they can. But I think that the
trucker that's in in there should be trained to a

(01:00:54):
level that they can recognize if they're tired, which means
if you're breathing, you can recognize if you're tired. Done,
the class is over your your train.

Speaker 4 (01:01:02):
Come on. I'm confused by the usemism laying asshole? Is
that like laying pipe?

Speaker 3 (01:01:09):
The plumbing is gonna get gonna be upset with you.
How dare you They're gonna be our next spots as
the plum I think that right past the crowd, I
got it, No, we got it how to address them,
but we got a lot of cleaning it up a
little bit.

Speaker 2 (01:01:24):
I'm just wondering. We got a lot of people from
South Africa and here. I wonder if they have these
sorts of sorts of issues with their truck drivers down there.

Speaker 4 (01:01:31):
You don't want to get started truck. Most most of
them are unlicensed, illegal, so that's their clog of the
roads and there's horrific accidents.

Speaker 2 (01:01:38):
We're having that problem now. Arkansas is trying to trying
to get a state bill passed to be able to
arrest these people that don't speak English. They don't read
writer or speak English. You know, we got people here
trying to navigate roads. We had a guy complaining he's
from the Mid East and he's out there in Canada
in the mountains out in western Canada, and he said, man,
they just sent me out here. I don't know how
to speed right right Canadian or English and yeah, Canadian,

(01:02:02):
Canadian English. But he's like, I don't, I don't. I
don't understand these signs, and they just put me out here.
He says, I don't know what I'm doing.

Speaker 3 (01:02:11):
What was he from one of the big companies.

Speaker 2 (01:02:13):
I imagine probably you know companies. You know.

Speaker 3 (01:02:20):
The big companies, man, they're the ones that usually are
the ones that are jackknife on the side of the road.
I see the independent guys are like they know what
they're doing. That's the big trucking companies. I'm a little
more skeptical.

Speaker 2 (01:02:30):
I'm one guy goes out and put that kind of
money and that kind of investment in that truck and
that trailer, and and to build a business is not
cheap or easy. I'm not going to risk it on
icy roads. These big companies are self insured. And uh,
they got the residual equipment and the bs and yeah,
they pushed their drivers too hard because everything's on just
on time delivery system. You know, they they booked these

(01:02:51):
things to be delivered with. This country runs on a
three day period. Your shelves get stocked in the stores
every Thursday. It's tight.

Speaker 4 (01:03:02):
Only only the preppers will survive when it gets shut down.
We saw that in lockdown.

Speaker 2 (01:03:05):
Yep, you better be somewhat prepared. There's a bottom line.

Speaker 4 (01:03:11):
But clean the shelves off and then there was nothing
there for ages.

Speaker 2 (01:03:14):
Right.

Speaker 3 (01:03:15):
Yeah, once you deplete it, it takes a while to catch up.

Speaker 2 (01:03:17):
There is the stock on toilet paper still up? Or
do that go down? Is it just eggs replaced it?

Speaker 4 (01:03:21):
Or eggs? Eggs are coming down, man, Yeah, they're coming down.
The eggs coming down, Fuels coming down, gasoline's coming down.

Speaker 2 (01:03:29):
He's a one up some but for me, But gasoline
has been coming down, so that that was unpredicted. I
didn't they say gasoline was going to go up with Trump,
and they were trying to make fun going, Oh, gas
prices are gonna throw with Trump. They didn't.

Speaker 4 (01:03:41):
Well, actually, you know, it's a silly argument they make
because if tariff's go in place, people buy fewer things.
People buying fewer things is less to man of energy
to move things around. Less man of energy means lower
fuel prices because the price is dropped. So the logic
they applied really didn't make any sense to begin with.

Speaker 3 (01:03:56):
So anyway, Yeah, so the fuel prices are going up,
especially diesel. It leads me to believe there's probably more
trucks out there on the road delivering things.

Speaker 4 (01:04:03):
Right. Oh, I only drive electric teslas, So I don't
know what you're talking about.

Speaker 3 (01:04:07):
It let's target him.

Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
Going back to regulatory agencies, I figured out how Donald
Trump can save almost a billion dollars a year abolished
the FMCSA man, it's nine hundred million dollars are working
with this year, nine hundred and eight million dollars to
be a useless regulatory agency.

Speaker 3 (01:04:25):
So what one signature line through an agency you saved
a billion. Imagine that. There you go.

Speaker 4 (01:04:30):
We don't got them. So we got we got we
got that one. We've got education, We've got e P
A Consumer Potential Protection Bureau. Oh that's the already we're
racking up the big savings right there.

Speaker 3 (01:04:40):
Well, let me ask you a question, the truck drivers.
Is there anything that the FMCSA does that would be
worthy of keeping, maybe keeping it a different agency or
a different something like that, different agency.

Speaker 2 (01:04:51):
Maybe the problem with the FMC is, we're never going
to get all the all these regulations. No I get,
I gives is a force ability of So they'll they'll
work hard. They spend millions and millions of dollars every
year on each state to enforce their regulations for them,
that's how that works. And they work hard enforcing the
sticking broken hours of service rules that only work for
a select few people. They work hard forcing that ELD regulation.

(01:05:16):
But there's such thing as three ninety two point three
and fatigued. If I tell a company, hey, I'm too tired,
I can't drive, or I'm sick today, I can't drive her, whatever,
whatever the reason it is, I cannot drive that truck
companies will still try to push them. And how do
you report this? You go through their data que system.
I mean, you go through this big national database system.
You're supposed to make a report on this that they
never followed through with. Sure, they claim to be understaffter.

(01:05:39):
Basically they just lacked the heart to do it, you.

Speaker 3 (01:05:41):
Know, kind of like filing out, you know, something through Congress,
you know, and it takes months before you even inquire
about it. You know, by that point, whatever the issue was,
it's either over well the person's life has already been
ruined at this point, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:05:53):
Yeah, it's too late to do anything. Nothing's getting done.
And uh so, I mean they just they lack dedication
and follow through. They call themselves an agency for safety,
but they do anything but what pertains to safety. Yeah,
ninety two point three is about all we need. We
don't need ours a service. We just need enforcement on
three ninety two point three. When drivers say I need
to take a rest break, I need to stop running.

Speaker 4 (01:06:15):
Now.

Speaker 2 (01:06:16):
You know, I've had times when I'd run hard. I
didn't mind running hard. In fact, I enjoyed running hard.
But you're only going to do it for so long, right,
So when you tell the dispatcher. Listen, when I get there,
I'm done. I want a day off. They need to
respect that instead of saying, hey, I got you into
the load. It's like, dude, I told you I want
the day off. Oh no, no, the wait you can't
take the day off, you know?

Speaker 4 (01:06:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:06:35):
Right? Yeah, yeah. You should be able to log yourself
out and unavailable for a day or two or whatever.
I think that's the way it should be. I agree.

Speaker 4 (01:06:42):
Yeah. I guess what's gonna happen to Mark guys?

Speaker 2 (01:06:46):
Uh, tomorrow tomorrow? What's tomorrow?

Speaker 3 (01:06:48):
Is uh?

Speaker 2 (01:06:48):
President Trump going to meet with the cheating ping.

Speaker 4 (01:06:51):
Or maybe who cares is going to send that's executive
order dismantling the Partment of Education.

Speaker 3 (01:07:00):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (01:07:01):
How's this going to work? Because it was it was
it was passed through Congress, so it was actually statutortally
created or congressionally created. So how do you dismantle it
by hard created this? No, it was, it was. It
was an act.

Speaker 3 (01:07:18):
Yeah, it was under the Carter administration. For sure, you're.

Speaker 4 (01:07:23):
Push it was. It was a nineteen seventy on the law.
It wasn't it wasn't executive or.

Speaker 2 (01:07:27):
So there's things he can do right, like cut funding,
cut spending. He can reduce some staff. There's things he
can do to cut it, but he can't abolish it.

Speaker 4 (01:07:37):
Well, he will by executive order and then they'll challenge it.
So we'll see where it goes.

Speaker 2 (01:07:41):
Is going to be interesting.

Speaker 3 (01:07:42):
I mean, he's probably well within his rights start to
re you know, divert the fund somewhere else. Probably, you know, I.

Speaker 4 (01:07:48):
Don't know about the verity of Congresses approved it, and
he signed a budget. But but back to the already
get rid of it. They just don't put in future
appropriations bills.

Speaker 2 (01:07:56):
So here's a sense of irony for you. About a
year and a half, maybe possibly two years ago, I
was talking to a gentleman by the name of Ted
through Jeane S. Sheen's office, Senator Sheen here, who's not
running all this next election cycle. And I was explained
to my says, you know, by way of executory you
guys give president a lot of power, a lot of
a lot of ways to use regulatory power that he

(01:08:17):
has a lot of control, can kind of lay down dictate.
So oh, he can only do what we give them.
But I don't realize when they say the secretary may
do this the secretary may do that, or they leave
this big wide stroke you know, broad stroke of the
pen where the president or the secretary of whatever agency
can really has a lot of flexibility to do what
they want to do. It's up to their discretion. Where

(01:08:39):
they do the studies, They do the research, and then
they plan everything and put everything together and determine the
regulations as if they were legislative because it's just so broad, right,
which empowers the President of the United States for regulations
and basically it almost gives him legatory legislative powers.

Speaker 3 (01:08:54):
Sure, and as Congress has done that to advocate the
role so that we always have a boogeyman in the
executive branch and vice versa, you know the brand. Yeah, yeah,
it's a buffer and it's a way for both both
to be able to raise money too. It's it really is,
I believe it or not.

Speaker 2 (01:09:10):
So through this, through this administrative procedure they've created, they
kind of collapse the powers of the executive branch in
the legislative branch. Through this to administrative procedure, they kind
of married them in the way. Okay, almost almost violates
the whole separation of powers things.

Speaker 3 (01:09:29):
Yeah, of course, but it's a way for Congress because
they don't they're not the experts in any of the
fields that they legislate on. I mean, there may be
lawyers or doctors and stuff like that that may have
some knowledge, but they're not certainly experts that you would
say that, you know, but these are the people that
are making the rules, if you will, or some think
tanks making the rules and they just pass it. And
it's like, well, if we don't go into broad strokes,

(01:09:49):
it's less that could be tied back to us. So
that way, whenever the executive branch goes and and forces it,
we can actually attack them or we can side with them,
depending on you know, which parties in office and in
the White House.

Speaker 4 (01:09:59):
So that's what they are the best.

Speaker 3 (01:10:01):
Yeah, it very broad.

Speaker 2 (01:10:02):
Yeah, so yeah, you know, I mean like we got
this acting and Trump didn't pointed a nominated administrator for
the FMCS say he appointed an acting administrator, which I
think is kind of odd because he's not nominating her.
She happens to be from up here in Massachusetts, not
far from where we are now here in Nashville, and
but she knows nothing about trucking. She knows nothing about transportation.

(01:10:24):
Same thing with the regulatory agencies. These people aren't well informed.
They're informed by true professionals in the industry. And that's
the problem with lobbyists, right as they influence these people
through their bs to get what they want. And this
is how an agency becomes a captured agency because now
they're listening to these people, these large entities like the
American Trucking Associations in regard to what I'm doing. And

(01:10:46):
so they have the clout, they have the money, they
have the ability, they have their super packs and and
all the other well not super packs they have they
have packs anyway, and it's not just the ATA has
a pack, but it's all these entities that belong to
the American Trucking Associations. So you got large corporate in
these like Schneider National Carriers, Wan't Enterprise and so on
and so forth, These mega mega industry or corporations of

(01:11:08):
the trucking industry who have their political packs. So they
create a lot of influence and they create a lot
of way to get what they want, which is crippling
to the spawn to peddicaria, which makes up ninety percent
of the industry. You know, the ones you talk about
the responsible and pull over.

Speaker 3 (01:11:27):
Yep, absolutely well. Last week the mission was scrub but
this week we can report that the Nassa ass for
US have returned back to back to Earth safely. And
of course Joe Biden has been reported that. But Joe
Biden had a lack of courage and that's why they
didn't send any any rescue mission up there. Of course
there was no rescue mission. I don't think that was
ready to go, but didn't want to give Elon Musk

(01:11:48):
a win or Trump will win. Whenever he said he
had it ready to go, they basically shine him on
and then of course said no, no, thank you.

Speaker 4 (01:11:57):
SpaceX was able to go over six months ago. They
had a flight, but they turned them down so long
before this. This is it's but I'll tell you why,
don't If you saw the splash down, man, it was
like watching the Apollo program as a kid. You know.
It was incredible, the shoots opening up and yeah, absolutely
gorgeous day. Landing in the Golf America was awesome.

Speaker 3 (01:12:17):
That is cool. It's the first time a US space
capsule or any space capsule has touched down in the
Gulf of America. First time ever I love it.

Speaker 4 (01:12:25):
Yeah, I kept I kept waiting for Major Nelson and
Captain Healy to pop out of that cap.

Speaker 3 (01:12:33):
I love it little, I dream a genie.

Speaker 4 (01:12:34):
Everybody. That was pretty good. That was absolute bretty. I
had to think that, like five minutes before they landed,
they were going seventeen thousand miles.

Speaker 2 (01:12:45):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (01:12:46):
I mean that's some rapid acceleration there, man.

Speaker 3 (01:12:49):
Huh yeah, seventeen thousand to a light, gentle touchdown in
the in the Gulf.

Speaker 4 (01:12:54):
Yeah, they're going sixteen miles an hour when they hit
the water. Wow.

Speaker 3 (01:12:58):
Yeah, like a drop.

Speaker 4 (01:13:00):
That was pretty incredible. I was exciting stuff there, and
more embarrassment for Boeing and I Liberty and I Launch Alliance.
They just didn't get it done. I mean they're lucky
of those astronauts got there one piece with the problems
they had with that capsule, and then here it is SpaceX.
But I'll tell you what, I gotta be honest, guys,
I was not concerned, but I was hoping nothing bad
happened because it was these crazy was to go crazy
as well, go after after Ela Musk and blame him

(01:13:23):
for But you know, it's not a single article compliments
Elon Musk and his vision for this company and why
we're at where we're at, where we're at now. They
just talked about a great mission. Elon Musk was an afterthought,
and without Elon Musk, we wouldn't have that mission we
would do Right now.

Speaker 3 (01:13:35):
We'll think of all the billionaires that Elon Musk is
spurred on to go and explore space. Zuckerberg or not Zuckerberg,
but the Amazon guy right as an example, Uh, the
Virgin Virgin Mobile guy, you know, so you got him,
Richard Branson, right, all these different things, and of course
now it's made NASA get on the ball if you will,
you know, which I think is a good thing. I
don't I think we can go to space in Mars
and other places without NASA. You know, maybe we defund

(01:13:58):
that and we just farm it.

Speaker 2 (01:14:00):
I don't know, maybe get a few were talking about
that about a couple of decades ago.

Speaker 3 (01:14:03):
Might get it cheaper.

Speaker 4 (01:14:04):
I don't know. Well, we've got four major companies, Virgin Galactic,
which has kind of failed, hasn't really achieved a whole lot,
Blue Origins, which is Jeff Bezos's. Yeah, yeah, that put
Captain kirkup and he's technically in the space and brought
him back down. That's pretty much all they've done so far.
And we've got the United Launch Alliance, which includes Boeing
and a few others, and then we've got of course SpaceX.

(01:14:25):
The only one is doing is consistently and successfully. But yeah, no,
it's great stuff to watch that happen. I remember, you
remember moments. I mean I don't remember the days, right,
I just remember as a kid watching all the Apollo
programs because I was very young. But then you know,
when the Shuttle came along, I watched all the Shuttle launches.
Then people lost interest and I happened to be watching
the Challenger. I was in the day and Charlie Company

(01:14:47):
eight signal betime on rose Beracks and back Kreudzock in
nineteen eighty six, and I was sitting there cleaning my
AM sixteen after coming back from the range. And it
was a range where I had a makeup range because
I wasn't available. I had guard you or something and
had it before, so I went to the rain. So
I was the only one in the day room cleaning
my weapon and I'm rotting and cleaning it out and
had the receiver out and I'm wiping it down and
I'm watching it, and I watched it blow up, and
I was dumbfound I could never It's just wow, Wow,

(01:15:10):
that was insane because of a ring. Yeah, it was
an o ring because they were determined to do that
launch instead.

Speaker 3 (01:15:16):
Of just yeah yeah hubers, Yeah, not an ring.

Speaker 4 (01:15:19):
It was wah, yeah it was ring. But yeah, you're
right they yeah, But they had the teacher on there,
christomacull Iff. They had an Asian American on there who
was a co pilot. They had a black American on there.
It was a very diverse Back in nineteen eighty six,
we had diversity. We didn't have to have people tell
us that we're systemic eracist to shut it down her throats,
We're actually doing it.

Speaker 3 (01:15:40):
Everyone I'm worth qualified to be there on the shuttle,
to include the school teacher. He was very intelligent, she
was brilliant.

Speaker 4 (01:15:47):
Yeah, I want a shame that she was lost. She
would be in her sixties today if I'm not mistaken.

Speaker 3 (01:15:51):
So yeah, who knows what what she could have done
in life. You know, she would have done great things.
I think, Oh, no doubt. After coming for back, What
a story to tell kids. Everyone woul want to be
in her class for the rest of the life. So
Trump also appointed the Board of Visitors to the Nations
of cat Military Academies. Here's the ones for West Point
Lieutenant General Michael Flynn. He is appointed along with represented

(01:16:12):
Wesley Hunt, Maureen Benn and that of course that's she's
a west Point alump.

Speaker 4 (01:16:16):
And that's Steve Yeah. And then also uh Metal Haunter
recipient to David Bellavia, the only living Iraq Conflict Medal
Honor recipient, retired General Michael Michael, my General Dan Walwrath,
and Megan Mobbs west Point graduate Conservative activists. Also Tommy Tuberville.

(01:16:37):
And then this one. I'm stumped by turning points Charlie
Kirk scratching my head on that ah.

Speaker 3 (01:16:44):
That guy, he has no business being there. I've had
to agree about him in the last couple of days.
No business being there. Here's the guy who's making made
his living. And I'm not saying I disagree with a
lot of his politics, but he's made a living just
going around is yam on about nonsense and some he's
a problem solveim because that's all he does is he
run his mouth and makes a lot of money doing.

Speaker 4 (01:17:05):
It, yep, and he have no business being there, part
of that in crowd of small conservatives who only promote
other people in the in crowd, and we have no
interest in talking to anybody. So I remember when Charlie
Kirk turning point USA didn want to talk to anybody
over the age of thirty, and I'm comical. I'm laughing
at their comical behavior because they're all going to be
over the age thirty. And then they sort of dropped
that Moniker after he got over thirty. So then also

(01:17:27):
we got David Bell, I said, I said, David, I'm sorry.
So Colonel Doug got Nikolai and then Dana A Dina Powell.
Uh yeah, so that at the Air Force Academy. But
Charlie Kirk, I mean that, that's that's scratched my head.

Speaker 3 (01:17:41):
No no reason to be there, no reason, and I
think he didn't need to drop out of college, which
it doesn't matter.

Speaker 4 (01:17:47):
That's fight, it doesn't matter. But but I mean, these
are these are the folks that are supposed to be,
you know, with the border, I supposed to oversee morale, finance, academics,
and student life of each academy, which made it I
think kind of odd staff Sergeant David Bellavia to be
on the board. I mean nothing against him, but I
don't understand how an n c O is is going
to have experience. I suppose because he brings moral code

(01:18:08):
and character to it, maybe that's supposed to help him.
That's that's fine, But the Charlie Kirk, when I'm just
scratching my head, it just shows that you don't have
to be smart or good.

Speaker 3 (01:18:16):
You just have to be connected, connected right place, right time,
and have no shame of what what you do or
say and who you say it to or about. I'm
just like, there's there's too many of those people out
there on the right and on the left, and it's
people care about what they have to say because they
have all these followers. I don't care one thing about
what you have to say. I don't care about the
number of followers you have to say. Are you competent?

(01:18:38):
What experience do you have? Then I'm then I may
listen to you. You know, are you on point or
are you just saying things that make yourself you know,
to be able to raise money and stir up trouble.
You know, just because a Democrat said one thing, you
got to come out and say the opposite. You know,
that's that's not a way of going solve any problems,
going tit for tat.

Speaker 4 (01:18:55):
No, it's not good governance. It's just politics and what
we need. We need our leaders, not not politicians. Problems
politicians not leaders.

Speaker 3 (01:19:02):
Charlie Kirk great on running campaigns. You know, communication, you know,
you know, getting out a message, whatever the case may be.
There you go, he's perfect over there. I wouldn't dispute
that at all, but it has no business being anywhere
anywhere associated with the military.

Speaker 4 (01:19:18):
Yeah, no, I don't. I don't think he's I don't
think he's great at those things.

Speaker 3 (01:19:22):
Well, he certainly has certainly has a following, is able
to raise a lot of money, so in the political
world that that goes a long way. I wouldn't. I
wouldn't vote for him for anything. I can tell you that,
not even Dogcatcher. I just don't. I don't trust the guy.
But somehow he's on a pedestal because he's got a
lot of following. I don't trust the guy, one bet,
I've seen him too many times behind the scenes. I
don't trust you, Sorry, buddy.

Speaker 4 (01:19:40):
Yeah no, I got you. It's look that whole crowd,
the bench Hero, the Charlie Kirk, the Candice Owens. I
just don't, don't, I don't whatever happened to Stephen Crowder.
He's been very quiet lately, out of crowded. He's a
big deal. He's still doing Something's been very I.

Speaker 2 (01:19:55):
Think he's still on rumble. Isn't he looking today? And
ask I saw him there?

Speaker 4 (01:20:01):
That yeah's Vanity Project?

Speaker 3 (01:20:05):
Yeah, damn and Dan Bongino. It's like who who. I've
met him several times and spoken to him, but he
has kind of that that that ego head, you know
what I mean, that big head of like, oh I
believe my hype. It's like you got a big following.
He got in with the right crowd. I mean what
he lost, lost the Senate race, in the house race
in Maryland. Again, nothing nothing wrong with somebody losing a
race if you run a race. But he ran on

(01:20:25):
some name recognition to start with, right, right, And now
now he's where he's at essentially based on name recognition
and all the connections because he's in the end crowd.

Speaker 4 (01:20:37):
Yeah No, But I was getting at with the with
the with the Shapiro's and the and the and the
Candice Owens and all those guys. They're all part of this.
This this insular group doesn't let anybody else in. And
we also really challenge to people that I don't know
if they're in that group, but they're also kind of quiet.
I haven't heard anything from from what's his name there
for ages the conservative Uh oh gosh, drawing a blank

(01:20:58):
now senior moments my tongue. There any fellow.

Speaker 2 (01:21:02):
Oh are you talking about Umswami?

Speaker 4 (01:21:06):
No, No, that's not the that's not our first I
know the.

Speaker 3 (01:21:12):
Movies.

Speaker 4 (01:21:13):
Yeah, yeah, I mean I haven't heard from so I
can't remember his name.

Speaker 3 (01:21:18):
Or or you're talking about am not Shyamalan with a twist,
I see the entire time in that movie you find
out that the guy was Bruce Willis the entire time.
It's like, that's not the part of the movie. He
was dead.

Speaker 4 (01:21:34):
Yeah that was yeah, Yeah, that's that's a soccer by
the movie is a hard time drawing up. But Dennis
used to be everywhere all the time. But these people
kind of push them to the side. You know, it's
unfortunate and they're kind of but there's other people who
are conservatives who will share their time and don't mind.
I mean one of them is Victor Davis Hansen, Guy's Brayant.
I've had my program, not recently, but I've had about

(01:21:55):
three times in the past, and I had my program
only had a few thousand subscribers, and and people asked
me to get him on and he was humbling.

Speaker 3 (01:22:01):
So yeah, that goes to show that people like that
who have truly something to say, something to offer, they
don't care the size of your audience. They're going to
come on and say it if you're a reasonable, level
headed person who's not just going to go on there
and attacking.

Speaker 4 (01:22:14):
I've always thought it. I've never turned anyway down unless
they're racist.

Speaker 2 (01:22:17):
So Danesi Desuza has four point nine million million followers
on that he does podcast on Apple and apparently he
does locals dot com.

Speaker 4 (01:22:28):
Oh, I've got a locals account. I haven't touched it months.
I wonderf it's still active because it got tied to Rumbles.

Speaker 2 (01:22:34):
Yeah, yeah, it's connected. Somehow went out and I didn't
even know it existed until Rumble.

Speaker 4 (01:22:41):
Yeah. I think a lot of people found out about
it because because the Rumble linked up with himself.

Speaker 2 (01:22:46):
Yeah, okay, I didn't do Rumble for a long time.
I recently just started looking at Rumble doing stuff with it.
I didn't do it for forever and a day. When
I first went over there, I didn't get it.

Speaker 4 (01:22:56):
It just didn't.

Speaker 2 (01:22:56):
It had the whole thing about coins and st stuff
like that, like TikTok does. I don't get into that stuff.
I don't understand that stuff.

Speaker 4 (01:23:05):
You don't understand locals.

Speaker 2 (01:23:07):
No, No, the coins and the nonsense of diamonds and coins.

Speaker 3 (01:23:11):
And he understands only fans though, right.

Speaker 2 (01:23:15):
No, No, I don't have only fans either, So I
don't understand.

Speaker 3 (01:23:18):
Oh, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:23:19):
I've heard stories about only fans, but I don't know
only fans.

Speaker 4 (01:23:24):
Well, you're speaking of as ironic as I just looked
at my locals account here and on the February or
January twenty sixth to twenty twenty two, I was covering
the Canadian Truckers rally that's in here, yep, speaking of truckers.

Speaker 2 (01:23:36):
So I heard there were some kind of rumors that
they're thinking about firing up another one of those rallies,
but probably just talk.

Speaker 4 (01:23:45):
I don't know, could be maybe maybe not. I cannot
confirm nor deny any of that because I'd heard about it.

Speaker 2 (01:23:50):
Let's hope it's not just talk. Let's have another one,
a convoy for freedom man.

Speaker 4 (01:23:55):
Well, we don't heed these people all get locked up
and have the livelihoods taken from them. Absolutely, that kind
of sucks.

Speaker 2 (01:24:02):
Yeah, that was pretty bad. I can't think of that
guy's name.

Speaker 4 (01:24:05):
He was.

Speaker 2 (01:24:05):
He was an influencer and he got he was involved
in that really heavily. And you know, podcaster man, sure enough,
he was one of the first people that locked up.

Speaker 3 (01:24:15):
Of course I did. Of course, the guy who can
get the information out there, you can lock them up.
You can, you know, basically cripple any movement.

Speaker 2 (01:24:23):
He was like Oman the dead terrorists, silence, I kill.

Speaker 3 (01:24:27):
You, right?

Speaker 4 (01:24:31):
All right?

Speaker 3 (01:24:32):
What else we got, John? What else we got?

Speaker 4 (01:24:34):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (01:24:34):
What do we have?

Speaker 2 (01:24:35):
Let's see? I think I'm running one things here. I
did the gen Z thing, and we got going on?
What do we got going on in the world?

Speaker 4 (01:24:46):
Well, Germany is updating a travel advisory for its citizens
after we detained a couple of people who enter the
country illegally. So it kind of undermines the argument that
trumps a racist that we only go after people of
color who come to the country illegally because we going
after to Germans who slipped in the country league and
they can be detained. So the Germans are not happy
about that. They have said that we're not going to
accept this. Well, I don't think we really care.

Speaker 2 (01:25:10):
So what is Cash Patateel doing now? Is acting director
of the Barrel Bell Call Tobacco On Firearms, but he's
also the director of the FBI.

Speaker 4 (01:25:20):
That's because we don't have anybody appointed to atf so
he's just filling in that role. But he is the
director of the FBI. Cash Betel is making awesome, awesome
recruiting videos. Did you see the FBI recruiting video. None
of this. I have two mommies and my days at
the FBI. Now, it's like Cash Betel comes out there
and they've got black Hall Call coops flying in a
swat team from FBI. They fast rope down and they

(01:25:44):
blow the doors in this building and along here comes
Cash Battel wearing a cap and he's got camouflaged jack
and on. He walks up looking all stiff and stern.
This is a recruiting video. It's like I'm just waiting
for him to break out inude. Be all that you
get by waiting for that to break out. But what
a great recruiting ad. Remember the stupid army ads a

(01:26:05):
couple years ago. I was raised by two mommies, and
I always wanted to be in the army.

Speaker 3 (01:26:11):
Yeah yeah, so, but I knew I couldn't be because
you know, I'm too much of a weakling and don't
want to don't want to really serve my country. Plus
you got to get up early apparently, you know, and
then they yell at you occasionally, you know, and you
got to exercise. I don't want to do that. I
just want to wear my hair coulor and get my
sex change, do all that. You know, that's what people
want to do in the Joe Biden's army, right, myself.

Speaker 4 (01:26:32):
Wasn't much of an army by the time Biden got
done with it. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:26:35):
Oh, I want to feel good about myself, get my
college education, get my transgender, my sex change and all
this stuff, and then leave the army having provided no
service to the country.

Speaker 4 (01:26:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:26:44):
I just turned into some sort of camp right.

Speaker 3 (01:26:46):
Yeah, since I started the sex change, you know, you
can't make me do stuff. That's what they were doing
so years Underbiden.

Speaker 2 (01:26:53):
Send him another leader. Chuck Schumer sorted his party's roles
to take down President Donald Trump. Numbers as a Democrats
face a popularity crisis, So that's role is to just
take Donald take down Donald Trump right and his agenda.
So it doesn't make sense. So serving your constituent's supposed
to be serving your people. This is a man who
should not be holding office right.

Speaker 3 (01:27:15):
Dully elected president fulfilling his constitutional role as head of state,
chief executive, you know, commander chief, all this stuff. Your
job is to undermine that. How is that your oath
to the constitution? The Shumer I'm not saying you have
to agree with him on everything and you vote in Congress,
but to try to stop him on everything, I mean,
how is that fulfilling your your oath of office. I

(01:27:37):
don't think it is.

Speaker 2 (01:27:38):
How about good policy and good you know? I mean
if your if your role is just to take down
the president of the United States of America. And I
remember the Bide administration, our bipartisan bill. You know, apparently
Republicans were trying to work with you as crippled as
you were as President of the United States of America
and your party being as crippled as it is. Republicans
were trying to get something done with your party.

Speaker 3 (01:28:02):
Right, that's true. Yeah, trying to help you out, you know,
trying to save you from yourself. But now I'm good.
You know. It's it's like the coast guard shows up
and the guy's like on the top of his boat,
you know, and it's thinking, He's like, no, I'm good.
I'm waiting on Jesus to show up. It's like, yeah,
you know what I mean kind of like that. Yeah,
he's sent us to help you out, buddy.

Speaker 2 (01:28:22):
Come on, now here's a good one for you. Was
Sean put in here? This just in Chuck Schumer looked
through his glasses instead of over them.

Speaker 3 (01:28:30):
You've never seen that before, read something.

Speaker 4 (01:28:31):
I never seen him look through them. Hey, you know
one thing we forgot on the on the SpaceX thing,
guys did if you watch then? Did you know the
dolphins showed up? Did you watch that? I saw that.

Speaker 3 (01:28:40):
That was so cool.

Speaker 4 (01:28:41):
Hey, guys, welcome back.

Speaker 3 (01:28:43):
But that's like a good omen like for sailors, right,
So it's a good omen right, maybe for SpaceX I
don't know, or maybe our space program.

Speaker 2 (01:28:50):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:28:50):
Maybe, but it's pretty wild. They all showed up, they're
all friendly, just checking out what was going on. Hey, hey, guys,
look over here, somebody's playing in our water.

Speaker 3 (01:28:57):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:28:58):
It was pretty wild though. I mean, I mean, you
couldn't have planned that better what I was. And it
was such a beautiful day too. It's gorgeous sky. It's
just wonderful. Was such a you know, fantastic SpaceX. Thank gosh,
we've got those guys out there, man, they're doing a
great job. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:29:11):
So well, yeh, somebody somebody asked I was watching some
some videos on on social media and they were kind
of you know, going through social media what people are saying.
It was like a social media influencer on the left set.
Oh you can see how it's AI generate. It's not
real the dolphins. Look, they made that up. It's not real.
So now it's apparently AI from Elon Musk.

Speaker 4 (01:29:30):
Well, you know, there's it's there's The flat earthers are
still out there, man, Yeah, Mark the moon landing was
on a stage in Hollywood, remember, yeah, oh yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:29:39):
Everywhere everywhere around the world there are flat earthers, Like, come.

Speaker 2 (01:29:42):
On though, so Chris Bannon or Steve Bannon brother wants to.
He's working on something he's got up his sleeve to
make your So Donald Trump can run again in twenty
twenty eight, become run for a third term. He goes
to become forty probably us still be the forty seventh,
but yeah, yeah, run for a third term. The only

(01:30:05):
way there's only one way to go about that that
I know of, and that's to ratify the US Constitution
to amenda what is.

Speaker 3 (01:30:12):
It, twenty twenty fifth. I think there's the one that
shared everything up right, twenty fifth Yeah, yeah, twenty fifth amendment. Yeah,
because that happened after FDR. Once he was in office,
they changed it. They also changed the inauguration day from
what March fourth to January twentieth. It's not like he
got short term. I mean he served almost four terms.
I mean he was in his fourth terms.

Speaker 2 (01:30:31):
Well, yeah, I passed away during the beginning of them.

Speaker 3 (01:30:34):
Wasn't it right?

Speaker 4 (01:30:35):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:30:35):
Absolutely, and you got Truman.

Speaker 2 (01:30:36):
That's when Truman come in.

Speaker 4 (01:30:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:30:38):
One of the shortest Vice presidencies in history. I think
it was like the third shortest.

Speaker 4 (01:30:42):
I believe it was.

Speaker 2 (01:30:43):
Yeah, he was so nice to deliverate the Administrator Procedure
Act in nineteen forty seven. If he's around, I'd have
to write him a thank you letter of some sorts.
Sarcastically speaking, that's like the day Wilson was regretful for
having signed the The oh darn it, Federal Reserve was

(01:31:10):
a revenue Act of nineteen thirteen. They created the Federal.

Speaker 3 (01:31:12):
Reserve, right, I think so.

Speaker 2 (01:31:16):
They say he was regretful for that. He didn't understand
what he was doing at the time of the detriment,
because that ultimately led up to the Great Depression. If
I'm not mistaken, what led to the Great Depression? So
Federal Reserve, there's some nonsense about what they do, had
something to his interest rates or something they did something

(01:31:39):
shortly after they were created that some while after they
were created that led up to the Great Depression.

Speaker 4 (01:31:46):
Well, the real problem the Great Depression is the right
of the banks. That's what caused it. So people panicked,
and so they rushed to take their money out of
the banks, and the banks didn't have enough cash in it,
and there was no Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to protect
them to the run of the banks. The banks, in
order to get the cash had to foreclothes on property
they started confiscating homes and you know, and selling them

(01:32:07):
and which drew down the property prices because of a
lot of things, and just it's one thing another. Then
we get this idiot named Franklin Delano Roosevelt came in office,
who loved socialism, who accused state run programs to create
fake employment, which held back the economy. And if it
wasn't for World War Two, who knows when we would
have got out of that depression. That their actions of
Franklin Roosevelt extended the depression by at least a decade.

Speaker 2 (01:32:29):
Yeah, I would say so. I always thought it was
a Truman that had a change in policy. Supposedly when
he took over the White House it was dilapidating. I
think it was Truman that It's probably one of the
finer things he ever did. But he borrowed money to
fix the White House. He says, is nation's first house.
It's dilapidating, and we're going to fix it.

Speaker 4 (01:32:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:32:50):
I kind of always thought that inspired businesses to follow
suit and do the same.

Speaker 3 (01:32:53):
Yeah, Triman did that. He also put the balcony on
the I don't say the back half, but on the
south side of it they now call the trim and balcony.

Speaker 4 (01:33:01):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (01:33:02):
He also the basement right, the cellar well dug outunderneath
the White House and neither and.

Speaker 4 (01:33:08):
I if there's anything under the White House. You watch
the Hollywood movies. Nothing you see here movie.

Speaker 3 (01:33:13):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:33:13):
I didn't say it went down fifty stories.

Speaker 4 (01:33:16):
Thirty six. Didn't say how many.

Speaker 2 (01:33:20):
Thirty six. There must be something the furious meaning behind
thirty six?

Speaker 4 (01:33:24):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (01:33:25):
Chris? Is it like the Devil's number or no?

Speaker 4 (01:33:28):
They ran out of concrete after that, I could reach.

Speaker 2 (01:33:33):
Any for the excavator can only go far down, so
far down.

Speaker 4 (01:33:35):
Right eventually win you wind up in the water table.
You gotta be careful there. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:33:39):
Yeah, it is close to the ocean. I mean it is.
It's elevated. But they got subways. And have you ever
been in the subways in DC? I'm sure, yeah, anything
the Metro, Yeah, it's the subways. Yeah, it's crazy. Last
time I was down there, I was like, Wow, they're
like huge in cavernous, I mean, unreal hard they are there.

Speaker 4 (01:34:01):
Uh well, it's I mean there's big arches, you know
when you come into the stations where you changed. I
don't like the Metro in DC because it's just it's
psychaotic and they're like Nazis. Man, don't you dare eat
on one of the things. I'll arrest you for that.
I remember they arrested like this eleven to twelve year
old girl who was riding at home from school and
she hadn't had a chance each so she was like
nibbling on a snack or something. She got arrested, put handcuffs.

(01:34:23):
Oh crazy place. No, but that's the rules. They're very
strict on it. So that's that's not my cup of tea.

Speaker 2 (01:34:30):
Come on, could you said put that away?

Speaker 4 (01:34:32):
Hun? Sure, but that would be personal with a heart,
a human being.

Speaker 2 (01:34:36):
Wow, I've had I've had some good luck with DC
police down there. I don't have any problems. I mean,
I hear people from Jay six it was a whole
different story. But from my understanding, some of these some
of these officers they used during Jay six. Listening to
the Jay sixers doing the research had talked about some
of these officers have checkered past that I don't either.

(01:35:01):
I'm just saying the spectatively speaking, this is what they're saying.
I I you know, I thought Jay six was a
setup it wouldn't surprise meditating for somebody in uniform that
would suit their needs. But I've been to DC, worked
with some of the law enforcement down there, and they
were they were awesome people, man, beautiful people, had no
problems at all whatsoever. They worked well with us. Unexpected

(01:35:22):
protests show up there and they were just like, oh, here,
here's what we can do, and walked us through it.
You know, so we weren't impeding on travelers and things
like that. And they said, but you don't have to
rush hour traffic. Can go back here, park out on
constitution now, we don't mind.

Speaker 3 (01:35:40):
Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 2 (01:35:41):
You know, you kind of set up, you set the
pace with cops. A lot of people don't understand that.
The cop pulls you over and ask you how you're doing.
I mean, you know, it's a polite way to approach somebody, right,
how you doing today, sir, But it's also a way
to gauge somebody's attitude. Yeah, and start swearing a cursing adhim,
guess who's getting a ticket today, sunshine? You know, I
mean it's.

Speaker 4 (01:36:02):
Well, there's a big change gonna affect everybody come up here.
Guys don't know if you've heard about this, so Security
Administration what they're doing, So I have not. They announced
on Monday this week that they will now need to
verify your identity in person or online, but no longer
accept the verification over the phone. So wow, So if
you want to get benefits or change your direct deposits,

(01:36:24):
you're gonna have to see them in person. I don't
know if it's a zoom session or what, but yeah,
they're not gonna let you call in anymore. That's crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:36:31):
They must have something where people go out, say, I
don't know, if you're at nursing homes and things like that.
People can't travel so well. Elderly people, they must have
people that go out to them and visit with them
in their homes or the nursing home or whoever it
is that they they.

Speaker 3 (01:36:47):
Yeah, well I do. I've done work with hospice organizations
and volunteer working behind the scenes. There are people who
help residents, that's what they call them. Their residents deal
with stuff like that, be able to get reach benefits,
you know, SSA, Medicare, Medicaid and all that stuff. So
they do have people that they staff to help them
with that. Any reputable one do.

Speaker 2 (01:37:07):
That for sure, outside these nice people from the Party
of the Left that will go in there and help
them with voting and stuff and get their.

Speaker 3 (01:37:16):
Yeah, but any good county, we'll during early voting or
before early voting, we'll go in and hold a voting
session in these places and we'll ensure that you know,
you don't have riffra At least in Tennessee, they do that.

Speaker 2 (01:37:27):
Yeah, they give them an opportunity to vote that. Yeah,
so they can. They're restricted for travels.

Speaker 3 (01:37:32):
So yeah, and it's our election commission that goes and
does it. They set up stuff in their day room
or wherever somewhere in a common area that they can
come and be assisted to get in there. And it's
hell just like they're going to an actual polling place.

Speaker 2 (01:37:44):
Yeah, it's fair enough as voting and stuff can actually
both seal it.

Speaker 3 (01:37:47):
And right, right, and all the laws apply, you know,
whenever they're in their voting. So you can't have somebody
coming up trying to do your ballot for you stuff
like that, but you do have people who are there
to assist them who can legally do that. You can't
have like a third party do it.

Speaker 2 (01:38:02):
Yeah, Yeah, they have to be with the with the
voting or whatever registry or whatever it's called.

Speaker 3 (01:38:11):
Just lend lend assistance and carrying out what you want,
your wish, if you will. And usually there there's two
two persons integrity observing that as you do it.

Speaker 2 (01:38:19):
So nice.

Speaker 4 (01:38:21):
Speaking of integrity, whatever happened to the Fort Knox audit
and all the gold? I mean, that went quiet. I
wondering what.

Speaker 2 (01:38:29):
Maybe maybe they needed more time to paint the bars.

Speaker 3 (01:38:31):
Maybe they sent mister President since their last email, you know,
on the day you left office. The gold is still
not here. We'll update soon, No, I mean.

Speaker 4 (01:38:40):
They've probably got one bureau crack and then what's the update. Man,
there's a lot of gold bars down here. I'm still counting. Yeah, seriously,
that story just went quiet. That was everybody making a
big deal. I wonder if they'll be gold missing and
just everybody went quiet. You know, it's just nothing on that.

Speaker 2 (01:38:57):
Well that's a good question, man, I'd like to know.
I like to know how much is there?

Speaker 3 (01:39:03):
Yeah, well, go to New York. I think there's more
golden at the Federal Reserve in New York.

Speaker 4 (01:39:07):
Right then. In I've seen I've seen the movie. I
know there's more gold there, right.

Speaker 3 (01:39:14):
Too, baby?

Speaker 5 (01:39:15):
Right?

Speaker 4 (01:39:15):
I heard that wasn't two? That was like four? Was it?

Speaker 5 (01:39:18):
No?

Speaker 3 (01:39:18):
Wait?

Speaker 4 (01:39:19):
Two?

Speaker 3 (01:39:20):
You're right? I'm sorry Yeah, yeah, I'm sorry. Yeah, I
think it was three.

Speaker 4 (01:39:25):
I think it was three.

Speaker 3 (01:39:26):
Sorry, And it was on today, That's why I popped
in my head. Yeah, yeah, where do you.

Speaker 4 (01:39:29):
Want to go to?

Speaker 3 (01:39:30):
Julia?

Speaker 4 (01:39:30):
Or a stickers bar? Look around, man, the cops are
into something.

Speaker 3 (01:39:33):
It's Christmas still City Hall and he looks downtown like, okay.

Speaker 4 (01:39:38):
There's gold and there's gold and the Federal Reserve. Yep. Yeah,
that's a great movie man, Like why have you all
got these stacks of quarters in their pocket the time?

Speaker 3 (01:39:46):
And didn't say, yeah, that's great for the tolls, for.

Speaker 4 (01:39:50):
The toes, that's the tells, that's it. Yeah, good stuff. Yeah.
That was one with Jeremy Irons in it.

Speaker 3 (01:39:55):
Yeah, yeah, this is the time and didn't stay.

Speaker 4 (01:39:59):
Yeah, what a great die heard three? That was the one. Yeah. Now,
I thought the first one was classic, the second one
was okay, and the third one was awesome as well. Yeah,
and then the next one after that was kind of lame.

Speaker 3 (01:40:10):
So but yeah, yeah they got lamb. I think the
one where he went overseas and his son was a
spy or something that was supposed to be. I think
it was supposed to be a different movie, and then
they kind of just rebranded a little bit, changed a
few things, made it a die hard movie.

Speaker 4 (01:40:22):
Yeah, changed the name to John McLean.

Speaker 3 (01:40:24):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, I think that's what happened.

Speaker 5 (01:40:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:40:30):
Seriously, though, what is that gold in Fort Knox? You
got to wonder about that. You got to wonder about that.
The difference if the gold in the federal reserve, unless
it's being healthy in our states, it's not ours. It's
federal reserves. That's an independent body, whereas the Golden Fore
Knox belongs to the people.

Speaker 2 (01:40:42):
No, they got Golden Federal Reserve, different different facilities where
they stored for the government, but they also store private goals.

Speaker 4 (01:40:49):
That's what I'm getting. Yeah, so they store gold for
other countries. And for not going for.

Speaker 3 (01:40:56):
That was a great subliminal man, right, there was great.

Speaker 4 (01:41:00):
Is it safe? Oh? That was the movie Scared of
Jesus out of Me? Man? Is it safe? Yeah, that's
the marathon man, Dustin Hoffmann. Oh man, Yeah, that's the dentist,
the dentist. Is it safe? Ah, just tell me if
it's safe. Doesn't know what he's talking about. It has
nothing to do with it. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:41:19):
Yeah, he had that knife up his sleeve. That was
kind of wasn't it. Oh wow, Yeah, that's the man.
Stop him. And like the lady was walking down you know,
was he the butcher burking out whatever he was? I
can't remember, right, but I mean the.

Speaker 4 (01:41:30):
Guy's walking down the streets to Manhattan. I mean, okay, dude,
if you're gonna run into elderly Jews, that's the one
place you're gonna run into them. You know, all these
concentrations camp survivors recognize him. Not the place you want
to be hanging out. Man.

Speaker 3 (01:41:42):
No, No, that was especially in the Diamond District during
those days, for sure.

Speaker 4 (01:41:48):
No, exactly exactly. Yeah, now that was that was gosh,
that was that. Man's that movie?

Speaker 3 (01:41:55):
Great movie though, great, It was fantastic.

Speaker 4 (01:41:58):
Now it was a really good movie. But I mean,
i'd be't scared about Freddy Krueger and Friday thirteenth and
yeah that's so stupid, but exactly.

Speaker 3 (01:42:05):
But a movie about real people that you know, they
could actually do some of these things like psychotics, you know,
like a John Wayne Gazek we talked about, you know,
Ed Gean, those are real people that and they exist
right now, some of these types of people. That's what's
scary about it.

Speaker 2 (01:42:20):
Yeah, have you guys heard anything about Trump? Last weekend
was bombing Hoofi's.

Speaker 3 (01:42:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:42:28):
Yeah, and apparently the idea of announced on Wednesday that'd
be today. It expanded ground operations in central and southern
Gaza over the past twenty four hours, even the broad
security zones and create partial buffer between northern and southern Gaza.

Speaker 4 (01:42:40):
Yeah. They've been bombing aside out of guys for three
days and today's sent ground troops soon.

Speaker 2 (01:42:45):
So they're trying to wrap this stuff up. By the
sounds of it, Wow, I wouldn't hold my breath.

Speaker 4 (01:42:49):
And wrapping up it's like the surface of Mars. Now
it's just a polor ubble people can hide. It's like Stalingrad.

Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
There was supposed to be peace talks and exchange of prisoners,
which really wasn't prisoner as much as it was.

Speaker 3 (01:43:00):
But at least that that that does give closure to
families or so they know what happened to their family
member to a good degree, to a degree.

Speaker 2 (01:43:09):
You know, we're out of the peace talks now. We're yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:43:14):
I mean, what about Ukraine? Though, where are we at
with that? I think what will happen is there'll be
some middle of the night deal and all of a
sudden Trump will announce it, and all of a sudden,
the Democrats will just kind of lose their stuff and
it would be probably the best deal ever, and they'll
try to pick it apart, no doubt.

Speaker 4 (01:43:29):
That's their mo that's what they're all about. I mean,
just see now, this is the party of No. That's
what they've always been the only time the Party of
Yes is when they've got power, and then they push
all this crazy stuff through and some Republicans go along
with them. But you know.

Speaker 3 (01:43:42):
What's funny is the Republicans in the next few years
they'll be like, we're okay with trans now, and then
all of a sudden trans will be out for the Dems.
They'll be against it.

Speaker 4 (01:43:51):
Well, that's the best way to get rid of something before.
If you're Republican.

Speaker 3 (01:43:54):
Yeah, absolutely, now, we're good with that.

Speaker 4 (01:43:56):
You can.

Speaker 3 (01:43:57):
We don't want it now. We don't want that energy.

Speaker 4 (01:44:00):
I'm all for it. Oh No, green energy is evil.

Speaker 3 (01:44:03):
Republicans are for green energy? How dare they outrage? Just
to be outraged because it's a Republican. You know, I've
just didn't had conversations with people before, especially in DC,
you know, at a bar all to have it or somewhere,
you know, just having good conversation and getting along with people.
And then they find out like, oh, you're a Republican,
and it's all of a sudden, you're the worst person

(01:44:25):
in the world, and now they want to attack you
for everything ever Republicans ever said. It's like, I don't
support everything every Republican, everything, every Republican ever said. So
why do I have to atone for that? Shouldn't you
have to toe them for what Democrats do? Or say? No,
you know, it didn't work that way for them. They
got pissed quick.

Speaker 4 (01:44:41):
No. It's look, I tell people, you know, I'm an American,
first Conservative. Second in New York, I'm Frank. In Chicago,
I'm Earnest. You know, so Frank and Earnest and to
be Frank and Ernest. I love those My favorite life
for the long kiss good night. He's on Larry King. Larry,
you know, I like to be Frank. It's a New
York and Frankish member joke. It was a great live

(01:45:06):
in New York. Go yes, Oh gosh, Larry king Man,
hunchback leaning over like this, we got alive to.

Speaker 3 (01:45:14):
The White House. Yeah, he had a conspiracy going on.
How much did this suspender industry pay him?

Speaker 4 (01:45:20):
You know? So let me ask you guys a question.
I don't think about this much, but but I do
have it on my shelf over there. And as he
would used to say, in my formerly nicotine stained hands,
but I never smoke, so that it doesn't really apply
to me. But right right, I mean, how much do
we actually miss Rush Limbaugh?

Speaker 5 (01:45:35):
You know?

Speaker 4 (01:45:35):
What a loss?

Speaker 5 (01:45:36):
You know.

Speaker 4 (01:45:36):
I don't think Abouy's really talked about that, but what
a loss. I mean, he's gone, and what a great
voice he was for so many millions of people, and
it's just gone. And nobody's really filled those shoes.

Speaker 2 (01:45:48):
Well, Tucker Carlson's gotten quite a bit of fame for
what it is he does, but he kind of faded away,
I think a little bit. There is a gentleman by
the name I don't know if you know the name,
Joe Van Hutton Pilitzer. He does some pretty good show,
not like Rush Limbaugh. Because these guys aren't on mainstream
media the way Rush Limbaugh was out there and you know,
vastly heard on the radio. These guys are doing internet broadcasting.

Speaker 4 (01:46:11):
Well. Tucker Carlson is as good at what he does,
but he's also prone to hyperbole and sensationalism. I agree,
and I saw that in him his interview with Aaron Threats,
who's a friend of mine, and throats is over here,
and he interviewed it mean Ertz is always getting attack
for making false claims of white genocide, which he doesn't do,
and for you know, only caring about white people's out there,
which isn't the case. But anyway, so Tucker Carlson kind

(01:46:33):
of was the one saying all that in his interview,
and that kind of reminded me how he's He is
prone to bombastic statements and sensationalism. I don't know if
he doesn't make a point, but he does it in seriousness.
And Rush never played that game. You can almost never
catch Rush over stating the case. He didn't have to
thinks for someone rage. He just stated the facts.

Speaker 3 (01:46:51):
Yeah, absolutely, Yeah, he'd lay it out there. And then
he kind of liked with Paul Harvey with the rest
of the story. Can you imagine, and he would lay
it out there. He'd be like, yeah, i'd be outright.
But if it's a Democrat, they don't get outraged, you know,
whenever their people do things. But republicas we call our
own out Yeah, and it.

Speaker 4 (01:47:07):
Used to be fun. I mean, I still enjoy listen
because he's still pretty smart. But I'm going to TV
isn't quite saying, but but I missed the days when
you know, it'd be like, get off the phone, you
big dope, Mark Levin, Mark Levin, get off my phone.

Speaker 3 (01:47:20):
You're a waste of oxygen.

Speaker 4 (01:47:22):
I don't model my my my performance off anybody, but
but some of my mannerisms are very akin to Mark
Levin in his heydays, like all right, fine, just hit
the road, jack, you know, basically, get off the phone.
You big dope.

Speaker 3 (01:47:33):
Yeah, he big dope.

Speaker 4 (01:47:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:47:34):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (01:47:35):
Yeah. Now, but I miss Rush, you know, it was
it was great. I liked when he went on the
NFL Show. Unfortunately can do pretty quickly as he was
really good. But you had the audacity to say that
one of the reasons why people like Donovan Nexon much
is because he was black, and like, oh, it's a
racist now, it's a statement of fact. I mean, Donovan
mad was a great quarterback, but he was overplayed in
the press simply because he was black. Now all the

(01:47:56):
quarterbacks are black, and nobody talks about anybody except Mahomes.

Speaker 3 (01:48:01):
Right, yeah that's true. Yeah, Well they talk about the
guy out of Cincinnati occasionally, right, who's that exactly? Yeah,
that's what Johnny Fever occasion. Yeah, Johnny Fever. Yeah, we're
gonna have a turkey drop, but no occasion talking about
that guy.

Speaker 4 (01:48:16):
Right, Oh, those turkeys drops. That was classic.

Speaker 3 (01:48:20):
I swear to God, I thought Turkey's good fla.

Speaker 2 (01:48:24):
God is my witness, Yeah, God.

Speaker 3 (01:48:25):
Is my witness.

Speaker 2 (01:48:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:48:27):
Yeah, that was one of the most famous famous episodes
of television history.

Speaker 2 (01:48:32):
It's so funny, like a scooter.

Speaker 3 (01:48:35):
Yeah, I like the one whenever they go from what
it was that what were they classical music beforehand or
talk radio, and yeah we're now rock and roll full
time and Johnny Fever is born. He's like, I got it.

Speaker 2 (01:48:46):
I remember, I thought Johnny Fever was found on a
park bench. It was what was the character's name, The
black guy there found him on a park bench and
he was talking to him. He found out he was
a radio show host out of California, and he said,
why they fire you and in a bad word, what
would you say, booger? Yeah, I think you have to

(01:49:09):
understand the reference of that word in California.

Speaker 4 (01:49:12):
Yeah, but that that that show made a career and
a lifetime of income for Lonnie Anderson. Mm hmm.

Speaker 3 (01:49:17):
Absolutely.

Speaker 4 (01:49:18):
Is it a funny how some of these like the
original tool Girl or not, the two girl from tim
the Toolman Taylor that made her career just appearing on there,
and then of course got Lanie Ers in there, and
then Daisy Doke, the same sort of thing, Catherine Locke,
all of them just one show made it and they
made enough money to enjoy the rest of the life.
Pretty well.

Speaker 3 (01:49:36):
Oh yeah, Well some of those people from those shows
they do they do these trade shows now they show up,
make make five six grand to show up, plus they're
travel taking care of you know.

Speaker 4 (01:49:45):
Well, I tell you. Eric Astrada came to the Pennsylvania
State Fair a couple of years ago and he was
only supposed to be there for like an hour, but
he spent like three hours there signing autographs. Really cool, dude,
I like chips back in the day. But I you know,
I was never a big fan, but I liked it.
But but what a really good guy. I mean, I
know a lot about him. He did the tele novellas
in Mexico for a long time. Eric Strata is the
heck of a guy. I really like him, and I
really expected that he did. It was hottest blazes there

(01:50:07):
and he was in the little firehouse and the sign
autographs and I was happy to take pictures of people.

Speaker 3 (01:50:11):
That was really cool. Yeah. I met him in Sacramento
at the High Dick Cheney was doing an event there,
so I met him as the event was going on,
and then later that night he was still at the hotel,
so I got to hang out with him that night
and he took took his seat at the bar of
a secret service agent who had to go take a
phone call. And I went to the restroom, came back.
All of a sudden, Er Costrada is setting at the
seat and he jokingly said, oh, Ponce just took my seat.

(01:50:34):
And he turns around. He's like, holy cow, that's actually
Pont it's Ericastrada. He's like, you keep the seats there,
You keep the seat, you know, And then we just
sat there and had had a beverage with him for
about an hour. He was a great guy.

Speaker 4 (01:50:44):
Yeah, no, no, it's look I like that down on
the earth. You know that people are celebrities like that.
It doesn't get to their head. Pretty cool, but I
mean up there you go, guys.

Speaker 2 (01:50:52):
Tad ladies, and gentlemen. I'd be our show for this evening.
We hope you got something out of it. Please all
remember to listen WSM men, and catch us again next
week right here in the common Sense Conservatives where we'll
do it all over again. Until then, have a good one.
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