Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George
Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Ketty.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Arm Strong and Gatty and Hey Armstrong and Getty.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
So I don't know why, but for some reason, I
think I'm gonna be watching more NFL football this year
than I have in previous years. Maybe because it's my
kids are older and I have time again, but I uh,
the season kicks off tomorrow night. I was looking through
all the previews from ESPN and Sports Illustrated in USA.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
Did everybody like that?
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Man, there is no consensus whatsoever. I looked at like
probably twenty different versions of expert sports writers who you know,
dedicate their lives to this sort of stuff.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
And zero consensus of what.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
Two teams will be in the Super Bowl, which I
guess is kind of what makes it interesting.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
That even corperts have no idea. Yeah, it reminds me.
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Of the the what do they call him, the models
for where a hurricane might go. And it's a big
series of spaghetti strings that go in a range of
different places that are possible. And yeah, that's the Yeah,
of course, that's why it's interesting to watch.
Speaker 1 (01:13):
Plus, you know, six weeks into the season, everybody's playing
a different squad because of injuries. Right, all of the
predictions have nothing to do with injuries because you don't
predict anybody ever getting hurt. So it's all over the
place without injuries, and of course there will be injuries.
Speaker 2 (01:27):
So there you go, right.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
You know, I'm sure somewhere out in sportsland somebody does this.
But shouldn't there be like a lot of time and
energy spent appraising everybody's second string everything.
Speaker 2 (01:39):
No kidding, Yeah, and factor that in somehow. Yeah, there's
probably an algorithm out there, but who knows.
Speaker 1 (01:46):
Taylor Swifts has been claims he's in the best shape
of his life, so we'll see. He's going to be
done with the race soon. He'll be taking off the uniform,
so we'll see. But he's still you know, he still
hasn't landed her. I was just in Chief's Country. They've
been in the Super Bowl five of the last six years,
and everybody in Chiefs Country agrees this is the last
go round. This is the last opportunity, really, yeah, to
(02:08):
have everybody together.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
And young enough and everything like that. So it's now
or never. I have something incredibly important to talk about.
But how's Pat Mahomes not that old? How old does
somebody google that?
Speaker 1 (02:19):
I'm guessing the early thirty twenty nine even he might
not even be thirty.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Yeah, but Travis is done. What do I win?
Speaker 1 (02:29):
Although I will throw this in and this is a
little sports Ye, he's twenty nine, twenty nine.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
This is a little squinzy.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
Yes, many people have thrown around him being the greatest
quarterback of all time. He's certainly in the argument. The
Patriots just kept rebuilding and rebuilding and rebuilding with all
new people all the time around an unbelievably good quarterback.
So maybe the Chiefs will do that with Patrick Mahomes.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
Who knows?
Speaker 3 (02:53):
Yeah, sixth round pick Tom Brady. All right, speaking of
the difficulty of prognosticating anyway, complete change the topic.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
I promise this, and here it is.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
I'm going to quote a piece written by Simone Rodin Benzequin.
She is a French journalist and thinker, how the Muslim
Brotherhood is capturing Europe. We've been talking on and off
today about how Europe is really tense and the people
the government too, But the people are really really concerned
(03:25):
about the fact that rampant immigration has fundamentally changed the
countries where these people live, and they don't like it,
and they feel threatened to buy it. And the government's
response in a lot of countries like Britain, our old
Grandpappy Britain has been shut up, don't say anything.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
Well, immigration was the number one or two issue in
our election. People were very angry about it, and the
people flooding into our country were way are way more
similar to us than the people that are flooding into
those European countries.
Speaker 2 (03:58):
Yeah, in the.
Speaker 3 (03:58):
Main, Yeah, we certainly had plenty of h and Bill
Malugian and the folks at Fox News did a great
job of documenting this, But we had plenty of Chinese
nationals and people from various hostile Muslim and African lands
and that sort of thing. But is a percentage, No, No,
you're a pad a lot bigger prompt. You know, I
don't particularly want a bunch of Venezuelans flooding into the
(04:20):
country willy nilly who want to work construction. But I
mean that's a different situation than what we're about to
talk about. So anyway, the fact that this got zero
attention practically the free press is writing about it, but
the fact that it got zero attention in American media
is just yet another as if you needed a measure
of how incredibly dishonest and biased they are. France did
(04:41):
not plan to blow the whistle on the Muslim Brotherhood's
attempt to take over Europe, but a couple of weeks
ago a classified report from the Ministry of the Interior
leaked to one of the major French daily newspapers. Seventy
three page document marked confidential defense was meant for top
(05:01):
officials only. Reading from her article now, based on intelligence files,
field investigations, and dozens and dozens of interviews, it laid
out a stark diagnosis. The Muslim Brotherhood has built an
extensive ideological infrastructure in France, not through violence, but through schools, charities,
mosques and soft power. And it states and I quote
(05:22):
the Brotherhood's strategy is to install a form of ideological
hegemony that means they're running the thing by infiltrating civil
society under the guise of religious and educational activities.
Speaker 1 (05:34):
This is exactly the book Submission by Michelle Welbeck. If
you haven't read it, and we've talked about it many times,
he explains it in France exactly how it would play out,
and sounds like this is it?
Speaker 3 (05:49):
Holla, Beck, I think it's wiliback girl. Wellbeck, I think
somebody look up submission? Yeah, yeah, I just need to
read it. Yeah. Well, I guess we should say it
in a way that you could look it up. Yeah,
it's filled with a W. I think phonetically might be
better anyway. So the Reporter is the most detailed government
studied the date of the Brotherhood's presence in Europe. Written
(06:10):
by civil service, it draws on months of field work,
an analysis conducted in France and abroad, with inputs from diplomats,
intelligence officials, academics and religious figures.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
Its conclusion is blunt.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
The Muslim Brotherhood operates as a political project. Hear that
contemplate that not organization project. Its goal is not sudden revolution,
but gradual transformation. Its targets our hearts and minds. It
strength lies not in secrecy, but in strategic ambiguity. And
(06:47):
it's not just coming for France, she writes, it is
coming for all of the West. Here's another key fact
you need to know. The Muslim Brotherhood is a transnational
Islamist movement that seeks to impose Islamic law through gradual
ideological means, primarily via schools, charities, and religious networks. And
(07:08):
she mentions, she goes into a paragraph or two that
while it claims to reject violence, it has extremist offshoots
which gets people's attention.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
And that's obviously awful.
Speaker 3 (07:20):
But if somebody said to me, you know, my goal, Joe,
is to completely subvert and destroy and get rid of
the American constitution and American culture as it exists now.
But trust me, I will be nonviolent. I don't like violence.
I would still oppose them with every fiber of me.
(07:43):
So getting back to what they're trying to do, and
it reminds me a little bit of the critical theory crowd,
that the woke crowd, the postmodernists, the neo Marxist, whatever
you want to call them, that their intent is to
overthrow Western civilization and bring out a Marxist revolution blah
blah blah. And people are like, what, no, oh, no,
I think they just want to protect trans people.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
No, As I often say, they efing wrote books with
their efing names on the efing spines explaining precisely what
they want to do and how and now they are
doing it. It's not some sort of creative, you know,
flight of fancy. They told us what they're going to do.
(08:24):
And in the same way.
Speaker 3 (08:26):
The Muslim Brotherhood was founded in nineteen twenty eight by
a fellow by the name of Hassan Albana is an Egyptian,
and the movement has always presented Islam as a total
system religious, political, legal, and economic.
Speaker 2 (08:42):
See, that's the one.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
There are a lot of good Americans who think, well,
I'm Lutheran, and I have the right to be a Lutheran.
So I can't be against people who just want to
be a Muslim because they naively believe it's just a
personal faith like that you only really pay attention to
a day a week and when you pray and decide
not to sin, blah blah blah. No, it is a religious, political, legal,
(09:05):
and economic system. But it was in Europe that this
vision was tactically refined, she writes. After being banned or
repressed in the Arab world, many Brotherhood ideologues took refuge
in Western democracies. In Switzerland, Albana's son set up the
Islamic Center of Geneva nineteen sixty one and later raised
his two sons, both of whom became leading voices of
(09:26):
Islamist thought in Europe, and in the decades since, the
Brotherhood has methodically expanded its presence across the continent, all
designed to promote its vision of political Islam under the
coverage of religious outreach.
Speaker 1 (09:40):
By the way, countries like Jordan and Egypt are so
scared of these people. That's why they won't allow any
Palestinians into their country.
Speaker 2 (09:48):
Right.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
Oh yeah, and that's I'm so glad you pointed that out.
Speaker 3 (09:51):
In the Muslim world, they know exactly what these people
are doing.
Speaker 1 (09:55):
They're like, well, I don't want to be I don't
want to discriminate against Muslims. No, those people say, no,
I am a Muslim. I know what they're up to.
The number is in France alone, or startling. The Muslim
Brotherhood's French network comprises two hundred and eighty associations different ones,
including one hundred and thirty nine officially affiliated mosques, sixty
(10:16):
eight more that are considered ideologically close that want to
institute the whole of society system together, accounting for nearly
ten percent of the mosques open since twenty ten. Every Friday,
some ninety one thousand people attend worship in these spaces.
The movement also controls their influences twenty one private schools,
eight hundred and fifteen Charonic schools, where over sixty six
(10:38):
thousand miners are taught to see themselves as part of
the global community, global Muslim community in moral and cultural
opposition to Western secularism. And what exactly do they teach
at these institutions. You could guess most of it hatred
of Jews, hatred of Christianity, and any effort to contain Islam.
(11:05):
You know, it's you know, it's obviously anything that stands
in the way of imposing their system on the world.
And we'll post this at armstrong egetdy dot com. But
she concludes with France has taken a first step by
naming the problem. President Emmanuel McCrone was reportedly initially furious
(11:28):
with a dude for a wife, right what no, come on,
candas anyway, he was reportedly initially furious with the leak,
has now, in response to public outcry, acknowledged the findings
and ordered a national response.
Speaker 2 (11:44):
This is huge.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
You have not read a sentence of this in any
of the mainstream media. After initially like the Brits saying
shut up, don't talk about this. The public went nuts
and McCrone was forced to respond in order a national response.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
Sweden has followed suit.
Speaker 1 (12:03):
You read that in the New York Times, requesting the
full report and launching its own investigation.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
Sweden demanded a copy of the report. Austria had previously
produced assessments, but few have led to action. Belgium has
accommodated Brotherhood linked networks under the banner of multiculturalism and
the US Here the conversation barely exists. While several American
Muslim organizations have historical or ideological ties to the Brotherhood,
public scrutiny is rare, and political discourse tends to avoid
(12:30):
the subject entirely.
Speaker 2 (12:32):
But the warning is clear. She writes. The threat is
not just in France, it's in Europe, and it's crossed
the Atlantic. It's all around you.
Speaker 1 (12:40):
That's really interesting. The book we are talking about, it's
a novel, by the way. It's not some thick nonfiction,
hard to read thing.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
It's a novel.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
It's about a college professor who's living in France, like
ten years from now.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
Based on this timeline when the Muslims.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
Take over by legal means through electoral process, and it's
really interesting.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
There's a lot of sex scenes in it too, if
that hooks you anyway.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
The book's called Submission by Michelle well Beck is how
you're pronounce it, but it's spelled with an H.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
But if you look up submission and you'll find it,
you'll find it.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
But I'm telling you, it's really an interesting look at
how easily this could happen.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
Right, what's shocking about it is, well, it's exactly what
Simone Roddan Penzequin was describing in the piece. It's quiet,
slow infiltration of institutions and under the coverage of religious
freedom taking control of everything.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
Yeah, and a lot of people who just want to
be a good, good, nice, welcoming people who allow it
to happen. And then, in this particular version in the novel,
Marie La Penn gets elected Prime Minister. But then there's
the blowback against the right wing conserv ultra conservative Nazi,
so they allow the Muslim.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
Side to win, which you could easily picture happening. Yeah. Yeah,
it's not just a personal faith.
Speaker 3 (14:03):
It is a political system that has a personal faith
as part of it.
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Islam one of the world's great religions. Are here you.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Any thoughts on any of that? Text line four one
five two nine KFTC. Part of the key to doing
this job is having your finger on the pulse of
what people are interested in. And I think we we
understand that. The thing that was on your mind as
(14:35):
you went to bed last night is what does one
of the founding members of Pink Floyd think of Ozzy Osbourne.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Well, here's the answer. Ossi Osborne, who just died.
Speaker 4 (14:44):
Bless him in his whatever that state that he was
in his whole life, will never know, although he was
all over the TV for hundreds of years with his
idiocy in nonsense, the music. I don't have no idea,
couldn't give a I don't care about Black Sabbath, I
never date, I have no interest in biting the heads
(15:08):
of chickens they do.
Speaker 2 (15:10):
I couldn't care less. And there you go. Roger Waters
is a nut and a prick. But that was pretty funny. Yeah,
I might agree with him on that one. I'm not.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
Oh yeah, I was a guy myself. Here's another story,
got this text. We're talking about crime in various areas
while San Francisco, the Bay Area, the San Francisco. The
city has cleaned up a ton in the last couple
of years.
Speaker 2 (15:34):
I mean, just amazing.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
There are still dark spots. Anyway, this person texted that
they were at uh getting a ticket to get on
the BART and they set down their bag while they
were messing with the ticket machine, and somebody walked.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
Up and peed in their bag.
Speaker 1 (15:52):
Oh that bag tied the room together. That's unpleasant, big
Lebowski reference.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
Uh wow, wow that Yeah, that's see, that's that's admerant behavior.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Yeah, we should do better as a society. I want
to talk a little bit about the giant Chinese parade
they had yesterday, maybe the biggest military parade in world
history depending on who he acts with their missiles and
their bombs and their soldiers and whatnot, and their attempt
to bring down the United States of America and all
(16:25):
of Europe. Dad's fantastic. So that coming up, yeah tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (16:29):
I just I just happen to come across a an
analysis by a military analyst, which you know, an analyst
thought to do. They ought to analyze about the parade
and what he saw and what he thought of it.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
That I found quite compelling. We'll talk about that tomorrow. Well, cool,
it's something else in my head and I don't remember
what it was. How did it skip my head? Is
Roger Waters a singer or a guitar player? He is
the bassist, singer, and primary composer of most of Pink
Floyd's master or if I've heard a Pink Floyd song,
he was probably singing it. No, no, no, not necessarily.
(17:02):
I don't have time to properly answer that question. Both
he and David Gilmore sang a lot. Gilmore is the
guy who sings great. He is the handsome lead singer.
Roger Waters, like a character actor, did really great singing,
but not not as not the same.
Speaker 2 (17:18):
China wants to take over the world, that's not new news.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
We got a little inopol on mat for you, so
I played you several different versions of network coverage of
the big Chinese military parade that was impressive and scary yesterday.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
This is ABC's version.
Speaker 5 (17:37):
Chinese President Shi Jimping hosting Russian President Vladimir Putin and
North Korea's Kim Jong mund together in public for the
first time.
Speaker 2 (17:46):
The parade will commemorate the end of World War II.
Speaker 5 (17:50):
China's growing military might on display with more than twenty
five world leaders attending sasillite images showing military equipment already
lining up. Britt Clennet in Channaman Square.
Speaker 6 (18:02):
We are expecting China to showcase its new weapons, including
hypersonic missiles, drone stealth fighters, and it's a chance for
China to not only showcase its power on the world stage,
but also to showcase its upgraded military.
Speaker 5 (18:15):
It comes two and a half weeks after President Trump
welcome Putin to Alaska, ruling out the Red carpet shaking
Putin's hand. A stark contrast has Putin, she and India's
Prime Minister Moody stand shoulder to shoulder.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
They have thirty five is the greatest plane in the world.
We invented it, we built it, and China somehow stole
all of the plans and built exactly the same thing,
which is uh could definitely come back to bite us
in the ass someday. That's unfortunate. And they have these
hypersonic missiles that we do not have, at least we've
never announced that we have them that can travel around
the world undetected and deliver a nuclear payload anywhere, and
(18:51):
they had those on display along with their two.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Million man army that they were showing off.
Speaker 3 (18:58):
M it's something yeah, yeah, well when it's unmistakable the
message and yeah, Shiz and Ping, I'm sorry, Putin was
there and fat head from North Korea, but twenty six
different leaders were there saying, you know what I'm going
with team China. I think I'm going to get a
(19:20):
better deal here.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
And Donald Trump truthed out yesterday. May President, she and
the wonderful people of China have a great and lasting
day of celebration with the big parade and everything. Please
give my warmest regards to Vladimir Putin and Kim Jong
Un as you conspire against the United States of America.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
President Donald J. Trump, Well, wait a minute, that kind
of took a turn at the end.
Speaker 1 (19:51):
What an odd thing to message out as a president.
I know you're conspiring over there. Don't take it out now,
Is that what he's saying? You think I don't know
what you're up to.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
I know, I know domestically, I so like a lot
of what Trump's doing.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Good. God, you don't think Chesi and Ping doesn't know,
you know, Yeah, that's the if she's in Ping's subconscious
could could tweet it would tweet. Uh yeah, that's why
we're doing all of this on TV, so it's unmistakable.
I think you're wrong. I think he and Putin both
said crap, he's onto us.
Speaker 2 (20:39):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (20:41):
Anyway, completely different times. We need transition music for this.
Speaker 2 (20:44):
When Michael there, you got everything, he described the difference
between a beat and the Gruyah, there's the magic.
Speaker 3 (21:00):
Listen to this for a minute. I'm telling you that
organ in the background under appreciate.
Speaker 1 (21:10):
Harder than it looks too. Oh, it can come and
go like love the groove. Are you kidding?
Speaker 2 (21:18):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (21:20):
So, I think this is somewhat self explanatory. A woman
trying to sell her sneakers online and meets the guy anyway.
Here here's how it turns out.
Speaker 7 (21:28):
We had met up because I was going to sell
him my sneakers. He just wanted to sniff my feet
and I didn't feel comfortable with that. I mean, you
could have my sneakers all you want. I mean, I
don't care. I'm not wearing them. You know, they're just
stinky old sneakers. But people like weird things. And I
met him down in the parking garage. He did a
three point turn and actually hit me with a car
(21:51):
ran me over. I've met a lot of people who
have foot fetishes. Nobody has ever done anything to this caliber.
Speaker 2 (21:57):
A lot of questions here, go ahead and start.
Speaker 1 (22:06):
Oh geez, Now, maybe she has some of those, because
my son deals in the world of rare sneakers and
it's a thing and people buy and sell them online
and they're worth hundreds of dollars.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
And but but.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
I mean, why was she selling her shoes on used
shoes because she was offered money so the dude could
smell her stinky old sneakers, Okay, And then he said,
you know it seems crazy.
Speaker 2 (22:34):
Well I'm here, you mind if I just like I
go to the source.
Speaker 1 (22:38):
Well, see exactly, you know, my dear, it strikes me,
as we're conversing here in this parking garage, that it
seems odd to go to the second hand if you
will the smell of your foot within your sneakers, when
your very feet are there at the end.
Speaker 2 (22:52):
Of your legs.
Speaker 1 (22:53):
So perhaps I could, well, I don't know, sniff on
your feet here in this parking garage. And she said,
that is a bridge too far. I will sell you
my stinky as snakers, but you'll not be sniffing on matutsis.
So he says, well, fine, man, let's agree to disagree,
(23:13):
and he walks over to his car, gets in, does
a three point turn, yes, not a U turn, a
three point turn. Apparently the space was not wide enough
to allow a single turn. He does a three point turn,
comes back and hits her. How hard much did he
hit you? As you seem to be kind of recounting
this story in a jovial manner, as opposed to lying
(23:35):
on the cement going.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
Ah yeah, Something tells me it was a glancing blow.
But a guy who was charged with aggravated battery, which
is good after reviewing his background, and this is sing
the cops e scravated a battery is a full step
worse than jovial battery.
Speaker 3 (23:56):
He's been the subject of other incidents involving the same
modus brand.
Speaker 2 (24:00):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (24:03):
So he buys you sneakers online and then every time
he meets the person.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
He says, so, whoa, I'm here. That's eliminate the middleman, right,
an aggressive scent? What is the up charge for the
foot sniff?
Speaker 1 (24:22):
So your belief is that she knew exactly why he
wanted the sneakers She's one of those people that sells
her clothing for people to smell, which I find weird
and disgusting. But I wouldn't now lot between two consenting adults.
If you want to enjoy my soiled garments and are
willing to pay for me, that trade can happen well.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
As usual in modern crappy crappy journalism, some of the
most obvious questions that immediately popped to mind evidently didn't
occur to this journalist.
Speaker 2 (24:52):
Like the lead.
Speaker 3 (24:54):
Says, she said blah blah blah told local Is she
met up with this guy in order to sell them
a pair of used snakers. Okay, let's start right there.
She's a petite female, twenty eight year old dude, it's
not going to be wearing her snakers. Did at any
point she asked, why do you want to sell my
(25:15):
buy my sneakers? How did he come to know she
had sneakers to sell?
Speaker 2 (25:20):
Right? Okay?
Speaker 3 (25:21):
Did she realize there was a quasi sexual dynamic going
on here? And merely well, if you judged merely by
what she said, she just didn't want him sniffing on
her feet, but knew why he was buying the stinky
old sneakers, people like weird things.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
She said, yeah, okay, that makes sense now because the
part at the end where she said, I, I've met
a lot of people who like to smell feet, and
I thought, okay, I've not met any So how come
you've met lots? But that makes sense now that you're
saying that that's that's what.
Speaker 2 (25:56):
She's up to. Yeah, she's in that world.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
Yeah, okay, so she maybe this is profitable, Maybe I
should look into it. Maybe she goes to famous footwear,
buys discount shoes, wears them for a week, puts them
on eBay, and sells them.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
For a hundred bucks.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
Pers that's entirely you've declared it a perversion.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
You know what.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
I apologize for that, and I retract it to two enthusiasts. Anyway,
here's here's another uh, head scratcher for you. Right in
the middle of the article, the untrained eye wouldn't even
have noticed this jack So but then she said, things
got scary. She said, Uh, this guy whose name is
(26:39):
el Monsey Circle of Southwest Miami.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Dade, Florida. Man ran out of the room. Wait a minute,
what room room? Oh?
Speaker 1 (26:49):
She met up with him at a hotel good idea
to sell him, used snake, that's a really good idea. Knowing, knowing,
we think that what it's what's it's all about. So
you're selling your sneakers to people that want to smell
your dirty sneakers and you're eating them privately.
Speaker 2 (27:07):
That's a terrible idea, mailed them to Then she said
things got scary.
Speaker 3 (27:13):
She said, circle of South blah blah ran out of
the room with what she thought were her shoes.
Speaker 2 (27:19):
Okay, now that is very confusing.
Speaker 3 (27:23):
Everybody, including you folks, are all making the same Wait,
what face what she thought were her shoes? Did this
guy have like ten twelve pairs of women's shoes on him? Anyway,
she said, she ran after him to the parking area.
She's like, you got to pay me for my shoes
(27:45):
that you sniff while you pleasure yourself, Otherwise it's theft.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
And she's quite correct.
Speaker 3 (27:50):
And she confronted dude, like was yelling at him and
chasing after him. That's when he got into his suv,
did a rapid three point turn and actually hit her
with his car as she was like confronting him and
yelling at him, which is obviously uncool. But again again
(28:11):
you can be like America's leading seller of shoes, undergarments,
whatever the hell you want, if somebody's willing to buy him.
I'm a capitalist.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
You go, girl, But I think I the news consumer
to deserve an explanation.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
Okay, I need to look this up.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
Perversion generally means a deviation from what's considered normal, natural,
or acceptable. Acceptable is the eye to beholder, but certainly
normal and natural, it would it would count as a perversion.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
I don't know. I might have to quibble with you.
Speaker 3 (28:53):
There's one of the more striking things I ever read
as a young man, was pointing out the difference between
average and normal.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
How about natural? It's not natural. It's a value judgment.
It's not very hirely a value judgment.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
Well, if one out of a million people are into it,
is that natural?
Speaker 2 (29:15):
I suppose it is natural. Yeah, it's natural laboration.
Speaker 3 (29:19):
Yeah, if that's fairly consistent across time, the ten percent
of people are especially attracted to smells.
Speaker 2 (29:26):
I'm perfectly okay calling this guy a pervert.
Speaker 3 (29:30):
Well he's a shoe thief. Well maybe again, he ran
out with what.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
She believed were her shoes. He just ran out had
here with somebody's shoes, I believe there would be mine.
That is a odd story. And the reporters thinking, how
did I end up on this beat? All right? What
are the details? Writing it down? How much college debt
do I have from Columbia journalism school? I was going
(29:55):
to change this fascist, evil country and teach people about
the page triarchy and white supremacy. Here I am reporting
on Pervo Jim here and Sally Stinky Shoe and her scam.
Although again you know if they're buying sell that's what
I say. Nobody's harmed.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
No, no, nobody harm until you run over by an
su Okay, we will finish strong next how you do?
An NFL season kicks off tomorrow. Eagles are playing Dallas somebody,
(30:35):
They're playing somebody Thursday night, and then Chiefs Chargers in
Brazil on Friday. And I happen to know, and I'll
be vague about this because they didn't tell me with
the idea that I would spread this information. I happen
to know that for at least one of the teams,
all the people there involved are were told they're not
(30:57):
allowed to leave the hotel. So everybody flew there, landed,
went to the hotel and are told they're not allowed
to leave.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
And I just think that's kind of.
Speaker 1 (31:07):
Interesting that because I know, I know chiefs fans who
were thinking about I actually know some people are going going.
Speaker 2 (31:13):
You know, it'd be cool.
Speaker 1 (31:14):
We'll go to Brazil, we'll see Rio, we'll go to
the game and it'll be fun.
Speaker 2 (31:17):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (31:18):
But the teams apparently think it's so dangerous they don't
want you to even leave the hotel at all. Well,
they'll be there for three days. Dangerous in what way?
Says the skeptical man. I mean, because there's the standard
sort of crime danger. There's also the danger doing stuff
(31:38):
you're not supposed to. You got a bunch of young men.
It's young men's desires and libidos and plenty of spend
in cash loose in Rio. I think the danger is
not getting you know, yeah, this mugged as much as
other stuffs that could be too but true. But the
people involved I was talking about are not, so they're.
Speaker 2 (32:01):
Not allowed to go out of the hotel either.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
And my brother who took his daughters to Rio for
the Taylor Swift concert my nieces last year or year before,
said it is sketchy af the kind of like when
we went to Cape Town. He said, like, right down
in the middle of the city is pretty nice, but
like as soon as you get like a block away
from the most popular things, it's just like super scary.
(32:25):
And I don't doubt that.
Speaker 3 (32:27):
Yeah, that was funny. I was on a punt in England.
It's like a gondola but fatter. In Cambridge, it's a thing.
You take a punt and the gondolier. Dude, you go
down the river. You look at all these beautiful colleges
in Cambridge and they're chapels and everything, and then you
come back and anyway, some of the other folks on
our boat were South Africans and somebody, the other person
(32:50):
on the boat was asking them about it. Actually it
was the guy doing the punter, literally the guy pushing
the boat, and they're like, oh, it's like any place,
any city. Just have to be kind of careful. And
I'm sitting there thinking.
Speaker 2 (33:02):
No, it ain't right, it's dangerous, be careful. Here's your
(33:24):
host for final thoughts, Joe Getty.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
Hey, let's get a final thought from everybody on the
crew to wrap things up for the day. Beginning with
our beloved board operator Technical director Michael Angelo.
Speaker 2 (33:33):
Michael, what's your final thought? Yeah, we're missing an opportunity here, guys.
None of us like doing the wash or laundry instead
of just take our dirty laundry and start selling it,
you know, like socks are cheap. Once I've used it,
I can sell them as celebrity socks. What do you think,
ang dirty laundry people really paid? I don't know. Yeah,
(33:53):
I don't. Katie Green is off, but she will be
back soon. Jack, do you have a final thought for us?
Speaker 1 (33:59):
I just had no motion. I'm not proud of Envy's
one of your seven deadly sins. I don't like this
sort of thing. But I just saw a video of
a very happy gentleman launching his one million dollar yacht
he had just purchased for the first time, and they
rolled it down into the water and it backed down
and it sank immediately, and they enjoyed that. And that's
(34:21):
some sort of bad envy, like hating the rich thing
that I shouldn't be proud of. But I thought it
was awesome.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
You're that person. Why, I don't know why I thought
that was awesome?
Speaker 1 (34:31):
So famous stupid, particularly like TV fame.
Speaker 2 (34:35):
You remember Jack from Will and Drace.
Speaker 1 (34:38):
Yeah, flamboyantly gay fella played by one Sean Hayes. Judy
and I saw Sean Hayes in a play in London
and it was one of the most stunning acting performances
I've ever seen.
Speaker 2 (34:50):
Really, it was monumental. He won the Tony Award for it. Wow. Yeah,
it was amazing.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
But you'd bring up his name, people are like, oh,
I remember that guy, funny, kind of a.
Speaker 2 (35:00):
Gay guy, right, Yeah, and you assume that's all he
can do. No, far from it. When I got around
see tomorrow, God bless him her. There were so many
great moments on today's Armstrong and Getty Show, but none
as great as That's.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
Still fake news. Overall, we all know that it was
his administration throwing a bag full of the Epstein files
out of the window at the orders of the Pope
and the Jews, right with me, the Pope and the
Jews working together, right, everybody knows that
Speaker 2 (35:38):
Anyway, Armstrong and Getty