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November 20, 2025 98 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four
he wants to be on the show. That is how
we make that happen, okay, and kind of a what
a crazy morning, just you know, for you early listeners,
you know how I roll. I get up and I'm like, okay,
what horrible thing happened overnight? Let's go ahead and figure

(00:21):
it out. And then you know, start to start churning
through there and okay, hey, Ross, I'm gonna email you
something for that missing spot right now. Okay, do you
catch what I'm You catching what I'm putting down there? Buddy? Alrighty, yeah,

(00:43):
I don't. I realized that didn't get in there, So
let me do this. Sorry, this is house This is
very important housekeeping business which will be quickly resolved here.
So to do do do?

Speaker 2 (00:56):
Do? Do?

Speaker 1 (01:00):
All of a sudden, I got to figure out why
it's like that? Ah, this is the beauty of the
live radios, all right, that is on its way to
your show account there. Okay, So what did my I
spy as I woke up this morning? Well, we have
one now indicted Florida congresswoman accused of stealing five million

(01:23):
dollars in FEMA funds and it's pretty intricate. This is
she's a Democrat from the Miami area. I guess Sheila
Cheerfulest McCormick. I'm if I'm pronouncing that right. I guess
I don't know. I'm not familiar to McCormick. I think
I nailed that. But anyway, Cheerfulest McCormick had been under

(01:44):
investigation by the House that House Ethics Committee since December
of twenty twenty three. Was indicted by a federal grand
jury in Miami, facing fifty three years in prison if convicted.
All right, so how do they allege the scheme went? Well,
there's a lot, there's a ton of moving parts here.

(02:04):
And the irony, of course, is they also were able
to go pull her tweets from her where she posts
picture of Donald Trump sitting in court and it goes,
no one needs above the law. Bah So, which is
the first thing. Now, anytime a Democrat does something that
they go do they just say, all right, let me
just go to their account, I'll keyword search Trump the

(02:27):
law and then inevitably there's one they're waiting for him.
So good on that. So here we go. The Justice
Department alleges that I'm just gonna call herm McCormick. I
think I'm butchering the first part there. But alleges to
McCormick and several co defendants, including her brother, conspired to

(02:49):
steal an overpayment of five million in FEMA funds their
family healthcare company received. Now that you know that, that's
the other thing there too. Why do they get an overpayment?
And how common are these overpayments? I don't know, But
just it's like if the bank makes an air, right,
the bank makes an air, they accidentally just deposited nine

(03:11):
billion dollars into Ross's account. Ross can't go buy all
the olive gardens, okay and then claim how you put
it in their accounts. They will come after you for it.
That's a thing. So if you are, in this case,
you run a family healthcare company, and you have availed
yourself as a city member of Congress with government contracts

(03:37):
or of some sort or in some way, shape or form,
I don't know. I don't know fully what services were
being provided how that, But it doesn't matter, Like if
you're entitled to the money, then fine. But clearly this
was a five million dollar overpayment. According to the allegations,
so the defendants then noticed this, this is this is

(03:57):
I'm reading kind of what Pambondi was saying here for them,
notice this, and then concocted a plan to figure out
how to route the funds through multiple accounts to disguise
its source.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
And they had used a substantial portion of the misappropriated
funds as candidate contributions back to her her campaign for Congress. So, uh,
the way I read that is it went like this,
Oh no, we got five we got extra five million.
What do we do? Uh, let's steal it? Okay, all right,

(04:34):
So let's get a bunch of people that I know,
family members, friends, And what I'm gonna do is I'm
gonna I'm gonna create vendor accounts for them. Right, so
they're a consultant where they did this service, and I'm
gonna pay them a huge chunk of this money so
it looks in the up and up. And then the
pinky swear agreement on the back end is they will
then contribute to my campaign, Tonna, and then they can

(05:01):
keep a portion of it so they can buy cool
cars or we you know, whatever it is just as
personal expenses. They also there's also filing of false federal
tax return stuff, because you know clearly this is a
scheme that dates back to a few years ago, and
so you're gonna have various taxes taxes there. Now. She

(05:25):
was first elected to serve in twenty twenty two, replacing
al Sie Hastings. Was Hasting's the other hat lady. I
can't remember. No, no, no, no, that's that's the other Elseeed's.
I think Elsie might be a dude here. It doesn't matter.
I don't know all my Florida reps. But anyway, so,

(05:47):
so like this was this was like seed money some
of this, according to the allegations for her first campaign.
So I want to be clear, maybe she goes so
it looks like she got the overpayment before she was
actually elected. Well that's even crazier then to use it
to uh, because I was gonna say, if you're in Congress,
there's no need to steal five million. You can just

(06:08):
daytrade yourself there within like three years. Right. But na,
this thing, this thing's got tons of arms, tons of tentacles.
During the campaign, McCormick aroused suspicion by personally loaning her
campaign more than six million and paying herself back to
the tune of roughly two and a half million, even

(06:29):
though it was kind of unclear where the money.

Speaker 3 (06:31):
All.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
Right, so here's what it is. Trinity Healthcare Services is
the company name, and according to the allegations, it overcharged
the state of Florida by five and five point eight
million because it passes through Florida, the FEMA dollars passed
through to the state and then the state pays about
and she's she was CEO of Trinity during the time

(06:52):
of the overpayment. Yeah. Man, like there's a ton of
detail here. This is probably not going to end well
for And the rule is, as you know, like they
did with Santos, they she should probably you should probably
be kicked out of Congress tomorrow. Right, don't be wrong.
Santos is a dirt bag and he's a liar, but like,

(07:12):
this is far more egregious than what they were accusing
him of with his campaign fun stuff or what they
accused him of and what he was eventually convicted. I
can't remember if he pled or was convicted, but either
way was found liable for. Yeah, like this is this
is bad, bad, bad, bad, bad stuff. So we will

(07:34):
see how that how that pans out. All right, so
that's just one that's just like, you know, that's the
thing I dug into this morning. Caught wind of it
yesterday because the FBI director was h you know, Cash
was tweeting stuff out, but didn't really understand it till
I started reading this morning. I'm like, yeah, this is uh,

(07:55):
Like there's gonna be a bunch of receipts because there's
a bunch of payments that are made and then a
bunch of campaign contributions and all sorts of stuff. And again,
they've been looking into this since under the Biden administration,
like she's been under investigation. Now, when you're talking about
House Ethics Committee, nothing ever comes of those really very rarely.

(08:16):
But in this case, the state of Florida and the
FBI is not gonna screw around on this stuff. They're
gonna get you. And then you're gonna get a tweet
that you said thrown right back in your face. So
probably you're gonna be a rough week. Yeah, it's kind
of like with the plasket Corey Mills. Things that should
infuriate all of you. So you know, the reason they

(08:37):
didn't cent her plasket the other day is because apparently
the Republicans struct some sort of deal so the Corey Mills,
who's a Republican, wouldn't get censured for some of his
very very creepy the creepy allegations against him, and they
are creepy if you want to read into him, and like,

(08:59):
this is this is the swamp protecting itself, man, this
is this is that one a one. This plasket lady
should be nowhere near the halls of Congress. I'm happy
she doesn't have a vote, but she's still able to
influence and she sits on the Intelligence Committee. No like

(09:21):
listening her. Listening to her try to explain it away
is painful. Man.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
I believe that Jeffrey Epstein had information and I was
going to get information to get it the truth, all right.

Speaker 1 (09:32):
So she's now claiming that the reason she was texting
Epstein during that hearing among other times, but that's the
one that gets really the buzz is because she was
acting as some sort of like quasi undercover operator of
some shut up.

Speaker 3 (09:50):
I believe that Jeffrey Epstein had information and I was
going to get information to get truth. Having friendship with
him is not something that I would deem to.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
Have, you know, here's the problem. Here's the problem with this,
because she's gonna be like, I was just the facts,
it was just normal prosecutor stuff. No, it wasn't. You
know why, because that whole exchange starts with him talking
about you, chewing how you look, complimenting your clothes like
they're they're outside the realm of that's kind of personal stuff, right.

(10:25):
Don't even get me started with all the money that
he gave her campaign, which she is still never given back.
So yeah, she's this is how she's chosen to spend them,
and so I'm.

Speaker 4 (10:37):
Just looking forward.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
I'm moving forward, and I think that that's what we
as American people should do, is move forward. If individuals
are not involved in illegal activity. This is Rich extending
his criminal enterprise or his financial enterprise, or all of
those things.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
Yeah, So her argument is also anyone who may find
themselves associated with Jeffrey Epstein but didn't do anything criminally,
we shouldn't get into that, which is which is so
rich coming from one of the Democrats in Congress. Oh,

(11:15):
here's here's here's Jeffrey and Trump in a photo together.
It's some huge thing where everyone's taking photos with him.
See counts oh, he was a member of his club. Well,
or he would hang around his club, the one he
barred him from. Yeah, I'm sorry, you don't get to

(11:37):
invoke these rules now that you're caught.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
Man, I think that we need to look at what
people are doing moving forward.

Speaker 5 (11:43):
Wait, let me just better understand that.

Speaker 6 (11:44):
What is that point because at the time he was.

Speaker 7 (11:46):
A known sex offender and it had been detailed all the.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
Sexual As.

Speaker 3 (11:52):
A prosecutor, you get information from people where you can.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Okay, again, as a prosecutor, I cannot believe if you
would have an intimate style of conversation with him. You
guys were friendly, clearly friendly, just just it's not how
people who are who are just bit were strictly business
where it's just a constituent talks to their member of

(12:16):
Congress privately on their text messages. That's the other thing too,
to have. Now, I will tell you I have cell
phone numbers for a couple members of Congress who have
you know, been on the show or former members who
have been on the show. And you don't do a
lot of it's not a lot of buddy buddy chat
there because you use it for business. If I need

(12:39):
to get a hold of somebody if I have a
question about something, and you know, it's nine o'clock at
night or whatever, but it's important I can reach out
to them. But you you're not chumming like that necessarily.
You might be later after you've developed a relationship, which
is kind of what Plasket seems to have done with
Epstein there. So I'm sorry, but no nobody believes you.

(13:06):
All right. So that's where we'll start, and when we
come back. There is also what I what might be
the leader in the clubhouse for the dumbest judicial injunction
to thwart Trump that they got yesterday. It's a doozy
wait for it. That's next here on the CaCO Day

(13:27):
radio program. Real quickly, kudos to Family Dollar for your
new marketing strategy. That is amazing. This is like you
want to get people into the stores. This is a
good way to do it. There is in fact, let
me uh let's see here. Here we go eleven year

(13:48):
old boy in Pennsylvania. So here's the video. In the video,
you see this kid who's he's outside of the Family Dollar.
His dad had run in to grab a few things.
He's eleven, He's fine. This is rural Pennsylvania. And then
all of a sudden, on the security footage you see

(14:09):
this kid full tilt speed cruising through the parking lot
and then run into the family dollar terrified, terrified, and
then you figure out why he's being chased by a
giant black bear. Now this apparently happened. I when did
this happen? Yesterday? The day before? Well anyway, but yeah, man,

(14:32):
you want to get people in your stores just to
hire some bears to chase him in there? Boom done?
And then what you do if I could just from
a strategy, right, everything's a dollar except the bear mace,
which he probably had like three hundred dollars because supply,
demand and need are very important. Here his giant black bear.

(14:52):
I will say this, black bears are not slow. So
good on this kid being able to cook it into
the store there. Now, the problem is the problem is
you don't want the bear running into the store, which
unfortunately in this case, the bear did. However, once the
bear got in the store, clearly now he's in a

(15:13):
situation where he's like, what the heck's going on here?
So they were able to evade the animal make it
to safety. Is maybe when they went in the back.
There these things that Trump wanted to do, which had
people questioning, hmmm, would there be a little judicial warfare
going on here? Little law fare, little manipulation, bastardization of

(15:35):
our legal systems. So at every turn, some judge can
basically create one of these injunctions to grind everything to
a halt or force a as a member of the
judicial branch, try to force a member of the executive
branch to spend money that has to be allocated by
the congressional branch, the legislative branch. Right, So we've seen

(15:57):
all different flavors. This one, just for the sheer stupidity
of what it's injuncting, I think may take the cake.
So to understand this, you've got to understand that directly
next to the White House sits a building called the
Eisenhower Executive Office Building. It's overflow, it's where a lot
of the staffers who were technically White House staffers work
out of. It's where they've created Remember the fake Oval

(16:20):
office video thing they created like stage set thing that
was in the Executive Office building. So it is an
arm of the White House for all practical purposes, even
though it is technically its own building. If you ever
been to the White House, you've seen it. It's it's
I mean, it's it's slightly different color, different architecture. Sits
right next to it. And then and then the other

(16:43):
side is the Treasury where they steal all your money. Okay,
all right. So with all that in mind, the paint
has been peeling on this thing. And so as part
of the maintenance that the White House, so that they
were going to do was that they were either going
to repaint or powerwash that building because it doesn't look good.

(17:08):
Somebody got the judge to file an injunction and agree
to bar Trump or White House staff or anyone from
power washing or painting the building. This is where this
is where we are with the injunctions now instead it
powerwashing is simple maintenance. Now, thanks to the City of Seattle,

(17:31):
this is not the dumbest reason that they've not powerwashed something,
even though the idea that a judge is down in
this level of nitty gritty just to get Trump is stupid.
The City of Seattle, remember, they were going to powerwash
City Hall, which was surrounded by homeless encampments, and that
poop smeared all over it. They went to powerwash the poop,

(17:54):
and a member of the Seattle City Council objected and
attempted to block it because US powerwashers are kind of
like fire hoses, and some of the homeless people were
older black men, and then they would see that, and
then I guess they would be triggered. So we can't
powerwash the poop off of city Hall. That remains the

(18:16):
dumbest reason people didn't want to do a powerwashing. This,
I guess would be second now, but the fact that
a judge would get in here and block this according
to the rule, and the judge said she needs more
time to consider a lawsuit opposing the plan. Lawsuit was
followed by the Cultural Heritage Partners and the DC Preservation League,

(18:40):
neither of which are actual executive office branches or parts
of anything. They're their own things. But yeah, the Trump
they cannot do anything, including repainting or even powerwashing the
Eisenhower Executive Office Building through December thirty first, while the
judge considers what what what they want to do, because

(19:03):
apparently the judges now decided they're in charge of the
boatif and the paint or the washing of office buildings
that fall under a separate branch of government than what
they're in. Absolute insanity, just micromanagement. And uh, let's see here,

(19:26):
I think this won't this this, this female judge is
actually oh no, I screwed. I called her a female.
Oh ah, I'm I didn't. Yeah, apparently calling women female
is is uh is wrong. Now he's watching some lunatics

(19:46):
video yesterday on this. Yeah, yeah, nobody calls male the
female when they say they call females females. They don't
call males males, And I'm like, they don't. I feel
like they do that all the time. Usually it's an insult.

(20:08):
But they like to use the you know, all the
all the all the male terms there, the male toxicity,
male pattern, baldness. Okay, maybe that one's okay, but like,
yeah they do. And this, this lunatic was just ranting yesterday.
So I I am so sorry. Man, if you're triggered

(20:30):
this more, I don't really care, but I am sorry
for you. Okay, all right, very good. So going back
to Stacey Plasket, I think the only thing that's really
gonna save her is if some night idiot knight in
shining armor swoops in and says even dumber things so
it takes the limelight off the fact that she was
clearly texting with Jeffrey Epstein during a hearing, coordinating ways

(20:54):
to get Michael Cohen to say things that would be
more harmful for try and Jasmine Crockett has decided to
go ahead and step in and be that person. So
here she is yesterday in the House trying to I guess,
get a bunch of other members of Congress for receiving

(21:17):
donations from Jeffrey Epstein. This is this, and I'll explain
the detail. Let's listen to it.

Speaker 8 (21:23):
First, folks who also took money from somebody named Jeffrey Epstein.
As I had my team dig in very quickly, Mett Romney,
the NRCC, gotcha, Lee Zelden, Oh, No, George bush Win,
Red McCain, Palin Rick Lazio. I just want to be clear.

(21:44):
If this is the standard that we gonna make, just
know we're gonna.

Speaker 9 (21:47):
Expose it all.

Speaker 8 (21:48):
And just know that the FBEC filings they are available
for everybody to review. This is absolutely ridiculous, And at.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
No point did it click in your tiny little brain
that is said, is such public facing information that had
that been the case that these members of Congress, former
members of Congress, former presidential candidates of vice presidential candidates,
and current administration officials in the case of Lee Zelden,

(22:16):
you know, cabinet officials. At no point did it. Did
it in your tiny little brain or your team or
staff or whatever, you just called him to check to
make sure that it's that Jeffrey Epstein, because it's not.
It's not. There's that doctor. Can you imagine being named
Jeffrey Epstein. That must suck, But that's that's what one

(22:41):
of them is. The guy, his name is doctor Jeffrey Epstein.
I don't know who he's a doctor of. He shows
up a few there, but he did have the moniker
attached in the filings, and they just didn't care. And
then another is just somebody else named Jeffrey Epstein, but
not that Jeffrey Epstein. So she goes on the house
floor and absolutely embarrasses herself over this. So of course,

(23:03):
now it's an emergency. We got to get her in.
Let's go ahead and get her, Let's bring her into
CNN or whatever and let her essentially backtrack without hitting
her too hard, so that because it's such a big blunder,
we'll give her this opportunity and it's going to be
a she's going to have home court advantage. All you

(23:23):
got to do is come in with some reasonable explanation,
and of course she can't help herself.

Speaker 10 (23:28):
You mentioned the Leizelden there, he's now a cabinet secretary.
He responded and said it was actually doctor Jeffrey Epstein,
who's a doctor that doesn't have any relation to the
convicted sex truncker. Unfortunate for that doctor, but that is
who do it into a prior campaign of his. Do
you want to correct the record on the people?

Speaker 8 (23:43):
And I never said that it was that Jeffrey Epstein,
just so that people understand when you make a donation,
your picture is not there. And because they decided to
spring this on us in real time, I wanted the
Republicans to think about what could potentially happen because I
knew that they didn't even try to go through the FEC.
So my team they did is they googled, And that
is specifically why I said a Jeffrey Epstein. Unlike Republicans,

(24:05):
I at least don't go out and just tell lies
because it was not the same one. That's fine, But
when Lee Zelden had something to say. All he had
to say was it was a different Jeffrey Jeffrey Epstein.
He admitted that he did receive donations from a Jeffrey Epstein.
So at least I wasn't trying to mislead people.

Speaker 4 (24:22):
Now, when I dug in to find.

Speaker 8 (24:23):
Out who this doctor is, I have not so I
will trust and take what he says is that it
wasn't that Jeffrey Epstein. But I was not attempting to
mislead anybody. I literally had maybe twenty minutes before I
had to do that debate.

Speaker 10 (24:38):
Yeah, but people might see that and say, well, you're
trying to make it tell him like he took money
from I did not registered TEX offender.

Speaker 8 (24:44):
No, but I literally did not know when you search
SEC files, and that's what I had my team to do.
I text him and I say, listen, we're going up
there saying that she took donation.

Speaker 1 (24:53):
Right.

Speaker 10 (24:53):
But someone might say, well, your team should have done
the homework to make sure it wasn't.

Speaker 8 (24:57):
Within twenty minutes. You could not find that out, not
from just doing a quick search on FEC. So number one,
I made sure that I was clear that it was
a Jeffrey Epstein, but I never said that it was
specifically that Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
I mean that's what you did. You've had now hours,
hours since people have been calling you out for you
and your team, probably people within the uh, you know,
Democrat leadership, to sit there and hone anything, anything to
either walk that back or just explain, and you double

(25:31):
down on it. And well, I don't understand why you
had a twenty minute You only had twenty minutes. This
plasket thing, this plastic thing came out. What last weekend?
You've had this whole week worth. Today's Thursday, Yesterday, it
was Wednesday. You had three working days plus whatever you
put in worko over the weekend because the Washington Post

(25:53):
story broke I think Friday night. And that's the best
you can come up with. So like, unless she's suiciding
herself to protect plask, she's an idiot. I honestly, I
wonder if her staff didn't sabotage her. None of you know,
her staff does not like her. There's been some been

(26:17):
some stories that were written where she's just as lazy
as hell. They can't get her to leave her apartment
half the time. She's very nasty to them. I'm not
shocked by any of this. So maybe they're just like, fine,
you want to do this, we can make you look stupid.
But no, She's like, I didn't mean that, Jeffrey Epstein.

(26:39):
Then why would you make the speech. You made it
because you wanted because you thought people would run with it,
and a bunch of them did, by the way, And
now those same lunatics are armed with what they think
is the truth that's simply not the truth. So I
guess mission accomplished if you are ms Crocket there all right,

(26:59):
coming up? Got at an incident at a seven eleven
and I'm sorry, like what they're what they told this
woman she should have done instead? I don't like, we're
I we'll have to figure this out together. It's it's
possibly the dumbest, the dumbest thing that I have seen
in quite some time. And yes, we will get you.

(27:21):
The was is he a pediatrician? I don't know. Somebody
sent me something there, I don't I don't get oop. Sorry,
put the throwing button. I I don't know exactly what
the doctor of doctor Epstein is, but I know it's
not that Jeffrey Epstein. And it's probably been a rough
few years for him. All right, we'll get into a
lot more coming up. Six forty seven. Hang on, I

(27:42):
don't care what kind of doctor it is. I really don't.
I'm just pointing out it's not the Jeffrey Epstein and
like for Jasmine Crofts. Then go on and you know,
be getting softballed by Aaron Burnett, who when you look
at the face of the woman interviewing her also you
can see there's disappointment there, which is the whole thing
is crazy, man, absolutely crazy. All right, So check this out.

(28:05):
A woman she works at a seven to eleven and
you know, got to have your head on a swivel.
You're working convenience store, especially overnight, and some lunatic rolled
in there, started making some threats, and she did what
she had to do.

Speaker 11 (28:21):
He threatened me, said that he was gonna slice my
head off, and then that's when I tried to call
the police, realized he started throwing things at me, came
behind the counter. I tried to run off, but he
grabbed his hands around my neck and pushed me out
of the counter space. That's when I pulled out my

(28:41):
gun and I shot him. Said that they were going
to separate from employment because of violation policy. This was
a situation where I felt like I was put in
a corner between choosing between my job and my life.
And I'm always going to choose me my life because
there's people.

Speaker 4 (29:01):
That depend on me. Just I'm going I'm going home.
You know that's my goal. I need. I need to
be here for my kids.

Speaker 11 (29:06):
If I known that, you know there's a potential where
somebody could be for real in taking my life away,
that I will do whatever it takes.

Speaker 12 (29:15):
You know.

Speaker 11 (29:16):
I hope that you know women see that, and you
know they'll they'll do the same thing.

Speaker 4 (29:20):
You have the right to defend yourself, all right.

Speaker 1 (29:22):
So and I don't think other than maybe the dirt
bags of family and apparently management at seven eleven, I
don't think there's anyone who blames this woman. And look,
I also understand the part where from a business standpoint,
if you run a bunch of gas stations or convenience stores,
I guess you you have to be thinking about this,

(29:46):
right because these are the things that people go in
and rob, especially with seven eleven, where you're going to
stay open twenty four hours in most cases, like it's so,
but also, do you want every person that works for
you pack and he you want to give them that option?
What's the liability there? Where this gets real dumb, real

(30:08):
fast is when the response to her, among other things,
is too and I want to make sure that I
have this accurate here to do. The company had instructed
her in training and reiterated that she should have that. Well,

(30:29):
guns are against policy. They she should have used, all right,
what's the language here? She should have used store items
for self defense? What are you talking about? So if
somebody comes in, they're like, I'm gonna cut your head off,
and then they get their hands around your neck, you're
supposed to what hit them in the face with a slushy,

(30:53):
the nachos with the halo, that might actually work. You
get the jalapino juice in somebody's eye.

Speaker 3 (30:59):
What do you.

Speaker 1 (31:01):
What else they have at seven eleven? I guess maybe
there might be some jumper cables. You could try to
strangle them. It's all nonsense. The only good thing here
is she sounds like it's very calm about this. She
sounds like she kind of gets it. She's there working
right to support her family, to support her children. So

(31:23):
she has a has a work ethic. I just I
hope somebody sees this and hires this woman, gives her
a better job. Yeah, we're Yeah. What is this guy's name?
The spokesman's name, dill Yard. Yeah, Deallyard says she was

(31:44):
supposed to have store items and self defense. I just
can't even with this. Do you go with the thirty
two ounce slurpye for as your carry piece? Or and
then what flavor too? Ross? Are you blue Slurpy or
red Slurpy? Or you the weirdos that mix the slurp?

(32:05):
You ever seen those people? Yeah, my buddy used to
always mix the slurpy. I never understood that falling iguana
season in parts of Florida, right gets a little cold iguanas.
Everyone's talking about iguanas. Uh. And then this is so
there's an article here from the South Florida Daily. I

(32:26):
don't know where that's at. It doesn't matter anyway, reminding
people not to eat iguana poop. It can make you
very sick. So if you were planning on that, scientists,
once you know it's probably a bad idea. Ross, Do
you guys have iguana poop? Maybe it's a side dish

(32:47):
for thanks? I'm trying to figure.

Speaker 9 (32:48):
Out it's gonna start that new Hollywood iguana poop diet.
Now I don't know what to do. Oh, no, I'm
not sure that's what you're on, a Grande hign Oh
it's very effective, it is, Yeah, clearly.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
So I had to figure I had to figure out
how are people consuming this? And so one theory was
maybe it makes you high or somebody on Reddit said
it did as a joke, but no, apparently it happens
because they're all over playground equipment and the kids touch
and then or if you don't chlorinate your pool enough

(33:20):
because you know, they get they get into pools and
then they go number two and then that's the problem.
So that's how people are actually ingesting it. And apparently
it's like it can make you super sick because nasty.
Though it wasn't just people out, you know, consuming it
for no reason. You'd have to be done. You have
to be like Jasmine Crockett level dumb for that. You

(33:45):
want to play that cut, go ahead and play that
cut if you want. Russ is digging out the oldies,
but goodies.

Speaker 12 (33:50):
You know, some people say the q comas tastes better pickle.

Speaker 9 (33:53):
What she's up there and seeing that answering the questions,
and I immediately thought of Dave Chappelle, that skid. He's like, humph,
what humph, this is nonsense.

Speaker 1 (34:05):
This is nonsense. Oh, I didn't say it was.

Speaker 10 (34:08):
You mentioned DEALI zelden there, he's now a cabinet secretary.
He was doctor Jeffrey Epstein, who's a doctor that doesn't
have any relation to the convicted sex trucker. Unfortunate for
that doctor, but that is who do it into a
prior campaign of his. Do you want to correct the
record on the people that.

Speaker 8 (34:23):
I never said that it was that Jeffrey Epstein, just
so that okay, just stop.

Speaker 9 (34:27):
Why even go in the show. It's so dumb, Like
just just ignore it or put out a statement, but
don't go on there and then sound like Dave Chappelle
and that skit. You just sound like ridiculous. What are
you doing?

Speaker 1 (34:36):
Well, she had to show them what was in store
for them or whatever, right, you said, Yeah, so lies
Lizer and Store. I think they're clearly aware that that's
in store for them from you. Yeah, But to your point,
if she did, just if she just kept her mouth
shove for twenty four hours. The media would have stopped
out in here, they would have lost interest. Twitter would
have still made fun of her, but that would have
been it. But now you're like, God, let me, let

(34:59):
me help lunacy. All right. So now we are a
few days into I say, increased ICE informant enforcement. Because
again it's not like Ice and Customs wasn't doing stuff
in North Carolina already a lot of it. They've had

(35:19):
a hard time accomplishing it in the in the Charlotte
Mecklenburg area because they still refuse to, uh, you know,
give them access to the hundreds and hundreds of criminal
illegal aliens that they have, you know, incarcerated in some
in some sort of process or system. They refuse to cooperate.

(35:41):
So like, you know, for all of these people in Charlotte,
these woke politicians saying, well, you know, we thought you
were coming here just to get the worst of the
worst the criminals. You literally are hiding many of the
criminals from them. But I did notice something that kind
of feels different in the North Carolina enforcement. What's happening

(36:02):
here versus elsewhere. I'm seeing a lot more of these
agitators get arrested, a lot more and I don't know,
you know, it's hard to tell. It's just kind of
the videos you consume. But like there were a lot.
They had these two women that were driving around honking.
They had this guy in this little black like Tokyo

(36:23):
drift looking car with a big Mexican flag sticking off
the back that was like weaving in and out of off.
They're not they're not gonna screw with this, and so
they have arrest. The arrested that guy in Durham, smashed
out the windows, took him out. They got no problem
making that arrest. They're on They're gonna do it. And

(36:44):
you know what, I'm okay with it.

Speaker 13 (36:45):
I'm driving, you know, and I'm thinking of everything that's
going on when day go yo. What you know what,
like I wish my mother would pull me over, Like
I wish you would try to break my window, because
you know what, the I'm finna, I'm finna, I'm you're
about to get that bitch.

Speaker 4 (37:01):
I feel offended. I feel defended. I feel like I'm
being attacked. You're about to get it in your neck.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
By the way, that's all the beeps for the rest
of the year. We're out. So what she said, if
I'm uh fit to read this right, is if they
pull her over, even if it's a lawful thing, because
she's out harassing, She's gonna stab the ice agents with a.

Speaker 9 (37:26):
Screwdriver, phillips her flathead.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
Oh that's a good or the weird hes? Yeah? Right, right, right, Yeah,
I don't know which would you rat? Would you rather
be stabbed with a phillips or flathead? I think probably
a flathead just because the wounded be right, I think
would heal better. Yeah, of course they're gonna if you
stab them with a screwdriver, you're probably that's probably not
gonna go well for you, ma'am. So there's that, and

(37:50):
you use a rat one of the ratchet ones or not. Nah,
you don't want to waste good equipment, probably, And then
what if it's the one where the tips or replacemble
they're magnetic and you forget to put one in there,
And now you're trying to stab with like an open
hole on the end of your making stabbing motions like

(38:10):
you better have some force behind your swing, do you
know what I'm saying.

Speaker 9 (38:14):
Imagine you're like forced to use like a poverty allan
wrench or something.

Speaker 1 (38:17):
Yes, yeah, nobody wants Ugh, nobody wants that, so that's
why they're arresting people. And then I also keep seeing
this the school absence numbers. Where was it was like
twenty thousand in Wake County, thirty thousand in Mecklenburg County
and various others, And can I can I just point

(38:41):
something out? This is just purely observation, And I'm curious
if somebody within the school system wants to do a
little spy report and tell me if this is true.
If you have, you know, fifteen percent less kids, doesn't
that greatly improve class sizes? And on the secondary side,

(39:05):
if many of the kids are ESL I'm assuming it's
more cumbersome to teach in a classroom where you have
a bunch of students who English is not they don't
speak English very well. Because you have to, you have
to go slower. So shouldn't it actually improve the speed
at which learning should be able to happen just through

(39:28):
having less kids, regardless of the language issue. I'm merely
asking because I have heard story after story after story
over the years of how there's too many kids in
the classes and they need more money so they can
reduce class, classroom size, It's always always been a talking point,

(39:50):
and I feel like that kind of effectively is what's
going on now. I understand it's a transitionary thing and
a lot of those kids probably will come back, but
maybe not, and surely not all of them. I'm just
asking eight eight eight nine three four seven eight seven four.
Wouldn't that make it easier?

Speaker 9 (40:11):
I think like they said a Mecklenburg County now moved
to remote learning. Oh they were remote learning, of course,
it came out yesterday with that.

Speaker 1 (40:19):
Yeah, yeah, I saw they were threatening it. I didn't
know if they pulled the trigger on it.

Speaker 11 (40:24):
Ah.

Speaker 1 (40:25):
So look all right, so they're going to go ahead
and they're going to pivot to make things, you know,
make things easier, I guess. But now it sounds like
it's just gonna get harder because we saw a remote
learning during COVID, and how will that performed versus actual
classroom learning. That's why you have a generation of kids

(40:49):
that many of which are literally a grade level behind
because of all the COVID insanity, or have had to
dramatically catch up as a result. So now you're going
to implement this for a This is not an emergency situation,
as much as the activists want you, it's not an
emergency situation. It's literally the enforcement of the laws. And

(41:10):
there have been plenty of American kids. By the way,
a lot of these kids probably are American by birth.
That's the other side of it too. I refuse to
believe that it's everyone there was actually transported over the border.
So it's a sticky situation. But this is but the

(41:31):
enforcement of laws. There have been plenty of kids who
are like fifth generation American where a parent may find
themselves entangled by the criminal justice system and they still
got a truck on. Family still has to deal with that.
But these were decisions that were made. I saw a
video yesterday of a woman who is I guess in

(41:53):
the country illegally has a fourteen year old daughter who
has no driver's license, who who mom was bragging about
how proud she was because she sent the girl to
the store in the family minivan who's fourteen. And people
are like, this is what they had to do, and
it's just like farm kids from the depression are No,

(42:15):
it's not. This is not the same thing. And by
the way, you have now goaded your daughter into committing
a series of crimes because you committed a crime and
with your illegal locke or you know, your legal presence
within a country and now, and and you've also put

(42:38):
her and many other people in danger because she's a
fourteen year old who has no driver's license I'm assuming
no driver training, who was driving a several thousand pounds
missile around the roads here. And this is seen as heroic.
I see it as I see it as bad parenting.

(43:03):
You're telling me there's nobody else that could bring it,
let alone a delivery service. For that matter, you could
still probably order food on a delivery service. My lazy
butt gets groceries a lot of the time. So no, no,
I'm not going to celebrate it. And then this woman
right here whose child was greatly harmed by an ice checkpoint.

(43:23):
Although I have questions.

Speaker 14 (43:25):
Let's talk about what happened last week on Friday in
fam County, Georgia.

Speaker 1 (43:29):
It was Georgia.

Speaker 14 (43:31):
My son is seventeen years old, and he's level one
on the spectrum.

Speaker 4 (43:34):
That means that he requires those supports.

Speaker 14 (43:37):
But he still needs supports, especially when dealing with stressful situations.

Speaker 4 (43:41):
My son was in chrisis after going through that checkpoint.

Speaker 14 (43:44):
And not only that, but his sixteen year old girlfriend
was also terrified. It is not okay for Latinos to
be ragially profiled. It's not okay for children to go
into crisis. My son was in crisis. The next day,
we had a contact therapist and we had to make
sure that he was prepared with having to.

Speaker 4 (44:03):
Do his day to day life.

Speaker 14 (44:05):
He was coming back from school after representing our local
school district in an intercollegiate drama competition.

Speaker 4 (44:11):
This isn't the way it's supposed to be.

Speaker 14 (44:13):
Another local family ended up having to seek emergency health
services because the person that was detained, her husband, was
also rigially profiled.

Speaker 1 (44:23):
Which so so you're I'm assuming, I guess you're saying
your son is licensed seventeen. He is with his sixteen
year old girlfriend, and he went through a checkpoint where
if you've been through one of these inter you know,
inside the US checkpoints, they asked are you an American citizen?
And a lot of times you say yes, you don't

(44:43):
even have to show them anything, and I know people
have problems with it, but he essentially he experienced a
traffic stop, but of the smallest variety. Remember they do
checkpoints for DUIs, they do checkpoints for licensed checks, they'll
call them, but the really, DUIs, why are you doing
it too in the morning near the bar district? Like

(45:04):
these are things that you're going to encounter in your lifetime.
Ross you've ever been through a checkpoint? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (45:10):
Sure have you?

Speaker 1 (45:11):
Did? You have to seek medical attention after I did?

Speaker 15 (45:16):
Not?

Speaker 1 (45:16):
Oh, conn Like so, look, I'm happy that your son's
out there. He's living his life, and it sounds like
he's able to do a lot of things while still
being on the spectrum there, but like this is really
normal stuff. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (45:31):
And she said he's level one, so that's like more
high functioning.

Speaker 1 (45:35):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, that's what I picked up.

Speaker 9 (45:36):
So, I mean obviously if it did put him in
crisis on PANICGMAD, I mean, that's awful. But right, you know,
you are going to have to learn to adapt and
live with these things if you want to be driving
on the road. Yeah, And you're lucky and fortunate that
you're at a point where you can drive on the road,
Like my son is never going to be able to drive,
like right, Like Lincoln is more like between level two
and three, Like he's more severe.

Speaker 1 (45:56):
Well, this kid not only is driving, he's got he's
got a girlfriend, and he's apparently doing well in school.

Speaker 9 (46:02):
Yeah, and he's performing in intercollegiate drama competition. So yeah,
he's gonna have I mean, it sucks and it's not fun,
but I mean it's not fun for anybody that has
to stop, even if it is more difficult for him,
but he's going to have to learn to adapt, going
to have to. Yes, it's like Lincoln we mentioned before
in there with the soda can, like people opening soda cans. Correct,
this sound freaks him out. And people were like, oh,
well just start using you know, plastic bottles or start

(46:24):
you know, And we did find it, you know, we
are finding ways to make it easier for him. But
the fact is, and I've mentioned this to people, when
you're out in public, I say, like a place like
the museum, at the cafeteria, people are going to be
opening soda cans, and you have to get used to
it because you can't expect people to change for you.
The world is not going to adapt and change for you.
It's not going to happen.

Speaker 1 (46:43):
Yeah, it's nice when it's nice, when when accommodations can
be made, but for things like that.

Speaker 9 (46:47):
Right now at home, we can try to adjust things
to make it easier for him, because that's what home
is supposed to be. Right when you go home, you're
supposed to feel safe. It's supposed to be right exactly.

Speaker 1 (46:56):
Yes, yeah, So like the and then to try to
spin it into a profiling thing. Again, I have been
through several, especially if you drive from because I was
school in California, going back to Wyoming, I would hit
one of these every time. There's actually two that you hit.

(47:16):
When you're leaving California. There's one that you'll hit, especially
if you stay south on the Vegas Way, and then
if you drive into Arizona, you go through like three
of these near Yuma. But in California they also have
a checkpoint for fruit, so and it's you know, a
bunch of people in uniform like, hey, you got any fruit?
When you're coming into California, they do a fruit check
which is kind of a weird thing, but it's the

(47:38):
thing that happens, and it's something that you'll encounter if
you're driving on those roads, it's gonna happen. So I
feel like you do a disservice to your kid to
then get on here and rant about how it's profiling
and try to make him feel like the victim here,
when in reality it sounds like he was treated like
every other motorist and allowed to go on his way

(48:01):
and then that was it. So I'm sorry, but you
need to handle this internally, probably especially if your kids
gonna you know, it's gonna drive and go out and
live a normal life and do all the things that
you want him to do that everybody else does. When

(48:22):
the thing that everybody else does happens to him, you
need to explain it to him that way. Hey, this
is normal. Here's how you act in this situation. Here's
what you say, here's the documents you provide. Boom done.
That's it, Easy peasy. We'll be back in thirty minutes.
We'll chat with the Senator Ted Bud on all sorts

(48:42):
of insanity, which the list is endless since the last
time we talked to him. Shut down not shut down
junctions obviously, all the immigration stuff going on, and I
get a few other things as well, so that'll be
coming up. There's a horrific couple horrific stories, but let's

(49:05):
start with arguing I don't know, actually I don't want
to rank these just Thankfully, in the other story, the
lunatic was never able to accomplish what he wanted to accomplish,
where sadly, in this one, apparently allegedly he did. All right,
this guy's name is Lawrence Reid, and he was just
arrested in Chicago for getting on the train there and

(49:30):
dowsing a woman in gasoline, screaming burn alive B word
And yeah.

Speaker 11 (49:36):
So.

Speaker 1 (49:38):
That's awful. But to really drive the point home ross,
how many prior arrests on for committing some sort of
violent attack or violent crime on the Chicago train system.
Do you think mister Lawrence burned the B word alive

(49:59):
read had prior to this particular Here we go, this
particular effect. I'm gonna go.

Speaker 9 (50:07):
Ten bout ten.

Speaker 1 (50:09):
Oh, no, you're gonna have to go higher, twenty now higher,
I mean he had ten felonies. Oh there is that
U fifty pop fifty Oh lower? No, my wow, forty No,
it's higher. It's gonna higher at twenty seven higher higher. Oh,
I don't know that's correct. Did you get it in

(50:29):
in time? I think you might have won that. Yeah.
Forty nine prior arrest ten of which were felonies because
you know, and he's not. And he wasn't even barred
from using the train system, which is I guess where
his happy hunting grounds were. Just what an awful story.
What's even more awful is there were a lot of

(50:51):
people on the train. Not a single person stepped up
to do anything as he's as he's dowsing a woman gasoline,
screaming this clearly intending to set her on fire. It's
the Daniel Penny effect, man, the Daniel Penny effect one

(51:13):
hundred percent, especially in the city of Chicago with that
lunatic mayor, because this dude, this dude's black, and I
think if a white guy had restrained him, not even
necessarily killed him, but restrained him or beat the crap
out of him, you'd have to be nervous. You were
gonna find yourself getting charges because you stomped this guy's
face in. That's the insanity that we live under. So

(51:36):
if you think that story is insane, are you familiar
with these series of terrorist attacks? And I'm calling these
what they are. This is terrorist attacks that were set
to be if not for an undercover agent be able
to infiltrate this guy's organization. But we're set to be
carried out on the citizens of New York City. This

(51:58):
is crazy town. Here we go.

Speaker 7 (52:00):
A neo Nazi cult leader has pled guilty to plotting
a New Year's Eve attack in New York City. The plan, well,
you won't believe it. He wanted to use a terrorist
dressed as Santa Claus who would have handed out poison
candy to children.

Speaker 1 (52:18):
All right, Ross, is that like one of the most
evil things you ever heard?

Speaker 9 (52:22):
Because it's prety dang. Yeah, it's pretty dang evil.

Speaker 1 (52:24):
Yeah, that's like, that's like instant chipper Man. That's some
of the most evil crap I've ever heard. And and
remember this is part of a cult. Let's carry out.

Speaker 7 (52:35):
Two year old from the country of Georgia is known
as Commander Butcher, which off the bat is just terrifying.
And he admitted to solictening hate crimes, providing instruction on
how to make bombs and also how to use the
poison ricin It was all okay.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
By the way, if you're thinking of joining a cult
and the cults leader's name is Commander Butcher in red Flags,
it's like barbecue down in Haiti, right, Why they call
him barbecue. You don't want to know, all right. So
the cult leader's name is Commander Butcher, and people are joining.

Speaker 7 (53:12):
Part of his international group called the Maniac Murder Cult,
which again is terrified.

Speaker 1 (53:17):
And the name of the cult is the Maniac Murder Cult.
Are you joining for the fellowship? I mean, what's what's
the what's the plan at that point? Oh? They have
nice potlucks? Oh do they? Does Captain Butcher of the
Maniac Murder Cult put those on? That's nice?

Speaker 7 (53:37):
I think that sounds pretty on the nose. He's also
said to have inspired mass shooters with something called Hater's Handbook. Truly,
the whole thing.

Speaker 1 (53:45):
Is so your Bible is called the Hater's Handbook in
the the what was it? The Mayhem Murder Cult run
by Captain Butcher. Again, all three of these things should
make you go, hm, maybe this isn't the cult for me.
What are the genital branding people doing? What are they
up to? Where's the one where we just have orgies

(54:08):
the whole time and do edibles? Maybe I'll go join
that one instead.

Speaker 7 (54:12):
Evil It sounds made up?

Speaker 5 (54:14):
Now.

Speaker 7 (54:14):
This all people traveled to New York in twenty twenty
two and encouraged others to carry out hate crimes on
behalf of his cult. Now, with all his hateful plotting,
clearly he didn't do a crack job at vetting recruits,
thankfully for all of us. And one of those recruits
happened to be an undercover FBI agent. Now, this terrorist
pled guilty in the New York City Federal Court this

(54:35):
week after being hauled back to the US from Moldova,
and he faces up to forty years in prison, which
to me doesn't nearly sound like enough.

Speaker 1 (54:44):
No, it does not. That's that's New York Post one
of the reporters. They do these video things now, which
are actually quite informative. They tend to just kind of
be just the details. So just to recap Captain Butcher
Mayhem murder cult and your official book is the as
handbook for all things to consider. I guess if you're

(55:07):
shopping for a cult this holiday season? All right? Uh?
For and again, forty years. I now that's somebody that maybe,
just maybe considering what he was plotting to do, may
not function well in prison. So it'll be a shame
to see that. A right, the inmates, So what are

(55:27):
you in for?

Speaker 3 (55:28):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (55:28):
So what I wanted to do so, I wanted to
dress is or get somebody else. By the way, get
somebody else to dress is Santa. We would poison a
bunch of kids candy with ricing and then hand it
out to the kids like he shouldn't even make He
shouldn't even make it out of his first shower. Man.
That's that's some of the most evil crap I've ever heard.

(55:50):
All right, eight eight eight nine three four seven eight
seven four, let me grab a quick phone call, go
and what's up?

Speaker 4 (55:57):
Hey?

Speaker 15 (55:58):
I am this really chick off. You know, the five
grandsons that lived with me, they were all in school
when COVID happened. So I had five kids that were.

Speaker 16 (56:08):
You know, that had to do remote learning. One of
them is autistic and he started kindergarten that way. And
then an older one has severe ADHD and everything realized
on his special ed teacher and the support he receives
at school. And I was telling Ross that we didn't
know until three days before graduation if fat guy was
going to walk or not, because it affected him so badly,

(56:32):
not being in school, not being around people, And it
was really hard on the kindergartener too, who he's level
one autistic, but it was still very hard.

Speaker 1 (56:41):
On him and only kids. Judging by the numbers, Yeah.

Speaker 15 (56:46):
Yeah it was. And to shut schools down, okay, number one.
I hadn't gone to a school and taken.

Speaker 1 (56:51):
A child yet.

Speaker 15 (56:53):
Okay, they're not going to school to take kids. If
your parents are a legal they're going to get your
parents and then they're going to wait for you.

Speaker 16 (57:01):
You to come home.

Speaker 15 (57:02):
If it's a situation where yes, indeed, you are going
back to where you came from. This is political, This
is just prop It's just a political SciPop. It's ridiculous.
And these kids are.

Speaker 1 (57:14):
Going to be the population actively physically trying to bend
and break things so that laws can't be enforced. It's
it's wild. I've ever seen another situation like it where
people feel so morally justified to do it.

Speaker 15 (57:31):
It's but it's child abuse too, and I'm going to
call it what it is. It's child abuse. You're doing
you are doing specific, calm, purposely for the whole for
a few when there's not even any reason to be
doing it.

Speaker 16 (57:46):
And this is this is so wrong. And I hope
that's you know, I.

Speaker 1 (57:50):
Don't know about this is this is the strategy. But
this is the strategy that everything anything that the Trump
administration does, the Democrat strategy is to turn it into
the highest level of chaos possible so they can point
and go, look at the chaos he's creating, right, And
that's that's what you saw with the shutdown. That's what

(58:10):
you're seeing with this. That's what makes it even more
despicable because there's so many useful idiots that are being
used as political tools in all of this that are
so gender. They are threading to stab ICE agents with
screwdrivers out all right, or just or just to let

(58:34):
people know who may have a physical vested interest in
not cooperating with Ice, that Ice is on the way
to give them, you know, just a few with the
horns and the whistles and all this crap to give
them more time to prepare to either get away or
to put themselves in a position where they can literally
fight officers. So it's the I call what it is,

(58:56):
operation chaos Man, and it is the absolute political play.
But right now, all right, seven forty five race Stagic
from the Weather Channel here, all right, morning morning, so
Ross plays tonight yep, uh, you guys, uh what do you.

Speaker 12 (59:14):
Which one four twenty five Sunday?

Speaker 1 (59:17):
Okay, you are, You're late. You see Shedar Sanders is
starting against the Raiders, is he?

Speaker 12 (59:22):
Well why not?

Speaker 2 (59:24):
Right?

Speaker 1 (59:24):
Can't use your hot garbage. Can't wait.

Speaker 12 (59:27):
We're super part of the Browns. Besides so do I
I mean besides the defense, I mean, what are the Browns? Unfortunately?

Speaker 1 (59:34):
Whether you know, one of the things the Browns don't
have is uh oh, what do you call it? An
O line? Well, that too, I mean to hear, those
are good to have.

Speaker 12 (59:42):
So there's that you got. Uh yeah, on Sunday, it's
gonna be crazy.

Speaker 1 (59:49):
The Packers. I always hate the Lambeau Packers, Vikings Packers.

Speaker 12 (59:52):
Yeah, kind of messy too, but I like Houston tonight
at home.

Speaker 9 (59:57):
Actually, what you know, out so Stroud is out there.
Their backup quarterback is in and I think they're there.
I think there's like a tackle, a defensive like it
is out also out that being said, they're probably gonna
Bill is probably gona lose by sixty because yeah, yeah,
just because exactly.

Speaker 12 (01:00:16):
And who's the who's their backup?

Speaker 1 (01:00:18):
Now?

Speaker 9 (01:00:19):
I had no idea, Yeah exactly, some guy I never
heard of before.

Speaker 12 (01:00:22):
And that's why and that's exactly why.

Speaker 9 (01:00:24):
Right, they have no tape on them, They have no
idea who the right.

Speaker 12 (01:00:27):
Right at least to cover this and anyway, and if.

Speaker 9 (01:00:29):
You are a betting person, there's something else to compete.
But some people are the Texans have the best passing defense.

Speaker 12 (01:00:36):
In the league. Yeah, mm hmmm, so defense.

Speaker 1 (01:00:43):
Ards yeah so.

Speaker 12 (01:00:46):
And then the college lineup isn't all that great. I mean,
I think Clemson could win against uh yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:00:54):
Wow, how they're follow they're playing Ferman. I don't know. Anyway,
you think they might be able to cover the barely
d one school.

Speaker 12 (01:01:01):
I hope they might be able to. They might be
able to, but anyway should be decent. I don't know.
We still got high school football going on playoffs or
anything tomorrow night, probably right, Yeah, it is not really
much to impact that either. There's a couple chants to
rain over the next few days. The story stays mild.

(01:01:23):
We're down a little bit today. There is some page
fogging areas this morning, partial sun, a little bit sixties today,
maybe a little rain tonight early tomorrow, than cloudy and
warmer again, upper sixties to low seventies, about where we
were yesterday, and then even milder on Saturday, there could
be some showers or some spotty rain around. This isn't
gonna be a washout load to bit seventies, and then

(01:01:45):
we'll cool off as that low passes by Sunday, upper
fifties to low sixties, which is more typical this time
of year. I do think we stay mild even into
Wednesday of next week. Thanksgiving Day probably be the next
change that will start to slowly come in with maybe
a little wet weather. It could be bigger problems further north.
Some of the runs of the European model, specifically trying

(01:02:06):
to maybe paint a bigger storm off the northeast coast
sometime later next week or into next weekend, so that
could have been pat with some impacts for travel.

Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
O God, All right, well appreciate it, Thank you very much, sir,
and we'll talk it an hour. Okay, okay, all right,
there you go, raced agic from the Weather Channel and
we will be back in just a few hang on,
and I am wondering if I'm even going to watch
the ken Burns Revolutionary War series, which they finally so

(01:02:38):
that launched. I think what a week ago and everything
I'm reading is that they basically spend most of the
time talking about slavery and the treatment of Native Americans,
which by the way, clearly has a place in an
in depth series documentary about revolutionary war times. But from

(01:02:59):
what I'm reading, the just shoehorn it at anytime they
say anything positive about like George Washington, then they have
to buffer it with you know, slave stuff. And again
it's fine to acknowledge, but you've got to be honest
about the situation at the time and the reasoning and
how many of the founding fathers are absolutely against slavery,

(01:03:20):
and you know, in the case of Washington, inheriting slaves
that it is illegal for him to to free just
to be clear, it was illegal for him to free
them at the time. Is very disappointing to me, and
I'm just curious if anyone has watched it. So that's
one thing. And then Ross watched a mini series on

(01:03:41):
the Scrooge thing.

Speaker 9 (01:03:42):
You know, I'm an episode in like an hour in
and it's the FX version of a Christmas Carol. And
just to warn you, like it takes place, you know
in London.

Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
It's not modernized something like that.

Speaker 9 (01:03:54):
Charles Dickens time. They have made some changes, but I've
been able to look past that, and I will say
the guy's portrayal of Ebenezer Scrooge is amazing, Like I
don't know what his name is, but he's a bad
guy and everything he's in he was like the bad guy.
And I want to say Iron Man three, he was
the bad guy in one of the Maze Runner movies.

(01:04:17):
He's like a typical bad guy. Like when you see him,
you're the bad guy and he's really good.

Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
Yeah, what do you say? Changes? You know, some changes
like Tiny Tim is not tiny or.

Speaker 9 (01:04:28):
The kid that plays Tiny Tim the curse the people
that made this movie of this show, because he is
the most adorable person child I've ever seen in my life.
And it's like it's it pulls on your you know,
your heart strings or whatever because the kid is adorable
and you know what happens to Tiny Tim and you're like,
please know, you know what I mean. But so anyway,
missus Cratchett is black and okay, and she's a prostitute. Anyway,

(01:04:54):
there are some changes, but if you're willing to look.

Speaker 1 (01:04:57):
Past it, that that uh, but you know you mean it.
It's like if you're going to just accept everything. It's
been good, right you are. Actually it has been amazing.
But it did start and they're walking down like the
streets of London and it's like, you know, missus Cratchett
and mister Cratchett, and I was like, oh man, and
because you know, if they're gonna do that right in
the beginning, who knows what else they're going to change

(01:05:18):
or what else they're going to try to like shoehorn
in there.

Speaker 9 (01:05:20):
Prostitute gave it. Well, that's like a big it's sort
of like, listen, they're paying for Tiny TAM's medical bills.
The husband, mister Cratchet, is unaware of it. He thinks
they have some sort of you know, family benefactor in
America that that Tiny Tam writes letters to and he
has no idea. But during the episodehere it's like Christmas present.
You know, it's revealed what her secret is.

Speaker 1 (01:05:41):
Here insanity via the news cycle. And we haven't had
a chance to speak with the Senator Ted Budd in
a minute, so let's go ahead and write that wrong.
How you doing this morning, sir.

Speaker 5 (01:05:53):
I'm doing great.

Speaker 1 (01:05:53):
Good to be with you. What what's going on up there?
One of your colleagues is texting Jeffrey Epstein. Another one
just got indicted for stealing five million dollars in FEMA funds.

Speaker 5 (01:06:04):
Well, you can't make it up, you know. You go
back and you watch the clips. It looks like Plaskett
was on was texting with Jeffrey Epstein in twenty nineteen. Unbelievable.
She I'm proud to say, Kasey, she was a classmate
of mine when I came in in twenty sixteen, and
I think I may have seen her two or three times. Now.

(01:06:24):
She's a delegate, right, so she gets the vote in committees.
She doesn't get the vote on the House floor as
a delegate from virgin Allen's But anyway, I guess she
was the delegate for Epstein Island.

Speaker 2 (01:06:37):
It seems real.

Speaker 1 (01:06:38):
Yeah, And you know she's trying to say that she was.
I think her spin now is she was. She was
in prosecutor mode. She was trying to get info from
him where I'm like, no, no, no, no. The text
where he's talking about you chewing and your nice outfits.
That doesn't sound like business.

Speaker 5 (01:06:56):
Yeah, no, not very much. And you just see that
how much Democrats support that and who he ran with?
Who Epstein ran with, Yeah, I think Trump's Trump's right
designed this. You know, first of all, you got to
protect the victims and whistleblowers. And that was my question.

Speaker 1 (01:07:16):
That was gonna be my question because the Speaker of
the House seems is to be very upset with Thune,
although kind of was Schumer because you, you guys did
kind of a unique thing, and it's called unanimous consent.
A lot of people don't understand how this works. So
you didn't. You didn't alter the bill, and I think
the House wanted you to alter this Epstein bill. So
can you explain that to us why some are mad

(01:07:37):
over this?

Speaker 5 (01:07:39):
Yeah, I think they wanted to do their work for them,
And like, I can't blame the House. Let's get this
hot potato out, let's get it done, let's get it
behind us, let's resolve this, Let's get justice. That's what
ultimately this is about. But look, the House needs to
send us a good product. That's what that's not sloppy legally,
and uh, you know, the President signed it. The President
said if the House thing passed it past the Senate,

(01:08:01):
then he would sign it, and he certainly did.

Speaker 1 (01:08:04):
Okay, all right, let's so one other thing, here. Explain
to me why and I know you're on the Senate,
so you're not on the House side. This why plasket
isn't censured, and and why there's this Quarry Mills thing too, which,
by the way, those texts I saw from him creep
me out. I'll be honest with you, Senator.

Speaker 2 (01:08:22):
Yeah I'm not.

Speaker 5 (01:08:23):
I'm not. I just got wind of the whole Corey
Mills thing last night. Look, I served overlap with him
like two years, don't know him very well, don't know
too much to weigh in on that. I just know
there is a look you look at like that. The
conference which is like all Republicans or all Democrats over
on the outside, it's a giant family reunion. There's going

(01:08:46):
to be some spats here and there. I don't know
what they are. But give me a couple of weeks.
When we meet next time, maybe I'll be read in.
Maybe it won't be an issue.

Speaker 1 (01:08:53):
But yeah, it doesn't. It doesn't matter who they are.
What it appears to me until a lot of people
is the swamp protecting its own. And you know that's
not something that frankly, you guys have the approval points
to be demonstrated again.

Speaker 2 (01:09:08):
Hey.

Speaker 5 (01:09:09):
You know what's funny on approval points is that when
the House was shut down for like what fifty days
almost you know, or they were out of session for
fifty days, the approval rating went up. So go figure
on that.

Speaker 1 (01:09:21):
Well, it's just because I would have to watch, like
Jasmine Crockett pull try to indict people because other people
might be named Jeffrey Epstein wouldn't. Absolutely, I think you
fire that one.

Speaker 5 (01:09:31):
Yeah, I think this is the Twitter ex business model
of I think she's actually been good for business. Well yeah,
watch on social media.

Speaker 1 (01:09:39):
If not for her, what was Kennant? What did Kennedy say?
Operation let them speak or whatever you.

Speaker 5 (01:09:46):
Call exactly what's happening? Oh please please, you go first
and let them speak. You know every AOC has been
doing it since twenty eighteen.

Speaker 1 (01:09:54):
I just want to touch one thing on the shutdown
and then let's get into immigration stuff because that clearly
is the biggest story of North CA Carolina. So the
build to reopened the government, which you voted for, also
contain this hemp provision. And I've got a lot, we
got a lot of hemp farmers or people in the
business who listen to the show because they have been

(01:10:15):
inundating me with some language in there that they say
is basically going to destroy a billion dollar business in
the state of North Carolina. Do you agree with that?
Are you aware of what's going on? What tell us
more about this?

Speaker 5 (01:10:31):
So this goes back to the twenty eighteen farm bill.
Farm bill happens every five years. When it came up
in twenty eighteen, it was all hemp all the time.
Let's get this new industry growing here for industrial purposes,
not for intoxication. And everybody's like, yeah, yeah, it sounds great.
And it was led by none other than Mitch McConnell.
And you know, this is all Kentucky. So you saw

(01:10:53):
rand Paul and McConnell, both of Kentucky, on the same page, right,
And then they realized there was this loophole in there,
so they could make synthetic uh THC essentially or intoxicants.
I would say, I don't know I PHC, but intoxicans.
And it ends up in these Delta eight, Delta nine
products that you see in some of these uh you know,

(01:11:14):
convenience stores. Kids were getting it. I've had parents come
in my office that where they're you know, had straight
a students and then they get hooked on this stuff
and then you know, these some of these kids ended
up dying. So that's part. That's what the loophole went after,
is let's not use let's not get intoxicants out of
something that was meant for industrial purposes. And so that's

(01:11:35):
what the intention was to fix. So you know, if
you had seventy five, let's say, roughly seventy five to
twenty five vote to fix the loophole, these hemp folks. Look,
it's not against them, it's against production of intoxicants that
weren't even regulated. I want to protect our kids. I
don't want our kids on this stuff. I don't want

(01:11:56):
my kids. I don't want It's not good for our nation,
it's not good for our next generation. And so I
am for fixing the loophole.

Speaker 2 (01:12:02):
You know.

Speaker 5 (01:12:02):
And it was a seventy five to twenty five percent.
But if somebody built their business on a loophole and
it's hurting kids, you know, that's tough.

Speaker 1 (01:12:11):
I don't I don't think I should.

Speaker 12 (01:12:12):
Have done that.

Speaker 1 (01:12:13):
Yeah, no, no, no, And I recognize the difference. I
think the claim that I'm seeing is that because the
way that you guys want to fix it is going
to require essentially the hemp itself to somehow be modified.
It will impact the other parts of the hemp production,
you know, like hemp clothes, you know, the things that
you really thought of hemp rope.

Speaker 5 (01:12:34):
The industrial like fabric reuses and textal re uses.

Speaker 1 (01:12:39):
Yeah, yeah, so yeah, I mean.

Speaker 5 (01:12:41):
I'm not seeing that. Yeah, I think it is. But look,
if there needs to be additional modification that that you know,
good stuff that makes sense for text kids, that should
be able to be clarified. And this stuff will have
to be.

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
You know, I think it.

Speaker 5 (01:12:58):
Will come under the us DA when they write the
application of this out in the regulatory form. You know,
they can clarify this. But look, if if there is
a specific legislative fixed, send it to us or certainly
take a look at it. You don't want to hurt
legit businesses, but you do want to You don't want
people to harm themselves or to get addicted to something

(01:13:19):
that's going to destroy their lives. And you know, in
my case, when these parents come to my office, these kids,
they never came home.

Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
Yeah, all right, well I said I would ask about it.
So I hope that if there is a problem, it
gets fixed and because look, a billion dollars industry is
a billion dollar industry, especially with a lot of people
doing it right. But let's talk about the big story.
I got to tell you. I file this under Operation Chaos.

(01:13:47):
I think that the shutdown was part of this as well.
It's just another plank and trying to thwart anything that
Trump wants to do. But like when half the population
is absolutely losing their minds, these are half of your
constituent people driving around harassing ice. We've played so much
audio threatening to establish screwdrivers, intentionally obstructing, driving, reversing high

(01:14:10):
speed in the city of Durham at a bunch of
ice officers and schools now going going online because they
had so many absences. And then everyone just screams chaos
and it's all Trump's fault and look how horrible he is,
when in reality, this is law enforcement and counties like
Mecklenburg still won't even hand over criminals in their jails.

(01:14:30):
So give me the broad, Senator Ted budd opinion of
how things are going and what you're concerned about.

Speaker 5 (01:14:37):
Yeah, this is all roots back to open border policies,
the Biden administration, the sanctuary cities that they've been enabling,
and that is not humane and it's not responsible. And
what they're going after are those criminal illegal aliens. Now
do you see somebody like there's always the exception of ice,
you know, getting somebody off of a ladder, putting up Christmas.

(01:14:58):
Like you hear those stories, You've got to take a beat,
look a little further. Don't believe everything on first blush
on social media, because there is an aggressive anti law
enforcement narrative out there, and overwhelmingly, we are pulling criminals
off the streets, those that have been here for years,
and it's essentially fixing a problem. So here's here's a

(01:15:21):
couple of examples. You got forty four criminal illegal aliens
aggravated the assault, fault with the dangerous weapon, assaulting the
police officer, battery, driving under the influence, hit and run,
and also known gang members. They still need to be here.
And so you know, you got to you got to
check yourself before you buy into this. You get suckered
into this narrative from the left, and you've got good

(01:15:44):
people that are Republicans that are buying into this. I'm like,
come on, and look, I'm empathetic I grew up in
the trades. There are my neighbors I did this work
going on and that a lot of that's what immigrants
are doing now. And you know, the ones that are
here legally great, but maybe they have family that isn't
and you just you've got to follow the law. We're

(01:16:06):
a generous country. We let people. A million people come
here the right way every year. I had a lady
stop me this week to say, you know, she's so
proud to be an American, she had just gotten her citizenship.
That happens a million times a year, and we need
to keep that up. If you got to adjust the numbers,
adjust the numbers, but do it the right way. Bring
the best in the brightest here legally. And this is

(01:16:27):
illegal stuff that Biden enabled for years. We can't have
it that way.

Speaker 1 (01:16:32):
What about you got these Because every other story too
that I'm seeing, especially on Charlotte media, is uh, here's
a bakery that's not open today because no workers, are
no customers, And I don't know. The hard line for
me is if your entire staff's not showing up, who
are you employed? So like they're correct in saying they're

(01:16:55):
businesses that will probably fail if they're successful in this
big crackdown, but that doesn't preclude you from having to
follow the law up in Michigan. I believe we have
the story here because they're always saying, well, why don't
you go after the people hiring them. The owners of
a Michigan based plumbing company were just arrested for employing
and harboring two hundred and fifty illegal immigrants across four states,

(01:17:18):
which they use to generate seventy five million in revenue.
Correct me if I'm wrong with your line of thinking,
but that is revenue that probably sustained lower wages because
they were backfilling it with illegal immigrants. So do you
think that this will have an honest uptick in wages
if they are successful in arresting, deporting, and then getting

(01:17:41):
people to self deport. Is that the game plan?

Speaker 5 (01:17:44):
Yeah? Absolutely, And those who don't like it just remember
what Abraham Lincoln said, the best way to change a
bad law is to enforce it. Well, if you don't
like the law, let's enforce it, and then you could
talk about the numbers if you do need to bring
folks in. The problem is it's so obscure through illegal
activity right now you don't know what that right number
needs to be is at one point one way, I

(01:18:05):
don't know, but you can't tell when you have so
much illegal activity, and so you've created an underground economy
that and you've essentially you're going through a detox period
right now trying to get off of this addiction for
overly cheap labor. And I just think it's you know,
it's a bumpy period right now. That's okay, We're going

(01:18:26):
to get through it and we'll adjust as needed. But
you kill the demand signal for people to go in
the trades when you stuck it full of illegals, like
this plumbing company in Michigan. You've got kids that are
probably taken on debt go into these and not getting
great degrees from these four year universities when they'd be
better served, you know, getting a PEL grant or the

(01:18:46):
PEL Act, which I just helped pass. Getting a stack
of obrudential being an electricians assistant a plumbing going into plumbing,
learning a trade, you got no debt, you make more
money than you would if you got a four year degree,
and you have an awesome career ahead. So I was
talking with a brick Mason here at the Capitol this morning,
and he was talking about his kids, careers and his job,

(01:19:09):
and uh, you know he's he's got a great job
that he's built as a mason, And I just think,
you know, that's true in my neighborhood where I live,
and and we need more of them, but the demand
single gets killed when you hire all these illegals.

Speaker 1 (01:19:24):
Yeah, and by the way, at least he's mason. Over there.
Did you see a judge yesterday and junk to the
White House from powerwashing the Executive Office building.

Speaker 5 (01:19:35):
Let's not see that.

Speaker 1 (01:19:36):
Not making it up. They can't powerwash or repaint the
Executive Office building, which a lot of people's will that's
the White House. It's where the fake Oval office Biden
studio was built. But yeah, they can't even they can't
even wash their own building. What is going on? Man?

Speaker 5 (01:19:49):
We're going to name it the Beage House then, so sorry,
I guess.

Speaker 1 (01:19:55):
Let me ask you about what does this guy's say,
this Gregory Bovino. Do you know him personally? Have you
have you chatted with him?

Speaker 14 (01:20:02):
Not?

Speaker 5 (01:20:02):
But he's the commander at larger the c VP, right,
And yeah, he talked about Governor Stein increasing violent rhetoric
towards federal agents. And boy, you can really see in
those videos of the governor and look, I have a
working relationship with him. You know, I tried. You know,
I'm supporting jobs in the state and where he supports jobs.
We overlap, you know, we'll cut ribbons and groundbreak stuff together.

(01:20:23):
But on this, you know, you see him threatening the needle,
and it's very concerning. You've got to support the rule
of law. You've got to support these uh, these federal.

Speaker 1 (01:20:32):
Agents and what have you and Governor Stein talked about.

Speaker 5 (01:20:38):
It's about we talk about jobs. We talk about bringing
like bulk and elements uh to the state together. Uh
the Toyota battery plant, you know, and not too far
from where you are. That's uh, those are great opportunities.

Speaker 2 (01:20:52):
So I'm all in for that.

Speaker 5 (01:20:54):
I'm all in for decoupling from China. You know, he
was in support of an organ u a bulkan, not
the quarry, but a different group, different Bulkan, and we
you know, we were at an announcement together on Monday,
so that kind of stuff. You know, we we're all
in for North Carolina on that stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:21:13):
It's funny. I know a guy who just sold his
business in Pittsburgh, and he sold it to a guy
who's because he has a brewery. And the guy is
literally going to take all the brewery stuff and put
it right next to where the battery thing is opening
because he's like, well, they're going to get thirsty two
and so he's just moving he's just moving it, you know,
further further east in the state or west of the
state there, which I thought was, oh, that's I mean,

(01:21:33):
that's good, right, you know, businesses pop up around it.
But the problem is that you're well aware is Josh
is the Governor's uh, he's not been helpful. And I
don't know if financially there's a way you can make
him more helpful, because well, you know, like.

Speaker 5 (01:21:48):
The problem is, you know, if you're part of the
Democrat Party, is the base moves further and further left.
It's just off the rails, crazy, so destructive through our country.

Speaker 1 (01:21:57):
Sorry, yeah, I'm sorry to cut you. I just looked
at the clock here. I only have a few second.
So maybe we'll save that question and next time and
see if he gets smarter you too, Thank you, senator,
and we'll be right back. And I've been doing it
every morning fair.

Speaker 9 (01:22:10):
No, no, I'm thinking about that. But so you know,
after the construction here the remodel, there's like a big
like hub area right and in the hub area, they
have like a smart speaker and every you know, I
come in every morning, I'm the only one here, and
you know, it's so he's playing you know, one of
the stations here or one of the shows. So every
morning I've been going in and I've been telling it
to play different various wrestling podcasts at full blast.

Speaker 1 (01:22:33):
That's are you amazing? Yeah?

Speaker 9 (01:22:36):
So I was just walking through through the area and
it's stone cold Steve Austin and he's talking. He's having
an in depth conversation with whoever. His guest was about
the Kamala's wrestling makeup, not Kamala, the you know the yeah,
the old wrestler. Yeah yeah, yeah, you Ganden Giant. So
that's everybody coming into the office today will be treated to.

Speaker 1 (01:22:58):
Yeah. I get those speakers in the different I just
kind of tune them out. So but I that's amazing.
I'm gonna have to next time in Greensborough. I have
to start screwing with that too.

Speaker 9 (01:23:07):
I'm just waiting for people to notice or say something
or like for an email.

Speaker 1 (01:23:10):
To go out. Who's listened to all the wrestling stuff?
I don't know. Maybe they're learning stuff over in sales
because it's sales. You would have to listen to that
where it kind of is so like you're gonna go
in there and like all the salespeople are gonna be
armed with all the wrestling factoids. It'll be amazing because
like subconsciously they were training it and they have you
to think. By the way, Ross has three hours and

(01:23:34):
twenty minutes of work left. I mean, he's got more works.
He's got to do production. So just a reminder. Next
week is Thanksgiving week. We are not here, and because
of Ross's careful planning, he's not gonna.

Speaker 9 (01:23:49):
Be here for the rest of the year after tomorrow.
I'm not keeping track, but I have about forty six
days of vacation. But you're not keeping track, not at all.

Speaker 1 (01:23:58):
Wait, so your vacation will the government shut down?

Speaker 12 (01:24:01):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:24:01):
Pretty much? Look at that. I mean that was forty
seven days, I think. But yeah, yeah, because the baby's
coming and he's got paternity leave and then we always
you know, we have the end of the year vacation anyway,
So after tomorrow. Ross won't be back until January fifth.
I unfortunately have not I am not having a baby,

(01:24:22):
so so I will be here following Thanksgiving week for
like three weeks, and then we go on the end
of the year two week vacation because it's not a
rated period for us. So in case you're wondering, or
as many of you call it, we will be fired
and Ross will be fired at the end of the
day tomorrow, and I guess I'll also be fired, and

(01:24:42):
then I'll be rehired a week later, but Ross will
not until the new year. For those of you who
keep up.

Speaker 9 (01:24:48):
On our firing, that's right, because I'm holding out for
a better deal, are you?

Speaker 11 (01:24:52):
Yeah? Okay?

Speaker 1 (01:24:53):
Is it more chickens that you can squeeze obnoxiously? Is
that what I want to be paid in? In chickens?
Rubber chickens? Maybe if they can find some trade. By
the way, what's going on at disney World? You know
our theory here on the show of course, right that
anytime there's a death at disney World, rather than saying
they got eaten by a gator because that's bad for business,

(01:25:16):
they always make up stuff like right after the gator incident.
Another guy died in a tragic what was it a
smelting accident? Right, they're at the smelting ride at Disney.
But believe it or not, a fifth person has now
died at Florida disney World in less than a month.
And I thought, ways, I thought you couldn't die at Disney.

(01:25:38):
That's just one of those urban legends, right where they'll
haul your body out of the park and have you
declared dead outside the park? Or is that actually something
that they do. I don't know the answer to that.
Let's see a guess was reported dead at Disney Saratoga
Springs Resort. That's got to be near water. Hmm, what

(01:26:00):
are they saying even tell saying what it was?

Speaker 5 (01:26:05):
Do do do?

Speaker 16 (01:26:06):
Do?

Speaker 2 (01:26:06):
Do?

Speaker 1 (01:26:09):
Oh? And then you had the mono rail check too
that turned out to be a suicide, right, what a
what a horrible horrible thing too, because it was right
where it loops in it. What's the name of the
hotel that the mono rail comes inside of.

Speaker 9 (01:26:23):
There's a bunch of them that travels through.

Speaker 1 (01:26:25):
Yeah, well, hers is like the futuristic one right where
she committed where she jumped, And the problem was is
it internally comes into the hotel, so I cause I
was just figuring out how the heck she got under
the monorail there.

Speaker 9 (01:26:36):
Yeah, No, it goes through some of the hotels, yes.

Speaker 1 (01:26:38):
Yeah, because so it circles through the hotel there. So
she literally got to the edge where it meets the
hotel and the side, which uh, which everyone could see two,
which is really the the horrific part of that, Like
I've long had it. Look, I've long had a problem
whenever I see one of these stories where somebody wants
to commit suicide and they decided they're going to do

(01:27:01):
it in a very public manner. I think the thing
that killed me years ago is there was a guy
who went into a park in Minnesota back when I
was working there. It was not in Minneapolis, it was
one of the smaller cities south I can't remember. And
this is a park that has all the cool playground
top equipment. It's during the summer, so the kids are
and he sat down on a bench in the middle

(01:27:22):
of the park with a shotgun and it's just like,
just to spread that horribleness in front of everybody is
just a horrific last decision. Yeah, the pop Central pop
century resort. I don't know any of the resorts down there,
but yeah, so they had a few things going on

(01:27:45):
down there. None of it sounds nefarious, though.

Speaker 3 (01:27:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 9 (01:27:47):
I was gonna say, do you think this is just
a matter? It's sort of like, you know, like what
is it the year of the Shark thing or whatever,
the summer of the Shark. There's so many people that
visit Disney and the hotels and everything that people have
hadn't passed away before in the past, but now maybe
it's getting reported more because of the other incidents.

Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
Well, I think also the high profile nature, like with
the monorail thing, right, because that you know, that's going
to make the news versus somebody who had a heart
attack in their hotel room. I get what you're saying, though,
and I don't know the answer to that, but you know,
media go to media, So there we go. All right,
check this out. You need you need help. So there's

(01:28:24):
this chick on uh what is her name, bando D
I don't, I don't anyway, So she does like recipes
and stuff on the TikTok and some other other platforms,
and so everyone's mad at her, and I'm what are
you mad about? It were they bad recipes. No, no, no, no,

(01:28:44):
here's what it is. So this woman has taken upon
herself to take all the different recipes around Thanksgiving and
Christmas for that matter, you know, all the side dishes,
the ham, the turkey, the everything, and create an alcohol
infused version of it and so that you can have

(01:29:05):
a completely uh boozy Thanksgiving spread, which forget the kid angle,
we'll just benefit of the doubt that there's not kids
at this thing. What would be the appeal of sitting
down and everything on the table gets you drunk? Like
So let me give you example. So the mashed potatoes

(01:29:26):
have patron in them tequila, the ham is done with Hennessy.
And again it's late stage where she's adding this stuff,
so it's not cooking the alcohol out. She's attempting, I guess,
to get all of the dishes to about a nine
percent alcohol, which is the goal here. But I'm sorry,

(01:29:47):
if your whole Thanksgiving spread needs to be booze infused,
you should probably talk to somebody man. But also I
don't know whether getting mad at her, like you know,
infusing food with alcohol. There's alcoholic food and some people's
stuff weed all the food. So I'm not surprised, but

(01:30:08):
there's people who are saying that this is what they're
going to do this year, and I just feel like
it ends with liver failure apparently. Okay, so the turkey
also is Don Julio stuffed? Great, fantastic, And they don't
even get me started on if you've got kids around,
you got to make sure they don't get into that.
But or you're probably going to jail. I'm not the cranberry.

(01:30:31):
I'm not surprised the cranberries could be juiced. Is that
Puckers or something? You know what, That's fine. You get
the gist of what she's doing there, all right? Raced
Agic from the Weather Channel. So what do you think
this woman's putting out Thanksgiving recipes? But all the dishes
have booze and we'll get you drunk. That sounds like
a little much.

Speaker 12 (01:30:49):
What's the address?

Speaker 1 (01:30:52):
I knew it. It's not a way. It's a TikTok account.
She sells, she shares recipes, and she's just taken upon
her herself to make everything alcoholic.

Speaker 12 (01:31:06):
Woman. It doesn't make her a bad woman, right, So what.

Speaker 5 (01:31:09):
Do you just like?

Speaker 1 (01:31:10):
You you text some of these to your wife. Look,
at this thing I found on the internet. Yeah, she
might be up for it though it is your wife.
Oh I'm sorry, could be well then?

Speaker 12 (01:31:22):
Yeah, yeah I did?

Speaker 1 (01:31:23):
I did, all right?

Speaker 12 (01:31:25):
Is we like similar things? I mean there's probably some.
But how many wives indoor girlfriends will sit on the
couch every Saturday and Sunday and watch football all day?

Speaker 1 (01:31:36):
I know a few, there are a few. Did she
actually into it or is she just doing it to
be nice?

Speaker 2 (01:31:42):
Yes?

Speaker 12 (01:31:42):
Much bigger college because of the uga alum that's in
her family.

Speaker 1 (01:31:47):
But uh, she's one of these.

Speaker 12 (01:31:49):
And then there's the Falcon slash cowboys.

Speaker 1 (01:31:51):
So I find many Georgia fans to be trying sometimes.

Speaker 12 (01:31:55):
Yes, that's a good word. Brother in law, sister in law,
father in law. Yeah, they're all.

Speaker 1 (01:32:01):
They're all drunk with success. Maybe I'm the one who's better.
All right, man, what's going on? A little party of
the weather.

Speaker 12 (01:32:11):
Yeah, lots of sunshine, a lot more dry, mild than
we will have wet and cool upper sixties, low seventies
as we get into.

Speaker 1 (01:32:20):
This afternoon.

Speaker 12 (01:32:22):
Yeah, we'll probably get close to that now, up upper fifties,
low sixties. Sorry about ten degrees off. A little cooler
today Tomorrow near seventy, upper sixties for the tribe. Maybe
some rain coming in later tight tomorrow, really not going
to be a bunch into about six or seven am
tomorrow morning, and then as we get into the weekend,
gonna look a lot better. As the weekend goes on,
partly sunny after maybe just a touch of rain Saturday,

(01:32:45):
load of bit seventies, and then much better looking but
more seasonable on Sunday, upper fifties to low sixties. And
I think we're going to get some unsettled weather in
here toward Thanksgiving, so it might see a little rain
come in, so mostly Okay, all.

Speaker 1 (01:33:00):
Right, Well, have a good rest of your day and
I'll send along the recipes for you.

Speaker 12 (01:33:03):
Okay, sounds good.

Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
All right, there you go, Race Agic from the Weather
Channel back with Bloomberg. Next, Hang on, Denise, Pela Greenie,
what's going on? Denise?

Speaker 6 (01:33:11):
Yeah, Casey, We've got this September jobs report out finally
after it was delayed because of the government shutdown, and
it's a whopper. US September non farm payrolls rising one
hundred and nineteen thousand month and month. The estimate was
for fifty one, so that is more than twice as
many jobs as expected created, so, needless to say, some
positivity in the air this morning. Also chip Maker and

(01:33:33):
Ai Darling in Nvidia out with better than expected sales.
Walmart is increasing its sales outlook for the year. Stock
futures are skyrocketing, a big change from what we saw
earlier in the week. Dow futures are up four to
fifty five s and P futures up one hundred and nine,
and Nasdaq futures they are searching more than five hundred
points right now, Casey. But in a reminder that it's

(01:33:55):
not over yet, Verizon Communications cutting more than thirteen thousand
and jobs. They're starting those layoffs, shrinking the company by
as much as twenty percent, especially it's non union workforce.
We've also got some headlines coming in about what exactly
is in Netflix bid to Bimedia and Entertainment Giant Warner
Brothers Discovery. Sources tell us Netflix has told WBD it

(01:34:18):
would keep releasing the studio's films in theaters if it
wins the bidding war, and those bids are due today. Paramount,
Skuidance and Comcast are also in play here. There's a
new way of measuring your credit score. Casey in the
works fair ISAAC teaming up with the fintech plaid on
a credit score that includes your real time and cash flow.

(01:34:40):
When you think about it, this could be a big
advantage for people who maybe don't have a lot of income,
and maybe they have a lot of debt, but they're
very very good at keeping up on their payments. Maybe
they're selling some extra things on eBay, or they have
little side gig that's helping them do that. That kind
of thing not really measured that well by traditional credit scores,
but they'll be able to look at that as well.

(01:35:01):
That could be good for consumers. The NFL is apparently
secretly obsessed with supersonic flight. This is a weird one,
but the Wall Street Journal says the NFL is keeping
a very close eye on Boom Supersonic and other companies
working on planes that can break the sound barrier. The
reason is the NFL hopes it can make the league's
European expansion plans more realistic by making a flight from

(01:35:25):
New York to London, you know, under four hours, which
would be great for fans to just want to pop
in for the day or the weekend to see the game.
And here's what I really had you in mind. I
don't know if you're well, maybe your audience in mind.
I don't know if you have any pets or how
you feel about small dogs. But they're turning into big business.

(01:35:47):
Strength training in particular, little dogs is turning into big
business tiny chihuahua's, rat terriers, miniature poodles. They're competing in
these weight pulling contest. Casey Wall Street Journal says the
owners are spending big on things like classes, a lot
of protein and supplements, and even treatments that help these
little dogs develop strong gripping nails to help them pull carts.

(01:36:11):
These carts weigh thousands of pounds, and they feature this
one dog in particular. It's a rat terrier weighs under
twenty pounds. I think the dog's name is min presumably
for miniature. Her record is three thousand and five hundred
pounds pulled on this cart that rolls on rails.

Speaker 1 (01:36:30):
I gotta get a bunch of hihuahuas and start juicing them.

Speaker 6 (01:36:34):
I mean, people make a lot of money off this,
and it's a hobby too, right, And it's competitive, right,
A lot of people are, you know, I mean, and
the things are they feeding these dogs like creatine and
all this?

Speaker 1 (01:36:47):
Apparently they are whatever m h in there?

Speaker 9 (01:36:53):
All right, So I mean the.

Speaker 6 (01:36:55):
Dog's eyes and their ears must be tiny compared to
like these dogs must be so wildly buff. And can
you imagine seeing one of these on the street.

Speaker 1 (01:37:04):
A small, yappy, little chuah or rat terrier on who's
having roid rage. Looks like that must be terrifying. Hopefully
not a bulldog. Yeah, all right, Denise, thank you very much. Appreciated.
Talk to you, Tom. Yeah, yeah, hell Man, Ross you
ever shoot your chiuahas up with steroids? Oh man, sounds

(01:37:25):
like you missed the boat. All right, real quick quick
phone call here, hugs, I guess is the name? What's
going on?

Speaker 2 (01:37:34):
Thank good morning, Casey, Thanks so much for taking my call.
I just wanted to rant for a moment on sender bugs,
little nonsense talking about this whole stimulant loop, whole thing. Yeah,
the halftang this is you pointed it out. It's a
billion dollar industry that employees over three hundred thousand people.

(01:37:57):
These are his constituents, These are tax payers. Some of
these are people I know business owners in the state
of North Carolina that are about to be put out
of business. People are going to be unemployed.

Speaker 1 (01:38:08):
Look here's the thing. Because some people are mad. I
only got about thirty seconds. He said. If it is
a problem, he'd fix it, and I would encourage you
to take him up on that.

Speaker 2 (01:38:17):
I very much intend to
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