Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George
Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Armstrong and Gatty and he Armstrong and Getty.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
This this is what victory feels like.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Yeah, one very pumped up Elon Musk coming out to
ac DC crowd, going berserk, him jumping around like a
crazy person and giving a very impassioned speech. He is
going to have an office in the White House. They
announced yesterday a DOJ office in the White House. Wow,
(00:56):
which of course causes some people's heads to explode.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
I don't know why, but right I know it's bizarre,
and we actually got a great No, wealthy Democrats, you
can fly fly on the President's plane anywhere you want
to go. Nobody says the blinks an eye, but wealthy Republican.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Oh no, something's gone wrong. Yeah. I think it's absolutely hilarious.
And right away Elon Musk is not a Republican.
Speaker 3 (01:22):
No, I just think he's a policy that works.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
Guy. Oh why can I it's funny.
Speaker 3 (01:28):
I set aside these emails and I can't find him,
but one of our beloved Oh here it is from Aaron.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
You guys, think about it.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
All the cool septim pierced, purple haired Anarco adjacents, you know,
those educated metro anti establishment types. Everyone on the left
will have the distinct pleasure of watching them fiercely defend
every single government bureaucracy, office and agency that doze attempts
to shrink. The great anti establishment left in America is
(01:57):
going to defend every single bureaucrat on Earth.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
Excellent point. I was listened to a podcast the other
day where they're trying to make the argument that the
scripts have flipped on the culture, the vibes, all that
sort of stuff. I'm not sure I'm completely there. But
in terms of like when I was younger, when Joe
and I were younger, it was the right that was
gonna police your speech and crack down, you know, have
(02:22):
all these codes that you have to follow and ban
you if you you know this with that or whatever.
Now it's obviously the left, obviously the left that is
going to kill you for saying the wrong thing. Yeah,
and don't you dare call getting pornography out of elementary
school library censorship? Yeah, groomers. Right, and then to the
(02:43):
thing you just said. So, the anti establishment crowd is
going to fight tooth and nail to make sure no
government agency is shrunk or dissolved.
Speaker 3 (02:53):
It's Trump derangement syndrome and Elon Musk derangement syndrome.
Speaker 2 (02:58):
Right, So Elon's going to have an office there in
the White House. He's dancing around, he's all excited. At
the end of his little speech, he does a heartfelt
I love you and then makes a gesture that has
gotten quite a bit of a bit of attention. This
was the dumbest thing that happened yesterday. Let's hear the
audio first and then we'll explain it. And I just
want to say thank you for making it happen. Thank you.
(03:25):
My heart goes out here. Then he turns around and
does it to the crowd behind him. He hits his
chest with like a fist of them, puts his arm
in the air. It's kind of the Gladiator did it?
Star Trek did it, and Hitler did it.
Speaker 1 (03:41):
Jet disturbing not Sea salute by Elon Musk gives us
a hint of what we can expect these next four years.
Note that he entered to a song by ac DC
on Australian band who else came from Australia.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
Hitler, Dad back to you, that's awesome, freaking stupid.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
All this is Nazi guy straightens his elbow. He's a Nazi, huh, right.
So I can't even believe they had to respond to this.
But the ADL, the Anti Defamation League, which has been
around for over one hundred years, you know, fighting anti
Semitism all across the country and around the world. Sometimes
they put out a statement because some people on the
left and NSNBC and everybody, we'll all get to that
(04:24):
in just a second, presented it as clearly a Nazi salute.
I mean, just like, there's not even an argument here.
Elon went up and did a Nazi salute. Now let's
discuss what we think it means. Wait a second, can
we back up a second. I don't think it was
a Nazi salute, but the ADL put out a tweet.
This is a delicate moment. It's a new day, and
yet so many are on edge, Our politics are inflamed,
(04:46):
and social media only adds to the anxiety. It seems
that Elon Musk made an awkward gesture in a moment
of enthusiasm, not a Nazi salute. But again, we appreciate
that people are on edge in this moment. All sides
should give one another a bit of perhaps even the
benefit of the doubt, and take a breath. This is
a new beginning. Let's hope for healing and work toward
unity in the months and years ahead.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
I would love I would pay for a poll of
Americans to figure out what percentage of people actually thought
that was a Nazi salute, not.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
You know, Oh, that's unfortunate.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
The way he waived kind of looks like a no
actually thought, oh my god, Elon.
Speaker 2 (05:25):
Musk is a closet and Nazi, and he accidentally let
that slip for just a second. He gave a.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
Salute and realized, oh, I'm given the traditional Nazi salute.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
I wasn't supposed to do that. The percentage of Americas
actually believe that. Well, that's the thing. Even if you
were a Nazi and you Nazi salute mind closed doors,
how would you explain why he would do it on
that stage in front of those people with cameras all around.
I mean, what what's going on there?
Speaker 3 (05:52):
But he's preoccupied with the reaching Mars and he forgot
to mask his Nazism.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Nazi Germany sitting congress person Alexandria Acassio Cortes AOC retweeted
the ADLs, let's all calm down and give each other grace,
and we don't think it's a Nazi salute, and said,
just to be clear, you are defending a Hyle Hitzer
Hile Hitler salute that was performed and repeated for emphasis
(06:19):
and clarity, because Elon does it, and then he turns
around to the people behind him and does it again,
like I love you, but people can officially stop listening
to you as any sort of reputable source of information.
Now you work for them. Thank you for making that
crystal clear to all. The ADL works for the Nazis.
Speaker 3 (06:36):
She is America's greatest accidental comedian. That's hilarious, Doe eyed
little AOC lecturing the ADL about who's a Nazi who's
not and how they should do their jobs. I mean,
there's no parent there's no joke needed here, there's no
punchline required.
Speaker 2 (06:54):
PBS from the News Hour yesterday. Billionaire Elon Musk gave
what appeared to be a fan salute Monday while making
a speech at the post inauguration celebration for Donald Trump
at the Capitol in arena arena. I don't even know
what to say about that.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
I think the job of pointing out what jackasses these
people are has been done by them.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Elon Musk gave what appeared to be a fascist salute.
He also gave what appeared to be a wave you
make to a passing boat when you're water skiing and
you see a friend. He also gave a fair catch
symbol if you're a wide receiver, if you're a deep
back for the kickoff. He also knave what appeared to
be I mean, there's a lot of things he could have.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
What here? Here's the question, does AOC believe that? Or
does she believe that her constituents believe it? I think
she believes that the online Twitter crowd, especially the fever
pitch females that are such a factor in the young
politics of our day.
Speaker 2 (08:02):
I think she thinks they believe it. Okay, well, that's fine.
She's a politician and she gets to do what she's doing.
I hate it, But what about the PBS News Hour
billionaire the Elon Musk gave what appeared to be a
fascist salute. I find that astonishing.
Speaker 3 (08:20):
That was its self declowning on an exquisite level.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
That was retweeted by an historian who works at one
of your major universities, Ruth ben Giot, who's written a
bunch of books I'd not read. She retweeted that and said,
historian of fascism here, because that's what she is, She's
a historian of that era. Historian of fascism here. That
was a Nazi salute, and a very belligerent one too,
to which another retweet of that, Mary Catherine hamil Fox retweeted,
(08:50):
and I thought this was good, mam. This tweet has everything,
the condensation, the cutesy casual verbiage, the credentialism and service
of made up stuff, the credibility destroyed. Keep it up,
I guess, Mary Catherine, for the whim, I like you.
I like the cutees casual verbage because that is like
(09:11):
a coin of the realm in social media. You kind
of like act like you just kind of It's like
like I was talking about the other day, when you're
a very angry woman and you're doing your your screed
about fascism or something like that, you need to be
walking while you're doing anything like that. I'm very busy,
but I just have time to blast off this little
thing about fascism in America. It has to be casual
for some reason. So this historian goes with historian of
(09:33):
fascism here, that was a Nazi salute instead of like
writing a piece with you making your argument for whatever reason.
That so that's the way they do it. The condensation, Yes,
the credentialism and surface of made up stuff, because she's
got in her handle all these different degrees and departments
that shouldn't even exist. I love that sort of thing.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
Yeah, Mary Catherine, with a beautiful description of that sort
of thing. I want that like cross stitched and hung
on my wall so I can have it handy.
Speaker 2 (10:05):
That all right?
Speaker 3 (10:05):
So you got the condescension or condensation either way. Either way,
it's inconvenient. You got the the casual verbict, what was
your list again?
Speaker 2 (10:16):
This has every memories, the condescension, the cutesy casual verbiage,
the credentialism in service of made up stuff. Yes, the
credibility destroyed. Yeah, because you destroyed your own credibility, she says,
and she says, keep it up. I guess which I agree.
You know, you want to continue to have trump or
people who think like trumpet office. Keep it up, just
(10:36):
keep going with this crazy ass that only you and
your online weirdos believe and the rest of us roller eyes.
And it helps cover up, by the way, things that
Trump actually does wrong because you're so nuts.
Speaker 3 (10:49):
Well right, because you're going on about fantasy Nazi phantoms.
You know what's funny is she and her ilk have
no idea, no concept of the fact that professor from
elite university here is not a brag.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
That's something you need to explain away. That's not an.
Speaker 3 (11:12):
Immediate assurance of this as somebody I should listen to. No,
quite the contrary, it's oh, here comes up blast from
the far left.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
She has no idea of that. So Mark Halpern, I'm
going to end with this. He wrote in his newsletter
today about all this, and I thought this was really
good for a political operation. He's talking about the Trump people,
for a political operation that thrives on and benefits from
the proclivity of its opposition to regularly become so easily distracted.
(11:41):
It appears that Musk derangement syndrome is the latest arrow
in the quiver of the Team Trump communication shop. They
can count on people reacting to elon stuff as ridiculously
as they do react to Trump stuff to like distract
the media keep their eye off the ball from things
that are actually happening. I don't get why nobody gets that.
Speaker 3 (12:04):
I know, if I'm trying to indict someone for something,
I mean, my neighbor steals my lawnmower, I'm not gonna
go with my neighbor's stole my lawnmower. And he's a
closeted Nazi, and I think he talks to space addiens.
Plus he's able to urinate champagne and have been throwing
urine champagne parties, and I mean all sorts of bizarrero No, No,
(12:29):
he stole my lawnmower.
Speaker 2 (12:31):
Just that, just that.
Speaker 3 (12:33):
But they don't get that, and they don't do that right,
They must be that crazy. I mean PBS. And again,
if there's one thing I will pound into the heads
of America, it's that intelligence and wisdom have no correlation.
They can exist in complete opposition to each other. You
can have somebody with an IQ of one hundred and
(12:54):
thirty nine who is just a moron when it comes
to dealing with the world.
Speaker 2 (13:02):
And I think PBS is is it's lousy with that
sort of person.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
They are very bright, but they have no ability to understand.
Speaker 2 (13:10):
Humanity and the way things actually work. Nazi salute. Please
Elon Musk, who made a symbol that seemed to indicate
he would catch this fly ball. The right fielder can
stay out of the way. Whatever. If you have any
comment on any of this text line four one five
two nine KFTC. Things are getting weird, and they getting
(13:32):
weird fast. You heard the inauguration speech, Probably good chance
you didn't hear the speech he gave after it to
a different crowd where he said a lot of interesting things.
Will bring you some of that next segment. Yeah, some are.
Speaker 3 (13:46):
Quite funny, jazzy, unscripted and charming. Some of it went
on a bit longer, but well worth touching on the highlights.
Speaker 2 (13:55):
Hope you can stay tuned.
Speaker 3 (13:56):
All right, We're gonna have a little game show here
among the good folks on the team.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Play along at Homer, in your car, wherever you happen
to be listening.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
Blank Worth twice as much as Gold is driving a
global smuggling frenzy. One more time, blank Worth twice as
much as Gold is driving a global smuggling frenzy. Your
answers when we come back. We're back, Michael, do you
(14:28):
want to lead us off? What is worth twice as
much as gold? Driving a global smuggling frenzy Bitcoin? Very nice,
excellent guests, Stay tuned. We'll reveal the answer in moments.
Katie Green the news machine. What do you have, Katie?
What have you written down?
Speaker 2 (14:44):
I have no idea, actually no answer, no answer. Yeah,
that's going to go with some sort of drug, heroin, fentanyl, trenk,
some sort of you're close, you're sort of drug.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
Here's you're almost strike, you're tangential to the correct answer.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
I was going to go something the animal related. You
were yea, only you'd had the courage, young lady like
like like rhinoceros, testes or something, teeth or something. You're
getting warmer, getting warmer.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
My hint was going to be it has to do
with the utterly absurd ideas that inhabit Chinese medical practices.
Speaker 2 (15:27):
The answer, folks, is what's that? I said? Bat balls?
The answer.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
They'd have to be tiny, you'd need thousands of them anyway.
Cattle gall stones. That's right, cattle gall stone. Wait a second, now,
I got to guess the other part. What does this
do for me?
Speaker 2 (15:50):
I assume it gives me an erection, a better erection,
and even one more wonderful erection. No, for what.
Speaker 3 (16:01):
I'm gonna say, can somebody make him stop? Michael, you've
got the microphone buttons, turn it off anyway. It's one
of the most prized ingredients in traditional Chinese medicine, kettle gallstones.
Traders are willing to pay as much as fifty eight
hundred dollars an ounce for the nuggets of hardened bile
(16:22):
because the price of goal gold. Herbalists use them to
treat strokes as they grapple with the surgeon, hypertension, obesity,
in other conditions familiar in the affluent West, as China,
like the rest of the world, as it grows more affluent,
is getting fatter.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
I take issue with the fact that they're called gallstones
and not bile.
Speaker 3 (16:42):
What do you call them? Bile nuggets? Nuggets of bile,
nuggets of hardened bile? Oh, your face is a nuggetive
hardened bile. At least it's not an endangered animal. I
hate it when the elephants and rhinoceroses and everything are
being killed for these stupid reasons.
Speaker 2 (16:58):
Lots of cattle. It were one or the other, but
it's it's not.
Speaker 3 (17:02):
They're still killing rhinos and tigers and bears on mine.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
Some of the interesting stuff. Trump said that you didn't
here yesterday, Armstrong.
Speaker 3 (17:11):
And Getty present you and your letters of your team
now used to warn.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
About the days of Tako sly on commanities. What changed
that you're not worried about that age, Well, it depends
on the deal. I mean, I may not do the dealer,
I may do the deal.
Speaker 4 (17:27):
If I don't do the deal, it's worthless, worth nothing.
If I do the deal for the United States, then
I think we should get half.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
So that was during his florry of signing executive orders
actions in the Oval Office. That happened later in the day,
and he had the press there and he was taking
questions as he was doing it, and it was really
something and it should happen every day one. I mean,
if we're gonna go with this, apparently we are in
(17:55):
the modern world. Every president has to run on what
they're going to do on day one and then and
they sign a whole bunch of things on day one.
That's not necessarily the way the government ought to work,
but it's the way it works now, but usually it's
just announced or they do it in front of sycophants
who applaud with no questions whatsoever. I love the idea
(18:16):
of him sitting there and taking questions about this and
explaining it. I mean, if you heard the one where
he assigned the no more birthright citizenship. Just because you're
born on our land doesn't make you a citizen or
the only country in the world that does that, certainly
the only developed country that does that. And he wants
to end that. And he was asked that is that constitutional,
and he said, I don't know. I guess we're gonna
(18:37):
find out. Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. I don't
think you should do things that might be unconstitutional as
the president, but that that train has sailed also because
it's happened quite a few presidents in a row. Yeah,
I would just say I wouldn't.
Speaker 3 (18:52):
I wouldn't suggest doing things that are clearly unconstitutional. Well,
I think this is a really active and valid question
about fourteenth right.
Speaker 2 (19:01):
There's different ways to handle that. It used to be
back in the day. If you were going to do
something as the president, you would get a team of
professors lawyers whoever to make sure something was constitutional before
you did it, because you'd be violating your oath to
up hold the constitution. But like I said, that's the
olden days, old man, this is not terribly important.
Speaker 3 (19:23):
But I want to point out that that voice you
heard asking a critical question during a moment of government
transparency was Peter Deucy of Fox News David Muir. That's
what a real journalist does, no matter who's in office.
Trump did three different events yesterday inaugural address, whatever that
(19:44):
thing was he did after that that you're about to
hear from, and then the big event at the basketball arena,
and then he had three different balls he went to
and danced. But I would have to sleep for a week.
That's a long day. I don't care how old you are.
Speaker 2 (19:59):
Yeah, and he's going to what eighty any day now,
seventy eight? I believe. Yeah, Okay, crazy, What was I
gonna say? Oh so, here's a little bit of him
during his post inaugural address event.
Speaker 4 (20:14):
Think of it. They destroyed and deleted all of that
information that went on for almost two years against Trump,
and the reason they did because it was all false.
Like the person that said, I tried to strangle a
Secret Service agent. That's one of the toughest human beings
I think I've ever seen. I actually had a friend saying,
(20:35):
please don't change that, sir, you are the coolest sucker
in history. Remember she said, I put my hands around
his neck because he wouldn't go to the capitol, but
made up fiction and I was rebuffed. And the guy
in the right is a massive weightlifter, probably stronger than me.
Do you think he's stronger than me? You're not when
(20:56):
I'm talking possibly stronger than me, slightly younger than me.
Like I won't say how many years because I don't
want to talk about that, but a lot of years.
But I had a friend that said, why are you
disputing that story? That's the coolest story I've ever heard,
that I would attack a karate champion, get slightly rebuffed,
(21:18):
and then throw my arms around the guy with a
neck about this big even though there are bars, you know,
there are bars. You can't really do that anyway. So
I wanted to talk about that, but all of that
stuff got deleted.
Speaker 2 (21:33):
And the reason it got deleted is they were all caught.
Speaker 4 (21:35):
In lives, you know, Secret Service testified and they said
it didn't happen. Actually, the two guys were pretty embarrassed.
They're suffering because their friends are saying, did Trump really
do that to you? But they gained a whole new
respect for me. But it was just make believe stuff.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
So the the problem what, Well, there's trouble on both sides.
First of all, that story, Yeah, there was a bunch
of crap. Whoever started that story? Why this doesn't justify
to me? Then pardoning the violent people who are attacking
cops on the other side of it, Hey, you morons,
(22:18):
if you actually think Trump is a threat, why don't
you go with things that actually happen and he actually
doesn't actually says, instead of making crap up because you
harm your own side. It is Trump derangement syndrome.
Speaker 3 (22:30):
It makes people do things that you cannot defend logically,
they've lost their heads. But I agree with you completely.
I don't care if you're a person of the right
or the left. If you beat down a cop, you're
no friend of mine. I am not in favor of
the pardon of the violent people. And we actually talked
it at length during our two of the show about
the years of the tolerance of political violence by the
(22:55):
left and by Democrats, and how the cultural norm became
it's okay, you will not be prosecuted. Indeed, people will
raise money to make sure you don't spend a.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
Minute in jail.
Speaker 3 (23:06):
And then we act as if the January sixth people
were something out of nowhere that upset the peace loving
and placid planes of America. That's not the case at all.
We're against all political violence. It appears that some people
are not. They're just against political violence from the right.
Speaker 2 (23:26):
Why did he pardon the most violent of that crowd? JD.
Vance said fairly recently on the Sunday talk shows, because
Trump was talking about pardoning the JA six and calling
them hostages and all that sort of stuff. JD. Van said, No,
the violent people know, But the other people that were overcharged, Yes,
Why did Trump change his mind? Trump said, way back
(23:50):
in twenty one, he said, no, no, no, the people
attacked the police officers, you are dead to me basically,
But the other those of you, you're over blah blahlah.
He said the same thing. So why did he do that? Yesterday?
Speaker 3 (24:02):
I think somebody got in his ear about what I
was just talking about. How if you were chanting BLM
or whatever. You were allowed to hurt, to burn, to maim,
to steal. If you were Antifa in Oregon for one
hundred and twelve Knights in a Row or whatever the
number is, you could assault a federal courthouse, fight cops,
shine lasers in their eyes, hit them with bare spray.
(24:25):
You can do anything you wanted from the left for years,
and now political violence on the right is punished harshly.
And Trump to me, I think you're way, way, way
better off taking the high ground and saying, no, we
need to end all political violence, including from the left.
And then you go through the litany of leftist political
(24:47):
violence and you make it clear so nobody can escape
the moral.
Speaker 2 (24:51):
Truth of it. But I don't know.
Speaker 3 (24:54):
I just Trump is impetuous, he's mercurial, and I think
somebody got in his ear and he thought, yeah, you
know what, it's pardon all of Yeah.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
The only good thing that could come out of yesterday
is that Congress somehow takes a look at the pardon
power and scales it back so that Joe Biden can't
pardon his entire extended family for things they haven't even
charged with preemptively pardon and Trump can't parton people who
are beaten down cops with flagpoles.
Speaker 3 (25:17):
Yeah, the problem is if you combine the two of them.
Any president could say to you know, an equivalent of
you know, Hitler's brown shirts and you know, a not
strictly governmental goon squad. He could tell them, look, either
(25:37):
I will pardon you before I leave office, so you
will never feel the way of justice, and or, if
they haven't been charged yet on the way out Biden's style,
pardon them preemptively. You can never be charged with a
federal crime. That that is a precedent we do not
want as a country. I mean, the next guy, the
(25:59):
next Demo crat to win, and someday they will or
whatever rises up to replace the decimated awful Democratic Party,
they will win an election sooner or later. And what
if they were to deputize all the Antifa scumbag losers
to go out and just you know, punch the faces.
Of course that'd be a local charge. So it's got
to be federal. But to violate whatever all law's rules
(26:22):
civil rights that they wanted a true brutal goon squad
with total immunity sweeping out out across the plane disrupting
church services.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
Whatever. You don't want that man, you do not want.
By the way, I watched the evening newscast last night,
at least the two that I watched, one of them
barely mentioned Biden partning his family, and the other one
didn't mention it at all, at least not in a tease.
They teased Trump partnering the Jay six people. They did
not tease Joe Biden partnering his family, which is outrageous.
(26:56):
I mean, how does that not make the tease?
Speaker 3 (26:58):
But it's a confession of a criminal syndicate, absolutely, absolutely so.
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Speaker 3 (28:15):
Your cattle gallstones as we were talking about, boy.
Speaker 2 (28:19):
And again, what's that do for me?
Speaker 3 (28:20):
Keeps me from getting a stroke, or that doesn't do
anything for you? We according to Chinese traditional medicine, it
helps you get over a stroke, the one that's supposed
to give you longer erections or something that's.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
Right. But I know it's it's like everything.
Speaker 3 (28:38):
It's bear gall bladders, it's it's rhino horns, it's tiger
tiger something or the gall bladder.
Speaker 2 (28:46):
The killing of these animals, these killing of these animals
for those dumb reasons should be uh held up as
other cultures being stupid more often. Yeah, it's not. It's
not wonderful or beautiful. It's stupid.
Speaker 3 (28:59):
It's like free historic God, I would say, good lord, China,
don't get me started.
Speaker 2 (29:06):
We got a lot more on the way. Texas, What
do you think about any of us? Text line four
one KFTC mark my words. Fish's gonna judge you.
Speaker 4 (29:18):
You've done as one of most significant contruss has been
in bade by all of America.
Speaker 2 (29:23):
You made it rhyme ladders, ritting a long time.
Speaker 3 (29:28):
All right, that's a crazy incoherence old man shouting at
an air force base yesterday? Is that? I'm told it
was Joseph Biden On Jerry Baker, the Wall Street Journal
wrote a great piece. He's talking about the the Biden
farewell speech, which turned out like it's like a lot
of rock band's farewell tour. It's it's kind of a
(29:51):
farewell speech anyway. He continued to bend his ear with
bend our ear with his silly gibberish. But he's talking
about about the warning about the oligarchy, you know, Elon
and Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos and how dangerous it is,
these dangerous men of means who write algorithms on our phones.
But Jerry Baker says, bring it on. He points out
(30:14):
that a political philosopher, Robert Michelle's Iron Law and Oligarchy
states that in a large, complex society, representative of democracy
will always bend toward control by a few people, a
few powerful people. That's why our system is designed to
prevent that as well as we can.
Speaker 2 (30:31):
But yeah, that is what happens.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
But he says, He points out, for most of the
centuries so far, the oligarchy that's controlled our critical institutions,
the permanent government, big business, universities, are big cities, the
news and entertainment media have produced an unprecedented level of
national discord, undermined trust and the key institutions of our republic,
(30:54):
and sejected us to repeated failures at home and overseas.
He writes, it's achieved this malign trifecta part because of
its adherence to a creed based on an unholy ideological
trinity borderless globalism, environmental eschatology meaning a religion of environmentalism,
and Puritan wokery, canceling everybody in ending careers for daring
(31:18):
to say the wrong thing. This new oligarchy, in tune
with the national mood, will at least move us away
from this self destroying lunacy. Are they oligarchs, I don't know.
Maybe bring them on. They're better than the old ones. Boy,
I agree with that completely. They're proudly pro American, especially Elon,
(31:38):
not America hating, not borderless globalism. God, that was always
a pitch, a scam, a trojan horse because it enriched
the very very top tier of society. And if you
average out the games to the economy, everybody gained. But
that's not the way economies work. Most of that game
(32:00):
accumulated to the very very tip top of capitalism. And
I'm a fan of capitalism, but not when it sells
out the American worker to benefit the very very few,
especially when it leaves us vulnerable in terms of national security,
for weapons, for ships, for medical supplies, for bandages, for
(32:21):
masks that were useless during COVID.
Speaker 2 (32:27):
That was quite the crowd there in that one row.
Elon and Twitter, Bezos in the Washington Post and everything
that Amazon is.
Speaker 3 (32:36):
Zuckerberg think with Bezos' money he could buy his girlfriend
a shirt to put her over bra when't you think
he's rich enough. What's that guy's name, Patai or whatever
that runs Google Sundarpitchai. Yes, and then the guy who
runs TikTok was there, which is interesting, only with a
(32:56):
microphone to catch anything he could to report to his
Chinese overlord.
Speaker 2 (33:00):
But with all those people, what percentage of news people
took in yesterday came from one of those people? A lot,
especially the young for people under forty, probably the seventy
five percent of the news they got yesterday came from
that crowd. It'll be interesting to see.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
I hate this, but TikTok has been absolutely kissing Trump's butt.
Their algorithms have been Trump IIFI because they're desperate for
a deal so they can keep piping in their propaganda
and surveilling Americans. So they've been kissing Trump's butt. I
wonder if that's going to have an effect on youngsters.
Speaker 2 (33:37):
But I was gonna say, of that crowd there, how
many of them voted for Trump? I'm guessing Elon alone,
maybe maybe Bezos based on that editorial he wrote in
his own newspaper about how we need the lower regulation
and all that. Yeah, I could believe that.
Speaker 3 (33:54):
I could believe Zuckerberg did too really or certainly was
rooting for Trump to win. That's the much more significant question,
given their billions of dollars they can spread around and
their algorithms they can tweak.
Speaker 2 (34:07):
So, Katie, you tweeted out that picture of Zuckerberg appearing
to look down the dress, well, the dress the bra
of Bezos's fiance because she was wearing a bra. Basically,
h huh was that AI? Because that could have been AI?
Or do you think that was a real picture?
Speaker 3 (34:25):
I think it was fake, Okay, And even if it
were quote unquote real. As a guy who takes a
fair number of digital pictures, if you're taking candid digitals, dozens.
Speaker 2 (34:35):
Of them, you'll you'll get funny stuff. Yeah, Joe trying
to justify Zuckerberg creeping on Bezos's fiance.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
Hey, don't break out the girls if you don't want
anybody to look at them. Bingo, thank you, you're all week.
Speaker 2 (34:53):
A friend of mine was that she had a gathering
of some sort the other day. She tweeted out something
about sometimes it's nice having boobs because I get tired
of the eye contact. I don't have to want to
look all these dudes in the eye. My eyes are
(35:14):
up here.
Speaker 3 (35:14):
Well, your tatas are down there, and you got them
thrust out like cantalopes on a shelf.
Speaker 2 (35:20):
And you know, so that fing Bezos's fiance wore you
feel like that was too much as a as a
woman there, Katie, for that set, it was a corsette.
It was lingerie under a blazer, which is fairly aggressive
move sexually. Yeah, it's like to wear out to a
you know, a dinner or a club or something like that.
Speaker 3 (35:41):
But to brand, I'm a super hot older woman. But
you can let your brand rest for a second.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
Well, it's kind of his brand too, though. My fiance
is a super hot older woman, so they're both to
that brand. Super raising their prices on prescription drugs.
Speaker 3 (36:00):
Just if you tell me my package are going to
get here in two days, please get it here in
two days, Jeff, All right, hang out with anybody you want.
Speaker 2 (36:07):
Yeah, and when I search for a title of the book,
give me the title of that book. Some not some
woke stuff you're trying to force on me. It's all
I asked. Armstrong and Getty