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August 10, 2025 • 112 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
The views and opinions of the following show do not
reflect those of WSMN, its owners and or associates.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
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, WSMN ninety five point three FM, and
streaming live on WUSMN dot Live. Making sense of the
inverted reality we are subject to every day.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
The common Sense Conservatives.

Speaker 2 (00:32):
Are here to help bring you back to reality.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Now.

Speaker 2 (00:35):
Your hosts, Chris Wyatt, Todd McKinley, and John Golovin.

Speaker 4 (00:39):
Hello, everyone, and welcome to the Common Sense Conservatives, broadcasting
out WSMN second floor the Masaudi Tipple in downtown Nashvian,
New Hampshire.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Todd, how you doing tonight?

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Not bad, my friend. I'm here in Indianapolis, back yet
again for another American Legion National Membership Conference, where I
was last year whenever the Kamala Harris cabal took out
Joe Biden over over this weekend last year about this time.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
Oh no, kids, so you're you're right there at the
oh crap. I forgot the name of it the speedway.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Yeah, Indianapolis Motors.

Speaker 4 (01:14):
Yeah, yeah, no, no, no, they got the new uh
detention center there the ice.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Oh oh yeah, I forgot.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
I forgot what they nicknamed it. Chris, how you doing, bro?

Speaker 3 (01:24):
I avoid detention centers?

Speaker 5 (01:27):
Yeah, this wise move. I was gonna say that Todd
has a significant upgrading and accommodation. That's much sexier looking
than his home studio. I think you should. You should
get a photograph of that, used it as your green
screen in future.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
You don't like the American flag? How dare I love that?

Speaker 5 (01:46):
I love the flags? But your studio man, look at
that place, he's like Gucci. Man, I'm gonna have to
join the American leags. Look at the hotel, says, stay
in that place? Looks like the Ritz Carlton, Oh, I
should probably.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
I mean to open up my window here, hold on, secon,
I'm gonna do something.

Speaker 5 (01:58):
Look at we're gonna see. Look at this man lifestyles
a little the fightamous with.

Speaker 4 (02:06):
Robin yet and yeah, he was willing to spend some
time with us. Chris.

Speaker 5 (02:10):
Oh, it's it's good. It's good when you spend time
with the little people. I feel so special now. But seriously.
U anyway, Yeah, I was gonna say, John, And speaking
of that, did I hear you correctly? You're in a
Masonic temple?

Speaker 4 (02:23):
Yeah, well it's a Masonic building. I actually, okay, okay,
it is the Mason's building here.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
All right, I'm just checking. I don't want any that
that Richard pryor free dacing. I mean, I mean free
Mason stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:35):
On Temple Street by the way.

Speaker 5 (02:37):
A little, a little. I think I think John missed that. Todd,
you got it.

Speaker 4 (02:41):
Yeah, yeah, no, I overlooked it.

Speaker 5 (02:43):
I was, I heard, but I was okay, okay, all right, So.

Speaker 4 (02:46):
You already got in my head about pointing out that
it's on Temple Street.

Speaker 5 (02:49):
Got youa fair enough, fair enough to answer your question directly.
After all of that, I'm all right, I'm doing better
than Democrats are. Listen, you know, I think you guys
know that somehow I've been unofficially annoyed to kind of
like the refugee guy for South Africa. I'm taking up
a new calling now. I've become the refugee guy for
the demon rats from Texas. I'll be going to Illinois

(03:10):
this week to help them resettle in Illinois.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
Yeah. Absolutely, that's where they're at right now, right.

Speaker 5 (03:16):
That's from the Texas State Legislature. John, Are you with
me there?

Speaker 4 (03:19):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, I am. I was gonna actually ask you.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
Who called in the bump threat?

Speaker 5 (03:24):
Where is that? At Illinois?

Speaker 4 (03:25):
They called him bumper the hotel they were staying at.

Speaker 5 (03:28):
I told him not to do that. They never listened
to me.

Speaker 4 (03:33):
Yeah, I guess I don't know why they're going to
I don't think they're breaking any laws technically, so I
don't know how what they mean by arrest other than
no different than the truant officer going after a child
because he skipped school for the day.

Speaker 5 (03:43):
But yeah, now this whole interesting thing is this crazy
and these people are idiots. I mean, nobody batted an
eye when the Democrats redistrict the state of Maryland and
went from thirteen seats seven Republicans or seven Democrats, six
Republicans to twelve Democrats and one Republican. Only one Republican left.
In the states. They redistrict everything, and they took Prince

(04:04):
George's Montgomery and Howard Carreat We've talked about this before,
and drew a little line up along the Potomac and
added all western Maryland where the people are out populated,
instead of keeping them in Frederick County where they used
to be. They did that there. Here in Pennsylvania, we
had a redistrict thing that took place by the Supreme Court,
which is five Democrats and two Republicans nine months before
an election, in an election year after people ran for
Congress in districts they were no longer in because the

(04:25):
boundaries were changed. They reverted to the previous setup before
they've been changed five years prior. No one batter deny.
And that's the reason, the entire reason why the Democrats
took over the House a couple of years ago. Because
Pennsylvania was twelve Republicans, six Democrats. They redistrict nine and nine.
We lost six seats essentially, and now we only have seventeen.

Speaker 4 (04:43):
I think Virginia did the same sort of thing.

Speaker 5 (04:45):
Here, and they're freaking out over Texas, you know, and
where they go. But to the worst state in the country.
I mean, the difference there is almost nothing. It's negligible.
And Democrats out represent Republicans eighty two percent when they
only got fifty percent of the vote.

Speaker 4 (04:58):
Let's face it, Illinois is like home to Democrats that
is like diots.

Speaker 3 (05:03):
But have you looked at the district maps in Illinois
how ridiculous they are. I mean, Illinois are fairly good
sized states, and these districts, the way they're drawn, nobody
could truly represent those people in those districts without having
to drive several hours, you know, in a daily basis.

Speaker 5 (05:19):
Yeah, the whole thing is just messed up. I mean,
these districts should be drawn are all obviously on population,
but the population should be based on geography and culture.
You know, you shouldn't have Amish in the same district
as you know, Southeast Philadelphia, guns shooting neighborhoods right, different culturally, right.

Speaker 3 (05:35):
Because you got to thin the people who are going
to represent urban Philadelphia is not going to be the
same type of people who would represent you know, the
Amish will I mean, it's just not the culture is
completely different.

Speaker 5 (05:45):
Yeah, and it's an artificiality because it's so far away
from Philadelphia. Have to draw this little line just to
lump them in there and basically disenfranchise them. And that's
what the Republicans and the Democrats do. They disenfranchise Americans
with this nonsense. It's even worse than that we're also
disenfranchised because criminal alien invaders are counted in the total.
They should never count in the census. They should count
as aliens, you know, but not as representation. So that's

(06:08):
what's doing things to it. If Congress actually reflected the
voting patterns of this country, we would see a very
different House, represents very different and the Senate to it
will be over sixty sixty votes for the Republicans if
things were done the correct way. But they're not. They're not.

Speaker 4 (06:23):
So if I take it, the Republicans must hold in Texas.
I don't really know the Texas politics as much, but
I'm assuming that Texas right now is holding the state
legislator as far as having power and stuff goes, you know,
And so I'm thinking, can they not center these people
for abandoning their positions.

Speaker 5 (06:41):
I'm not really sure what the rules are that they
have in the Texas House, but yeah, the Republicans hold
sway in the House and the Senate in Texas, and
they at the governor also, they've got it in the
Senate House at the federal level too. But the state
has been trending a little the wrong direction for Republicans
down there. But now it's going back the other way.
So look, this is this is all just nonsense. These

(07:05):
are the people that that break in your home and
then they claim that their home is broken into when
you find with all this stuff in their house. Right,
that's the Democrats. That's how they behave. You know, any
time a Democrat accuse you of something, you should stop
and go wait a second, did you just do that?
Did you just do that?

Speaker 4 (07:22):
They are the type of people break into your home
and when you when you beat them up over it,
then they claim victimhood.

Speaker 5 (07:26):
Yeah, ah, well of course, yes, of course. They're the
sort of people that if you if you hire someone
because they're black, they don't have problem with it. If
you hire someone because they're black for merit, they don't notice.
But if you fire someone because they're black, because they're incompetent,
all you're racist. Right. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (07:41):
It's not the fact that they're in competent can't do
the job, it's because you're the racist. Yeah, that's that's
what they do, is how they operate. It's the modus operandi.

Speaker 5 (07:49):
Yeah, guys, guy, look John, okay, look, I know John's
fit a little under the weather, So I'm going to
take over here for just a second. I don't know
about you all, but I made an AI song called
Sweeny's Jeans.

Speaker 4 (08:01):
I'm telling you that awesome.

Speaker 5 (08:03):
I'm telling you, uh tell you. I can't play it here.
I'd have to have to send it to John and
play it over the air. But I could. I could
send it to you, John, I send it to you.
I don't know if I did during the break, maybe
you can manage to find a way to put it
on air. Are you able to get an MP three
song or a wave's file and play it over the
internet and play it over the radio.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
I may not be able to be on account of
I did not bring an adept or to PLA.

Speaker 5 (08:27):
Yeah. I was worried I might be too technological advanced there,
but but I've got it anyway. Well, we'll let you
figure that in the next during the break there, but
if you do, I've got it. But anyway, So what
I'm just trying to say, guys, is that did you
see what Trump the press? There's a couple of things
happening here with the press, Todd. Either they've eliminated all
the legacy media guys that are always acting like fools,

(08:49):
or they're slowly coming around to liking the Trumpster. Did
you see when he's on the roof, mister president, mister president,
what do you do on the roof? And Trump's like, uh,
I'm out for a walk? Why are you out for
a walk? Because it's the healthy thing to.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
Do, right, Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm over I'm overweight. I'm
in my late seventies, you know, pushing eighties. I need
to exercise.

Speaker 5 (09:07):
Come on, And then he's an Allen Town and it says,
mister president, uh, what do you think is Sydney Sween?
You know she's a registered Republican? He goes, she's a
regsed Republican.

Speaker 6 (09:16):
I really like her.

Speaker 5 (09:17):
A lot more now.

Speaker 3 (09:21):
In the outrage I think came after they was revealed
she's a registered Republican. It wasn't about the ad to
start with.

Speaker 5 (09:26):
It was like, no, they they they're upset. They're upset
with two things. Initially they used to the word jeans
and then I wraped out so they thought they called
they called it eugenics. Well, first off, white supremacies. Eugenics.
Eugenics is human supremacy. But see, these people are so
stupid they don't even understand the word. So That was
the first thing. The second thing is the objectication women.

(09:47):
Excuse me, I mean nothing comes between me and my
Calvin Kleines. What was wrong with a?

Speaker 3 (09:51):
Let me ask the scientific question. I'm sure you know
the answer. What determines your your eye color.

Speaker 5 (09:56):
Your DNA, your dioxy ribald clac.

Speaker 3 (09:59):
Act, your gen genes basically, But I know you broke
it down a little more scientifically.

Speaker 5 (10:04):
But you asked me if I can answer scientifically.

Speaker 4 (10:07):
So I did.

Speaker 5 (10:07):
I know, I know, I know you're good.

Speaker 4 (10:09):
I was just looking for one word.

Speaker 5 (10:11):
Careful what you asked for?

Speaker 4 (10:12):
Brother, He wasn't gonna give it to you.

Speaker 5 (10:14):
Man. I'm like, I'd like Billy the science guy actually
got an A in science class.

Speaker 3 (10:20):
He has no scientific He like me.

Speaker 4 (10:24):
Too, be I too got an A in science class
because I applied my artistic skills to the have they.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
Put on my report card.

Speaker 3 (10:31):
You made it into an A.

Speaker 6 (10:33):
Hey.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
You know every kid's got some some kind of art.

Speaker 5 (10:36):
You all got skills. No, but no, Bill I the
science guy doesn't have any science degrees. The only science
that he's ever done is is a TV show anyway?
Yeah anyway, but yeah, so okay, so DNA, that's what
determines your eye color. It's immutable. You have no control
over it.

Speaker 3 (10:51):
Right, And basically that's what the ad said, right, it's
like you know this the termin genes, term determined whatever,
you know.

Speaker 5 (10:55):
I think it was she was, but she was, of course.
It was hilarious when and she wasn't told the white
supremacist she was talking about her body, her smoking body,
that's because he got great jeans, and they turned into
racial things. Then they're like, it's misogynists. It's it's it's
objectifying women, like, oh my gosh, you silly, she's in
on it.

Speaker 3 (11:14):
Probably had creative controls to a certain degree.

Speaker 5 (11:17):
A star okay, okay, but Todd, I mean for for
five years, who've been suggest subjected to I'm sorry, folks,
but hungry, hungry hippos and you know, and people who
are celebrating morbid obesity as if it's a good thing.
And people who look hideous and unattractive. I'm sorry, there
are just that's just that, it's just the reality life.
Some people are very attractive, not everybody are, and and

(11:37):
advertising works when you make it appealing. It's not appealing
to me to look at somebody who I can't see
the bicycle seat on the swin they're trying to sell
because their body's overlapping it. Now, there are some people
who can wear there are some people who can wear
weight well. And look, it doesn't make it healthy though
that's true, doesn't make it healthy.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
But ahead chrismas point. You know, back in the days,
they used to make references like that. You know, she
must come from good jeans.

Speaker 1 (12:02):
I mean, yeah, that was a common thing. Go back
to the nineteen eighties.

Speaker 4 (12:04):
It was a common thing. These guys played off because
they were trying it was a great marketing scheme. They
were playing all that.

Speaker 5 (12:10):
But the Republican thing backfired on them. John. They they
thought they would out her as a Republican. It's just
made or more popular. And so American Eagle stock is
up over half a billion dollars.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
Oh wow, major feil guys, man, it was.

Speaker 5 (12:24):
It was up a couple hundred million, and then Trump
and Doorster and then he shot up over half a
billion dollars. And you can't buy the jeans. Go to
an American Eagle outfitter store. They don't have them.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
Chris, are you trying to get yourself a pair of jeans?

Speaker 5 (12:36):
I can neither confirm or deny the fact that I
did try.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Do you fit a woman's size twelve?

Speaker 5 (12:43):
Is at it? Dude? They make it, make it for
dudes too. They're not just for women.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
To being a wise guy here.

Speaker 4 (12:47):
I don't know what they make.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
I didn't go to the website, so I don't know.

Speaker 3 (12:50):
John still wears jeans by the way he wears wranglers.

Speaker 5 (12:54):
Man.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
Actually I got my wranglers.

Speaker 5 (12:58):
I know, you good man, Yeah jeans, And I got
my jeans at Montgomery Wards.

Speaker 4 (13:08):
And we were proud, man, we were probably we went
to k Mart.

Speaker 5 (13:11):
Was upscale, man, I we you know, we used to
call Montgomery Wards Monkey Wards when I was a kid.
Yeah yeah yeah, but uh, wranglers and lee jeans I had,
I remember because because I turned him into the quartermaster
along with my laundry when I was a young soldier.
And that big leather patch on the back, I mean
they put those things like it was industrial irons and

(13:32):
press your jeans just like uniforms. It came back and
my lee patch was all like, you know, stuck to
the genes. You can still relieve. But it looked like
somebody got a branding. I already branded the darn thing anyway. Yeah, now, look,
I look. So the song I got says i'm i'm I'm,
I'm I'm I'm dreaming of uh Sydney's jeans or something

(13:53):
like that. I'm lost in dreams about Sydney's jeans. It's
good stuff anyway, but people are losing to mind.

Speaker 4 (13:58):
If you can send a five email, I can get
it that way and load it up for the second hour.

Speaker 5 (14:04):
I will see if I could do that, but I
think it might be too large. I'll double check. The
MP three might be smaller.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
Oh no, you've got file share.

Speaker 3 (14:11):
Yeah, yeah, you can Google Google file share. Yeah. Yeah,
you just get a link and send it to him.
He'll he'll be a download if you share it with him.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
Okay, all right, well all right anyway, so I just
had I had to talk about that guy, so I
had to talk about that. That's just good stuff.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
Hey, good for her though, I mean, she got she
got an international fame off this, and she's a model,
so it may take her places.

Speaker 5 (14:30):
You know. Oh look, I mean you know.

Speaker 3 (14:34):
It.

Speaker 5 (14:34):
Just the thing it kills me about this is we've
been subjected to all this horrific Madison Avenue advertising First, off, folks,
nothing wrong, nothing wrong with people in this country being
different infinity races. But the country's twelve percent black, not
the ninety four percent that my ads would leave me
to believe. For years, I had to hear this story, Well,
the ads aren't representative of society. Well they sure as

(14:56):
that aren't representive now. And so the moment that an
attractive white when he gets an ad, finally they lose
their minds. Meanwhile, Beyonce's come out with a jeans ad too,
and nobody's.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
Yeah, she countried it up too, didn't she appropriating culture appropriation?

Speaker 5 (15:11):
That's right, we heard that nonsense for yours culture appropriation.

Speaker 3 (15:14):
And she did a little country album year or two
ago something like that, you know, that didn't really take off,
and then she claimed or somebody claimed racism on it.

Speaker 5 (15:21):
Oh, I actually thought people don't want to listen to
a country album. I heard that album did really well,
did it not? Did I get the wrong information? Well?

Speaker 3 (15:26):
I think I think in certain sections, but like the
country music, people didn't want to listen to it. And
it's like, well, that's who you're trying to sell to, right,
maybe you know, then they didn't want it, and you
said racism.

Speaker 4 (15:36):
Come on now, I really good. I get heard of
that too. That's nonsensical. Just because you failed doesn't mean
people are racist. It just means you just don't get
that particular genre. I mean, get over it and go
back to singing hip hop or find another genre you
can succeed that.

Speaker 3 (15:50):
She's a multimillionaire. I think her and her husband together
well well within the billion dollar range, probably up to
maybe two billion or more.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (15:59):
So they're doing okay. Racism is probably not anywhere near,
you know, affecting their lives like they want to play.

Speaker 4 (16:06):
So what do you call it when you pay off
the judges so you can win the CMT Awards or
whatever she won?

Speaker 5 (16:12):
Right? Good question, Good question.

Speaker 3 (16:14):
And imagine if she didn't win that CMT award? What
what what the left would say? They'd lose their mind? Right,
they're all racist country bumpkin? Is this and that whatever?
When in reality, the Academy of Country Music is controlled
by a bunch of artsy farcy types that are on
the left, just the same as you know any other
organization that holds the Oscars or Tony's or whatever. You know,
it's controlled by people that are fairly much on the

(16:36):
left here.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
So back in the day you talk about the sixties
and seventies, here there was a gentleman by the name
of Charlie Pride who was very very famous for his
country music scening in the nineteen sixties and seventies, who
happened to be very very dark of skin. He was black.

Speaker 1 (16:50):
He was an excellent artist. By the way, he was loved.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
I mean, and in this is the day when you
consider people more and more in a state of racism
than you would today. But Arlie, all these white people
love Charlie Bride.

Speaker 5 (17:02):
Man.

Speaker 4 (17:02):
It wasn't about racing off from them. They he was
an excellent artist. He is an excellent performer, and they
loved what he did.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
Right, Oh yeah, bingo, very true.

Speaker 5 (17:11):
Yeah, this this whole thing just gets plain silly though, man,
playing silly. It's just the way. Are you guys still there? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (17:19):
Right, we're having a thought break on this ring.

Speaker 3 (17:24):
Or whatever. He's about to take a sip there, so lead.
I don't want to step on your toes.

Speaker 4 (17:27):
I got my water. No, no, you just go ahead
and do what you do. Man, It's all right right,
all right.

Speaker 5 (17:32):
I'm trying to make sure, I send you the right one,
because I've did a couple of versions of it and
the one is just awesome. Just try to make sure
you got the right one.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Here, John have the lead is like John to open
and close for the show.

Speaker 5 (17:47):
Yeah, I got the right one. One of these is
like poppy. So this one here, it's actually well fit
in an email, so it won't be a problem. So
here we go. It's only four point six megabytes, so
that's pretty easy as it m P three file. You
ought to be able to play this fine Sidney jeans. Okay,
here you go. Just sent that to you John, all right,
I'll have a look for it, all right. So yeah,

(18:08):
so that uh, the Sydney Jeans things still got legs, guys,
it's still going. And Trump gave it more legs a
couple of days ago.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
I didn't know who this girl was.

Speaker 4 (18:17):
I had to go look it up. In fact, I
think I used I think I used AI g P
T there as I was driving on the road, going
who is this person?

Speaker 5 (18:23):
And they know she's she's uh, she she's had some shows.
I don't know where I've seen her. I've seen her
in something though, because I recognized her and I don't
know what it was, but it was probably before she
became famous. But now she's kind of big, and then
this is just blowing her up. She's gonna be huge.
But I mean, you know, it's it's remember you know
Brooks Shields when she was young and nothing comes fitting
me in my Calvin clients, remember that?

Speaker 3 (18:42):
Yeah? Yeah, But and she she is a child actress,
was exploited, I mean greatly. I mean basically did some
light porno back in the day, you know where I mean,
that's just some sicko stuff. And all these all these
artists that are you know, big names today A listers
were writ in a thickle all that, you know what
I mean that these people want to like they have
a moral high grind. I don't think so.

Speaker 5 (19:02):
Yeah, well, it's just silly the way they're behaving. I
mean it's but it's fantastic. It's it's it's you know,
I haven't seen this much excitement over something in the
popular press since Jason Aldean's Try that in small town,
remember that? Right? Oh yeah, that was awesome. Try that
in small town. I got all on board. I mean, look,
I'm not a country music person, but these people are
turning me into a country music ficionado here. Love this stuff.

(19:22):
Jason Alden's song was just brilliant. I just wish we
could play that on social media without getting strikes because
it was good stuff. But you can't do that anyway.
So yeah, that uh, the only the only connection I
know between Jean's and GENS is doctor Thaniel Jeanson's research
on thousand genome projects as Keith Olerson in the UK.
He's listening in from Coventry in the UK today, So yeah,

(19:43):
but that's just crazy stuff here. So the registricting is
is big todd. I mean, they're losing their minds over that,
but they completely ignore the hypocrisy of their own actions.
They just neglect. They won't pay attention to it. They
just gloss right over the fact that the irony and
the hypocrisy of going to perhaps the worst strict redistrict
state in the country where Republicans are basically cut out everything. See,
this is the problem I have taught with like with,

(20:05):
my audience is always talking about red state, blue state.
The Americans read. There's no such thing as red state
and blue states. There are some states that are overwhelmingly
red or overwhelming blue Connecticut's overwhelming the blue and Idoho's
overwhelmingly red. But I mean most states are forty two
fifty eight and somewhere in that range in between, which
is you take five percent for one to get it
to the other end, you're even. So it's crazy or
just basically even.

Speaker 3 (20:25):
Yeah, that's true. Yeah, most states are. You know, there's
a fair split in a lot of places. I mean,
even in red districts in Tennessee, there's quite a few
areas that have pockets of blue in it, and people
understand that. But people generally get along because you're working
toward a lot of the same goals. But when it
comes time for election, people go vote the way they're
going to vote. The next day, they're at church together. Generally.

Speaker 5 (20:45):
Well, that's a good thing, going to church together. You know,
did you guys there was an active shooter at Fort
Stewart today, Todds catch saw that. I saw that.

Speaker 3 (20:53):
I saw there was maybe five people that were hurt
or killed. I can't remember what it said that they
were killed, but five people that were wounded I.

Speaker 5 (20:59):
Heard were wounded. Yesh. Yeah, So you know, when I
was looking for it, they mentioned Fort Eisenhower. I'm like,
what the heck is Fort Eisenhower You mean Fort Gordon. Yeah, yeah,
they're reading that before them renamed apparently back to to that.
So they're still sticking with these renames. I mean, I'm sorry.
It's it's it's Fort Fort Benning, it's Fort Hood, it's

(21:19):
Fort Bragg. It is back to Fort Bragg now, by
the way, it is, but a different not Braxton Bragg. Yeah,
and Fort Rucker got named to something after two Metal
Honor winners. They make sure one was white, one was black.

Speaker 3 (21:33):
You know, I don't have a problem you know, changing
the names from Confederate generals if you did it the
right way for you know, but doing it the way
that they did it, Yeah, I'm sorry. I just didn't
appreciate it. You know, have a process to redo it,
have the military have some sort of say, and you
have a contest, you know, of who we want to
name our post after all?

Speaker 5 (21:51):
Right, I think John is ready here with the task.
I think he pulled it off.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
I think I did.

Speaker 4 (21:56):
Let's see what we go.

Speaker 3 (21:58):
You want you want to tease what it is, Chris.

Speaker 5 (22:01):
This this is Sydney's jeans. It's a tribute to the
Sydney Sweeney Gene commercial and that's pretty good. It's country
country pop crossover. I gave a bombed in thought it

(22:26):
was dead.

Speaker 6 (22:30):
Sydneys jeans turned my head, feeded blue with the reckless
vibe like a memory, a cane on tie, Sydney's jeans so.

Speaker 3 (22:50):
I'm so cool, make it Old Roust feel brand new.

Speaker 6 (22:54):
I want a pair.

Speaker 3 (22:55):
I need them now.

Speaker 5 (22:57):
American Eagle show.

Speaker 6 (22:59):
Me Red so fine. They tell the tale, every ribs

(23:20):
the story, every stitch of sale.

Speaker 5 (23:25):
She walks the streets, she owns the scene.

Speaker 4 (23:31):
I'm chasing dreams and sitting.

Speaker 6 (23:34):
In these jeans.

Speaker 5 (23:38):
They bring the past into the now.

Speaker 4 (23:44):
I'm sold.

Speaker 5 (23:45):
I'm hooked.

Speaker 7 (23:45):
I don't know.

Speaker 6 (23:46):
How'm sitting these jeans. So hot, so cool, mane Old
Rose feel brand new.

Speaker 7 (23:56):
I want a pair.

Speaker 6 (23:57):
I need them now.

Speaker 3 (23:59):
American Me Ego show me one.

Speaker 6 (24:15):
Blue's crashing on my fast, wearing the stars under ropen skets.
Sydney's bad is the fire I crave Denim, Dreams's the
cane hate Sydney's geese, so hot, so cool, making old

(24:42):
rules be a bandw I want a pear. I need
to eat him now. American Ego show me how Sydney's Geese,
so hot, so cool.

Speaker 3 (24:54):
Making old rules be a band new.

Speaker 4 (24:57):
I want a pear.

Speaker 6 (24:58):
I need to hate him now.

Speaker 7 (25:00):
American Sydney's Jeans w s MN Radio Afterlife, so hot,

(25:26):
so cool.

Speaker 5 (25:27):
I want to need them now.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
No, folks, this is not the new country station. It's
still the same old talk show radio show.

Speaker 5 (25:38):
What do you guys think? How was that not bad?
That was?

Speaker 3 (25:40):
That was pretty good?

Speaker 1 (25:42):
I thought it was excellent.

Speaker 4 (25:44):
So you did that on the AI?

Speaker 5 (25:46):
I did. I picked the vocals, I gave it the theme,
I put the keywords in I wanted for the lyrics,
and I let the AI do the rest. And man,
did that come out good?

Speaker 4 (25:56):
I gotta tell you, Actually, I should be walking around
with a feeling of guilt because of all this years
of being a true conservative.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
Here, I guess, I don't know.

Speaker 4 (26:02):
Conservatives tend to be reluctant to accept new technologies as
a rule. And uh, I'm over here just you know fortant.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
Technology, Oscar?

Speaker 4 (26:12):
No, no way, I know there's all that way. I
was just in Junius.

Speaker 1 (26:14):
You can't use a This is ridiculousness.

Speaker 4 (26:16):
Man, stuff is kind of cool, yeah it is.

Speaker 5 (26:19):
Look, I'm a rock rip conservative, but I've always been
into tech, I mean and as a conservative also did
dungeons and Dragons kind of a if you when I
was in college. But the thing is is that I mean,
tech is how we defeat the enemy. That's how we
took isis out you know, you know.

Speaker 4 (26:32):
So oh no, it's valuable. There's a lot of good
uses for tectives. The issue with how does it get.

Speaker 3 (26:37):
Used, you know, the misuse of course, of course responsible
use and of course at the same time embraced it
to make your life better and easier. But don't use
it for a nefarious means or at the same time
use it to just postupid cat video. There's a lot
of great information out there, a lot of good stuff
you can do.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
That's been my issue all along with technologies.

Speaker 4 (26:57):
I see it as a tool to strip people of
their free I was like, you know, you're you're you
talk about the eel. It's not just they're violating people's rights.
So it's getting to be an issue in society where people.

Speaker 5 (27:09):
Like, sorry, guys, you tell me technology. I have a
phone call as a Nigerian prince calling me right now.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
You got when you trying to win you were when
your sister.

Speaker 5 (27:21):
No it's one of the early tech scams. Nigerian princes
they send you emails and they call you and everything,
so they're not really Nigerian princes anyway.

Speaker 4 (27:28):
Yeah so, but I I just I just got to
tell you, I embrace technology when it offers people uh
more freedoms, you know what I'm saying. That's kind of
what it does for Chris right then when he when
he made that song, it's given me a believe it
wouldn't done so otherwise if he's like me, he's really
challenged with the guitar.

Speaker 5 (27:45):
Well, I'm challenged with any mesical instrument. I mean, as
a kid, I tried to learn percussion and you know,
they they I was the only one learning it. And
I had learned that in the boiler room or the
elementary school. It was like talk about being dissed. Everybody
else is upstairs in a band room and I'm down
there in the boiler room. And when you hear I
couldn't I couldn't learn the sheet music. I can't sing
to save my life. Now. Hey, before puberty, I was

(28:07):
in the church choir and I had an angelic voice.
But things changed and they didn't change deep enough. So
I didn't quite get that Luther vandro Steep voice, other
going on very white. There you go, no I wheezer sound.

Speaker 4 (28:21):
I had the ability to learn it, I just never
stuck with it. And I could one time I was
reading sheet music, but I just never had.

Speaker 1 (28:28):
You know, when you're well high school, middle school, and
they're teaching a guitar and it's it's dumb music. It's
not the music you want to play.

Speaker 4 (28:35):
Right, you're listening to Ozzy I wasborn, going yeah, I
want to rock out with that, and you over here
with this little you.

Speaker 1 (28:39):
Know, blow the man down or whatever, these like folk
songs or something. It's like, oh, this crap.

Speaker 4 (28:44):
I don't want to hear this. I don't want to
play this.

Speaker 5 (28:47):
Well you mentioned Ozzie. Man, I'm gonna have to get
a calendar out. I mean this tell me sound sound morose,
but we have to get a calendar out and put
the funeral watch. I mean, every time you turn around,
a famous celebrity is dropping like a fly the past
two months.

Speaker 4 (28:58):
Yeah, we just went recently the other day, Dy Anderson, Yes,
Money Anderson seventy nine.

Speaker 5 (29:04):
Good, first off, she was seventy nine. I'm sorry guys,
but I mean, you know, w k RP. It doesn't
seem that long ago.

Speaker 4 (29:11):
Apparently was about fifty years almost right, forty forty five
years ago at least seventy nine, eighty.

Speaker 5 (29:17):
And seventy eight, seventy eight when it came out. Yeah, wow,
that was That was my high school years. That was
that was my high school WKRP.

Speaker 1 (29:25):
Yeah, that was a great show. Man there's hands Now,
that was a great show.

Speaker 4 (29:28):
There was.

Speaker 3 (29:30):
You remember it was great. God is my witness.

Speaker 5 (29:35):
We're going to Turkey drop.

Speaker 3 (29:38):
That was the other guy.

Speaker 8 (29:39):
Last Nston was down there, Johnny less nessment There's less
nestman on. His brother wrote he was watching him fall
out of the oh the humanity, remember you wrote a
run on a moped.

Speaker 4 (29:50):
That's all they could afford to get him was a moped.

Speaker 5 (29:53):
Oh my goodness.

Speaker 3 (29:54):
No, but yeah, just several years later though, really I
didn't know that. Yeah, and it didn't last maybe like
a few shows. And I watched these YouTube videos. It's
like a spin offs that you never knew happened, you know,
And that was one of them. It was a w
KRP spinoff. I had a few of the original people
on there. Only last a few episodes because it didn't
take take hold well.

Speaker 1 (30:16):
Right, I mean I didn't know about it, but yeah,
hard to recreate them sometimes, right, like.

Speaker 3 (30:20):
Andy Griffiths show, they had Mayberry RFD, which you know
you're not going to recreate the magic of the original,
so why try just let it go?

Speaker 5 (30:27):
Yeah, most of those remakes, reboots just don't work. Mash
try after Mash. They tried that one. That was pretty late.

Speaker 3 (30:31):
I mean, and Monsters have been rebooted how many times?

Speaker 5 (30:34):
You know, I didn't know that.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
Now the Adams Family works out because you can do
movies and now you've got musicals and all this other
stuff that kind of plays into that favor.

Speaker 5 (30:42):
You know, they did it.

Speaker 3 (30:43):
They did it right, I think in bringing that back.

Speaker 5 (30:46):
But now they just remake shows and they suck. The
only one that was even decent when they remade initially
was the remake of Wi Fi ive oh briefly, but
then it went sideways very quickly. But that was pretty
good start. But you know, the dude mcguiver, this isn't believable.
This mcguyver they come up with and they do the Enforcer.
They've redone it twice. I mean, they've had they had
a couple of different actors. Now what's her name is
doing it. It's just it just it doesn't make sense.

(31:07):
It's supposed to be some English dude being the enforcer. Anyway. Yeah,
it's just anyway whatever. But we're off the politics. We
got onto popular culture. It's so easy to do because
the city's all right.

Speaker 4 (31:17):
So yeah, well, you know, it's kind of like sometimes
they missed politics in the popular culture too, but we
weren't getting into any politics and popular cultures.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
Mix up or mashups there. It was just kind of
went down a rebel home.

Speaker 5 (31:30):
Oh, it happened so easily. But did you see that
the Stanford Daily is trying to sue the Trump administration?

Speaker 1 (31:36):
The Stanford Daily? What does the Stanford Daily?

Speaker 5 (31:39):
Uh, they they complained that that they are worried about
being boodh out of the country because apparently the really aliens. Geez.

Speaker 4 (31:47):
So now okay, so you're you're illegal aliens and you're
going to uh, you're going to try and see the
Trump administration.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
Was this a preemptive attack?

Speaker 5 (31:54):
Well, it says here one of the plaintiffs, listed as
Jane Doe because they're not has published pro Palestinian anti
Israel commentary and is named on Canary Mission and hoymously
run pro Israel website that the administration has used to
find students to target for deportation. She has since ceased
sharing her opinions on the war. The other plaintiff whom
the complaint list is John Doe, attended a pro Palestine

(32:15):
protests at his university after Palestine and militant group Homas's
attack and published commentary against Israel. Though initially self censoried
withholding publication of a study related Gazia, since resumed his
journalism and advocacy. There's a real feeling campus, and it
reaches into the newsroom, said the Stanford Daily. The Daily
is losing the voices of sniffian portion of our student population.
Well maybe that's because nobody wants to hear what they
have to say. So it's they want to see the

(32:37):
Trump administration because they're reporters are cowards. That's the bottom line.

Speaker 4 (32:43):
So you know, the real crime in all this, or
the real shame in all this is there's bad enough
the Biden administration by these people, and now we're spending
forty six billion dollars out of the One Big Bill
Act and trying to get rid of these people, trying
to get them out of our country. That's forty six
billion dollars that could have went to other programs or
other things. That's not going to these things anymore. But
then you're gonna have things like the Civil Liberties Union,

(33:04):
who instead of telling these people, hey, you know what,
there's a process we'll get you involved that you get
the PaperWorks that you file doing you have to go down,
we'll get the paperwork to you.

Speaker 1 (33:13):
Helping these people to go through proper channels and processes.

Speaker 4 (33:18):
They pretty much hold them at base so they can
turn around and go, hey, look at us, we're fighting
for you. We're taking this to court and we're taking
this over here. Basically just for like donor grabs, right.

Speaker 5 (33:28):
They're just clogging up the courts and that's what they
try to do and it works right, right, And any
way they can post about it on social media, like
you said, so they can fundraise off of it.

Speaker 3 (33:37):
Basically that's all they're doing.

Speaker 4 (33:38):
Yeah, So basically they're using these people like property. They're
using these people like tools so they can make more
money instead of actually doing a job and facilitating something
for them in their better behalf. Yeah, precisely, probably scared
the crap out of if you go down to that
immigration office, go shoot you out of the country. Don't
do it.

Speaker 1 (33:58):
I'm speculating there, right, just for clarity.

Speaker 5 (34:03):
Well, you know, it's this whole argument. It's just amazing
how we've allowed this foothold to happen. And it all
happened when I was a young student at university. That's
it started in the late seventies, but I started in
the early eighties and university, and that's when we started
letting all of these Palestinians into the country as students.
And they never left. They stayed here, they stayed, they

(34:24):
got a master's degree, they never left, They had kids,
and now their offspring are the most ungrateful Americans you
could ever possibly find who hate America. And for what reason?
Where do they get this garbage Trump? We allowed their
parents to come here, they were stateless, and we gave
them education and let them stay here and build a
life and let them be born in this country. And
their way they repay.

Speaker 4 (34:42):
Us is to act like this, Yeah, entitledment, all right,
no hatred of America.

Speaker 5 (34:47):
I'm entitledment. Hatred of America.

Speaker 1 (34:49):
Well, they come here because they feel like the world
is something I guess.

Speaker 5 (34:53):
Some of the offspring that we're born here to these people.
So you've got this, You've got this member of Congress
versus the California like it's whatever. She went to Guatemala
and said, I'm a Guatemalan first, she hates America. Did
you guys follow this.

Speaker 4 (35:04):
Story, Yeah, hear on the radio coming in.

Speaker 3 (35:07):
Well, why don't you just stay there and make it
as good as you possibly can, because apparently you've ruined California.
You know, maybe you can do something there. Maybe you
redeem yourself in Guatemala.

Speaker 4 (35:19):
So here's the interesting thing about the left is if
you take a country like say Venezuela, where a lot
of these people are coming from. Venezuela used to be
a republic and then they start turning into a democrat
socialist nation like the left is trying to do here
in the United States of America, and like almost all
democrats socialist nations, it's just a segue to become socialists,

(35:40):
which it did under schavaz right, and now they become
extreme authoritarianism. It's become inhospitable to the residents there, and
they're trying to flee to the United States of America
to do what you know, to create a democrat socialist nations.
It's stupid beyond belief.

Speaker 5 (35:58):
Right, Look, this is this is Delia Ramirez Illinois three.
That's her district, Illinois three. And her banner says hashtag
save asylum. And then she actually went to Christy Nomes's
office on May sixteen, demanding she resigned. Handle letter resigned.
I think you need to surrender America. She's an anchor baby,

(36:18):
by the way. Both her parents are criminal alienvaders who
invaded this country. And she was born here. And she
becomes a member of Congress, and she goes and she
says that I'm a Guatemalan first, Well, then go to Guatemala.
You were born here. I'm not a German, Irishman, are
Viking first, I'm an American. She needs to be censored
by the House.

Speaker 3 (36:35):
Well, to me is that she's showing filthy to Guatemala
versus America.

Speaker 5 (36:39):
Right, she obviously doesn't want to be America. These people
hate our country and they're allowed to be members of Congress.
I'm sorry, I've had enough of this nonsense. This same
with Ilian Omar, with with the Rashida talib She's the
offspring of Palestineans. We let stand this country too unbelievable.
This is the gratitude we get is a destroy America
from within and turn us into the failed countries that

(37:00):
their parents came from.

Speaker 4 (37:02):
Yeah. Yeah, Omar actually openly stated she's here for Somalia first.
She's here to protect the office. She will work to
protect Somalia. That's all her touches on. And this is
the problem we have in the United States America is
people want to migrate year and I come down on
on Islam a little bit about you know, coming from
Islamic nations because a lot of these people in the
Mid East want to conquer. They said they're going to

(37:23):
conquer all the Europe. And now you got these people
floating boats. I don't know what they're Muslims or not,
but they're floating boats into places like Spain and Italy
and Greece and unload these boats under their society of people.

Speaker 3 (37:33):
You know, you know, I can understand, you know, some
people that want to flee a crap country or an
asshole country as Trump called them.

Speaker 5 (37:41):
You know, I can.

Speaker 3 (37:42):
Understand people wanting to flee there, right, But then all
of a sudden, we have all these people that want
to make those our country what they just fled. I mean,
I don't quite get that these are the people that
we certainly want to get out get out of this
country first, and then the rest of the people that
just kind of stayed here over state visas, send them,
send them packing next. But there are are probably many
good people amongst those illegals that are lumped right in

(38:05):
right in there, And I'm not saying that they should
be in this country, but those should be the last
ones that we kick out of the country. We kick
out the bad actors first that want to turn our
country into the craft that they left.

Speaker 4 (38:14):
It's like New Hampshire here, right, New Hampshire is more
of a conservative state next to liberal states, and these
people leaving these liberal states because it it becomes too
costly to live in these states. I love New Hampshire, man,
There's so much more freedoms here and the cost of
living is more affordable.

Speaker 1 (38:29):
This is great, then, but I missed these social programs.
It's like, what's one of the social programs?

Speaker 4 (38:35):
Whyn't you just go back to where you came from?
Don't ruin New Hampshire, right, but they want the familiarity,
and they always think they can do it over. But
they'll do it differently, or they do it right this time,
they'll do it the way and it doesn't work.

Speaker 3 (38:48):
Yeah, the socialist programs means money into their own pocket
one way or another.

Speaker 4 (38:51):
I mean, for sure, Girt Gilt. Yes, we can see
your chat, yeah, I said somebody. I don't know if
he was trying to get our because we're sitting there talking.
Sometimes we don't necessarily read all the chat or comment
on the chat, but we can see it.

Speaker 3 (39:05):
Oh, yeah, we say, And whenever there's something that needs
to be discussed, we'll comment at it, for sure.

Speaker 4 (39:14):
I see Keith was saying. The foothold is set up
with the Mobile Compact for migration for most UN countries
have signed up for as far as I can see,
probably backroom deals. Biden's millions will passed through several Yes. Yeah,
I agree that this is not the domestic problem for
the United States. This is an international problem for for everybody.
And it seems to be some sort of leftist socialist movement.

(39:39):
And that's what they do that comes out of the playbook,
doesn't it.

Speaker 3 (39:42):
Yep, that's true. That's absolutely correct. And you know they
want to bring our country down, I mean, turn it
into whatever asshole that they left. I don't I don't
quite understand that. Why did you flee in the first place.
Just stay where you're at. You have your social utopia, right,
that's what you want. Just stay where you're at.

Speaker 4 (39:58):
Yeah, you know, the crowd of the whip on your
back daily, what more could you want?

Speaker 1 (40:01):
I mean, they keep you down.

Speaker 4 (40:03):
And the thing about it is is socialist ideals are
that's exactly what it is.

Speaker 1 (40:08):
Keep people dumb and keep them hungry.

Speaker 4 (40:10):
Because stupid people can't fight back and they're too hungry,
they're gonna be compliant, you know.

Speaker 1 (40:14):
And that's what you see from authority touring in nations.

Speaker 4 (40:17):
That's what they do.

Speaker 1 (40:18):
They don't educate and they keep you hungry.

Speaker 3 (40:21):
Well, they also create chaos and havoc. And then what
people do. They clamor for somebody to fix it, and
well who can fix it? Well, government can fix it.
We're in power. Give us the authority. Give over and
give over your freedoms, get over your give over your liberty.
We'll fix all these problems that mind you, we create it.
And then all of a sudden all those freedoms and
liberties you gave over you never get back. Now all
of a sudden, you're you're reliant more on the government

(40:43):
or you're going to be thrown in some sort of
goolog that they set up to try to correct the problems, which,
mind you, you are the problem if you oppose.

Speaker 4 (40:49):
Them, so they create dependency on the state or the government.

Speaker 5 (40:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (40:53):
Absolutely, Yeah, that.

Speaker 5 (40:56):
Just amazes me that we tolerate this. That one of
the secrets to America's success was the integration of people's
That doesn't mean the elimination of culture. I mean, look
at how our culture has been rich. In the Southwest,
the old Southwest. We have people who celebrate cotillion, that's
a tradition that came over from Old Mexico. In the
Spanish and Anglos even have cotilion for their daughters. And

(41:17):
then we have, of course kindergarten throughout the country, which
the Germans brought to us. Our brewing tradition, although it
was destroyed by prohibition. We lost all our good breweries
and all we have now is crappy carbonated beer. But
except for craft breweries that made a nice comeback in
the past few years. But I mean so many things
in our society are things we've adopted from other cultures
and made our own or contributed. And those families who

(41:37):
came here, those people who that was important to their progeny,
inculcated those values and those norms, those cultural traits in
their progeny and it remains with them to this day.
And you know it's but the key was to accept
the norms, morays, and values of the society, adhere to
the laws, don't form ghettos, and demand that the society

(41:57):
you come to conform to the place you came from.
If we had done that, this place would be just
a balkanized society. They're trying to balkanize us now. And
these people are trying to balkanize us. Either need to
assimilate or get out.

Speaker 3 (42:12):
Yeah, and and everyday American should stand up to this
instead of saying, wow, I'm afraid I'll be reprised again,
so they don't say anything. Well, there's gonna be a
point where it's not even going to be reprisal. They're
just gonna come and perform direct actually against you, and
you're not gonna like it for sure. Then you're gonna
be like, well, where's everybody else at where everybody else
is like, well I don't want them to come do
that to me, so I don't want to reprisal, so
they won't stand up for you. So then it's the

(42:33):
next family, that it's the next person, and so on
and so on and then and it gets to the
point where it's like, well, who's going to stand up
for us? It's like, well, there's nobody left, right. I
know that I'm paraphrasing what other people have already said,
but you know, it's essentially what it is.

Speaker 5 (42:47):
Yeah, it's look, it's it's it's not hard to figure
out the secrets and their success. I mean early on,
one of our great adventags is we were distansures, so
we weren't subject to you know, invasion by our neighbors
right next door in Europe in Middle East, which is
what others had to deal with for centuries. But beyond that,
we had natural resources, we had open space, we have
fertile land, we have a diverse population from origins and

(43:11):
beliefs and all that made us stronger. But now people
trying to come here and turn this into the broken
place they came from. Whether it's Somalia, the Democratic Republic, Congo, Russia, Ron,
you take your pick. That's not the way things are.
I mean, you know, there's the Iranians. The Persians came
here and became such an integral part of America that
most people don't even know who they are. The Catherine

(43:33):
what's her name? That was Catherine Bell from Jack Jesus
Persian must People don't even know that a lot of
Persians have a lot of actresses and a lot of actors,
a lot of successful lawyers. You know, Georgians came here,
Armenians came here and have been very, very successful. But
they become Americans, and people just just grasp onto this
stuff and hold onto it to the detriment an American society.

(43:54):
If you don't want to be American, then leave yep.
I was in the army with a guy whose grandfather
came in. They moved a deer born in Michigan, worked
in the auto industry, and you know, he married a
white woman and you wouldn't know that his grandfather was
from from uh from from it's Persian.

Speaker 3 (44:09):
You wouldn't know that at all. I mean, he just
looks like anybody else. I mean, his kids a little
bit darker, barely.

Speaker 5 (44:17):
But I mean that stuff aside. The point I'm trying
to make here is that whether you're black, white, and brown,
Christian musselm but it doesn't matter. You became American. That's
what people became. Now people don't want to become American.
They want us to be forced their culture on us
that was broken, that's why they came here in the
first place.

Speaker 4 (44:32):
Well, they want to treat us like a torment. They
want to walk all over us for their own greater benefit,
uses for what they can get out of us, and
then just do what they do.

Speaker 5 (44:39):
And the leftists want that to be the way of
the wear. That's what they want. They want to expect
us to bend over, and if you don't, you're a
white supremacist, a racist, which is utter nonsense, utter nonsense,
because I'm not talking about white culture. I'm talking about
American culture. Sure, I'm talking about bluegrass and blues and
soul and R and B and you know, the Jeffersons
and all in the family, all of that. That's a America. Yeah,

(45:01):
these people. I'm absolutely tired.

Speaker 4 (45:02):
Oh the contribution black folks are made to this country.
I mean the banjo think about it. The banjo was
not a white person's instrument. It came from Africa. Black
people brought it over here. But yeah, it became such
an iconic instrument for country music.

Speaker 3 (45:16):
Yeah, ye, all sorts of contributions from people from all
over the world who come here and assimilated and done
the right things. And you know that's the right that's
the right thing to do. If I'm going to move
to say, if I was going to move to Germany,
I think I should have to learn the language as
best I possibly can and at the same time understand
their history and culture, et cetera.

Speaker 1 (45:35):
I was going to say, you do well to learn
their cultures.

Speaker 4 (45:37):
To my understanding, there's certain mannerisms about Germany, like if
you move there, you don't introduce yourself to neighbors, they
get really offended.

Speaker 1 (45:46):
Yeah, sure, they don't come to you.

Speaker 4 (45:47):
You got to go to them.

Speaker 1 (45:49):
Yeah so I've been told.

Speaker 5 (45:53):
Yeah, I never Well, I've been in Germany. I lived
in Germany. Germany, and a lot of people find the
kind of stand office I don't. A lot of people do. Yeah, so,
but no, I mean, look this, this this congresswoman from
Illinois third District. She needs to move to Guatemala and
renounce American citizenship because clear she's not proud to be
an American. You're not a hyphenated American. There's no such thing. Right.

(46:16):
You can say for cultural pride, but you can't say
that as your identity.

Speaker 3 (46:20):
And in Guatemala, which you have the opportunity to serve
in high office, that she does, I highly doubt it.

Speaker 5 (46:25):
I have no idea and I really don't care. But
you know what I'd like to find out. Let's send
her back there. Yeah she does, right, Yeah, I'm sure
she won't do very well anyway.

Speaker 1 (46:37):
So yeah, Todd, how do you feel about Marsha Blackburn
being your next governor?

Speaker 5 (46:42):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (46:42):
I's not saying she's going to be the next governor,
but yeah, right today she announced she's running for governor.
It's funny, is the first thing I received was was
a text message from her, and most of it has
had things to do with Donald Trump and then asking
for money. You had nothing to do with her achievements,
her background, anything like that had to do with Donald Trump.

(47:02):
Send me money. I saw her Facebook post was had
a picture of Donald Trump talking at a rally. You know,
not her had a picture Donald Trump at a rally,
and it had most of most of the language that
was in there had something to do with Trump, Trump's agenda,
this and that. What does the Tennessee governor have to
do with Trump's national agenda? I get it, you can
have a similar agenda, but what does Trump have to

(47:22):
do with Tennessee specifically as you being governor?

Speaker 1 (47:26):
And it makes no sense you saying she's just writing coattails.

Speaker 3 (47:29):
Riding coke tels. I mean, I mean out of her
debt for sure. But you have the rich establishment who
you know, basically essentially, I'll just say, they have a
useful idit that they can control, that they bought and
paid for. And she has, you know, millions millions of
dollars in the bank account personally that she that she's
profited off of her time in the state legislature, US
House and US Senate. She's become very wealthy. And you

(47:51):
can say, well, it's her husband that's done all that. Yeah,
Nancy Pelosi's Husban's done fairly well too.

Speaker 5 (47:56):
Let's be clear.

Speaker 4 (47:57):
So when you tell me that she's so announcing that
she's associated with Trump or liking to Trump and stuff
like that, what I'm hearing is she's telling you she's
involved with partisan politics. She's saying she's following the party lead.
That's what I hear, because that's that's basically he's the
leader of the Publican party at the time, right, it's
his agenda that's happening right now.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
But as governor, you should have your own agenda for
your state. As the chief executive of a state, right,
you're going to be the commander in chief of the
National Guard, etc. I'm not saying that. I'm not trying
to quote it to the presidency, if you will, But
in a sense, it's a microcosm of the presidency in
a lot of ways, for sure, And you have no
original ideas to put forth. You have no real accomplishments

(48:36):
of her own. But here she is wanting to be
the next governor on name recognition, in the facts, he's
a woman. I'm saying, no, I'm not voting for it,
for sure. There's a lot of other reasons for behind that.
And I don't really particularly care too much about the
establishment Republicans. They don't care about me, they don't care
about veterans. They love taking pictures with veterans and pretending
they love veterans. But let's be very clear established for

(48:57):
Republicans or about themselves, about the bottom line, or about
the next office, because most of them have never served
their country truly, especially in harm's way, and most never will.

Speaker 1 (49:07):
They shoot themselves on the own foot, too, don't they.

Speaker 5 (49:10):
Country club Republicans, They're just like the country club content
creators who've never done anything but professed to be such
great patriots and such conservatives, and they've never done anything.

Speaker 3 (49:20):
And just watch my video, watch my video, and I'll
tell you all about it, right, yep.

Speaker 5 (49:24):
Yeah, they're they're all about the clicks. Yeah, Megan Trainer
said she was all about the base. Well, they're all
about the clicks.

Speaker 1 (49:32):
God, it all goes back a little way, ah, not
that far back.

Speaker 5 (49:37):
Ways. I didn't say I always bring the culture references here.

Speaker 4 (49:40):
Yeah, very true.

Speaker 3 (49:43):
Yeah, but yeah, she's a no for me for for
a lot of reasons.

Speaker 4 (49:46):
And and you know, I can tell you she is
a senator. She wasn't. She wasn't really all that.

Speaker 3 (49:51):
No, she she was basically there the grandstand. And you know,
you think about this. At the most recent twenty four
Republican National Convention, she chased the uh, the secret Service
director around on camera just just to put on a
show quite trying to quiz in questions her chasing her Upstairwell,
I'm like, this is pathetic. If you want her to

(50:11):
answer questions, you subpoena her properly. You don't accost her
in the middle of a convention where the Secret Service
is responsible for the security and her as director ultimately responsible,
regardless of the fact that President had Trump had just
had been taking a pot shot up the week prior,
right in Pennsylvania. Besides the point, it's subpoena her, bring
her into your committee. That's where you answer asked the questions,

(50:32):
and she can answer them.

Speaker 5 (50:33):
At that point.

Speaker 3 (50:34):
Yeah, she was just showing off. It was It was
a bs. It was nonsense. I saw right through it.
I hope everybody else did. Sadly the good he established
and be like, look how tough she is she was
out there giving it to the Secret Service director.

Speaker 5 (50:45):
Well, if she was tough, she'd have been out there
in the five years before that, when the Secret Service
failed to provide information to the Senate for years, That's
what she would have been making noise. Now these has
Johnny come lately, attention seekers.

Speaker 4 (50:56):
Absolutely somebody's asking for the update on the DIMS and
Texas and that's basically a standstill. They they're still in Illinois.
They're still dodging their responsibilities. And what they call that,
they called it breaking.

Speaker 5 (51:09):
Quorum is a term for that, I call it cowardice.

Speaker 4 (51:13):
But that that is the term is breaking quorum there there?

Speaker 5 (51:16):
If you're going to be scientific on me, yes, so yeah,
it's actually attacking.

Speaker 4 (51:21):
In fact, I think we saw them.

Speaker 1 (51:24):
Do that a couple of years ago, didn't we They
did the same sort.

Speaker 5 (51:26):
Of Well listen, they're in Chicago. You're talking about them
breaking quorum. They did.

Speaker 3 (51:30):
They did that before.

Speaker 5 (51:31):
Recently, they've done it several times. But you're talking about
they're in Chicago and Illinois breaking quorum. I know some
fellas on the South Side, it could break their kneecaps
for us.

Speaker 4 (51:41):
You get those kinds of connections, Chris, I know all
kinds of Are you supposed to advertise that? I thought
those kind of connections you were supposed keep your little
black book get Away underneath your pillow.

Speaker 5 (51:49):
Now it's not a black book, it's digital.

Speaker 1 (51:53):
Yeah, just make sure it's accessible by all sorts of hackers.

Speaker 5 (51:57):
Well yeah, yeah, have you heard to the Irish mob
out of Boston.

Speaker 4 (52:03):
Yeah, they call the waity balter sure out anyway.

Speaker 5 (52:07):
No, but just kidding seriously, Now, these people are just useless.
They're supposed to be representing people in Texas and instead
they're hiding in the worst Jerryman state.

Speaker 3 (52:17):
If you're if you're representing Texas, here's what you should do.
Go to Austin, go to the state legislature, go to
going to the capitol, go to the well and argue
your point. Debate it and if you lose, you lose.
But allow the people to decide at the next election
what they want.

Speaker 5 (52:31):
That's what you do.

Speaker 3 (52:32):
You don't run away to another state to hide because
you're you're too afraid to actually face the music in
your own state. You are elected to stand there and
stand up to Republicans and Republicans where they're elected to
stand up to Democrats. That's the way it is. We
have a good adversarial system that works if you debate.
If you run and hide, it can't work. It breaks down.

Speaker 5 (52:52):
Well that's a fair statement.

Speaker 4 (52:54):
Well, they know they've lost. In the ridiculousness about this
is You can break quarum all you want to, but
at the end of the day, can't they just table
this until they come back and then they're still gonna
have to vote on it anyway. So basically they just
sold show the hind quarters. But it's also to my understanding,
some of these guys, according to Ken Paxton, might be
facing charges because they used campaign funds or some sort

(53:15):
of fund they weren't supposed to use for this effort,
So the charge.

Speaker 5 (53:21):
Did you notice, John, every one of the Democrats was
the interviewed on TV. Not one of them has a
Texas accent. Not one of them, of course not. They
got Midwest access, they got California accents, they got Northeast accents. Uh.
These are supposedly members of the legislature for Texas, look
to be like a bunch of carpetbackers.

Speaker 4 (53:37):
Texas is the biggest growing state in the United States
right now for industry and stuff, which means people are
going to migrate there for.

Speaker 5 (53:43):
Work five minutes after they arrive when they're leftists right.

Speaker 4 (53:47):
Also, when you ruin a state like California, you need
to flee because you can't afford to live anymore. Of
the fact that you make about eighty thousand dollars a year,
but you can only afford to live in a ten
on the streets on the sidewalk because you can't afford
an apartment to move out of that state and go
Somewhere's else in Texas has been a pretty good landing
point for them.

Speaker 1 (54:04):
So they're gonna ruin yet another good state.

Speaker 5 (54:06):
Well, they ruined Idaho.

Speaker 4 (54:10):
No, Idaho is still pretty good. But Billy will tell you,
and I'm sure he listening right now. We probably love
to chime in and tell you about it too. Idaho
has had the problems with these leftists.

Speaker 5 (54:19):
Moving right now. That's so I said. They ruined a
quarterline used to be having on Earth. Now it's kind
of quite frustrating. Speaking Idaho. I'll be out in Idaho
late September.

Speaker 1 (54:27):
Oh, no kidding. You're gonna stop buying and pay our
friend Billy Painter a visit.

Speaker 5 (54:31):
I will see if I can make that happen. I'll
be out there filming a documentary.

Speaker 3 (54:35):
No really, what's what's it about? If you could tell us?
Or is this a gray alien situation?

Speaker 5 (54:40):
You can't tell?

Speaker 1 (54:40):
No, I think this was the Is this a South
African migration?

Speaker 5 (54:44):
It's not the migration, but it is a South Africa story.
That's correct. The migration might play a minor role in it,
but that's not why I've been invited to participate in this.
But it will be talking about South African and South
Africans in the US, but not necessarily the reft thing,
and also what's going on with South Africans in general.
So I'm looking forward to that.

Speaker 4 (54:59):
Sodd you'll lead to space aliens or something.

Speaker 3 (55:01):
Yeah, I don't know why.

Speaker 5 (55:03):
Well, that would be Nevada man.

Speaker 3 (55:05):
I you know, since he worked in the c I A.
Remember he was a deep deep black cover operative guy,
you know, doing stuff with the aliens. I don't know
people that room around everybody.

Speaker 5 (55:19):
I could really I could use that money. Man.

Speaker 3 (55:21):
He used to work on the space station. We had
our circling Mars right, that's where you stationed at, right
Mars orbit.

Speaker 4 (55:29):
I keep hearing these clicks from Chris, and I'm thinking
he's going through his stocks, going, yeah, I'm in the money.

Speaker 5 (55:35):
Eagle Outfitters right now.

Speaker 3 (55:37):
He knew you were doing something.

Speaker 4 (55:41):
I've heard these clicks.

Speaker 5 (55:42):
Want.

Speaker 1 (55:42):
He's pretty active over I don't think he's reading articles.

Speaker 3 (55:45):
Look at the after after hours of trading tist ticket right, there.

Speaker 5 (55:48):
That's exactly what it is. It's up another six. I
just bought five more shares, five more shares, five more shares. Yeah, anyway,
I switched to a quiet keyboard. Apparently it's not so quiet.

Speaker 4 (56:02):
Nope, nope, we hear the click. So, ladies and gentlemen,
we're gonna go for a top of the hour break.
We'll be back in about five minutes. Don't go nowhere,
come back to We'll talk a little bit more about
American politics, what's going on in the United States of American.

Speaker 1 (56:13):
Have a little bit of fun, all right, ladies and gentlemen.

Speaker 4 (56:50):
If you're just now tuning in, you're listening to the
comments and conservators right here WSMN fifteen ninety on your
AM dial seven ninety five point three on your FM
dollar you can catch at WSM men dot live. Gentlemen,
we're in the second hour here. Have you heard the
case about big Balls?

Speaker 2 (57:08):
What?

Speaker 3 (57:09):
Hello?

Speaker 5 (57:11):
Air?

Speaker 4 (57:12):
Can I say that on the air?

Speaker 1 (57:13):
That's what the that's his nickname?

Speaker 4 (57:15):
I don't I'm gonna They didn't elaborate.

Speaker 3 (57:17):
I know you're talking about the dose Christy or yes, yes, yeah,
that was his handle or whatever?

Speaker 4 (57:23):
Right they yeah, yeah, it was his handle or his
nickname or something I'm saying because he's kind of aggressive,
and I mean he's only nineteen years old.

Speaker 1 (57:30):
He's kind of like on top of.

Speaker 4 (57:31):
The world with Trump administration and dogs and stuff, and
I mean, like the top player there. And apparently I
don't know, some kids recognized them, but apparently they apprehended
these children that the kids that attacked what was it
Sunday night or recently, and I believe one of them
shot him with a BB gun and they were talking
about carjacking, taking his car and stuff. And uh, but

(57:51):
I guess it was thwarted because Metro PD showed up there.
They come in the middle of it, they saw it happening,
and they and the kids fled.

Speaker 5 (58:00):
Huh.

Speaker 4 (58:00):
So they did manage to locate them and arrest them
for and charge them for their crimes.

Speaker 3 (58:04):
And we'll see how far that goes though, especially they're
just especially with the mayor, especially with the mayor there. Yeah,
they'll they'll they'll do some slap on the wrist, a
little tippy tap you guys, run.

Speaker 4 (58:16):
Along, Black still got their fun going for bailing people
out of jail and stuff or.

Speaker 3 (58:22):
Actually blue Yeah, yeah, pathetic, pathetic these people should be
put away for for for a good period of time.
You know, they didn't kill the kid, thankfully, but I
imagine if they if the police didn't show up, they
probably could have done some real damage to it. Because
I saw, I saw his head. He got some major
punk knots. And you know it takes one hit to
the to the head, hit, you hit the wrong way,

(58:44):
concussion goes sideways, and you get killed.

Speaker 5 (58:46):
You for sure.

Speaker 1 (58:47):
I watched, I watched it happen. I literally saw that happen.

Speaker 4 (58:49):
We kicked in the head.

Speaker 1 (58:50):
It was it was a martial arts tournament. Yeah, I'll
watched that guy Paris right in front of me.

Speaker 3 (58:55):
I know a guy who got who got a TB.
I just hit his head and like I thought, it
was no big deal, had on the life light headache
and then overnight died.

Speaker 5 (59:02):
Yeah wow, yeah, yeah, that's crazy. Yeah.

Speaker 4 (59:06):
I'll tell you what, man, A powerful kick will do
it to you. But like Todd said, it could be
just the right location or right something, or cause a
brain bleed and stuff in the cause late life threatening
injuries or or life stabilitating injuries. Absolutely, because you made.

Speaker 3 (59:22):
You think it's he made us think you're having a
headache and and not not not really understand what's going
on in your brain's bleating internally, and do you pass away.

Speaker 5 (59:29):
It's it. That's game over. There's no coming back from that.

Speaker 3 (59:35):
Especially after you're dead.

Speaker 5 (59:37):
I'm kidding.

Speaker 3 (59:37):
I don't mean to make light, but you.

Speaker 5 (59:39):
Know there's no coming back from that. That's uh. Now,
people just took careless with human life. It's just astounds me.
Sounds me by the way that you know that that
Air India flight that crashed right after the takeoff, they
have pretty much determined that it was homicide. Pilots off
intentionally killed all these people. Only one survivor.

Speaker 1 (01:00:00):
Wow, that happened on a airline flight years back, the
same thing.

Speaker 5 (01:00:08):
It's happened a lot of flights, but it's the German
Wings had a pilot that flew up the German Wings
Discount airline into the side of the Alps intentionally.

Speaker 4 (01:00:16):
Right, that might have been the one I'm thinking of.
I don't remember, but yeah, I do remember that something
deliberately did. I can't picture having, you know, two hundred
people behind me and doing something like that.

Speaker 1 (01:00:25):
That's just wow.

Speaker 5 (01:00:26):
Oh these people aren't well mentally. I mean, this is
the problem that these airlines have responsibility to ensure these
people mentally stayd by. I mean, you know, the qualifications
and they and the check should go through as a
military pilot are pretty intense. I would hope that the
commercial aviation does the same thing, but looking at some
of these pilots, I don't think that's the case. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:00:45):
Yeah, I've seen a couple of pilots that, you know,
I remember, I've been flying for many many years. I'm
sure the colonel has been flying for many many years
longer than that. And some of the pilots you used
to see back in the day were you know, we're
veterans and people who've flown in war and stuff like that,
people that understood how to handle the air. And now
I'll look at some of those people and I'm like,
this person's just out of high school. It's like they
understand what's what, what's the stake here is? You know,

(01:01:07):
I don't know, it's just it's just they got they got.

Speaker 4 (01:01:10):
Pretty extensive training. I mean, you don't just jump out
of high school into a big jetliner and it takes
all the questions that pops.

Speaker 3 (01:01:16):
In the back of my mind just a thought. I
don't do it to be malicious, and I never say
anything to anybody, but it's just the thought that pops
in the back of my mind. I'm like, military guy,
you know, fifteen years training, you know, and experience somebody
just out of high school just flying. I'm like, probably
could do the job for sure, but I'm like, I
would rather have that experience, that reliability before I'd had
the new guy flying me. It's just my personal thoughts.

Speaker 4 (01:01:39):
Yeah, it's kind of funny because, like you allude to,
back in the day the sixties and seventies, pilots were admired.

Speaker 7 (01:01:44):
Man.

Speaker 4 (01:01:44):
These guys were, like you said, air Force pilots and
Navy pilots, and they got great job opportunities going into
the airline industry and stuff. Had great, great money, and
they were admired for their jobs because there they were.
They took on it in the fact that they were
flying like that. But nowadays they come out of pilot
school and stuff, and they got this huge debt and

(01:02:04):
they get like forty year it's like they gotta live
with mom and dad in the basement because they can't
afford to live on the room because of all their
debts and stuff. And it's it's ridiculousness now right.

Speaker 5 (01:02:13):
Well, what's interesting about all that is that people often
get upset about how much plane tickets costs. But if
they actually look at the ticket and see a lot
of these flights, you go in three quarters the cost
are taxes fees these yeah, ara, the not the airlines necessarily,
but the government at the airport, at the state, the
federal government takeoff fees.

Speaker 3 (01:02:32):
Yeah, it's apron fees.

Speaker 5 (01:02:35):
It's just I mean, I've bought tickets. I bought a
ticket that costs eighteen hundred dollars and the amount of
money that Delta got was four hundred and twenty two dollars.
The rest went to taxes and fees.

Speaker 4 (01:02:46):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (01:02:47):
Wow, when you look at the cost of flights these days.

Speaker 4 (01:02:49):
I remember back in the seventies, you might have a
flight flying like my father, I think it took a
flight from Florida to Nevada and back. It was like
four hundred something dollar flight. But it was nineteen seventy
some you know, seventy four or seventy three, I don't remember.
But back in the day, that was a lot of money.
You know, it might be one hundred dollars today sixteen
hundred dollars today, you know, a counting for inflation. So

(01:03:10):
when you're getting a flight for four hundred dollars, you're
really not paying as much money as you think you
are comparatively.

Speaker 5 (01:03:15):
Oh today, Yeah, well, because the dollar isn't worth anything.
They've fized the currency and ruined it. So yeah, you're
definitely not getting your money's worth today. I mean, it's
it's a problem with everything, you know. I mean, look
at we're paying a frappuccino seven dollars. Now, I've got
to ninety five for a Venti When those things came
out in the summer of nineteen ninety six, I have
no clue.

Speaker 3 (01:03:34):
And then, you know, and then whenever you pay with
your credit card, like the lowest automatic tip is like
twenty five percent that they put on there. I'm like,
how about I tip you less like fifteen percent for
the coffee. I'm going to tip you, but thirty five
percent for the seven eight dollars cup of coffee. I'm sorry,
Wait a minute, they take that.

Speaker 5 (01:03:52):
I don't tip. I don't tip at Starbucks. I'm sorry.

Speaker 3 (01:03:56):
Now, I rarely wouldever shop at Starbucks. I try to
do a local coffee if I'm out, if I'm out somewhere.

Speaker 4 (01:04:01):
I thought every time I went to the drive to
with dunks or was at the counter, they had a
little coffee cup out there where I had little dollar
bills in it, where people right, that's perfectly yeah, taking it,
taking taking it involuntarily from me. I think it'd be
a little offended too.

Speaker 3 (01:04:14):
No, no, no, not involunteer. I'm saying like, like, you
have the option to tip, but like the lowest amount
that you could you know, that you could just push
it was like thirty five percent. Oh yeah, And then
they had the button for other and it's like who's
pushing other and doing like another amount? You know what
I'm saying. Most people will just say no tip, but
they hide that button ob securely down.

Speaker 5 (01:04:31):
At the bottom.

Speaker 3 (01:04:32):
So all these all these high level tips are at
the top fridge, you know, oh yeah, and most people
just hit it not knowing, and I that's thirty five
percent of what you just paid for grant allowed.

Speaker 4 (01:04:42):
That's like the car wash thing when you go get
gasoline at the gas station and and it gives you
an option for a car washing, and a lot of
people accidentally hit the yes button and they never get
the car wash and making out like a bandit on it.

Speaker 3 (01:04:53):
Oh yeah, oh yeah, I've been to a place where
the car washould look like it's been closed for a
solid year and a half. Still ask if you with
the car wash?

Speaker 4 (01:05:01):
Yeah, I knew a guy. And the reason why I
think about that, I worked.

Speaker 3 (01:05:05):
With a guy on a job Texas. I've seen it
for Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:05:09):
He he he owned a place and he said that
happens all the time. People punch us for the car
wash and they never get one.

Speaker 3 (01:05:14):
No, that's just free money for the for the for
the owner.

Speaker 5 (01:05:19):
Water there. When you said that, you said West Texas,
out in the West Texas town of El Pass. So
mine started wandering there. It's a song.

Speaker 4 (01:05:27):
Yeah, it's a good song. Yeah, all right? Yeah, what
else we got going on here? I had something else
though I was looking at No, I don't remember what
it was.

Speaker 5 (01:05:38):
Crazy.

Speaker 3 (01:05:39):
So what's the next song for? For colonel Colonel Wyat?
What's the what are you thinking?

Speaker 5 (01:05:43):
What?

Speaker 3 (01:05:44):
That was a good song, by the way.

Speaker 5 (01:05:46):
Yeah, I thought so too. I've got a bunch of him.
I got one one called Alabama Heat. That's pretty good.
That's the kind of a tribute to the refees to
come over here. We could play that when in a break.
I'll send that in Alabama. Heat's pretty good. It's a
duet country song. Once again, the country and reggae seem
to be the best ones for this artificial intelligence app
that I'm using to create this music. But yeah, Alabama

(01:06:07):
heats very popular. You know. I'm I'm I'm an artist
now I'm on on uh, on Spotify and twenty three
other music sites with my.

Speaker 3 (01:06:14):
You're you're a recording artists.

Speaker 5 (01:06:16):
That's that's it. Yeah, yeah, it's uh. I have no
musical talent, but I'm recording artists.

Speaker 4 (01:06:21):
Well, I think that there's being used loosely, right. You
come up with the lyrics, and the AI is kind
of putting together the You just tell them what kind
of genre you want to put together.

Speaker 5 (01:06:28):
The correct and I basically I'm really just a producer,
you know, at best.

Speaker 1 (01:06:33):
Well, you're you're a lyricist. You're coming up with the
lyrics yourself, right.

Speaker 5 (01:06:37):
Well, on a few of the songs, I do all
the lyrics. But that's that's quite time consuming. No wonder
musicians have a hard time getting albums out, uh, But
I give it the key themes and the keywords I
want to be included, and it finds waiting to corporate
those and it's pretty smart about understanding what you're trying
to get at. I've made some some comical songs about
politics in South Africa and some other things and and
uh yeah, so it's uh, it's it's interesting. But I've

(01:06:59):
got well, there are forty songs now published and so
you could listen the whole playlist a lot. It takes
a couple of hours get through. It's pretty cool.

Speaker 3 (01:07:07):
Wow, that's good. He's gonna he's gonna have his Uh,
that's gonna be your full income stream in the future.
Right is it loogging and doing music?

Speaker 5 (01:07:15):
I think I have no idea, but you know it
can't be looking at for some folks. So you know,
if he keeps it up, well, you know, you get.

Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
Some of these DJs that make money basically set up
some laptops, maybe a little turntable and then they just
kind of press a couple of buttons, and you know
they think a whole lot of money doing that.

Speaker 5 (01:07:30):
I mean, you could do it. Well, you have DJ Khaled,
who can't sing. He just plays other people's music and
he makes a fortune.

Speaker 3 (01:07:36):
Yeah, yeah, you get a name and all of a sudden,
it's like, man, that's it. You could get maybe a
cool hat or something that you would wear, you know
that that that's your stick, right, the cool hat, Maybe
a cane, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:07:48):
I think the beard is my stick.

Speaker 6 (01:07:50):
There you go.

Speaker 3 (01:07:50):
He just needs a little little Santa Claus little hat
hanging on, you know, maybe tilted back, you'd be you know,
you'd be hip.

Speaker 1 (01:07:57):
Chris Jingle, Chris Dingle.

Speaker 5 (01:08:02):
I don't think that's the answer.

Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
He could do Christmas songs all day long. It's middle
of July and there's Chris doing Christmas music.

Speaker 5 (01:08:11):
I'll trust me. I know those Christmas songs are all
copyrighted because I try playing them. They're all protective.

Speaker 4 (01:08:16):
Man, you make your own. I'm talking about making your own.

Speaker 5 (01:08:19):
Come on, well have to make I'm gonna have to
make some Christmas songs.

Speaker 3 (01:08:22):
Yeah, Christmas rock and for Christmas like metal Christmas song.

Speaker 4 (01:08:27):
He's writing Christmas songs and birthday songs all at the
same time because they're both relevant.

Speaker 5 (01:08:32):
Well that's true, that's true, Yep, that's true. Yeah. So
these these democrats really are just I think they're comical. Guys.
Oh did you see Trump raise the tariffs on the
semiconductors on OU that's gonna hurt, by the way, guys,
I think you know, and some of the audience knows
that when I when Trump got elected, I knew he
was going to come with tariffs. So I ordered my

(01:08:54):
laptop like on November eighth, and I got it like
a few days later. So I got a laptop before
the before the tariffs came into effect. So I got
a good deal my laptop, and I'm happy with it.
Got two people now probably ought to be so happy
when they buy laptops or PCs because those chips are going.

Speaker 4 (01:09:11):
To go up.

Speaker 5 (01:09:12):
But he raised it one hundred percent. He threatened two
hundred and fifty percent of chips, so it was only
one hundred percent. And then India, he's angry in India.
This is not going well. They got a fifty percent tariff.

Speaker 4 (01:09:21):
Oh yeah, they've been kind of plenty of It's funny
because we've done a lot for India, you know, through
the years, with education and medicine and stuff, and they're
not very reciprocal with us.

Speaker 5 (01:09:34):
No they're not. And there's an awful lot of stuff
that emanates from Indian MILICIAUS stuff on the internet, scams
and fraud and stuff like that, and the government India
doesn't do much to stop it. And that's a real
issue with our government. They would like the cyber issues
to be addressed and they're not being addressed.

Speaker 4 (01:09:47):
So you brought up tears. I thought you're going to
bring up the pharmaceuticals. He's looking at two hundred and
fifty percent of pharmaceuticals.

Speaker 5 (01:09:53):
Yeah, that's coming too, But that wasn't announced. They wasn't.
I didn't see that.

Speaker 4 (01:09:56):
No, I just looking at it here a moment ago.
While let's see. President Trump plans to levy a step
wise series of pharmacy pharmaceutical terriffs that could reach one
hundred fifty percent within a year and a half and
then rise up to two hundred and fifty percent, he
said in a wide ranging interview on nbc c NBC Tuesday.
It's the highest teriff rate the president has threatened the

(01:10:17):
industry at two date, while he also presses a major
manufacturers to commit to most Favored Nation pricing policy. So
I think the threat is for leverage. But you know Trump,
if he you know, you don't come through, He's going
to follow through.

Speaker 5 (01:10:30):
Yeah, No, it's uh, you know, it's funny how they
love to have this thing to talk about, and they
wanted to talk about, you know, taco. Trump always chickens out,
but he does it. He's generous and give his people,
gives him a chance. And now they're finding out the
hard way that Trump is serious.

Speaker 4 (01:10:44):
So, yeah, they don't use that term anymore because they
found out Trump doesn't check it out. He knows, he
knows his stakes, and he knows his leverage points, and
he knows where he stands, and when he says something,
he means it.

Speaker 5 (01:10:55):
Yeah, when he says it, it's for real. Don't check around.

Speaker 4 (01:10:58):
So did I see something about the Vladimir and Vladimir
are planning a meeting or something. I thought I heard
something or saw something about it somewhere, and now I've
got to look and see. But I don't know if
they're starting to.

Speaker 1 (01:11:11):
Work on cooling things down now or I thought I
actually asked because I thought you actually would have known.

Speaker 4 (01:11:17):
But sorry, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:11:22):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:11:25):
Well, it's not coming up right away, so it might
be a little updated.

Speaker 1 (01:11:29):
Maybe it's a few days old or something.

Speaker 3 (01:11:33):
All right, Yes, buddy, Brian Harrison, he's a Texas state representative.
I worked with him and there in the Bush administration,
he's he just destroyed. Seeing in the last couple of
days with regards to jerry mandering, he's showing he's showing
him like, hey, this is this is what Illinois looks like.
And he's like, this is what Texas will look like.
Which one's worse here? You know, like you know which

(01:11:55):
one's worse here?

Speaker 5 (01:11:56):
You know?

Speaker 4 (01:11:56):
And they can't they have to like the stand up,
I'll tell you what the comical punch line and all
this is. Since Texas did their redistricting, now needs is like,
well I'll pay them back. Well, Jury Mandarin California, It's like, hello,
what what does that mean?

Speaker 1 (01:12:14):
I thought? And then in the New York State, I
think it's following suit. It's like, these people are ridiculous.

Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
So they're proving the point that you know that this
is what they actually do, and what what what will
happen if Texas will redraw the districts and they'll be like, oh,
that's actually pretty fair. You know, it'll probably be fair.
That time will tell.

Speaker 5 (01:12:34):
We shall see.

Speaker 4 (01:12:35):
Yes, Sometimes you know it's it's tilted, I mean and
I'm sure the right has done it too.

Speaker 3 (01:12:41):
I'm sure they absolutely absolutely.

Speaker 1 (01:12:43):
I know New Hampshire did it here a couple of
years ago.

Speaker 4 (01:12:47):
They had to read it.

Speaker 1 (01:12:48):
It wasn't jury Mandarin, as far as I know, they
were redistrict districting and it was it wasn't something like
you know, it wasn't willie knilly. You know they make
the sound like Texas was just all willy nilly. This
stuff is a lot to work. And in fact, they
were having a hard time.

Speaker 4 (01:13:02):
Meeting the deadline, and I think the governor had to
push on a little bit and said, no, you need
to have this ind by this date now, because this
is ridiculous what you're doing. Yeah, and as far as
I know, everything turned off fine as far you know,
when they were done and said about it, it didn't
turn into a big fiasco, right, God, So.

Speaker 5 (01:13:22):
We're talking about lunatics here. What do you want it
that's supposed to making You.

Speaker 3 (01:13:25):
Can't rationally, you can't get into their head. You can't.
You know, the story I talked about the lady that
I actually I don't know though I told you this
day was at dinner early I was telling this story.
I told her on the show before twenty seventeen Trump's
first inauguration. I was leaving one event to go somewhere
else and one of those pink ladies with the type
of hat you know I'm talking about, looks like a
female genitalia, like a group of I'm a lady had

(01:13:47):
fell herd her leg really bad. And I stopped in
rendered ad and was telling them like, Okay, there's a
fire station right around the corner if you want to
go grab them or just calling nine one one. Let
them know what street it is and tell them. Tell
them the cross streets. And I gave him the cross streets.
They were maybe half a block or more away from
the street signs, so I said, this is the crosstrees.
Tell them they're telling them, you're up half a block
on the right hand side. They'll come right to you.

(01:14:08):
Ambul starts to show up. I leave, and I'm like, well,
I gotta hurry up. I gotta get to this other event.
You know, I'm working at this other event. And then
they're like, oh, you're working the inauguration. I said yes,
and they were so nice to me up to that point.
Then they started cuss cursing me out. I'm like, I
just helped your friend here for about twenty minutes and
now I'm in an ahole, sob you know, fascist all
this stuff. As I was walking away, I'm like showing

(01:14:30):
you true colors. And then the lady who I helped
was like, no, please, he was nice to me, Please
don't do it, you know. And she was actually appreciative though,
but her friends were just a holes, couldn't help her
at all, letting her lay there with her busted up leg.

Speaker 1 (01:14:42):
You know, it's funny because you bring that up.

Speaker 4 (01:14:44):
And I saw a post here recently on social media,
a guy wh was looking at a bunch of people
dancing around with mask on and all of a sudden,
it just breaks us. He goes, you know in twenty twenty,
how you acted in twenty twenty, and how you responded
to the COVID crisis or so called Crovis crisis.

Speaker 1 (01:15:00):
That's your true personality. That's who you are.

Speaker 4 (01:15:02):
And if you were weak and you caved, you're a
weak person and you cave. But those who were strong
were strong, and they stood strong. They're still stand under
strong today. That's who they are because you were tested.
I really loved I loved this video. I shared it, I.

Speaker 1 (01:15:15):
Think, on my Facebook page because I really loved what
he said.

Speaker 4 (01:15:20):
But it's true, that's true, and that's who they are
when they when they saw you, they didn't think about
the kind deed you did. They didn't think the fact
that you didn't.

Speaker 1 (01:15:27):
Take into consideration her affiliations or associations place. You did
what you did because it was a human experience.

Speaker 4 (01:15:33):
You saw a human in needing, you responded accordingly, right,
and they did not have any appreciation for her to
realize what you've done for them. They just simply, you know,
to use their terminology, the objectified U toadds.

Speaker 3 (01:15:44):
Absolutely, you know, And it's funny. I had another story
that kind of similar to that is when I lived
in Crystal City. Occasionally go to the Mortons there in
Crystal City and have a cigar a couple of drinks
in the evenings. And I had a cigar. It wasn't
even lit. I left. My apartment was on the fifth floor,
going down. I think we stopped on the fourth floor.
Lady gets on. We go down to the line and
I have to go one or two more down and
go out the back through the underground. Chris of the
underground and this lady looks down after going like one floor,

(01:16:07):
sees that I have a cigar not lit, was hadn't
been lit yet. She starts this fake coughing routine and
gets off and says something to me, And I put
it basically in her face, probably about maybe a foot away.
I said, it's not even lit yet, and she goes
oh and walks away. Didn't have anything to say after that,
this whole big You shouldn't be smoking on the elevator,

(01:16:29):
like it's not lit yet, and so aw, she says, oh,
walks away, What a fool. There's pools out there everywhere.

Speaker 5 (01:16:35):
Well, I'm a big opponent of cigarettes, but not that silly.
If people aren't smoking, I don't lose my mind. It's crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:16:42):
I don't smoke, and I haven't smoked because it doesn't
do well for me. But I liked smoking. I actually
did when I smoked it.

Speaker 5 (01:16:49):
Liked it.

Speaker 4 (01:16:49):
Particularly.

Speaker 1 (01:16:50):
Do like cigars. I think they're nice.

Speaker 3 (01:16:51):
Yeah, I like an occasional cigar.

Speaker 5 (01:16:53):
I'm not every day.

Speaker 3 (01:16:54):
I don't have to have a cigar, but if I mean,
there's times whenever I'd smoke more cigars that I do now.
But now I'll have one every maybe two a month,
you know, during the summer summer months. That's about it.

Speaker 1 (01:17:06):
I used to do.

Speaker 5 (01:17:07):
We called him sundowners. When I was in Liberia, my
predecessor would meet up with the ambassador and they'd sit
on the deck and look out at the sun going
down on the west of the Atlantic Ocean off the
Maba Point Peninsula in Liberia. And so when I got there,
the ambassador wanted to do that, so we gave it
a shot a few times and sit up there and
have a cigar and relax. But we were just so busy,

(01:17:30):
the two of us. I don't know how. I don't
know how he pulled off before. I guess I worked
harder at my predecessor.

Speaker 3 (01:17:33):
I don't know, right, Yeah, I loved I loved the
little outside patio that they had at Saudi Arabia at
the embassy there, the Ring Barracks is right there. They
have a swimming pool, a little bar. That was always
fun to set out at the pool in the evenings
after you get all that work done and you have
a cigar before you go back to the hotel. Good times.

Speaker 5 (01:17:51):
Yeah, No, it's amazing how time passes. I mean, I'm
talking that's like June of two thousand and seven. That's
almost twenty years ago. That's how I know it's weird.

Speaker 3 (01:18:00):
I mean, I'm thinking back, you know, getting Station at
the White House. I'm like, that was such a great thing,
and I'm like, it's twenty three years ago this December.
That's crazy.

Speaker 5 (01:18:09):
Yeah, where did it come? I mean Landi Anderson was
seventy nine. What happened there? Right?

Speaker 4 (01:18:14):
Well, you know, they say, they say there's a thing
about with entertainment and stuff that you're supposed to retire
at a certain time, because it's kind of like how
you retire, how people remember you. Right, So when you
think of Betty White, you think of her in her
nineties because that's how you last remembered her. But a
lot of times when you haven't seen somebody in the
last twenty years and year they passed away, they think
they're there in their fifties. You don't stop in their seventies.

Speaker 1 (01:18:36):
So it's a thing.

Speaker 5 (01:18:39):
Well, you know, on on w KRP, you had Bailey
Quarters who was the straight girl but very ATTRACTI because
she was also model, and it was played by by
Jan Smithers. She's seventy six, seventy six, My goodness, wow, wow.

Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
Well, you know, well was Chris, whyatt? What are you
fifty nine and holding?

Speaker 5 (01:19:03):
I'm fifty nine again this year? That's correct?

Speaker 1 (01:19:05):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:19:06):
Yeah, you know, it's kind of funny because I often
tell people, I think I've said a couple of times
on this show, you're look in the mirror trying to
clean yourself up, and you wish the old man will
get out of the way.

Speaker 1 (01:19:15):
You can't see yourself because he keeps getting in the
way you move, he moves.

Speaker 4 (01:19:18):
What's up with this?

Speaker 5 (01:19:19):
Well, I mean I look in the mirror and I
just saw that's you know, I lost a little pigmentation
there in the in the hair color, but it picked
up some pigmentation in the pink face. So maybe my
face is drawing all the melon from my beard in
my hair.

Speaker 1 (01:19:35):
You're getting more and more of that Chris Kringle.

Speaker 5 (01:19:36):
Look, yeah, I guess it's time for the beer to go.
I think maybe that's the secret.

Speaker 4 (01:19:41):
Yeah. So we Yeah, a lot of these people, you know,
they're passing the way, and we remembered him at a
greater time in their lives, and so when they go
it is astonishing. You know, You're like, well, wait a minute,
what happened?

Speaker 5 (01:19:51):
Why?

Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
Why is hal Cogan gone or why is Ozzy Osbourne gone?
This doesn't make sense. But Keith Richards, by the way,
has no intentions on leaving anytime soon.

Speaker 4 (01:19:59):
So you're safe there.

Speaker 5 (01:20:00):
Let's see one hundred and thirty seven.

Speaker 1 (01:20:01):
Now I don't know. I hear tell that he was
there when God arrived.

Speaker 5 (01:20:07):
Yeah, well that's the thing, you know. So a lot
of artists come through central Pennsylvania because we have Hershey
and either they play in the Giant Center, which takes
tens of thousand and ten thousand or something like that,
or they play at Hershey STAIU, which should hold like
forty thousand, and so a lot of these artists. I'm
not really interesting in going to a concert, but I
go just because it might be the last time, you know.
So I went to I went to Hershey Park and

(01:20:28):
watch the Outlault Music Festival a couple of years ago,
just because Van Morrison was coming, and he was like,
sel here you go classic, yeah, oh yeah, and Van
morrisons seventy three, you know. But he walked on the
stage at the top of the hour, played his whole set,
didn't nonsense, chat or anything, finished his set at the
next hour and walked off the stage. The only thing
is he didn't play Brown Eyed Girl, which is a
little aappointed, but but he played the whole hour is amazing.

(01:20:51):
It was well worth the money. I didn't go for
anything above Van Morrison, so I went to see that.
Baron Manlow came to town. And Barry Manilow spills in
his last tour, but I think he keeps having last
tours like share and he performed it the Giant Center
and it was just amazing. And so Barry Manilow went
to Philadelphia. Happened to get free tickets from vet Tics,
and went to Philadelphia a day that I had rugby
in South Philadelphia, then had to go to Baltimore for something,

(01:21:12):
and then came all the way back up to Philadelphia
for Hall and Oates. They were in their seventies and
now they're not. They got this big dispute. So Hallanoa,
it's Barry Manilow, and then then Van Morrison. And then
also I watched now she's not in the same boat
because she's a couple of days younger than me, and
that's Shania Twain. This past weekend I went to see

(01:21:32):
Shandi Twain, She's fifty nine. Twain's fifty nine. She don't
love fifty nine. No, she don't love fifty nine. That's uh.
She looked good out there, but yeah, yeah that that
don't impress me much, but that she did?

Speaker 3 (01:21:45):
You miss you mentioned Brown Eyed Girl? Van Morrison? Is
that your favorite song of his?

Speaker 6 (01:21:51):
No?

Speaker 5 (01:21:51):
No, no, I mean I don't. I don't really have
a favorite Van Morrison song. I just love so many
things he's done.

Speaker 3 (01:21:55):
He's end of the Myssic Hits. HiT's just perfect for me.

Speaker 5 (01:22:00):
Love that song now I've had Morrison was such a
talented musician. It is such a time of musician, and
it's such a WATCHDN and going all the way back,
way back in there. But I mean there are people
have Is Bob Dylan still alive? I think he is so.

Speaker 3 (01:22:11):
I saw him in concert Hawaii. That was a great concert.

Speaker 5 (01:22:13):
I mean, I mean, like that are going to disappear
at some point too, you know.

Speaker 4 (01:22:17):
Yeah, the stones you hush your mouth. That's not supposed
to happen.

Speaker 5 (01:22:22):
The Traveling Wilberry's are gone, guys, I mean.

Speaker 4 (01:22:26):
Yeah, Tom petty Man, Yeah, that was that was premature.

Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
To be a will bear, you had to already be
a great artist. To get invited to be a.

Speaker 5 (01:22:33):
Member, I think to be I think to be a
travel Wilberg the exception of Tom Petty, you had to
be on death's door, you know.

Speaker 3 (01:22:39):
Yeah, absolutely, man, So many greats were Willberry's my good Robison.

Speaker 5 (01:22:44):
Oh yeah he was.

Speaker 3 (01:22:46):
He's unbelievable. I mean it was unbelievable. I mean, my goodness.

Speaker 5 (01:22:50):
Yeah. But when you think about it, there's gonna be
one of these folks. They just it's just amazing. These
are just names you grew up with. And some of
them I realized how much older they were than me.
I didn't know Lannie Anderson was two decades older than me.
That was a bit of surprise.

Speaker 4 (01:22:59):
So Bob Dylan is eighty four years of age born
May nineteen forty one.

Speaker 3 (01:23:08):
Holden said that Bob Dylan received a Nobel Peace Prize.
And I think he did receive the Nobel Peace Prize, right,
And I think at least some Nobel prize I didn't know.
Sheldon Cooper called out the Nobel price. It's not being
a real Nobel. Yeah, but I mean, look y also,
Airfact got one, so you know, right, yeah, right, yeah,

(01:23:29):
And Obama got Oboma got one for the idea of peace,
not because Yeah, and then he lost three wars, right,
and then he then he drone actual American citizen, underage
American citizens, remember, remember, yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:23:41):
He yeah, that's right. He never forget extra judicially used
drones to kill American citizens without any legal authorization and
not being called to count for it. Yeah. No, it's
Nobel Peace Prize. Come on, guys, I mean that's but
you know, Trump has got like three nominations this time.
Pakistan is nominated him, Cambodi is nominating him. I think

(01:24:02):
someone else nominating Trump for of course I don't ever
give him one, but but if anybody deserves one, it's Trump.
He's ended more wars than anyone history.

Speaker 3 (01:24:08):
Right, Well, he could give it an own nuclear weapons
on the planet tomorrow, negotiates some sort of settlement with
with the Gray Aliens where they'll give us so much
gold every year and make us the wealthiest country in
the world, make us the planet that's so safe and secure,
so technologically advanced. They'd still shun him.

Speaker 5 (01:24:26):
Yeah, they were still shunning Well, you know with some
of these governments. Something. Look, when when Obama was in office,
I felt like we were watching that movie Mars Attacks.

Speaker 3 (01:24:35):
You know, it was the noise that made.

Speaker 4 (01:24:40):
What song was it blew their heads?

Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
There was some old country song.

Speaker 5 (01:24:47):
The best part was when with her day, the one
from Ohio is the sex of the city, which she was.
She was put on the little chill always body or head.

Speaker 3 (01:24:54):
Yeah, it's so ridiculously over the top movie.

Speaker 1 (01:24:59):
I love it.

Speaker 4 (01:25:00):
It was brilliant.

Speaker 5 (01:25:05):
I forgot about the south of the Martians made. That's
so funny. But typical Democrats, we'd like to negotiate.

Speaker 3 (01:25:13):
There's a twilight zone. We talked about aliens that that
came and like, uh, basically was telling you know, like, hey,
you're gonna have to do X, Y and Z. Overnight
the world got rid of their military. The settled, they
had peace treaties and all this stuff. They're like, no,
we wanted you to fight and destroy one another. That's
what we wanted because that's what you do best. You know,
you don't do you don't do peace best, you do

(01:25:33):
war best. That's human nature.

Speaker 5 (01:25:35):
Sad Well, I'm sure that somewhere aliens, you know, they
have you know, satellites that watch Earth and they get
it's like we're a video game watching us kill each.

Speaker 3 (01:25:42):
Other, you know, so right, Well, there are the theories
out there that people say we're a zoo. Basically we're
kind of just being watched at this point, you know,
because we're too dangerous to be trusted, because we want
to blow everything up and kill everything, and we have
the power to destroy the entire world many times over.
And that's that's safety and security for crying one. I
don't think so. I mean, I'm not a guesst having

(01:26:02):
nuclear weapons because other people have it. But wouldn't it
be nice if nobody had nukes and nobody wanted to
fight anybody or kill anybody, everybody just got along trade
and commerce and free travel amongst people. Uh, you know,
I realized we don't live in a utopia. If it
wouldn't that be nice, It's never gonna happen it would
be nice, So never gonna have That's why we have borders,
That's why we have laws, rules, regulations, why we have militaries.

(01:26:23):
Because human beings are human beings. They're gonna they're gonna
make some of the worst decisions they possibly can. And
you know, they have no problem in killing people who
look different or act different than them.

Speaker 4 (01:26:32):
I built it up here before you know. I mean,
like one percent of the world's population works on the
level of psychopathy. I mean there are social psychopaths alter
in the world. There are social paths out the world,
and narcissists do enough damage job by themselves.

Speaker 3 (01:26:45):
Sure, but emotional thinkers are psychopaths.

Speaker 4 (01:26:48):
Don't necessarily mean they're gonna become world leaders. But they
got a great deal of chance everybody else because they've
got no sense of emotion.

Speaker 3 (01:26:55):
Or or regret, no sense of shame. Yeah, shame.

Speaker 4 (01:27:00):
Like AOC or somebody, you know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (01:27:02):
Well, narcissists people whenever they fail, it's not their fault.
It's other people who mess them.

Speaker 5 (01:27:09):
Yeah, it's never their fault. It's never their fault. But
you know, you got me on the mood there, Todd.
You were you were like talking about I'm thinking, we
are the world, we are the children.

Speaker 3 (01:27:21):
It's too we make a better way, just you and
didn't didn't Prince he was up there right in Princeton
sing everybody is in the Prince was in it. Uh,
he had the whole time, I think, right, did he?

Speaker 5 (01:27:34):
I didn't know that. I think he did. I think
he did. But that was I mean, look, we we
joke about it and make fun of it. That was
a heck of an effort by those artists. I mean
that was really and it was good. It was good music.
It wasn't just some crappy song.

Speaker 1 (01:27:45):
And I think it was Michael Jackson started that.

Speaker 5 (01:27:47):
It was he who I know it was. It was
the British guy what's his name, Bob Geldolf. It was Bob, Yeah,
it was Bob yelled Off from Pink Floyd. I didn't
know that. I did know, maybe were just in the
movie Bob Bob Geldoff is the one who started that
live aid Yeah. And then of course Willie Nelson did

(01:28:09):
Farm eight.

Speaker 3 (01:28:10):
After that, so yeah, speaking of British bands, Speaking of
British band, Spinal Tap is about to make another final tour. Guys,
spinal Tap another final.

Speaker 4 (01:28:18):
This is my favorite guitar because well it goes up
to eleven, not ten, but eleven.

Speaker 3 (01:28:24):
Why not make ten just a little bit louder.

Speaker 5 (01:28:26):
It's a live live from their live from their sarcopha. Guy, Uh,
spinal Tap comes back.

Speaker 3 (01:28:32):
Yeah, but he didn't know the difference between feet and
inches the thing and he made a little stonehands little
thing that popped up. Oh yeah, well, hilarious, great movie.

Speaker 5 (01:28:46):
So this Zoran, I call him Zoolander, Mom, Dommy, this
guy is a member and he is part of a
group that endorsed North koreas totalitarian states. You're about the Democrats,
Socialist America and its international Committee. We're endorsing and supporting
organizations for a People's Summon of Korea to be held

(01:29:07):
July twenty fifth, twenty seventh in New York City. The
forum called for reunification of South Korea with the North,
not the other way around, and promoted claims and imperialist
forces of unfairly disparaged the communist nation.

Speaker 3 (01:29:19):
South Korea. Yes, yeah, okay.

Speaker 5 (01:29:22):
So one of the problems we face the United States
is that the NonStop demonization caricaturing of the DPRK Democratic
People's Republic of Korea. Imperialism wants us to believe the
government of North Korea and the people in North Korea
are completely distinct and fundamentally antagonistic. Well, they are. A
member of the group said, this lie facilitates any number
of imperialists maneuvers, ranging from sanctions to conducting wardrobes, as

(01:29:43):
it allows the imperialists to say that they're carrying out
these actions on behalf of North Korea and against their government.

Speaker 3 (01:29:49):
What so let's say that word to happen. Let's say
South Korea had you know, a brain fart and said, yeah,
we'll we re unifyed with you guys in North Korea
took over. How quickly would North Korea come down to
the South and invade take everything that's technological or anything
that they could that's not bolted down back to the North.
I mean, it'd be almost overnight, right, and then of
course the South would collapse rather quickly anyway, would be

(01:30:12):
just a bit like the North. If you allowed that
to happen.

Speaker 5 (01:30:15):
Well, look, it's not even that. I mean, the bottom
line with this whole thing is is that people you know,
when I think the answer that people you look at
here is any pay attention to what happened to Germany
when the German Democratic Republic was merged with the Western part.
They still haven't recovered nineteen ninety they still haven't recovered
because how much it costs. They devalued the mark, which
was a foolhardy idea. Then they became the euro, which

(01:30:37):
is another bad idea, and they still haven't recovered, and
Germany was infinitely better positioned, the world's third largest economy
at the time, infinitely better position to succeed South Korea,
which is much stronger now than it was thirty years ago.
But South Korea, if they had to absorb the North,
it's a total disaster. Twenty four to twenty eight million
people in the North, most of them starving to death
most of the time. No serious industry up there except

(01:30:58):
stuff for defense and nothing. There's no potential up there
except some mining. If South Korea merged with North Korea,
it would be an epic financial disaster for the South.
It would take decades, if not half a century for
them to turn that stuff around. And because we haven't
seen it in thirty years in Germany, east is still blighted.
It still looks horrible compared to the West. Not nearly
as well developed.

Speaker 3 (01:31:19):
All right, Yeah, I I was in Berlin and just
the late nineties. I know, the wall just fell, but
you could definitely see a market difference.

Speaker 5 (01:31:26):
The West.

Speaker 3 (01:31:27):
Germany was like a Western nation, you know what I'm saying,
Like New York City in a lot of ways, a
microcosm in New York City. And then the East was
just like some city that's been bombed out still.

Speaker 5 (01:31:37):
Yeah. In fact, you could still see bullet holes on
buildings in nineteen ninety one in the eastern side of
the city that they never bother to patch up from
the second came of.

Speaker 3 (01:31:44):
Some places there still in some of the buildings they
still have it, but some places have repair done some repairs,
but can't patches to remind people because you have so
many tourist that come there, you know, that's what they
want to see. That's that's a lot of dollars to do.

Speaker 5 (01:31:57):
To be fair, the community has probably left some of
the bullet holes of the buildings to be a reminder
to people throughout the commerce regime too. Yeah, act up,
this is what what awaits you, you know, so that
was probably intentional as well.

Speaker 3 (01:32:08):
Lay waste to your city after Allied bombers of course
come across.

Speaker 5 (01:32:12):
A few times. Oh my goodness. Yeah, Germany, what a
stark contrast between the two germanys. I mean, you couldn't
define it any better than the difference between the peoples
of the Federal Republic and the German Democratic Republic just
night and day. I mean, you got Czechoslovakia at the
time and you've got the Romanian, you've got Bulgarian. You
just love always place behind the our curtain. That's one thing,
But there's no constituent other part of those countries. They're

(01:32:35):
all they're all there. Germany was split in thirds, one
third gone forever to the polls and the Russians, and
then the other third in the middle, and then the
western third, and you could see the same people completely divided.
I mean, that whole thing is just just crazy. I
look back and imagine what we went through, living through
the Cold War was just something else. And all those

(01:32:55):
people who were murdered by the East Germans when they
tried to escape, and then it all just came down
at once, remember that nineteen eighty nine, and people started
going to Hungary and the Hungarians wouldn't stop, and they
crossed over in the Austria, and the Austrians didn't stop them,
and suddenly was news and everybody's there covering it. At first,
it was a few because they're there on holiday. The
went weather's summer, and so many were gone that these

(01:33:16):
Germans couldn't stop it, and they just they gave up.
And then the flood gates open. Next to you another
all standing on top of Berlin Wall and tearing the
wall down, and oh my goodness. One of the best
lines happen to me is, mister Gorbachev, tear down this wall, right,
if you.

Speaker 3 (01:33:30):
Seek peace, come to this gate, open this gate, and
he says, tear it down. I love it.

Speaker 5 (01:33:35):
Yeah, Well it came down, and we never asked a question.

Speaker 3 (01:33:39):
Maybe you guys know the answer that Donald J. Trump
announced anything about meeting with Putin and Zelenski sometime next week.
I've not heard anything about that. Have you guys heard
anything yet?

Speaker 4 (01:33:48):
Trump says good prospect of summit with Putin and Zelensky
after envoys Russia visit Okay, said there's a good chance
he could meet with Russian and Ukrainian leaders following well.
He describes as a very good talks between his eyes,
boy in Vladimir Putin earlier in the day asked the
White House whether the two leaders had agreed to such summit.
The US President said there was a very good prospect,
but did not give further details.

Speaker 3 (01:34:09):
Yeah, let me correct one thing in the common here.
Pablo Charlie says North Korea's mineral wealth is estimated between
six to ten trillion, but Chris says they have nothing.
In fact, Chris said, that's what they have, precisely minerals.

Speaker 5 (01:34:21):
That's right, That's what I said, said, that's all they have.
They have no agriculture potential, they have no retail potential. Yeah, no,
I did say, that's all they have. Is Made is
trying to call me out. He's always trying to do that.

Speaker 4 (01:34:31):
So you guys, you guys were talking about East Germany
and stuff earlier. Now, remember we had a guest on
who escaped Czechoslovakia when it was a communist nation, told
us a story about escaping.

Speaker 1 (01:34:42):
It's kind of when you're talking about that, that's what
That's what my mind went back to.

Speaker 4 (01:34:45):
Was was this guy talking and it was a harrowing
feat for them, his family and stuff. They were risking
life and limb trying to get out of a communist
nation because these people don't want you to escape, they'll
kill you in the process.

Speaker 5 (01:34:57):
Yeah. Well, let me go back real quick here too.
You're saying, Pablo Charlie said yes, and I'll stick to
a little bit of mining. So you're trying to tell
us that six to ten trains a lot of money, Well,
in Nvidia is worth four trillion dollars in asset value.
Microsoft is worth four trillion dollars and Adobe is probably
worth two trillion dollars. Or I add one or two

(01:35:17):
more companies. That's ten trillion dollars for three privately held
companies in the United States out of millions of companies
in America, six to ten trillion dollars worth of mental
wealth is nothing. I can stop an asteroid and tether it,
or put it in gioseckness word with the Earth and
mine it and get trillions of dollars out of that asteroid.
And I don't have to rely on North Korea. It's
not it's a drop in the bucket. They've got nothing

(01:35:39):
of any value that anybody wants, and they're useless. It's
splits to the world.

Speaker 3 (01:35:44):
Yeah, even with ten trillion dollars, which I mean obviously
for one individual, there's certainly a lot of money, but
you're talking about millions of people who are starving in mountain, nourished, impoverished,
have no doctors, no physicians, nothing, have no running water,
all this stuff. That money would go very very quickly
to try to provide basic services to that many people.

Speaker 5 (01:36:01):
Well, but even so, if if you got mentos of
six to tradon dollars, six to ten trallion dollars. Once
it's mine, then what have they got? But you got
nothing doesn't get replaced.

Speaker 4 (01:36:11):
I don't know about Utah, but I just heard Chris
Wyatt the asteroid Cowboy.

Speaker 5 (01:36:16):
Yeah, man, I'm telling you, I think I'm starting an
asteroid mining company.

Speaker 4 (01:36:21):
There's going to be folklore in the future. They're gonna
write country sides about them.

Speaker 3 (01:36:25):
Christ glasses the potential, so it's rare.

Speaker 5 (01:36:29):
Earths are not so rare on asteroids. Man, we're talking
about a lot.

Speaker 4 (01:36:32):
Of it's it's actually a thing, so we're we're talking
about this is insane, But we're talking about setting up
a nuclear facility on the Moon.

Speaker 5 (01:36:45):
It's a power station. I got a probum with that.

Speaker 4 (01:36:47):
Yeah, well, the idea logic. They talked about this thirty
thirty forty thousand, thirty forty years ago about Yeah, it
feels like thousands of thirty forty years ago they were
talking about setting up space station.

Speaker 1 (01:37:00):
On the Moon and use that from a launch pad
to get the Mars. So that's what it sounds like
they're trying.

Speaker 3 (01:37:05):
To Because you don't have to break to break the
Earth's gravity. To break the Earth's gravity, you gotta you
gotta be able to propel a rocket seventeen five hundred
miles per hour just to get to low Earth orbit
for power.

Speaker 1 (01:37:16):
If you already gravity to get to the Moon, then
you don't have to break it, right.

Speaker 3 (01:37:20):
Exactly a fraction of what it is concepts resources.

Speaker 4 (01:37:25):
So the concept is you'd build a station where your
ships are on the Moon and you only have to
transport people from Earth, so it's lighter travel. But can
you imagine building a how you're going to operate a
nuclear facility on the moon. Okay, so you can use
particles from the moon, right, moon dust or whatever to
mix concrete and stuff like that. What are you using
for a cooling station? There are ice crystals on the Moon,
I suppose, and.

Speaker 5 (01:37:46):
There's a great deal of water on the poles, and
there are also lava caves there the remnants of caves,
so you can stay out of the solar radiation. Yeah,
I know, there's a lot of potential on the Moon
and doing awful lot of stuff. The only thing is
missing is oxygen.

Speaker 4 (01:38:00):
I think you have to module, right, you have to
have the means for equipment and manpower and stuff to
get on the Moon, and I mean this is going
to be a huge feat and undertaking.

Speaker 5 (01:38:10):
We can get there.

Speaker 3 (01:38:12):
We can get to the Moon, no problem. It's a
matter of getting all the other stuff off of Earth
lifted up there.

Speaker 5 (01:38:18):
Well. If we haven't been built, or if we had
not been dorking around for fifty plus years since the
Policy Space Program, we would already have functioning space stations
on the Moon. In fact, we haven't done. It just
shows that the lack of leadership. We squandered money on
the Great Society. We squander money in Iraq, We squandered
money on so many other things we could have put
into space, and we need it. It's necessary. A lot

(01:38:39):
of people think it's pine the sky, but I don't so.

Speaker 4 (01:38:41):
The reason why I would say it's kind of pining
this guy is because their objective is to occupy the Moon.
Have this built and occupy the Moon by twenty thirty
five years now.

Speaker 5 (01:38:50):
That is not nasa' subjective. Go look at their website.
They are most proud not of that. The most important
goal is to put a woman on the Moon and
a person of color.

Speaker 3 (01:39:00):
That's the primary, most important thing that.

Speaker 4 (01:39:03):
I don't want.

Speaker 5 (01:39:04):
I don't want to be a person of color and
a woman.

Speaker 1 (01:39:06):
I don't want to be crude.

Speaker 4 (01:39:07):
But with other men on the moon that are trying
to get the nuclear power plant are built up, they're
gonna need, you know, somebody to cook them.

Speaker 5 (01:39:15):
That's not God, John, he.

Speaker 3 (01:39:17):
Did not do that.

Speaker 4 (01:39:19):
Hey, you know what, if the left can do it,
I can be an opposition John, John, I just saw
love Nashville. Just blow upon me, Everybodyjohn is.

Speaker 5 (01:39:27):
In the studio with with with with PowerPoint mess around
with photographs of Sydney Sweeney at the moment, so you
can send your letters to him, John.

Speaker 1 (01:39:37):
Hey, all hate mail can be received here at w
S M.

Speaker 5 (01:39:39):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:39:39):
I hear George Russell loves to read him and he'll
afford them. He does.

Speaker 5 (01:39:45):
He does not Bill.

Speaker 3 (01:39:50):
He's a common sense conservative too. Let's let's face it.

Speaker 1 (01:39:53):
Yeah, Hey, I want to read hate mail. Send me
the hate mail. I don't care.

Speaker 4 (01:39:56):
I'll read it.

Speaker 5 (01:39:56):
I'll read it.

Speaker 1 (01:39:57):
I'll bring it into the station and read it back
to you, just so I can you know, let you know.

Speaker 5 (01:40:01):
You listen, listen. I mean you don't want to read
hate mail. I get hate mail every day from racist
on both sides of the spectrum.

Speaker 3 (01:40:07):
I've been I know how to take it, I replied
to hate mail. Last night, somebody messed my website and
then said that I was a lie air l I
e R. Then I quoted, I'm certainly not a l
I E R, but I said at times I may
be a l I A R. And they're like, you
don't know how to spell liar. I'm like, no, I
suppolled it right. I'm making fun of you. See the
quotations I'm quoting you back to you.

Speaker 1 (01:40:30):
Oh man, that's having I don't even know.

Speaker 3 (01:40:33):
Yeah, yeah, liar.

Speaker 4 (01:40:36):
I'm a punchy person.

Speaker 1 (01:40:37):
I like the poke I got.

Speaker 4 (01:40:38):
You know, last week we were talking about artificial intelligence
and getting on these little chat GPT and I've been
doing that all week long. I've been playing with them.

Speaker 1 (01:40:46):
So I've been on co pilot.

Speaker 4 (01:40:47):
I've been on Jim, and I have been on with
that open AI and I'm playing with these things and
some of them are so sensitive a co pilot, man,
you say stupid things like I was trying to figure
out on George Floyd of how much toxicity is levels
worth fitting on stuff like that. As soon as I
asked his answer the question. That is a sensitive question
and that's not my parameters. I'm like, what the what

(01:41:08):
was wrong with you people? You know it's research.

Speaker 1 (01:41:11):
What do you think I'm gonna do?

Speaker 4 (01:41:12):
Start producing stuff or committing suicide? Come on, give me
a breakup a grown man. Well, I do I do
like to ask the punching questions.

Speaker 5 (01:41:21):
I tried several of those. AI to generate thumbnails images
for videos jem and I is pretty good, but it's
very fickle. One time you mentioned you want to you
want to put the president of the country in the
character if they happily do it. Next time, oh, I
can't do that. I can't do that anyway, and then
then they use up you know, your your free allotment
by you know, not not making an image. I mean, dude,

(01:41:42):
you didn't make an image. Don't count that against me.

Speaker 4 (01:41:45):
Right, cold Pilot you can make as many as you want.
It's it's I've made a few on Cold Pilot that
turned out pretty nice. I kind of liked them. They
they're good for that, But as far as conversation and stuff,
they're all right. I mean, if you want to talk
about kittens and puppy dogs, you're at the right place.
If you want to talk about deep stuff, well maybe
not so much. You know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (01:42:02):
Every time you get on something edgy, it wants to
shut you down.

Speaker 4 (01:42:05):
So open Ai though I love it, the problem is
you get about twenty three minutes and it shuts down.
You can o put it back up and start playing
with it again, but it just keeps shutting down on
you because you're timed out. So unless you want to
get the paid service at twenty dollars a month.

Speaker 5 (01:42:18):
Yeah, what they want is quite expensive. Yeah, and I
don't use the same here. I don't use it that much,
so why I want a payer plus plus? You don't
know what you're getting. You know, it's not it's gonna
be worth a twenty bucks.

Speaker 4 (01:42:28):
You know, So open Ai. The one of the things
they've got is they've got a series of things for
like learning and different things. So if you want to
do research, they've got AI for research. They got AI
for like school and.

Speaker 1 (01:42:37):
Stuff like that. As far as I know, they got
different types of programs for different reasons.

Speaker 4 (01:42:41):
It's not just like the what you get for the
chat Ai. It's just that it's a chat ai to
help you look stuff up and do stuff for you.
But I believe they got more tailored stuff that you
can actually purchase and use.

Speaker 3 (01:42:53):
Okay, so I'm gonna mispronounce his name and animi A
n E m I her anime anime anime sorry anime. Yeah,
says we should send the meer Cats to the Moon.
I'm like, they're too cute to send to the movie.
We shouldn't do that's that's that's a.

Speaker 5 (01:43:09):
That's a that's a song that I made.

Speaker 4 (01:43:11):
Oh okay, inside joke the.

Speaker 5 (01:43:18):
Enemy. That's that's one of my It's one of my
songs called Meerkats and Space. Yeah, okay, I gotta I'll
send it to John. Yeah, that's a pretty good with
Meerkats in Space. Yeah, it's uh, it's I was having
all the fun with that. Yeah. I was having a
little fun with that and it came out pretty well.
I mean it's it's you know, it's yeah. Anyway, it's

(01:43:39):
a it's a good song.

Speaker 3 (01:43:40):
It's heat dropped the beat you can we don't.

Speaker 5 (01:43:43):
We don't have time for it tonight, but maybe next
week the Alabama Alabama heat off from ever to send
you those Yeah, that's a good idea.

Speaker 1 (01:43:51):
Well, what what what platform you're using using that Base
forty four or whatever.

Speaker 5 (01:43:55):
It is or no, well, I mean as a record label,
I have to have a distributor out of astributor and
they send it to twenty three different sites. So you
can buy the music on Amazon, you can buy it
on iTunes and Apple Store, or you can listen to
it on Spotify and Weezer and a whole bunch of
other spots.

Speaker 4 (01:44:11):
Oh awesome. Yeah, I was looking at Base forty four.

Speaker 1 (01:44:13):
I played with that a little bit, create a little
bit of a song. I had this joke song, but
I can't do it here because it's that type here.

Speaker 4 (01:44:19):
I believe Todd used the word twice during the show,
but it's repetitively used in this particular case. Anyway, I
just did that, played around with it. I thought it
was kind of pretty cool technology how it worked.

Speaker 5 (01:44:32):
Yeah, no, it's uh so. You know, it's interesting because
on Spotify, for instance, I've only had the thing I
said up for a couple weeks, and I've got oney
twenty nine monthly listeners already on there. How many one
and twenty nine?

Speaker 3 (01:44:46):
Oh okay, I thought you said one hundred thousand?

Speaker 5 (01:44:48):
What oh if I had ane hundred thousand I'd be
growing about that in a couple weeks. I'd be impressed.

Speaker 4 (01:44:53):
Absolutely, that would be he would be putting this, putting
the shows and stuff on there.

Speaker 3 (01:44:57):
I kept the body of AI chat about follower That's
what I would think. One hundred thousand in like a week.

Speaker 1 (01:45:02):
It only cost them fifty thousand dollars to get that
many followers.

Speaker 5 (01:45:07):
What is what is interesting though, is these are people
from over the world. If I look at the entire globe,
I mean, I've got listeners in the US, Brazil, this
is the third largest audience. I have a South Africa
number one in the United States and Brazil, UK, Mexico, Germany, Canada, Spain, France, Turkey, Australia,
the Philippines, Indonesia, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, India, Thailand, Poland, Portugal, Ukraine.

(01:45:28):
Have got listeners in Ukraine, Vietnam. I've got thirty eight
different countries where people are listening to this music. Nigeria
is one of them.

Speaker 3 (01:45:35):
That's cool.

Speaker 5 (01:45:37):
It's pretty cool.

Speaker 4 (01:45:38):
So yeah, anyway, that's a nice thing about the Internet, man, really, Yeah,
you reached the world.

Speaker 3 (01:45:44):
You know, the world's a lot smaller now for because
of technology and if you use it properly, it can
be a heck of a lot better world.

Speaker 5 (01:45:52):
Well that's that's well, that's a true statement. And the
other thing's interesting here too, is that unlike my online presence,
for like YouTube, which skews male, it's about seventy three
to one male, it used to be about sixty forty,
this is almost fifty fifty male female, not that that's
an issue to me. Also, my audience is much younger,
so almost sixty percent of my audience is under the
age of forty five, whereas my other stuff it's excuse

(01:46:14):
the other directions, sixty percent or over forty five. So
that's interesting.

Speaker 4 (01:46:18):
So anyway, those kind of analytics are helpful too, because
you know, females and males.

Speaker 1 (01:46:23):
Do tend to think differently and stuff, and while you're
being viewed and stuff then or maybe.

Speaker 4 (01:46:30):
How to create new material, you know, if that's you're
the audience. So yeah, the analytics is pretty cool. If
you can get accurate analytics, it sounds like you are.

Speaker 5 (01:46:38):
Well, I hope they're accurate. They're interesting, They're I don't
know if they're accurate, but I hope they are. But
they're definitely interesting.

Speaker 4 (01:46:43):
That's for sure, I've questioned some you get on social
media's and stuff, and they give me these analytics, and
I'm looking, I'm going the responses I'm getting from people
alive or whatever in person don't match a little bit
of analytics have given me, you know, almost like they're
trying to encourage you to purchase or something for ad
space or something.

Speaker 1 (01:46:59):
I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:47:01):
That could very well be what it is.

Speaker 1 (01:47:03):
I've seen that, like Google and stuff like that.

Speaker 4 (01:47:05):
With the website. I actually had a guy one time. Man,
I have a website, and I worked for a company
in Pennsylvania, and the safety director knew about my Website's
kind of funny because I was talking to him about something.
I mentioned it to him and he actually knew it
was that that's you. I'm like, yeah, man, got that website.
Goes oh wow, I didn't know it was you. Man,
That's kind of cool and stuff. We started talking.

Speaker 5 (01:47:25):
You know, Now, the internet is a small world. I mean,
you know, I travel halfway around the world and I
have fourteen hundred people come to meet greets who watch
my program. That's just a tiny smattering of the people.
And all the people after the fact, like I did,
you were here. I missed it. I didn't they were here. Yeah,
just crazy.

Speaker 3 (01:47:41):
I got recognized this year Donald Trump's inauguration. I was
showing somebody, uh forward Fox News is and you know,
its just went around there and it was somebody out
of southern California who does a basically Vietnamese podcast and
recognized me and interviewed me for the little podcast by
just by Man on this Street, but knew exactly who

(01:48:01):
I was. I was like, oh, you're Todd you you
were with comments and he knew our show and he
knew it was weird.

Speaker 5 (01:48:09):
No, it is kind of strange. I mean, I've been
interviewed by people in Australia and New Zealand, Germany. I
was interviewed by somebody Lithuania last week, the Netherlands, US, Canada,
South Africa. It's pretty wild. It's an interesting world out there. Yep, yep, yep.
So we're coming up on the end of this one, guys,
any big events me now? Next week? I'm trying to think.
Next week is the thirteenth, don't know if we have

(01:48:31):
anything big plan other than more tariffs. Tomorrow is the
day they start collecting the tariff money. Tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (01:48:36):
Oh yeah, it's gonna be interesting to see the reports
of how much that is coming in actually be considerable.

Speaker 4 (01:48:42):
So by tonight at midnight, is that what you're saying.

Speaker 5 (01:48:46):
Yeah, that'll be the seventh right, So you know I
said tomorrow, Yeah, since in three hours here he says, yeah,
tomorrow is three hours away. That's true. No, it's it's
interesting because you hear people that are running their mouths
about this all. I heard some South African say, this
is all Trump is just trying to make up for
the big tax cut he gave to the rail for
the enriched and all this money, and like, okay, hang
on a second. We just got thirty billion dollars in

(01:49:09):
tariff revenue in one month. Even if every month stays
of that, right, because they don't, because the trade goes
up and down from outh to month. That's three hundred
and sixty billion dollars a year. Okay, but it's a
seven point four trillion dollar federal budget. That's around the
ear that's a fraction that that's nothing. That is not
the reason why Trump is collecting tariffs to make up

(01:49:29):
for a loss and tax runner. These people are not
very bright. They don't understand economics to say the least.
It's comical.

Speaker 3 (01:49:36):
Absolutely, But if anybody's listening, I would be signing my
book on the twelfth at the Kingsport Public Library in Kingsport, Tennessee,
at the Kingsport Public Library for Henry Mall, Lower Level,
twelve to four o'clock pm on the twelfth. Anybody wants
to swing by.

Speaker 5 (01:49:52):
Cool bes that sounds good? Yeah? How is that being
received for people? Very far?

Speaker 3 (01:49:58):
Fairly well? I mean, I'm trying to sell a thousand,
and it's slowed because I'm just relying on online sales.
In person sales should pick up after this. I hope
we'll see how it goes trying to just sell a thousand,
trying to find out be the one commission to in
veterans suicide uh anti bowling campaign. Also, we're going to
focus on PTSD and TBI awareness and hopefully maybe get
some the state legislature to send some money to that

(01:50:21):
type of research. We'll see.

Speaker 4 (01:50:23):
Yeah, I think I think it's important to remind folks
too on this book that this isn't you trying to
make a million dollars. This is you trying to make
money for veterans and such.

Speaker 3 (01:50:32):
So it's absolutely those who are on the commission basically
be able to give them some gas, money to travel
and lobby on our behalf to get this stuff done.
That's basically what I'm trying to raise money for.

Speaker 5 (01:50:44):
That's it.

Speaker 1 (01:50:47):
Anyway, So folks out there listening, you know, you know
the drill Man, help them out.

Speaker 4 (01:50:51):
Buy his book. It's a good book and.

Speaker 1 (01:50:55):
It's going for a good cause.

Speaker 4 (01:50:56):
This isn't a selfish issue at all. This is this
is very generous and giving on Todd McKinley's part. And
I'm saying it because it's better if I say than
Todd says, it sounds better.

Speaker 3 (01:51:04):
That's right, very true. I appreciate it.

Speaker 5 (01:51:07):
By the way, I just checked before we wrap up.
Gary Sandy from w w KRP and Cinsandy is seventy
nine and less Nessman is eighty four.

Speaker 1 (01:51:16):
He's still kicking. I wonder if he's got the less
Nessman scooter.

Speaker 4 (01:51:19):
What was it, the ww k r P scooter or
whatever it was.

Speaker 5 (01:51:23):
I'm trying to remember that one. But yeah, he's still
around eighty four.

Speaker 3 (01:51:26):
Pretty cool, very cool.

Speaker 4 (01:51:30):
Sehn and I used to the Independent Trucker show. He
did the less Ness Man. We called it the less
Nestman Report. It was kind of fun, your little news updates.

Speaker 5 (01:51:37):
You know. I always loved it because he was just
so such a stiff guy and they walked in, he
got Johnny Fever in the theater, and then Venus fly
Trap remember that guy. Yeah, Tim Reid.

Speaker 3 (01:51:47):
Wasn't one of the early episodes where they were like
like what they weren't a rock station and all of
a sudden they flipped the switch for a rock station
now and Johnny Fever turns on Johnny Fever immediately.

Speaker 5 (01:51:57):
Yeah, he was like half sleep sleep sleep walking through
the boring you know, Musaic station that it was. Yeah,
and then he's like, yeah, that was the first episode,
if I'm not mistaken.

Speaker 3 (01:52:07):
Yeah, I think you're right.

Speaker 5 (01:52:08):
Yeah, yeah, Tim Reid and then Howard Hessman who's passed
away a few years ago. Two, yep, what a show?
All right, Well there it is? That is it?

Speaker 4 (01:52:18):
I almost missed it too, Ladies, gentlemen, thank you for listening.
We enjoyed having you here. Don't you care? Get the
catch us next week, same time, same place.

Speaker 7 (01:52:25):
You all.

Speaker 4 (01:52:26):
Have a good night.
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