Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hello friends, you have a moment so that we may
discuss our Lord and Savior Mini key. No, seriously, I'm
just kidding.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
My name is Rick Robinson. I am the general manager
of Klrnradio dot com. We are probably the largest independent
podcast network that you've never heard of.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
We have a little bit of everything, and by that,
what I mean to tell you is we have news,
pop cultures, special events, ins your attainment, true crime, mental
health shows, drama productions, and pretty much everything in between.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
So if you're looking for a new podcast home to
grab a little bit of everything that you love all
in one place, come check us out. You can find
us on x under at klr and Radio. You can
find us on our rumble and our YouTube channels under
the same names. We can also find us at klr
and radio dot com and pretty much every podcast catcher
and known demand. So again, feel free to come check
us out anytime you like at KLR and Radio.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
Are you ready to reach for the stars? Tune in
to The Lost Wanderer, the number one monthly podcast on
Good Pods in Astronomy. Join our host Jeff as he
takes you on an interstellar adventure to explore the mysteries
of space and the wonders of science, from rocket launches
and distant galaxies to the latest discoveries in astronomy. Each
episode is a thrilling ride through the cosmos. Don't just
(01:27):
gaze at the stars. Come explore the universe with us.
Follow the Lost Wonder wherever you get your podcasts, and
let's discover the stars together.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
Hi. Everyone, this is JJ, the co founder of good Pods.
Speaker 6 (01:53):
If you haven't heard of it yet, Good Pods is
like good Reads or Instagram, but for podcasts. It's new,
it's different, and it's growing really fast. There are more
than two million podcasts, and we know that it is
impossible to figure out what to listen to on good Pods.
You follow your friends and podcasters to see what they like.
(02:13):
That is the number one way to discover new shows
and episodes. You can find good Pods on the web
or download the app Happy Listening.
Speaker 7 (02:26):
KLRN Radio has advertising rates available. We have rates to
fit almost any budget. Contact us at advertising at KLRN
radio dot com.
Speaker 8 (02:44):
The following program contains course, language and adult things. Listening
to Depression is It.
Speaker 9 (03:34):
It is Wednesday, otherwise known as chat Labs, Matter Night
Right here Lave on Klin Radio dot com.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
We are our three of our four of our live
content and about three others of syndicated content after that.
I'm Rick, She's Stacy, and this is whatever the Quintinvidential
podcast for gen X by gen X, and we usually
just talk about all the things that pissed us off.
So I'm thank you for you.
Speaker 10 (04:05):
I am fine.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
I'm super happy we've returned to some level of sanity
and I'm looking forward to it.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
Yeah, I'll be I'll be honest. I actually was half
expecting what happened to day to happen. I just don't
know why they were insisting it wasn't going to but anyway.
Speaker 11 (04:24):
Well.
Speaker 2 (04:26):
It it was what I was saying last week, like
there's a way to do this, and there's a way
not to do this. This is the way to do it,
And I honestly think it was coming down to.
Speaker 10 (04:41):
Coming down to.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
The advice of Howard Lutnik and Peter Navarro versus Steve
Bessent and Steve Bassent.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Won like well it should.
Speaker 10 (04:55):
He's been out.
Speaker 2 (04:55):
There saying the goal is reciprocal tariffs. Let's keep removed
trey barriers, let's lower taxes, let's get our energy production up.
Speaker 10 (05:04):
Let's let's do all the things we need.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
So people want to pour investment into America, and we're
not going to do that. If nobody can get steel
and the energy prices domestically go blow sixty, certainly blow
fifty dollars a barrel. We don't produce. It's not worth
it to frack. So if we're gonna drill, baby drill,
(05:27):
we got to be doing things in the other direction
and like actively growing, and we do that through a
series of steps. And yes, removing trade barriers and other
countries is important, but we don't want to like abuse
the whole world equally. And when you start rolling trade
deficits into it, like Navarro and Lutnik, we're talking about
(05:49):
trade deficits for most countries outside of maybe China and
a few others, are a function of population and per
capita GDP. So mattagarsk Gascar sends us a lot of vanilla.
The people in Madabac Gascar don't have the money to
buy our stuff, and there aren't enough of them, so
there's always going to be a trade deficit. Similar things
(06:11):
are in Vietnam. Similar things are in some of the
other Southeast Asian countries. Even Israel only has nine million people.
They're not going to erase their trade deficit with US.
They don't have the population to do it. So some
of that thinking.
Speaker 10 (06:30):
Was just wrong headed.
Speaker 2 (06:32):
And yes, let's remove the trade barriers and let's keep
punishing China and let's isolate them to some degree. And
it looks like that's the strategy that's gonna gonna be
going forward. And I mean I was seeing all this stuff, Oh,
he already get ten more bonds.
Speaker 10 (06:48):
To this so he can do this with the debt.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
And then that whole thread that woman did, I'm like,
oh my god, guys, this is not forty chs. This
is Peter Navarro's having an argument with Steve Pascent, like
that's what's happen.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
But whatever, I'm just glad people started coming to their senses.
Speaker 2 (07:09):
Well, like I said, I mean, some of the hardest
hit companies were going to be Chrysler and Ford. Like, hello, anyway,
who can't move a lot of manufacturing back to America
without losing money because of the unions.
Speaker 10 (07:31):
But anyway, I'm just happy. I'm happy. I'm happy. I'm happy.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
That's good.
Speaker 2 (07:40):
And it's not over the stock market either because that
needs a major correction. The price earnings ratio has been
out of sight for a long time.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
So oh yeah, no anybody, I mean anybody who actually
understands economics and we've been as stock market mm.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
Hmm, and we were not crashing the market to save
like five hundred billion and interests on the debt. That like,
that whole line I'm thinking never made any sense to me.
But whatever, I got told on Twitter by people I've
known for a long time that I was stupid as
their twenty four year old kid, And I'm like, okay,
keep that up. Known you for a long time and
(08:20):
you just got your damn self muted. I'm not putting
up with that kind of nonsense. Well you neither have
a discussion based in reality or I can just go
bye bye.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
Like whatever whatever, man, whatever.
Speaker 10 (08:35):
Whatever, whatever. But I like all the winning in court.
I don't know what the hell is wrong with Amy
Coney Barrett.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
I don't have an answer.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
Did she really really really clerk for Scalia or were
we just was our change at Yanked?
Speaker 1 (08:53):
I'm thinking our chain might have been young and that one,
to be honest, I mean, this whole.
Speaker 2 (08:59):
Oh my god, If the chief executive cannot fire people
in the executive branch, who can?
Speaker 10 (09:10):
Who do they work for? My dog wants to know too.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Apparently he has questions like who do.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
They work for? Like I didn't even read the descent justification,
but who do they work for? You want an unaccountable bureaucracy?
Speaker 10 (09:30):
Like what in the world.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
I've wondered that myself because I don't really under that,
because that that's one of the that's one of the
things that I've tried to use as proof of how
broken everything is is if you show me the people
that you're not allowed to fire, I'll tell you who
you're actually working for. Because if the guys of the
whole damn thing can't fire these people, then he's not
the one.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Actually, we had a like we had a couple decisions
in the last few days. Can the chief executive fire
people in the executive branch? Well, my if the answer
is no, who can? Like even John Roberts was like, yeah, okay,
I mean they did it on a technical grounds like
you people don't have standing and you went to the
wrong court. Stop forum shopping, which in and of itself
(10:13):
is a good message, But no, you can't do that
and then the other one. I mean, the president has
near plenary power over foreign policy. Immigration is the province
of the executive branch within the federal government to enforce
the laws of Congress. Okay, the judiciary has nothing to
(10:38):
say about that. I'm getting so sick of hearing about
the rights that visa holders, green card holders and illegal
immigrants have.
Speaker 12 (10:48):
No.
Speaker 2 (10:48):
In fact, they don't have all the rights of due process.
Speaker 10 (10:51):
They don't.
Speaker 2 (10:54):
They have a limited number of due process rights, generally
in an immigration court, and that they don't get to
sue people. They don't get like no, and they were stupid.
Thing about that case was the five people that sued
(11:15):
actually got taken off the plane. So what standing did
they even have. You didn't get deported to the El
Salvador in prison, So what do you bitching about?
Speaker 1 (11:37):
I don't know, but oh no, I'm sorry. I just
I was starting to talk and realize that was muted,
and I'm like, wait, nobody can hear me. But yeah, no,
I wondered a lot of that myself, because I don't
I mean, and a lot of people disagree with me
on this, but I don't think illegal aliens should have
access to our constitutional rights in the first place. And
(11:58):
I know a lot of people disagree with me, but
there's I've explained it in great detail on my daily
show as to why I think that's to be the case,
and I'm gonna stand by that. So, yes, they have
some limited rights, like they have access to certain due
process for their immigration claims. It's tetro. But outside of
all of that, no, we have treating these people like the.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
I'm sorry, well, I mean everybody. Oh, this guy, this
guy Ma Mood Khalil or Khalil, my Mood or whatever
his name was it Columbia. Sorry, I haven't been listening
that carefully. No, he didn't just say I don't like Israel.
He was coordinating protests and the mission of his group
(12:44):
is to take down the West. No, we don't have
to let that person keep his green card. And maybe
if you've only got a green card and you hate
the country you're living in and you're really public about it,
you shouldn't get married and knock somebody out unless they're
willing to go back to Syria with you. This is
(13:06):
true if you go to Nasralla's funeral, which is not
just like a quick bus ride or a direct flight.
You don't need to be here, you don't share our values,
You're not becoming American. I don't want to be the UK.
So let's get all of these people out of here.
(13:27):
If we had started taking stuff like that seriously, we
wouldn't have dearborn Michigan. We wouldn't have Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Speaker 10 (13:34):
We wouldn't have.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
Rashida to Leave in Congress, and we wouldn't have Ilhan
Omar in Congress.
Speaker 10 (13:38):
And we shouldn't.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
A in fact, don't believe in democracy, They don't believe
in the constitution of these United States, and them swearing
an oath on it is a goddamn joke.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
I'm not even sure how the hell John Omore still
has a job. Not only that, but how the hell
is she even still here. She committed fraud to get here,
I know, but.
Speaker 10 (14:04):
Now they've elected her, so what are we gonna do?
Speaker 2 (14:07):
Like and I mean her daughter, unfortunately I believe she
was born here. But what a fucking disaster that girl is.
Speaker 10 (14:17):
Working.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
She's the typical second generation problem, working from inside the
nation to take the nation down. And this is exactly
what they've done in the UK. That's why an entire
generation two generations really of young girls have been sexually
assaulted and abused. They've completely subverted Western culture for a
(14:42):
culture of invaders.
Speaker 10 (14:45):
I don't want to do that here.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
So find all the people that are supporters of things
that are not in fact American or even remotely related
to assimilation or becoming part of these United States of America,
and get them the hell out of here, Bye bye.
(15:09):
As far as I'm concerned, as a student on a
visa that would to participate in that protest, those protests
at Columbia and at UCLA and any bit where that
they were preventing Jewish students from going to class or
barricading them in buildings or taking buildings hostage, every single
one of them.
Speaker 10 (15:26):
Can go the fuck home.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
And do so a lot.
Speaker 2 (15:36):
And if the universities don't give us a list of
the students that were involved, no government.
Speaker 13 (15:41):
Funding, not a government dalla, not one.
Speaker 10 (15:52):
I think that would be an excellent policy. That And
we're taxing your endowment.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
We're going to relieve some student loan debts, and you
people are paying for it for giving away those garbage
degrees and social justice and things where people can't make
a decent living and end up being a barista. You're
gonna pay that stuff off, not the taxpayer. Now, you're
going to develop degree programs that actually support the economy,
(16:26):
and we'll bring us into the twenty first century.
Speaker 10 (16:29):
And then you're going to.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
Select the students that can actually complete them.
Speaker 10 (16:32):
How's that? How's that?
Speaker 2 (16:36):
Then you get to keep your money.
Speaker 10 (16:43):
People are really mad at me too.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Eh, don't get over it now.
Speaker 10 (16:48):
I said forty three was middle aged.
Speaker 1 (16:50):
I mean it kind is.
Speaker 10 (16:54):
That would be the middle of eighty six.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
If you lived to eighty six and you're doing really well,
you've won the law.
Speaker 10 (17:00):
Friends.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
Yeah, I was gonna say that's that's half of eighty six,
which is the expected lifespan of most humans.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
Sois ooh, Alan gave me wonderful language or wonderful news?
Speaker 4 (17:16):
Was it?
Speaker 2 (17:17):
Twenty two people got yeaded from the halls that you
have m this week, and their visas got rejected except bye.
Speaker 14 (17:24):
Bye boye boy, criminals and terrorists, bye boy, And no.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
I don't see this as a free speech issue at all.
I see this as you're never gonna assimilate. You don't
belong here, you're not aligned with our values. See you,
and those are values we all used to agree on,
like Western values, free markets, free people, freedom of religion,
(18:00):
all of that.
Speaker 1 (18:01):
Stephen to be fair, the barista who became a Congress
coator was a psyop, so.
Speaker 10 (18:11):
She couldn't make a complicated coffee. She just slept drinks.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
I was gonna say, I guess she was more of
a bartender or a bar backer or something.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Not really, And I mean, you know, her choice like
her doing that was absolutely her choice. She had a
degree in economics from Boston University, and she was a
minority female. She could have gotten a job in any
corporation she ever applied to.
Speaker 10 (18:39):
She chose not to.
Speaker 2 (18:41):
She bartended because that's what she wanted to do. She
didn't want to work. She was looking for a for
an easy way out. And uh, I love her running
around with Bernie right now. She's totally banking on the
left wing populism message because she thinks it'll win if.
Speaker 10 (19:03):
Trump takes the economy, and now that looks like it's
not going to happen.
Speaker 2 (19:09):
I also think he changed his perspective and put him
on hold sort of because somebody said to him, dude,
the courts are going to slap you. They were already
working their way through the courts, and technically that's really
that's really Congress's job. Doing an emergency national emergency related
(19:37):
to trade deficits was probably not gonna fly, and then
he wouldn't have his negotiating position. So now if he
puts them on hold, he has all these countries coming
to the table, he still has his negotiating position, because
I think the courts too, include Scotus would.
Speaker 10 (19:54):
Have smacked him around a little bit.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
Probably.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Yeah, So I think it's all well and good, And
I think Howard Lutnik and Peter Navarro don't be on
need to be on TV a lot anymore.
Speaker 10 (20:07):
I think mister descent was a much better job.
Speaker 8 (20:10):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (20:11):
I'd be okay with him not being on TV as much.
Speaker 10 (20:13):
Oh my god.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
Like, I'm sure Howard Lutnik is a very nice man,
but he's like a hyperactive four year old. Like if
you watch my TV, you're like, dude, did you take
did today? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (20:30):
Yeah? Did somebody remind you to take your ship before
you got on TV? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (20:36):
No. It's just like he's so excited to be a
part of this and you're like, dude, whoa wow, you
know you're the Commerce Secretary right, just not down one, okay.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
Just too little. You're kind of way up here. Bro,
we kind of need you down here. You can you
can do it. You're way up here. We need you
down here.
Speaker 11 (20:59):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (21:00):
Yeah, yeah, I'm really tired of congresswoman with baby prop.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Dude. Seriously, I mean, honestly, I feel like that's the
one thing Doge actually kind of got wrong because I'm
the opposite on this argument. I don't think Congress creators
should be ensconced in DC for ten months out of
the year. I think they should spend most of their
time in their districts, and with technology the way it
is right now, they can technically vote from anywhere.
Speaker 10 (21:29):
Oh no, I'm totally with you. I'm totally with you.
But what you don't get.
Speaker 2 (21:34):
To do as a congress person in your district, even
if we have remote voting, you don't get to give
your vote to someone else to take because you'd rather
sit home with your baby.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Yeah no, I agree.
Speaker 10 (21:45):
You still get.
Speaker 2 (21:45):
On the zoom meeting and do your vote.
Speaker 1 (21:50):
I mean, and that's the thing. During during the COVID sham,
It's not like we didn't have a bunch of Congress
criatters voting via zoom, So it's not like this is
something new.
Speaker 2 (21:59):
And again I would be all for you never get
to come to d C. You stay in your districts,
we caucus online, we vote online, and the entire lobbying
industry just goes straight to hell.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
I mean I would be okay with them coming to
d C for like certain things like the swearing ins,
like some procedural like some of the actual you know,
voting stuff, kind of like they used to back in
the day when they had when they were spending a
lot of their time traveling, so they'd be in d
C for like three months to just get everything gone
wrong with the while they were there and then start
traveling back. I think we kind of need to get
back to that again, because d C is the way
(22:38):
the most.
Speaker 10 (22:39):
Of the state legislatures work.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
I just want I just want like the daily interaction
with a concentrated media, and I want like local media
reporting on what my representative is doing to represent my district,
what my senators are doing to represent the state of Georgia,
not what they're doing to represent k Street.
Speaker 1 (23:01):
I know, right, yeah. I mean the thing about that is,
I mean, think about this for a second. One of
the reasons Towing feathering went away is because nobody can
find the representatives most of the time. If these people
did some of this shit that they're doing right now
while they're hiding in DC, while people could find them
in their home districts, I guarantee they wouldn't be doing
it much longer.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
I'm just saying, well, I agree with that, but I
also agree if they were required to live in their
district and they were covered by local media, the pressures
on them would be completely different, completely, Like, you don't
get to be Reverend Warnock sitting in the state of
(23:45):
Georgia and vote against the bill to prevent a shutdown.
You don't get to be raw Faeled Warnock and live
in the state of Georgia and vote to keep boys
in girls' sports.
Speaker 10 (23:59):
You just don't do that.
Speaker 8 (24:06):
You know.
Speaker 11 (24:08):
So, I don't know.
Speaker 10 (24:09):
I'm like totally with you.
Speaker 2 (24:11):
If you were gonna, if you were gonna like take
the whole thing apart and use technology to really run
the Congress, I think there's a lot of ways you
could do that that would be amazing. What this one
one wants to do is just take a sick day
when she.
Speaker 10 (24:32):
Needs to vote and let somebody else vote for her.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
And the answer is no, yeah, no, just no.
Speaker 2 (24:39):
And I mean she was pregnant when she was in
the primary. If this wasn't what she wanted to do,
maybe you should have thought about that. And I'm getting
the sense this is like baby number one at forty three,
because she has no idea how to hold that child,
how to dress it like she's a disaster. Like if
she keeps using the baby is a prop, somebody's gonna
(25:01):
call CPS on her. She's just like she holds it up.
I mean, she tries to make it look like an infant,
like a new infant. The child is clearly like five
to six months old and can sit up on her
hip and wants to be up looking around. It doesn't
want to lay down, you know. I mean, just we
(25:21):
all get that kid's bigger than you want us to think.
Speaker 4 (25:23):
He is.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Good. Lord, you have daycare down the hall because of
the eleven women who have given birth before you and
the innumerable number of men who have become fathers. In Congress,
it's already allowed for you to bring your child onto
the floor until they're one years old. Like, where do
you get to bring baby to work until they're one.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
I don't know of anywhere exactly my point.
Speaker 2 (25:52):
So stop saying we need to do this to get
younger people in congress. If you're an example of the
younger generation, I don't want any more of you in Congress.
We'll wait for gen Z because you, Oh my god,
(26:13):
I mean, millennials are like whiny boomers. They're the first
people to do everything. Nobody has ever done anything like
they're doing it. It's like, you have got to.
Speaker 10 (26:27):
Be kidding me.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
They've reinvented the wheel.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
Wait till they're standwich between us and our kids in
gen Z.
Speaker 10 (26:36):
What on huh?
Speaker 1 (26:39):
Come on, come on, Stacy, you have to admit it.
Millennials have reinvented the wheel five thousand times. Come on,
come on?
Speaker 2 (26:47):
Not really, No, I can't think of anything they've made
better other than when they get married. They tend to
stay married, and the divorce rate among millennials is lower.
Speaker 10 (26:58):
Than it's been in a year. So I do think
think that's a good thing.
Speaker 2 (27:05):
Honestly, they're waiting a little longer, but when they get together,
they stay together, and especially like for family and kids,
I think that's a better thing.
Speaker 10 (27:22):
Oh, gen Z is not socialism.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
No, that's honestly mostly millennials.
Speaker 10 (27:31):
That's mostly millennials. Like gen Z is like they're almost
as cynical as chen X.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
Well, so gen I.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
Mean gen Z are like twenty four and under.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
Yeah, but I mean.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
Maybe the ones in maybe the ones at university have
kind of gone that way, but that's not the majority
of them.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
Yeah. My favorite thing is watching a millennial start talking
about a French press and how they do their coffee,
like like it's this brand new thing. I'm like, dude,
you realize how long a French press has been around.
Speaker 2 (28:10):
I realize that's how the pioneers did it, right.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
But no, I mean I think part of it is
it's kind of it's the it's the younger millennials. So
I kind of see why everybody's starting to lim at
in with Jesus and gen Z a little bit, because
the older millennials are like the Zennials. They're they're they're
they're a little bit like us, but they have more squish.
And then you've got the younger millennials that are the
ones that are like, oh yeah, hard.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
Well, the younger millennials are the ones who are like,
what is adulting? Adulting.
Speaker 10 (28:45):
It's hard.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
Oh my god, you don't even know what adulting means.
Speaker 10 (28:50):
Mean I can make it?
Speaker 2 (28:51):
What do you mean I can? When I make forty
five thousand dollars a year. I can't do stitch fix?
Speaker 10 (28:56):
What does that mean?
Speaker 2 (29:01):
How can we not buy this really high end makeup anymore?
Speaker 10 (29:05):
If I've got a favor anyway.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
That's the thing though, when when we first started moving
out on our own, we did this thing, you know,
like we found roommates and shit, yeah, yeah, you know.
Apparently apparently that can't be done anymore.
Speaker 2 (29:22):
They don't know how because they've never interacted with people.
They've only done it on social media and like text.
We didn't have that. Like I remember when my kids
were young.
Speaker 10 (29:35):
I didn't realize the world had changed.
Speaker 2 (29:37):
So I'd be like, go outside and play, Go find
somebody to play with, like that's what you did, right.
My kids would disappear into other people's houses because nobody
else let their kid outside to play. So these kids
never went out and like played a game of kickball
and had to solve a problem without adult interference.
Speaker 1 (29:56):
Which is why everything is broken and as it.
Speaker 10 (29:58):
Is, all right, I know, we also why nobody ever
got punched in the mouth.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
I think everybody would do better if they just got
punched in the mouth once.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
All right, I know we don't normally take breaks, but
I've got to get something to drink. My throat's getting
those scratchy, so we're gonna take a quick break. We'll
be right back. Stay tuned.
Speaker 7 (30:25):
You are listening to k l R and Radio where
liberty and reason still rain.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
This is Derek's a Riotto part story.
Speaker 15 (30:37):
After the third time jump starting my car, I finally
realized my battery was dying, so I stopped by O'Reilly
to have it checked. They tested it right there in
the parking lot. It was bad, for real bad, but
they helped me find the right battery for my car
and even installed it for free. Now my car starts
like new.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
On old arts.
Speaker 16 (31:03):
Hi, I'm Mike, founder of Dollars Shave Club dot com.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
What is dollar.
Speaker 10 (31:06):
Shaveclub dot com?
Speaker 16 (31:08):
Well, for a dollar a month, we send high quality razors.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Right to your door.
Speaker 4 (31:13):
Yeah a dollar.
Speaker 16 (31:15):
Are the blades any good?
Speaker 10 (31:17):
No, our blades are great.
Speaker 16 (31:21):
Each razor has stainless steel blades, in olvir lubricating strip
and a pivot head. It's so gentle a toddler could
use it, And you like spending twenty dollars a month
on brand name razors?
Speaker 10 (31:31):
Nineteen go to Roger Federer. I'm good at tennis.
Speaker 16 (31:35):
Do you think your razor me the vibrating handle, a flashlight,
a backscratcher and ten blades. Your handsome ass grandfather had
one blade and polio.
Speaker 10 (31:46):
Looking good, Papa.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Stop paying for shave take you don't.
Speaker 16 (31:49):
Need, and stop forgetting to buy your blades every month.
Alejandre and I are going to ship them right to you.
We're not just selling razors, We're also making new jobs. Alejandro,
what were you doing last month? What are you doing now?
I'm no Vanderbilt, but this train makes hay So stop
(32:10):
forgetting to buy your blades every month and start deciding
where you're going to stack all those dollar bills.
Speaker 11 (32:14):
I'm saving you.
Speaker 16 (32:15):
We are Dollar Shave Club dot Com and the party
is on.
Speaker 10 (32:26):
To see you.
Speaker 15 (32:36):
Celebrity designer Jeff Lewis is back with Hollywood House Lift.
Speaker 1 (32:40):
I'm excited to be working with new clients.
Speaker 10 (32:42):
I'm not getting rid of that.
Speaker 1 (32:43):
I hope I never see you both again.
Speaker 4 (32:45):
An all new season.
Speaker 16 (32:47):
Those have to go.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
That has to go.
Speaker 4 (32:48):
From Oh Wow, it's a nightmare to oh wow, this
is such a enough pride.
Speaker 2 (32:53):
With celebrities like Josh Umel, Christina Ricci and Gina Rodriguez.
Speaker 5 (32:57):
Zazz on jet it looks like Chuck E Cheese stream.
Speaker 16 (33:01):
An all new season of Hollywood House Left with Jeff
Lewis now streaming on freeb.
Speaker 17 (33:12):
I'm Jordan Klinger, an attorney at McIntyre Law. The decision
to hire an attorney after you've been injured is important.
The decision on who to hire is even more important.
At McIntyre Law, we will settle a case if the
offer to our client partial.
Speaker 10 (33:26):
Justice is no justice at all.
Speaker 17 (33:28):
At McIntyre Law, we are committed to obtaining full justice
for our clients. Contact McIntyre Law at four zero five
nine one seven fifty two hundred or visit us at
Mcintyrelaw dot com.
Speaker 5 (33:41):
Hi everyone, this is jj the co founder of good Pods.
Speaker 6 (33:44):
If you haven't heard of it yet, good Pods is
like Goodreads or Instagram, but for podcasts. It's new, it's social,
it's different, and it's growing really fast. There are more
than two million podcasts and we know that it is
impossible to figure out what to listen to on good Pods.
You follow your friends and podcasters to see what they like.
Speaker 5 (34:04):
That is the number one way to discover new shows
and episodes.
Speaker 6 (34:08):
You can find good Pods on the web or download
the app Happy Listening.
Speaker 7 (34:17):
K l r N Radio has advertising rates available.
Speaker 10 (34:21):
Almost any budget.
Speaker 7 (34:22):
Contact us at advertising at k l r N radio
dot com.
Speaker 8 (34:35):
The follow the program contains course, language and adult themes.
Listener and discretion is.
Speaker 11 (34:41):
Advised and welcome back into the program.
Speaker 1 (35:19):
We're halfway through in what what is our next to
last hour of live programming exclusively from kl ARM Radio.
Then we're gonna start moving into the syndicated content. After that.
I'll be hanging out with you til about probably two
in the morning my time, so three Eastern, because I'm insane. Anyway,
Welcome back into the program. I just realized after doing
(35:39):
all of that, I got distracted because my granddaughter brought
me a present from church and I left my water
in the kitchen. I guess I'll have to make do
it tell the next break anyway. Woh, fun times anyway,
So we're back. You have a nice break, Stacy.
Speaker 15 (35:55):
I did.
Speaker 10 (35:57):
I was doing work.
Speaker 1 (35:59):
Work that's not a we're doing work, that's a four
letter word. That's the only four letter word I don't
allow on the show.
Speaker 12 (36:07):
Just kidding.
Speaker 1 (36:09):
So, how is the new gig anyway?
Speaker 10 (36:14):
I'm getting my arms around it. How's that?
Speaker 2 (36:17):
I'm not exactly in the area that I thought i'd
be working, So I'm spending a little more time in
my car than I would like, and I have a
little less control over my schedule than I would like.
Speaker 10 (36:29):
But it's all going to get there.
Speaker 1 (36:31):
Yeah, I'm sure it'll get there. I was a curious
because we really haven't had much of a chance to
talk since you switched the NUS. Wasn't sure if it
was everything you expected, raptor it's.
Speaker 2 (36:41):
Better than what I was doing. It's not everything it
could be. How's that?
Speaker 11 (36:47):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (36:47):
Basically I was hired to be like within a thirty
minute range of my abode, and right now I'm like.
Speaker 10 (36:58):
All over.
Speaker 11 (37:01):
Like, yeah, it's gonna.
Speaker 2 (37:02):
Run the other side of Atlanta some days.
Speaker 10 (37:05):
So it's just it's a little bunch.
Speaker 1 (37:07):
Oh, they got you going all the way to Hot Lanta.
Speaker 18 (37:10):
They got me going all the way around Hot Atlanta
to Stone Mountain.
Speaker 1 (37:15):
Oh boy, yeah, that's not anyway.
Speaker 18 (37:19):
Yeah, and they've got me going right down into Hotlanta,
and yeah, so it's a it's a little bit.
Speaker 2 (37:29):
It's a little bit, not gonna lie, but we're gonna
get there. We're gonna get there. I gotta do a
little sales and marketing.
Speaker 10 (37:37):
It's all gonna be.
Speaker 1 (37:38):
Well, oh, it's all it's all gonna be. It's all
gonna be gravy baby. It's all gonna be gravy baby.
Speaker 10 (37:45):
Yep, yep.
Speaker 2 (37:49):
Anyway, sorry, I was just I'm sorry. While we were
on break, I was doing work because I didn't know
I was gonna have to do this work.
Speaker 10 (38:00):
Until twenty minutes ago. And I'm not gonna have time
to do this work.
Speaker 1 (38:03):
Tomorrow, so I tell good. So apparently to.
Speaker 2 (38:09):
Use a swear word like that, I know that's why
we do the disclaimer and everything.
Speaker 1 (38:14):
But well, yeah, but even disclaimers only cover certain words.
Work is one of those words. Nobody there you go.
So apparently right after we went on the air, Rebecca
Downs put out a piece through town Hall. I guess
the House is voting on whether or not they're going
to finally do anything about all these rogue judges. So
(38:37):
so the House did in fact pass the No Rogues
Ruling Act Final vote was from nineteen to two thirteen. Rep.
Mike Turner up no vote.
Speaker 10 (38:49):
Who was.
Speaker 1 (38:51):
Mike Turner was the sole GOP no vote according.
Speaker 10 (38:55):
To where's Mike Turner from?
Speaker 1 (38:57):
I have no idea.
Speaker 4 (38:58):
I didn't.
Speaker 10 (38:59):
I'm looking right now.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
I thought I knew almost every Congress readure, and I'm like,
I don't even recognize that name.
Speaker 2 (39:05):
So he's from Ohio, Dayton.
Speaker 1 (39:12):
WHOA, that's weird.
Speaker 2 (39:14):
Serving Ohio, Like it's rural. Oh well, Dayton's not rural.
Maybe it's kind of purplish.
Speaker 1 (39:21):
But I'm glad to see that they're starting to do
things like this because one of the things that's driven
me crazy is every time I start hearing people, you know,
in Congress talking about, well, we could pass this, but
it won't get past the sixty vote threshold. You know what,
Send it to the Senate, Prove it to the American people.
Prove to them that you prove to them that you
guys are trying to do a single issue, single bill,
(39:42):
things that we've been telling you we've wanted for the
last thirty years. Just start sending them over and then
after the fourth or fifth time, you can be like, Okay,
so America, this is your option. You can either give
us enough people in the Senate and the House so
that we can do the things that we're trying to
do that you're being option, or if you don't, then
we'll just need the filibuster for now and keep on
rolling it up to you. I just it's we've got
(40:04):
to do something because it's the same thing, and it's
one of the reasons why it is trum is weird
and is roller coastery as the last week has been,
and even though I wish the messaging was a little
bit better, I am glad to see that we finally
have an administration that is not just going to keep
doing the same old things over and over again and
hoping things turn out differently. We need the same things
in Congress because we can't just keep doing that. Well,
(40:26):
we can't do it because we don't have enough people
to get past the sixty vote threshold in the Senate.
Speaker 2 (40:31):
So proven that you have point, that's not the point.
Speaker 10 (40:34):
Make them vote against it.
Speaker 1 (40:36):
Never know, some Democrats might actually you know that are
coming up for reelection, may go, hey, shit, maybe I
should vote for this thing, or at least let it letay.
Speaker 2 (40:43):
Hey maybe maybe maybe it doesn't look good for us
that all these judges are like ruling to keep criminals
in the country.
Speaker 1 (40:53):
Which is nuts to me. I mean, hello, hello, No
matter how the Left tries to spend this, these people
were criminals to begin with. They violated the law to
get here.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
Okay, I don't need concrete proof that these people are
trend de agua agua or however trend whatever. They've got
the tats on our faces. I don't think you do
that if you're a good dude.
Speaker 1 (41:26):
Oh, speaking of tats, did you hear about this story today?
All the all the Muslims are pissed at Pete Hexeth
because he has kafir tattooed on himself. He has what
he has the word kaffir tattooed on on himself, which
is basically the Muslim word for infidel or you know, unclean.
Speaker 2 (41:49):
It's really weird because it's also the name of a beverage.
Speaker 1 (41:56):
I've never heard of a beverage called kafir, but I
don't know k.
Speaker 10 (41:59):
E I are.
Speaker 2 (42:01):
Kafir really got a lot of probiotics on it. It
tastes kind of like drinkable yogurt. It's a fermented dairy product.
Speaker 1 (42:10):
Well, no, this one is kaf i r slightly different,
but yeah, it's so it's just funny because the word
specifically means exactly what it says it is, which is
a non believer or an infidel mm hmm, or someone
that is worthy for islamis to kill without having to
(42:31):
face any repercussions. So it's not the fact that he's
using the word in the proper context. They're mad at
him because he is mocking them by accepting the term
and embracing it. I have never really wanted to get
ink in my life. As of now, I've thought of
my first two tattoos. One is a fork because there's
a story that goes along with that regarding people in
(42:52):
suicide and illness and things like that. And also now
I'm seriously considering getting the word kafir tattooed on me somewhere.
Can piss off a Muslim one of these days, maybe maybe,
maybe maybe.
Speaker 2 (43:09):
Maybe I just get a tattoo, Maybe I'll get a
t shirt.
Speaker 1 (43:14):
I'm fifty two and I've never gotten any ink, and
everybody's like, it's weird that you don't have a single tattoo,
and I'm like, it's never really been my thing. You know,
I grew up in the era where you know, tattoos
were you know bad. I mean I remember my first day,
in my first days in uniform, they didn't you couldn't
eat it. So later it turned into this thing where
(43:35):
they didn't want you to want you to show the tattoos.
So if you had tattoos on your arms and stuff,
you had to wear long sleeves. When I was going
through all that shit, you couldn't not No, they wouldn't
need you. It wasn't even whether or not you could
cover it. It wasn't allowed.
Speaker 10 (43:53):
Yeah, well they weren't allowed in a lot of a
lot of professions. And neither was blue hair. Neither were
nose rings and cheek rings and other things.
Speaker 2 (44:04):
And now teachers have them and a bunch of people
have them.
Speaker 1 (44:11):
I feel like I missed something with alb because he
just said in the chat, well see there you go.
That's why you don't know him, and I don't know
who he's talking about. Oh wait, never mind, he's talking
about the Ohio dude. Never mind.
Speaker 10 (44:22):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
I was like, and I was confused for a moment there,
and I'm like, wait a minute, never mind. I had
to rewind the middle there. Oh did you hear about
Chris Matthews? No freaking out because you know we're gonna
have to grow trees in America. I'm not gonna import
them from Canada anymore?
Speaker 12 (44:45):
What not?
Speaker 1 (44:46):
Even kidding? Hang on, let me see if I can
find it. I think maybe it was Ton. I know
it was one of them because I actually played it.
I gotta find it. Where did it go? Maybe it
(45:09):
was PJ. I know it was one of them.
Speaker 2 (45:11):
Damn it.
Speaker 1 (45:12):
I just can't remember.
Speaker 12 (45:13):
Which one Chatsmine, Crockhead Trade or Bomb Show.
Speaker 1 (45:25):
Oh, so I'm looking at this one. Did you see
the report that got dropped about the Chinese by balloon things?
They dropped today? So apparently they have determined that not
only was the Biden administration aware of what the balloon
was actually there to do for the whole spy blown
thing from twenty twenty three, they were in direct China
(45:48):
figure out what they could or could not do to
not embarrass themselves for China flying a spy blow over. Dude, Stacy,
you are like the actual envisioning of the meme with
the keyboard dude just slamming his fingers everywhere. It is
(46:10):
really loud when you type out, I'm sorry it is
I just I don't know why, but it's like super
super But anyway.
Speaker 10 (46:18):
I have no idea why I have a keyboard.
Speaker 1 (46:23):
You're quiet. Keyboard is a lie, it is anything, but
that's fine. I wish I could find that clip. I
don't know where the hell it is. I can't find
it anywhere. Now it's weird. And I just saw it
a few minutes ago too, and now I'm like, I
can't find it anywhere. But yeah, it was funny. It
was like a minute a minute and a half of
(46:44):
him just screaming about so what are we gonna do?
We're just gonna grow more trees now, like yeah, if
we have to. But my question is, why the hell
are we still using trees for paper when himp has
four times the three?
Speaker 10 (47:02):
My dogs are killing me.
Speaker 1 (47:05):
Hey it happens.
Speaker 15 (47:07):
Yeah, I know, I know.
Speaker 1 (47:14):
Oh yeah, I don't know what happened to that article.
I wish I could find it, so I guess I know.
At least Stephonic basically was removed from because I guess
she's she's being put back into leadership positions too.
Speaker 2 (47:33):
So interesting, Yeah, I think that happened a while ago,
but did that change when we won the special elections.
Speaker 1 (47:41):
They left her in place because they were afraid of
what was gonna happen, and you is there's somebody coming
to get you because the dogs are sounded like somebody's
coming to get you. Wait what Okay? So I just
(48:07):
happened to see this come across my feed from Twitchy.
This was put out by Amy Curtis just a little
bit ago. So apparently, according to this, one third of
California's community college system applicants are fake and taking a
million eight yes, so Scamifornia. One third of California's community
(48:27):
college system applicants are fake, taking millions in aid. As
doj ncovers waste fraud in Medican waste and fraud in
Medicare and so security. This is a good reminder that
such things don't happen only at a better level. California
has a problem with this community college system and see
one that's costing the state's taxpayers millions in big financial aid.
(48:47):
So this is a post from Emilyhoven on x This
is startling. About thirty four percent of applicants to California's
community collegis are likely fake in the last calendar year
and have been scamming millions of dollars in state and
federal financial aid. That is from calmatters dot orger. For years,
cameras have targeted community colleges across the state, posing as
(49:11):
students in order to steal money for from scholarships or
government financial aid. Recent state reports suggests the problem is
getting worse, not better, and college leaders say they're worried
that the Trump administrations cuts to the US problement of
education could hamper fraud, pension and investigations. I don't see
how that would be a thing. So in twenty twenty one,
(49:31):
the California Community College Chancellor's office reported about twenty percent
of college applicants were likely faked. In January twenty twenty fourth,
the state said it was up to about twenty five percent.
Now in twenty twenty five, it's about thirty four percent data. So,
if you're worried about federal aid being cut for investigations,
(49:52):
what are you doing about the thirty four percent fraud
that you have right now? I know, I'm wish, I know.
Oh anyway, well, I like.
Speaker 10 (50:14):
I like, uh, who was it today?
Speaker 12 (50:17):
Oh?
Speaker 10 (50:18):
Doctor Drew?
Speaker 2 (50:20):
Like he's so excited about Gavin Newsom running for president.
Oh lord, it's amazing.
Speaker 11 (50:32):
I'm amazing.
Speaker 1 (50:34):
I'm already starting to hop aboard the condic. Can we
stop talking about twenty twenty eight? Straine? We just finished.
Speaker 10 (50:40):
Oh no, I'm not. I'm not disagreeing with you, friend,
I promise.
Speaker 1 (50:45):
Oh, it's just you're not.
Speaker 2 (50:47):
I'm just saying I find the whole, like the whole
Gavin Newsom having a podcast to try to pretend to
be a moderate thing so beyond the pale that I
can't even tolerate it.
Speaker 10 (51:01):
Oh like, I just grease Aleni.
Speaker 2 (51:05):
He and Justin Trudeau just need to go off into
the ashes of history.
Speaker 1 (51:14):
Yeah. So, another thing I kind of want to talk about,
because it's been happening.
Speaker 19 (51:19):
A lot over the last couple of weeks. What is
up with all these new books that are supposedly, you know,
starting to finally tell the real story about Joe Biden.
Because now I'm seeing another story from Nick Arama and
the headline reads this new book troubling story about Biden.
Interview with Stephanopolis, or as I called them, call him,
Snufflepacus raises more questions about the media.
Speaker 1 (51:39):
I don't give a shit, you had a chance to
tell this the truth. You tell us not to go
to funk away, every single one of you.
Speaker 2 (51:47):
So you know, every year comfortably Smug does the whole
like hack media tournament thing along with the basketball.
Speaker 1 (51:56):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, in the vein of March madness, I guess.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
Yeah, the the like my winner had to be Jake
Tapper because I found it so freaking offensive that his
name is on a book about the cover up of
Joe Biden's mental decline, Like are you freaking kidding me?
(52:23):
Like we were reading experts from one of the books
last week where.
Speaker 10 (52:30):
What's his name?
Speaker 2 (52:31):
Ron Klaine was like, well, no, no, no, no, no no,
And I was saying, sir, no, you can't look perplexed,
because they think you always look perplexed, Like these people
are insane. There's a there's a former Democrat bundler and
huge donor. Her name's Lindy Leu or something like that.
(52:52):
She's running around name and names. That girl's gonna write
a book and we're gonna found find out exactly who
knew and when she had an interview with Dave Rubin
and she's like, oh no, I'm working on a book
because she went on TV after George I think it
was after George Clooney wrote the op ed in the
(53:14):
New York Times right that Barack Obama put him up to.
Lindy went on TV on Fox News Sunday and said
it's time for Joe to step aside. And she got trashed,
she got threatened, and now she's just like, screw y'all.
I'm done. I'm telling everybody everything. And she was an insider, insider,
(53:35):
huge donor take, like keep your eyes out for her book.
It's gonna be good. It's gonna be good.
Speaker 1 (53:47):
It's gonna be so good.
Speaker 10 (53:49):
It's gonna be so good.
Speaker 2 (53:51):
But I mean, how does Jake Tapper write that book
and like live with himself?
Speaker 10 (53:57):
This other book that Ron Clayton was sort.
Speaker 2 (54:03):
Oh why did you wait till now?
Speaker 10 (54:09):
Why didn't you just break it?
Speaker 2 (54:12):
Demented and still in office?
Speaker 1 (54:16):
Because they couldn't do that because then they would have
been disavowed by their own party.
Speaker 10 (54:23):
As Jake Tapper says, I'm not on the left.
Speaker 1 (54:26):
Okay, whatever, dude, you're a liar.
Speaker 10 (54:28):
Whatever, dude, whatever.
Speaker 2 (54:30):
No, Like I remember, I remember Jake Tapper was like
the conservatives, well, he's not such a bad guy, because
he talked about Kermit Gosnell like his wife doesn't work
for planned fucking parenthood.
Speaker 1 (54:52):
Oh like he.
Speaker 2 (54:54):
Actually tweeted about Gouznell. So he's gotta be kind of
an Okay, gu I know he doesn't.
Speaker 11 (55:00):
No, he's not.
Speaker 10 (55:01):
As a matter of.
Speaker 2 (55:01):
Fact, he was accusing people of what was cheap fakes.
Speaker 10 (55:09):
Just like everyone else was.
Speaker 2 (55:14):
Joe Scarborough, this is the best Biden is it?
Speaker 1 (55:19):
Is it?
Speaker 15 (55:20):
Joe?
Speaker 10 (55:21):
Like nobody believed them. And then he died on the
debate stage.
Speaker 1 (55:28):
He just died.
Speaker 10 (55:31):
And where has he been?
Speaker 1 (55:35):
Like I read an.
Speaker 2 (55:36):
Article that said he and Jill wanted to like stay
in politics and.
Speaker 10 (55:39):
Help with the midterms.
Speaker 1 (55:41):
I'm like, oh, please do Actually, all the Democrats pretty
much told him to polm sand Well.
Speaker 2 (55:48):
But how does Kamala Harris pick up the shards of
her reputation and run for anything again when she was
the vice president and had the and like all of
these books are coming out that said everybody knew and
she had the sole responsibility for bringing the team together
to say this guy's gotta go.
Speaker 10 (56:12):
This guy can't do it anymore.
Speaker 2 (56:14):
I mean one of the books I'm writing now, like
it's like Lindy was saying that, according to her sources.
Speaker 10 (56:22):
Like Hut, when Joe had COVID.
Speaker 2 (56:26):
Like Hunter Biden, was it meetings that required security clearance?
And She's like, and I'm not sure he's an ex
addict like Jill was in these meetings. And she said
it was Jill that was like hanging on with a
death grip. It wasn't even really Joe, like people need
(56:51):
to go to jail.
Speaker 10 (56:54):
And I don't even know wonder what law.
Speaker 1 (57:00):
Oh yeah, me either, but we need we need to
find one. All right. Well, believe it or not, man,
we've pretty much come to the end of our time together.
Where can folks find you?
Speaker 2 (57:08):
Well, tonight they're gonna find me working at my computer
for a little more.
Speaker 1 (57:14):
Stacy's gonna be playing Aljandro this evening because she's gonna
be wait god, O, all right.
Speaker 10 (57:25):
Find me at Scott's fire on Twitter.
Speaker 2 (57:27):
And yes, I call the forty three year old congressman
middle age, So if you'd like to jump into that conversation,
please do.
Speaker 1 (57:33):
I mean forty three is basically middle aged.
Speaker 2 (57:36):
Oh and I also said Trump really wasn't playing forty
chas he was just listening to Lutnick and Navarro, who
will no longer be doing the Sunday shows.
Speaker 10 (57:43):
People aren't liking that a lot either.
Speaker 1 (57:46):
Yeah, they'll get over it. And as far as far
as we can find me here in a minute with
the ordinance packard, as we finish out the Kaylor Radio
live programming for the evening before we change over to
the syndicated stuff, you can find me tomorrow afternoon doing
the Rick Robinson Show that's Tuesday through Friday noon to three.
Can find me tomorrow night as far as I know,
first pushing buttons for the disasters and the making crew,
(58:06):
and then Jen and Rick ten pm Eastern Friday, same thing,
noon to three, and then hanging out with Aguyrekin from
eight thirty Eastern until we run out of gas. Quick announcement,
we did launch a new show tonight. If you've missed it,
I will have the podcast version up sometime tomorrow because
I've got to separate everything out. And then we've got
two others that are in the pipe. I'm not saying
(58:28):
much else about those until I've got more detail, but
I think some of you will be pleasantly surprised. And
on that note, we're getting out of here, ladies and
gentlemen hang out for myself and the Amish one after
the break. Stay tuned