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November 11, 2025 94 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Right, I got. I got spy reports just filling up
my inbox this morning. Uh, you know, some you would expect.
Some folks who listen live up, you know, a little
ways up the mountains. I was not expecting the Bladen
County though. That was interesting. I guess if you don't

(00:20):
know where Bladen County is one, there's a monster there.
So just that's the thing or a beast. I mean,
technically they call it the beast, but I think that
qualifies as monster. Says, hey, case, we're getting snow in
southeast North Carolina, earliest I ever remember, not snow and again,
but we'll take it. Yeah. I suspect it's probably hitting

(00:41):
the ground and melting. Tell the filling weather guy he
was right. Okay, Well we'll chat with Jeff a little
later because Ray is not back till tomorrow. And that's
if his flights worked out. I didn't even uh, I
don't even know how that works.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
Few things as we get rolling this morning, Ross, I
didn't send this to you. I don't. I forgot to.
I was reading this this morning. Did you see the
Mike McDaniel, the Dolphins coach story what he did after
the game. No, I did not so. Apparently Mike McDaniel
decided to drive There's a bar in Miami that is

(01:21):
a Bills bar, and so he decided to drive by,
roll down his window and just really smile at him,
just to set him off. I don't know, I kind
of like it. I know it's against your team, but
like that's the first sign of life I've seen from
this dude this year. But still like it was one

(01:47):
win you guys, so there is that. He really surprised
the guy still has a job. But it was interesting
because I get treated to all the Bills stuff because
Ross is he has his he's all so able to
access the show account clearly. And I can't decide if

(02:07):
your fan base once the Giants coach rehired to the Bills,
I would say they're leaning yes, okay, all right, so
you think if they can get because they didn't have
to change his driver's license, so there's that, so they
if you get the Bowl back. I don't know why
I end up getting engrossed, probably because yesterday's Monday night
football game was such a snoozer. Was when I was

(02:29):
seeing all this stuff. I mean, ten to seven with
those two offenses, gross, but even my buddy who went
there just to trash talk Packers fans, who's an Eagles
dude wearing all of his gear, said he was underwhelmed.
He said they were nice to him. I'm like, well,
I mean, you are a Philly fan, so I understand

(02:49):
why that would be somewhat weird for you. After the game,
someone now he's playing off like he after the game,
someone's bearing a striking resemblance to McDaniel, pulled up beside
Elbow Room, a Bill's bar. He then trolled Bill's fans
before driving away. When asked about it, he said, that's

(03:11):
why I like the good old days, and you could
trust the internet and images because they were detailed. I
do live in that area. I mean AI, right, And
then the reporters like, well, you didn't deny it. He goes,
AI is real. That's what I got for you. So
he totally did it. But yeah, all right, I get
down with the petty in the world of football. There again,

(03:32):
I'm just surprised the dude still has a job at
this point. Let's see, all right, Boston, Paul, you did
not get a foot of snow at your house, hush,
or maybe maybe you think you did maybe you hallucinated it.
We shall see. Anyway, we'll talk about weather and a

(03:54):
bunch of other stuff coming up here here on the show.
All right, we got poorand insanity for you. Everybody loves
Portland insanity. So I didn't catch this when they had
the this was a few days ago when they had
the shareholders meeting. I mean clearly I followed the news

(04:16):
out of it, you know, elon this pay package where
the left is freaking out. They're like, oh, he's trying
to become the first trillionaire, and it's like, I mean
that's a possibility. But the only way he makes a
single penny is if he essentially quadruples the the what

(04:39):
what what Tesla's worth? Think about that, He's got to
take one of the most valuable companies in the entire
world and basically quadruple what it's worth. Then he gets paid.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
Yeah, his payment through is it yeah, through Tesla or
is it SpaceX one of the two. It's tests it
might be both, but yeah, it's just all on stock options, right,
like stock payments.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
I think that's how he takes all of his pay right, yes, yeah, yeah, yeah,
But the Tesla one you remember you had, they found
that judge in Delaware to reject the last one. Then
seventy five percent of shareholders re voted for it, then
they rejected it again. So they moved the incorporation of
of Tesla. Let's incorporated in Texas. Now, I believe, which,

(05:24):
by the way, horrible thing in Delaware because like that's
Delaware's big thing, right, We're the state where you want
to incorporate your business. Right, there's a couple of states
that really incentivized where everyone was rushing Delaware for standard
corporation and South Dakota maybe maybe don't realize this. So

(05:48):
South Dakota back in the day, they decided they wanted
to be able to attract business and they figured out
that if they changed their usery law to thirty percent intro,
all the credit card companies would set up some HQs there,
which they did, and so you know that was pretty

(06:08):
sort of big Delaware then deciding to take on Elon
because you know, Orange man bad, this is this is
how we got here. So yeah, like he's got a
I can't even imagine promising that, you know what Wall
Street's looking for five percent maybe more from Tesla, but

(06:30):
to quadruple over this period of time. That's an insane thing.
But you know, hey, that's what he's got to do.
That's the ultimate meritocracy right there. There's I'm sure there's
people listening to this show where your pay is commission only. Right,
you're in sales and and so if you want to eat,
you got to go out, and you got to you

(06:52):
got to meet certain goals. That's what he's saying. It's
just on a bigger stage. But then he mentioned something else,
and this is the part I didn't see, and I
like where he's going here, but I feel like this,
this idea could be improved. So here here's what Elon
was talking about as it pertains to the criminal justice
system and these AI robot things they want to build.

Speaker 4 (07:15):
I think we might may be able to give people,
if somebody's committed crime, a more humane form of uh
containment of future crime, which is if if you if
you said like you now get you now get a
free optimist and it's just going to fully around and
stop you from ding crime. But other than that, you
get to do anything. Just it's just gonna stop you
from committing crime. That's that's really it. Don't have to

(07:37):
put people in like prisons and stuff. It's pretty well
to think of the various of all the possibilities. But
I think it's it's it's clearly, it's clearly the future.

Speaker 1 (07:45):
All right now? Now, is that a honed idea? Probably not,
Like I don't even how would that even work? Right?
If if you're super criminal and you want to go
commit crime, what I mean, to what level is the
cyborg gonna be able to stop you? What if you
just decide, you know, what if you just you know,

(08:07):
blow the thing up and then go commit your crime.
Now you're still out So I don't know, But here's
where I might get involved with this. I don't want
one that stops you. I want one that does the
crime that you did to you. Right, so, let you know,
you hit somebody all of a sudden, robot fist in

(08:29):
your face. Okay, don't do that again. You murder somebody, Sorry,
robot's going to beat you to death. You mess with
a kid, now you will never be able to have
any of your own. And and if you're feeling rape
all right, you want to go there, go go gadget

(08:49):
uh and by the way, it's actually a giant corkscrew.
Then I'd be down with that. But I don't know
the idea of essentially a robot following you around making
sure you don't do crime actually works unless the thing
is essentially the T one thousand. So I don't know,
what do you think, ross Justice by robot companion? Are

(09:13):
you doing with that?

Speaker 3 (09:16):
I mean it kind of sounds a little like I
don't I don't know, so you know what I mean, like, no.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
What about my what? But what about if it does
the crime to you? You commit the crime, then it
does the crime to you?

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Webby, I'll I'll be fine because I I you know,
I'm not going to commit a crime obviously, I don't
think I've ever committed one in my entire life.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
You never have, so so well, I think it just
polices you. I mean, the hellscape is when it's it's
robots policing everybody. Then we then we get into uh,
you know, terminator kind of stuff there. But yeah, I
don't know. I thought that was interesting. I had not
seen that, so uh, there you go. All right, So

(10:00):
that's how we're starting the show today. Coming up, We
got all sorts of stuff to get to. What is this?
Patriots fans are obnoxious, all right, we'll just ignore those emails.
Oh look at that six seventeen. We'll take a break,

(10:22):
we'll come back. I'll give you the rundown next thing on.
There was quite the brawl yesterday. This was in California
during a Turning Point USA event. Of course Antifa had
to show up, and like it was, it beat the
crap out of some TPA USA person. They actually did

(10:44):
arrest one of the Antifa dudes, so I'm sure he's
already back out on the street.

Speaker 5 (10:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
Man, just just absolute crazy times over there. But it's
just like you know, it's not just Antifa, like you
have this this brain rot in a decent percentage of
the population there. And I don't know if you guys
saw the video, I'm gonna play a little audio from it.
You have the spotter groups, all right, These are just

(11:14):
random people who drive around all day and they follow
law enforcement, right, and so what they're looking for is
they're looking for you know, ice or border you know,
any of those folks. But as we've seen evidenced in
many instances, they'll follow around just like a standard police

(11:34):
fugitive task force, right, they want the guys that are
in the unmarked vehicles they're following them around, they're relaying information. Hey,
they're coming into this neighborhood. And then somebody posted on
a website or blows whistles. They hand it out like
ten thousand whistle packs. And if you hear the whistle
and you're an illegal immigrant, I guess you go to

(11:56):
ground whatever. And you know you can't do that, right.
I see people arguing, Oh, she's just driving around. They're
just driving around. Where they're driving around. She's driving around
for the purpose of interfering with a legal law enforcement activity.
You're gonna get an obstruction in any other sense, so
this is not any different. And so they had this

(12:18):
lady and she she was videoed by a news crew
that's literally doing a ride along with one of these
ice patrols, and she was outside of her car. She
was screaming. She also screamed at Christy Nom when she
was there, like she's a known commodity. So she's following

(12:40):
these guys around and finally they just kind of whipped
to a stop, get out of the car. She tries
to drive off. At first they block her in and
all of a sudden, she flips the woe is Me switch.
It's so fake, it's so obnoxious. And now they did
refer her for prosecution. I think they should have charged

(13:01):
her right there. She's clearly interfering, and she had been
warned before. But just listen to this. Water works it.
I'm just.

Speaker 6 (13:12):
I'm yes, you are just you turn around and get
out of here.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
Here you go, slow down.

Speaker 6 (13:19):
Hey, guys, guys, I got it.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
I got it, I got it, got it. I don't
buy it for a minute. I'm sorry, I don't ky
you look at me, Look at me, ya, look at me.
Say good you breath, big breath. Okay, I need you
right now, take a breath. I want you to pull
over right here and go home. Okay, take a the bread.

(13:44):
You may leave. Please turn around. I'm gonna find you
were willing. You were literally willing to warn people that
warned people who had an order for removal or an
arrest weren't. Keep in mind, a lot of the you know,
a lot of these folks they're going after I have
standing criminal charges, warrants, all sorts of stuff. You were

(14:06):
willing to tip them off the law enforcement was coming.
You understand why that's so dangerous, right because if you're
like I ain't going it ain't taking me not taking
me alive. You get one of those attitudes. If you
just gave somebody a heads up, you should be charged
with access rate of murder if an officer gets killed.

(14:28):
I'm sorry, that's how it works. That's not free speech.
But though I'm a mom. Oh oh, is that how
it works? If you have a kid, you can't commit
crimes anymore? Ross, would you look that up and see
if anyone who has a kid ever committed a crime.
Ross is going to check you. Yeah, let me check.
Yes's not how that works. Oh yes, okay. I thought
if you had a baby, then you're not criminally liable anymore.

(14:51):
I assume that's why people have babies, right.

Speaker 3 (14:53):
No, they having to get a November and December off.
As far as I know, that's why you have a baby.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Well, if you time it right, yes, Aco Day radio program.
So Ross, just would you win prices? Right? It's a
brand new living room, all right, Ross, get a bunch
of I'm just letting people know what's up. So you
got a bunch of furniture. It's part of your remodel.
But they're delivering at like seven am tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (15:17):
Yeah, So Marky like send me a message yesterday, like
in panic mode because the like the company had like
called her and they were like, yeah, so your delivery
window is like seven am to like ten am. And
she's like, I just spent like a buttload of money
on furniture. Can you just extend it from like, you know,
anytime like ten fifteen to many right.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
Yeah. They're like no, no, no, we can't change it.
I freaking hate this so much. Do you know I
canceled an order for one time because they played this game? Yes,
so we were that close.

Speaker 3 (15:45):
So she she's like texting me all this stuff, and
she's on the phone with them and she's like, you know,
they say that it's impossible to move the window, and
she's like, well, can we do a different day. We
can do Thursday, we can do any day, you know, Thursday.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
Any day. You're like no, no, no, And this wasn't one
This isn't one piece of furniture. You ordered a buttload
from it.

Speaker 3 (16:03):
Yeah, So they're like no, They're like, you know, it
has to be this day. You can't move the day,
and we need it by a certain time because we
have family coming in for the birth of the baby,
right right, Like they're gonna be here for like a
you know, Thanksgiving and stuff. And she's like, I'm just
gonna cancel the order. I'm just gonna can't. And it's like,
you know, it's a lot of money. Yeah, And I'm like,
hold on, just give me a second. So I contacted

(16:26):
Jade and then Trevor and then she's gonna be filling
in tomorrow because I have to be home for the
order because Marky has to go to work. Lincoln says,
she's she leaves to drop Lincoln off at school like
seven o'clock, Like that's what they leave. So yeah, tomorrow,
waiting for all the furniture to come in and directing
that traffic into the end of the house. Yeah, you
have you unfortunately you have you have this scheduling thing

(16:48):
you gotta meet. But I won't say which, but one
of the one of the furniture stores up on Glenwood,
which there's a gazillion of them, I ordered a couch,
like an l stay couch, a like a big TV
stand drawer thing.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
My desk. I it was not cheap, and they sat
there and they they started to play games. After I
literally bought the furniture and they tried to like, oh, well,
there's also going to be this other delivery charge, but
they were running a promotion that if you spend a
certain amount of money there was no delivery charge, and
I canceled it.

Speaker 3 (17:27):
Weird this close to doing it, and the guy threatened me. Yeah,
but it was such a pain in the ass shopping
for it all. Can't I'm not going to cancel that
and then what it's going to be another like two
weeks before everything comes in.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
It's like, no, no, I know you're yeah, I didn't.
I didn't have that time was on my side. So
it's just annoying. But it's like it's it's just you know,
you you spend thousands of dollars in a lot of
instances with these furniture stores and then and and by
the way, then I bought it from another one and
they were super great to deal with, so I don't
I don't want to imply that it's all of them.
And actually, uh I found a much cooler desk, so

(18:00):
it was good. But yeah, it's just like the audacity, man.

Speaker 3 (18:04):
But it's super strange because like you know, like the
schedule is literally I will be home from like ten
to fifteen to like, you know, three in the morning,
four in the morning, right right, anytime then would be fine.
I will get up at midnight and I'll meet you
at the door and I'll help you, you know, bring
everything in. It won't be an issue. And they're like, nope,
that's the window that but and then you know it's

(18:26):
gonna happen. You know what's gonna happen, right, I'm just
I was literally just gonna throw out bad things. But
I don't want to be that guy. Now what's going
to happen is we did all this, They're gonna show
up at eleven, They're going to show up at like noon.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Yeah, I was gonna say that at least it'll be
done though, Right, Well, you didn't order from Wayfair, did you? No? No? Okay,
because you know, yeah, like a super expensive cabinet. It
was like twenty thousand dollars, show up with a station
wagon with four kids. What is this? Is that my dresser,

(18:59):
by the way, way Ross is being humbled. I'm looking
at this packing sheet here, golden crusted throne, brazen bull.
What do you need a brazen bull for? Are you
torturing people like medieval cos? Good for barbecue. Okay, Oh
you're getting into that. Oh that's it. You're pulling the
ultimate Dad trigger, aren't you.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
Yeah, you're like, you know, I didn't want to get
like too elaborate or expensive because I need to get
that like, you know, the tariff stimmy, and I don't
want to just go off by myself, you know, So
I'm just staying humble.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
I see it's a very small throne. There's jeweling crusted though,
right right, right, yeah, but the jewels are all the
way around this is the top right yeah, where the
so it makes an angelic circle over your head.

Speaker 3 (19:47):
While you said, I didn't want the jewels to be
where you rest your arms because a could you could
get wound, be.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
Uncomfortable, and smudges, right, smudges, got to keep those clean.
So all right, well, I'm sure to be very tasteful
whatever it is. So so but that's good because like
Jade's going to be filling in for you when you're
on your super Dad leave and so this will be
good because you know, the first time you run the
board by yourself with no assistance, a little nerve racking, man,

(20:17):
a little nerve wracking. The first time you're doing anything,
so you know, you come in and then if anything
needs she needs a you know, info or correct it
on anything. We got that window before you take the
rest of the year off, which I'm very jealous of.
All right, so it's ross taking the full twelve weeks.

(20:41):
It's not just Boston, Paul, you don't twelve. No, this
company gives me two Boston's on fifty two weeks vacation
right now.

Speaker 3 (20:51):
Now, I'm using four weeks of vacation in the two
weeks of paternity leave I'm given. Yeah, so I've been
saving up my vacation a year before this.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
Yes, yeah, this is it's all planned, so that's what's up.
But yeah, I don't need a fifty two week vacation
or making fun. Don't need it. All right back to
Portland real quick. So I said it was cringe. Also this, Oh,
I'm just a mom. I'm just a mom who deposits

(21:20):
your kid at school and then drives around, harassing law
enforcement and perhaps puts them in more dangerous situations because
of your activism. But you're just a mom. Don't care,
don't care, And shame on the the agent there for
not arresting her. On them, that's how you deter that.
And I've seen video after like these cats are falling around.

(21:42):
They had a dude. They had a dude who was
who got out of his car with a hammer and
then was throwing rocks at cops, screaming everything, and he
had a friggin baby in the car, and of course
they arrest him, and it's one of those stories they're like, oh,
they violent arrest of a father who's got it just

(22:03):
with the baby. The dude was throwing rocks and threatening
law enforcement with a hammer. They didn't do anything to
the baby. And i'saw another video where this morbidly obese
Mexican lady is She's like, they're obstructing officers. Officers, they
put oc spray out and some of it wafted it

(22:24):
into her car because she's on the periphery of this
thing and she's in her car too, so law enforcements like,
are you gonna try to ram us? What the hell's
going on? And all of a sudden, then she made
a TikTok video of her with holding a little baby
that she had had in a car seat in the
car that she's using the harass officers as part of

(22:47):
you know this this damn near riot, and then she's
dabbing the baby. And now I don't know if the
baby did catch a whiff of that. I hope that
it didn't, but I also she's she's so far off
to the edge. I don't know if officers, when they
did this, this this deployment, which wasn't even directed really
at her, you had any idea there was a baby

(23:07):
in there. And what the hell are you doing bringing
a baby to a riot? That's rule number one of riots.
Don't bring your baby. I just can't take it. And
then listening listening to them organized ahead of their protests, dude,
just listen to these weirdos.

Speaker 6 (23:25):
I want to hear parking. I want to hear screaming
and howling. I want to hear horse noises.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
I want to hear moaning.

Speaker 7 (23:33):
Way on.

Speaker 4 (23:37):
What?

Speaker 2 (23:39):
Who?

Speaker 1 (23:40):
Who's organized? Whose battle cry is? Whatever the hell that was?
Maybe at a furry orgy? Was that William Wallace? It
sounded just like you know it did. That's a good play.
I honestly, I can't tell if he's trying to organize
a furry orgy or a protest.

Speaker 3 (23:56):
I felt bad, so you sent the link yesterday and
I put it in prep. You know, I'm putting the
repack it together. Yeah, and uh you know, I had
the volume off so just watching it, and I thought
it was those weird horse people like I labeled it
Portland horse weirdos in the prep packet, and then this
morning I realized most of them were dressed up as dogs.
I see, I want to apologize for by that was

(24:16):
that's my back.

Speaker 5 (24:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
So the system it says dog weirdos. I appreciate horse weirdos.
They're dog weirdos. So all right, here's the here's the
full cut of said weirdos.

Speaker 6 (24:26):
I want to hear parking. I want to hear screaming
and howling. I want to hear horse No, I want
to hear moaning.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
Way wait wait wait, well.

Speaker 3 (24:40):
What so there are some horse weirdos there. So there's yes,
horse weirdos.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
No, no, no, no no, there's dog weirdos, horse weirdos and wolf
weird wow. Yeah yeah yeah, it's the trifective weirdos and
then whatever screaming and moaning is. Yeah yeah yeah, that's
why when I tweeted this out yesterday, I just I
just did the emojis for everything that he asked for
as the as as it goes, So listen, here we go.
I want to hear barking, okay, dog weirdos, right.

Speaker 6 (25:08):
Yeah, I want to hear screaming and how.

Speaker 1 (25:10):
Uh screaming and howling. He's gonna say so howling would
be wolf weirdos.

Speaker 6 (25:15):
I want to hear horse noises.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
Horse weirdos, and then I wanna hear monig cornstar weird something.

Speaker 3 (25:23):
I don't hear a lot of nag. I hear the awooing,
I hear the barking. I don't hear a lot of
like horse noises. So they need?

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Is there no winning? I don't they need? They need
their game? All right, Well, hold on, let's listen very
close for the worst weirdo noises. I'm gonna play the
full cut because it's thirty seconds, and we'll see if
we can pick out any horse noises.

Speaker 6 (25:43):
I want to hear parking. I want to hear screaming
and howling. I want to hear horse noises.

Speaker 1 (25:49):
I want to hear monig Way are generals nor no eyes?
Yeah no, no horses, no snorting, no name, no nickering.

(26:19):
Yeah you know what the horse guy's fort to show up.

Speaker 3 (26:23):
That's embarrassing about to say, if that's your thing, like
you need to come back strong next time. Yeah, yeah,
I want to see the memo before that meeting, Like
it was a memo sent out like saying what to wear,
what to bring?

Speaker 1 (26:35):
Like what kind of I think? What I actually it?
Probably here's the deal because if you want to be
the horse people, it takes two, right, if you want
to be in the horse costume. What if somebody was
so excited, like the horse horse protesting is their thing,
and then their horse partner didn't show up and now
they can't even do their thing. Wouldn't that be sad?

(26:57):
It would be were you gonna say.

Speaker 3 (27:01):
It's got like a like a imagining like the two
you know, combining to be or it's got like a
human centipede type vibe to it.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (27:10):
Yeah, Like I don't want to be the end like,
oh no, you're gonna eat the what was it monkfish
or the cuttlefish? Cuttlefish?

Speaker 8 (27:18):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (27:19):
What are you gonna have cuttlefish? I would tish, all right,
horse people, step your game up, absolutely embarrassing. We'll be
right back. I noticed that Kuck Schumer was trending, and
that's not Republicans making that trend. They are mad, mad,

(27:41):
mad mad, And so if you are absolute fringe lunatic leftists,
this is what you feasted upon. And actually I reposted
a little montage uh yesterday on the Twitter. It's it's
got music and exploictives. I didn't have Ross dubbed in
because it's it's not well done. But uh, it was
a collective of like Harry Sisson and like all the

(28:05):
all the correct people are absolutely despondent. So some would
argue it's a feel good video, except maybe the people
in Portland.

Speaker 6 (28:13):
I want to hear parking. I want to hear screaming
and howling. I want to hear horse noises.

Speaker 1 (28:19):
I want to hear monig can you can you imagine
if like this was a MAGA rally, right, there's some
guy up there, He's like, I want to hear bald eagle.
I don't want to hear I don't know, yeah, big
something else. Uh Yeah.

Speaker 3 (28:36):
Then they'd have the analysis on MSNBC and it would
be like somebody up there and they're like, actually, eagles
don't make that noise.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
They'd be leading with it for sure. Whatever it was,
these lunatics dressed is uh all these animals making it different.
You just can't always Yeah, sorry, go ahead, No, I
can't imagine.

Speaker 3 (28:55):
Like, you know, you put on your dog mask and
you look at yourself in the mirror and you're like,
I'm the resistance, right, Like I'm making a different Like
it's so dumb.

Speaker 1 (29:02):
Well, you know the you know, the the hit squad
that murdered the Romanovs all dressed as furries. That is true. Yeah,
a lot of people don't realize that. No, No, every
time I see you know where they there's some video
from out front of that ice facility in Portland with
all these lunatics, I just imagine that somewhere in America
probably will to say des Moines or something. Right, are

(29:23):
are some parents who are not even probably political at all,
let alone right wing left wing, and every day if
they dare to turn on the Internet or news, they
see their their prodigy dressed as a furry taken oc
spray to the face right while he while he yells

(29:45):
Jewish insults, right, and then that's that's your kid, that's
your boy.

Speaker 3 (29:49):
Or you're in the dinosaur inflatable and they're having like
pepper spray go through the back or whatever it was
right the little bear hole, and as a parent, you
would still love your kid, but you would probably be
praying that it was just a fa like please make
it just be a phase.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
Please. I think I think you text your kid, you'd
be like, can you can you mask more efficiently so
they don't see it's you they're asking about it down
at the supper club, or could go the other way.

Speaker 3 (30:10):
Remember during the blm rallies during the Summer of Love
in twenty twenty where you had that one mom show
up and she recognized her son, Yeah, Baltimore, he was
looting or something, yeah, yeah, And she went up there
and she's on video and she like pulls off his
mask and like takes him by the ear, like drags
him home, Like how dare you?

Speaker 1 (30:28):
I raised you better than this. He's like seventeen and
he just cows immediately. So you just have like a parent.

Speaker 3 (30:33):
When of these Antifa horse dinosaur weirdos, it's like showing
up and like you know, with like a pin and
popping the inflatable dino and bringing them home.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
You know, I come home. You want to know what
I think. I think that there are violent enough people
in there. They would assault the parent. Yeah, I believe that.

Speaker 3 (30:51):
Or you could have parents that, you know, maybe they're
the reason that their kids are so radical because they're
sort of like that.

Speaker 1 (30:57):
Right, Yeah, or grandparents for that matter. Judging by some
of the He's anti Trump.

Speaker 3 (31:01):
Rallies, Well yeah, I was about to say, you had
that one guy who tried to, you know, shoot Trump
on the golf course and turned out like the guy.

Speaker 1 (31:06):
From North Carolina. Yeah, Ruth, yeah, you like him and
his son are both lunatics and into the kittie porn. Apparently,
I am shocked, all right. Yeah, So like dude, and
and and it ran the gamut. It wasn't just Portland.
It wasn't just on MSNBC and CNN where they're having meltdowns.

(31:27):
The Nazi dude up in Maine. I'm gonna play some
audio from him to kick off the next segment. He's
beside himself. And there's a very interesting thing happening too
in some of the other races, Like now you have
candidates who saw mondamie Win who are running on the

(31:47):
platform that he's not radical enough. You elect me. Somebody's
sent me a link of the city council woman who
was elected the one who murdered a tourist. Yeah, we
covered that story here, I think last week. Yeah, it
would have been last week. Yeah, that's crazy. But the
guy who's running for Senate up there, he's got like

(32:08):
a thirty point lead. He crazy too. Here he is
reacting yesterday to the government reopening, or the potential thereof,
and his seething hatred I guess of Chuck Schumer.

Speaker 5 (32:22):
Good morning everyone, Graham here.

Speaker 1 (32:24):
Oh this is Nazi tattoo guy, just in case you
didn't pick up on them.

Speaker 5 (32:27):
Good morning everyone, grand here. Well it's not really good
morning at all. It's gray, rainy, and dreary. But more importantly,
it is a bleak morning for millions of American families
because last night some Senate Democrats caved. They cave, and
they voted with Republicans, and now up to twenty million
Americans are going to watch their healthcare premiums double triple

(32:51):
and in some cases quadruple.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
But at least now we are on a path.

Speaker 5 (32:55):
To watch fifteen million Americans possibly lose access to healthcare.
And it's in the first place. Yeah, this happened because
Chuck Schumer failed in his job yet again. Because they
do not understand that when we fight, we win. When
we hold the line for working families, for working people,

(33:17):
we win. But they don't get this.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Because the work makes you free? Is that what you is?
That what you meant?

Speaker 5 (33:23):
They see all of this as a game. These are
just numbers on a sheet of paper, not people's lives.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
But I can tell you, like a list, a list
of people, kind of an important.

Speaker 5 (33:33):
List down here in eastern Maine. A doubling of healthcare
premiums destroys families. That's not an exaggeration, that's not hyperbole.
That is real, and it is going to happen.

Speaker 8 (33:47):
Now.

Speaker 5 (33:49):
We need to elect leaders that want to fight. We
need to elect leaders that care about people, that care
about the actual outcomes of policies. That is why I
am asking all of you call in today, Call your senators,
Call your congress people, call your senators, and tell them

(34:10):
that Chuck Schumer can no longer be leaders.

Speaker 1 (34:14):
Oh okay, all right, all right. So it's very bleak,
very onerous, you know, but not keeping promises like your
favorite of what was it, a Volkswagen in every driveway
or whatever. Yeah, you know, here's the thing. This guy
still is a thirty point lead right now. Ross asked me,
I just want to be clear, would you ask if
he won his election?

Speaker 5 (34:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (34:34):
I didn't know what he was running or what he's
running for. Just you know he's like a Nazi. Yeah, yeah,
you know he's running for US Senate. So he hasn't
even hit his primary. I'm assuming it's probably April.

Speaker 3 (34:43):
But it's so so bleak, it is so bleak grain.
This is how the people people are gonna be able
to eat now because there's Snap benefits were put back
in the age bleak. We need to put him in
a happy fun Tom camp somewhere off the coast.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
Of Bunger, Maine.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
What they're they're so incoherent. Their messages is all over
the place, like I don't even know what they're for anymore,
and say, oh, well, you know you can't. What do
they want the Snap benefits? Do they not want the
Snap benefits? And they're talking the AC. I'm sorry, my
premium is already doubled and I lost my doctor when
we had the ACA was put into place, so boo
freaking hoop mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (35:25):
It's the the meme I saw yesterday. The best encapsulates
it is the uh we want the government open. And
then the next face is the screamy face. No, not
like this, right, Yeah, they're all over the place. It's
like pick pick a lane here, and clearly eight senators
at picked their lane, Democrat senators, I should say, at
pick their lane, all right? Seven? Wait? Seven? And then

(35:48):
one independent? Right because king is independent, I think. But
still you get the gist of it. So yeah, now
they got out crazy. And and here's what's crazy. So
this guy, if you're the front runner by that many points,
basically you're only job is just to not shoot yourself
in the foot. And I saw somebody literally saying this
about him, and I'm like, what could he possibly do? Right?

(36:14):
Hugged Trump? I think that would be it. Right if
he hugged Trump.

Speaker 3 (36:18):
Like he wakes up and you know, he wasn't a
drunken stupor and once again went into one of those
way where was it Turkey or something like, went into
you know, a tattoo parlor, comes out and he's just
got like a croatia croatia. He he wakes up with
like his face and he had Hitler's face tattooed on
his face.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
You know, I think I think he'd be like, oh, no,
I thought that was you know, and then insured whoever
it was? No, no, no, it was Charlie Chaplin. I
think if he got a Maga tattoo, it would be
the only way he could see on this. Yeah, yeah,
it would be it. Then they would disavow him. Can
you believe what he did? This Nazi scum? Oh, super
Nazi stuff.

Speaker 3 (36:54):
What about the Hitler tattoo? No, it's Charlie Chaplin. Yeah, well,
you know, like the gold Rush, Come on, it's a
classic film.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
I was a drunk breen. I didn't know what I
was doing. I know quite a few Marines and none
of them accidentally got Nazi tattoos. I don't know. Maybe
maybe maybe that is. I'm sure it's a thing that's
happened before.

Speaker 8 (37:14):
But like.

Speaker 1 (37:17):
People are weighing your policies with your with your tattoos.

Speaker 3 (37:20):
There's it's just one of these things where when you
start looking at the policy of what they're saying they're
trying to do, it makes absolutely no sense. Like I said,
they're all over the place, like even the it's called
the Affordable Care Act, and as we've known here forever,
it's not affordable and it made most people. You know,
like I said, we lost our doctor and we had
to double our premiums doubled and it went through the roof.
It's just completely awful. So it's called the Affordable Care Act.

(37:43):
It's not affordable. It can only survive off you know,
taxpayer subsidies. And it's just like just stop it, just
stop it with the mixed messaging and like nothing. Everything
you say is wrong and doesn't work, so shut up.

Speaker 1 (37:54):
One of his I don't know if it's his campaign
manager or just one of the one of his. Uh,
one of the people is part of his campaign.

Speaker 2 (38:02):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
They made it was a woman. She made the comment,
uh something something along the lines. Isn't it a shame
that the US won the Cold War?

Speaker 2 (38:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (38:13):
No, I've been seeing that more and more.

Speaker 8 (38:14):
But what.

Speaker 1 (38:16):
Isn't it a shame? You realize that not only do
we win the Cold War, the other form of government
literally collapsed. It literally collapsed. So like you have two
indicators that maybe Russia wasn't the USSR wasn't the powerhouse.

Speaker 3 (38:35):
There, but they will tell you that it collapse because
of the evils of capitalism.

Speaker 1 (38:40):
Yes, yes, or the we tricked them, we tricked them
into overspending on space is my favorite theory. Right, we
made it. We never we never did all this stuff,
but they thought they that we did. So they've used
all their money to try to also go to the
moon and then we broke the system.

Speaker 3 (38:56):
Oh is so is part of their theory or conspiracy
as to why the Soviet Union collapsed because we faked
the moon landing?

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Oh dude, you don't know. I had no idea I
heard that.

Speaker 8 (39:05):
No.

Speaker 1 (39:05):
No, let me tell you something in Russia. In Russia
coming out of most Russians believe, following the disillusion of
the USSR, the vast majority of Russians believed we never
went to the moon because that's how Russia propaganda ised
their people. They basically said that US was making all
this stuff up. So you still have these people running

(39:27):
the same playbook then one hundred percent. Yeah, yeah, there's
still a lot of people in Russia. I remember seeing
polling not that long ago where a lot of people
in Russia still think the US never never did any
I never went to the moon at least. Yeah, yeah,
one hundred percent. And these guys are like, well, there's
some valuable lessons that can be learned here, I'm like, no,
there's not right. As soon as you've decided that there's

(39:48):
some there's some harvestable fruit from Nazi Germany or a
communist Russia, like that is terrifying. There's only one thing.
There's only one thing that you can learn from, uh
from Hitler? All right? You ready don't get married. That's it.
That's your only thing. Ross You know why?

Speaker 5 (40:09):
That is right?

Speaker 1 (40:11):
One of the most evil, diabolical, heartless, soulless people on
the planet got married, and you know what he did
the next day, blew his brains out. That's it. There
you go. You can you can harvest in comedic fashion.
As soon as you start putting it into real policies,

(40:33):
you're absolutely insane. You think that guy's insane. Let me
go to California. This is a guy running for governor.
His name's Butch where and it's this is weird audio
because there's a little snippet of a woman with toy
is it toilet paper wrapped around her fire? What the
hell is on her face? I don't know. It looks
like like a makeshift burka, that's what. Actually, it doesn't
look like a real burka. It looks like looks like
a mummy wrap of some sort. And she says, where,

(40:57):
hold on, let me get the quote here? Correct?

Speaker 5 (41:00):
Where?

Speaker 1 (41:01):
Where? Who is our mom? Danni? All right, there's a
California protester who's going to be our mom, Donnie's that's
what she wants to know. And then that apparently motivated
this dude. H there's Butcher where to decide? He's going
to throw his hat in the ring for California governor?
And he here he is, explaining all the fun things

(41:22):
he wants to do.

Speaker 5 (41:23):
La, who is our.

Speaker 3 (41:25):
Mom, Donnie?

Speaker 1 (41:26):
Where are you? Where are you at?

Speaker 5 (41:29):
La?

Speaker 1 (41:30):
Where's our mom?

Speaker 2 (41:31):
Don outside? The name is Butch?

Speaker 7 (41:34):
Where very Muslim, very anti capitalist and unlike Zora. And
I will never say that Israel has a right to exist.

Speaker 1 (41:42):
Hasn't even been sworn in yet? Have They're already thrown
him to the cur Oh he's not radical enough? All right,
tell me more, sir.

Speaker 7 (41:49):
I will never demonize Venezuela as part of a propaganda
campaign to launch US empire.

Speaker 1 (41:55):
If you talk to somebody for Venezuela, should you should talk?
You should talk to somebody who's clearly not in Venezuela anymore,
because yeah, you should. You should chat with them.

Speaker 7 (42:07):
We'll never apologize to the NYPD or the LAPD for
calling American policing racist. I will never compromise even so
much as an inch on Zionism. You will never hear
me demonizing the resistance. I will never discourage the use
of the term globalized into fada.

Speaker 1 (42:26):
Good.

Speaker 7 (42:27):
So, yeah, let's make this happen which way for good
dot Com?

Speaker 1 (42:30):
I hope this guy wins? Is it ros? Is there
a small party who's like, maybe they should elect him?
Kind of like yeah, you're like, you're gonna get what
you deserve, and they sit back and watch it. But
the problem is, like, you know, everything is connected, so
in some way it's gonna affect us as well. But
when they say, I'm very confused when they say, ma'am
down here, they talking about Zoltarmanicati, the guy in New York.

(42:50):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yes, yes, yes, okay, yeah, so they
are talking about Zohan Salami. That guy. By the way,
you guys don't realize this ross spent several minutes of
his valuable weekend time just texting me fake uh man Domino.

Speaker 3 (43:04):
I'm just trying to clarify we're talking about, ma'am. It
Zimboni that guy. Yeah, okay, he's big with the hockey community. Yeah,
so yeah, I mean, listen to what this dude's promising.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
Old ever, Israel shouldn't exist, screws Ionism, globialize the Entifada,
f police, dude. I hope he wins. Although then you
run into the same thing with New York because there'll
be a bunch of people going, I'm out of here,
and then uh you know, then our housing prices go
up or whatever it is. So yeah, now there's that

(43:39):
this is what now that he's in in New York.
The floodgates are open, man, because people are going they're
gonna want this version of it, and they want it
now because he hasn't had a chance to fail spectacularly
up in New York, although I did see the governor
of New York said that the free bustling isn't happening.
And you're talking about Zartan Miata, right, that guy Masda Miyada.

(44:01):
Yeah yeah, yeah yeah. Also, uh, you know fun little
car that I really don't fit in, so anyway, so yeah,
this is everyone wants their own and people will step forward.
There's all sorts of crazy, uh, Ithaca, New York. How
far is Ithaca from where you grew up? Ross? A
few hours? An hour and a half something like that.
They just they just elected a communist city council member

(44:23):
who ran on the Communist Party, not Democrats, Socialists in
America ran as a Communist in Ithaca. I'm assuming, and
she's like twenty. I think she's a student. What is
it Cornell that's up there?

Speaker 8 (44:36):
Right?

Speaker 1 (44:39):
Good lord man? What are we doing? Seven nineteen? Hang on?
So yeah, So to my larger point, even though the
senate dude up in Maine, I'm gonna call him Nazi Baine.
What do you think of that? Ross? Because that voice
can't be his real voice?

Speaker 5 (44:54):
Right, good morning?

Speaker 3 (44:56):
Everyone is so bleak, bleak, bleak and dark, and so
he's almost he's like this close to sounding like Alex Jones,
like he's like.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
Morning everyone, ten years away. Tell me about the frogs.

Speaker 5 (45:09):
Good morning everyone, grind here, it's not really.

Speaker 1 (45:12):
Oh, good lord, okay, all right, yes, we got him,
and then we got lunatic in California and more coming.
Plus you got a wholescale civil war bruin within the
Democrat parties. So it will be interesting to watch, all right,
a few other things. You know about once a year

(45:34):
somebody puts these this list out and it never really
changes that much, although I was a little surprised. And
basically what they do is they take all of the
compromised accounts that you know, end up being found as
part of you know, law enforcement action or companies issuing uh,

(45:57):
you know, we were hacked. Alerts change your pats. So
they get a hold of these accounts and they can
see the passwords, and what they're trying to determine is
what passwords are the most compromised passwords in the world,
And for the most part, it's the ones that you expect. One, two, three, four,
five six is number one, and it's usually number one.

(46:18):
Password is up there too, other variations of numbers, you know, one,
two three four one, two three four five, the word
admin however, oh and we just had the one the
other day with they figured out that the security system
at the LOUVER the password was louve right. People make
bad decisions. However, there is one I have never seen

(46:42):
before that is on the list this year, and it's
actually two it's two variations of the same thing. It's
the word India or if you're required to have numbers
and a character. India at one, two three is in
the top fifty most used passwords in the world. I

(47:03):
don't think I'm surprised by that. This guy's named rich Tidwell.
He's pastor of Ormond Church, which is a Nondnam Protestant
church in Missouri, and he had a little surprise for
everybody on Sunday. I want to let him know he is.
He's uh getting married again. No, he's not divorced. He's

(47:29):
literally married. He's he's decided that he's taking a second wife.
And I think she's preggers too. Yes, she is pregnant
with his eighth child. He says he was reviewing the
Bible and he's pretty sure that it's biblically Okay, So
there you go. Rich Tidwell figured out something. But like

(47:49):
if you're if you're sitting in that congregation, but you leave, right,
you just you just kind of like, all right, I
guess I'm gonna go find another church, right, go walk
on out of there. Let's see. He cites the story
of David Joosh. I don't know a few other things too.
So Ross you're reading the Bible, Uh, it's it says,

(48:15):
take all the wives, right, because that's what this guy
says is clearly I don't know.

Speaker 3 (48:20):
Like I said, there's a you know, the first part
where I'm in there, I know the Old Testament, right,
I'm in Ezekiel now. And today is super exciting, by
the way, Oh, what's going on because I've been waiting.
Today I get to read Ezekiel twenty five. Okay, Ezekiel
twenty five seventeen.

Speaker 1 (48:39):
You're just to use this a pulp fiction. Yeah, I
can't wait. I can't I've been waiting. Yes, so I
got there, but anyway now, but anything to look for me.

Speaker 3 (48:47):
Yeah, it was super excited. But like you know, there's
also like I haven't gotten there yet. But there's a
second part of the like the New Testament, right. Oh,
like I've heard about this, like like DLC. Yeah, right,
but I guess there's a part of it called Timothy
or something. There's Timothy where it talks about, you know,
if you're gonna be like a priest or and elder

(49:09):
in the church, you have to hold yourself to higher standards.
And it specifically says one wife, Oh is he not?

Speaker 1 (49:17):
So it's he said, he said, I don't know. I
mean I haven't gotten there yet. You go with tim
or I don't feel qualified to speak on it. I'm
just saying I see. I think that also, if I
remember correctly, you also have to supposed to be like
hospitable and respectable and something yes, right right, and judging
by our target conversation, I don't know how hospitable I am,
so that would be a struggle for me.

Speaker 3 (49:37):
But yeah, but that's there's like an old covenant and
then there's like a new covenant. Yeah, I believe I
said I'm not qualified to speak on it, so I
haven't gotten there yet.

Speaker 1 (49:48):
Okay, you're just you're just gonna channel uh learning energy. Yeah,
oh I can't wait.

Speaker 3 (49:54):
Now when you read that, do you have to read
it out loud while yelling at That's how I've been
reading the entire book. Oh wow, what is the family?
He's been scaring my family? Oh well, some scary stuff
that that book is pretty ah man, is it?

Speaker 1 (50:07):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (50:08):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (50:08):
Okay, all right, well let me know how that goes.
Dad is mad, Yeah, but it's not me, I'm saying
the book.

Speaker 5 (50:17):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (50:17):
Oh yeah, yeah, the book. Yeah, he's a little angry. Yeah,
he's got some thoughts he does, yeah all right, oh yeah,
I think you just got to walk out. But man,
I like some of the stuff, like the guys who
kill me or these megachurch guys with the like we oh,
we need another jack because we have to land right,
people are like, yeah, I'm gonna stay in this church.

Speaker 8 (50:39):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
There was there was a video that I reposted I
don't know a few weeks ago where some pastors like
people are coming up to give their tithe and like
he wanted two grand and this woman only gave twelve hundred,
and he just excoriated her in front of the in
front of the entire congregation. Dude, you saw them.

Speaker 3 (50:58):
You just see that clip and I have it, but
it sounds disgusting and once again amateur new guy here. Yeah,
that sort of you know, rubs me the wrong way.
There doesn't seem like the way to go about that.

Speaker 5 (51:08):
You know what.

Speaker 1 (51:08):
I'm gonna find it. It was so over the top.
Find it and we can, we can play it. I'll
find it during the next commercial break. I'm just like,
why doesn't I just keep thinking, so, why does the
entire congregation walk out? Get out of there?

Speaker 5 (51:23):
Dude?

Speaker 1 (51:23):
There was there was a guy who Uh there was
a guy who came in and uh started a church.

Speaker 4 (51:29):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (51:30):
It was some sort of Christian try. I can't remember specifically.
The denomination might have been non denomined. No, I think
it was four square. I think it was a four
square anyway. Uh in Sheridan, Wyoming. This is the funniest story.
And the guy was vegan and he would incorporate vegan
messaging into his preaching and uh, let's nobody would like.
He got run out of Branch Country essentially. I mean

(51:53):
they didn't physically run him out, but like he's like,
it's like, dude, you you moved. And he was from
like California something, and he's and he's like, I'm gonna
go to I'm gonna go to where they raise all
the beef cattle and preach gospel veganism. And as church failed,
I am shocked. I'm absolutely shocked that that didn't work

(52:18):
out for you. So here you are in a non
denominational church, You've got your mistress pregnant, and you're like,
all right, loophole a second life, and everyone just sits there.
Absolutely bonkers to me. Okay, here's the other thing, speaking
of you know, flyover country, we'll use that term. How

(52:41):
on how on earth? And I hate this because I
actually enjoy this guy's work, But how on earth are
you not aware of the perceived I think it's more
than perceived. I think there's plenty of evidence, but the
idea that much of the country is despised by coastal elites,

(53:06):
and people who live in those parts of the country
are very much aware of what you think of them, right,
the sneering, the snotty New York attitude, or the California attitude,
you know, like, oh, you know, flyover country or these
you know, these what was Obama's line people cut clutching
their guns and bibles or whatever. Right, that attitude permeates

(53:29):
and I hate it, and I know you hate it
as well and have been subjected. Even though technically North
Carolina is a you know, an east coast state, there
are a lot of people that don't live near the
coast who who definitely get that vibe when they hear
people who, you know, these coastal elites talk about them,
and it's disturbing and it's not winning any friends. And

(53:51):
it's frankly, very very ignorant. For a guy who is
supposed to be one of the best quote unquote researchers
and documentarians in the world, and that's ken Burns. How
many ken Burns documentaries have you watched? Ross? What would
you've seen? The Civil War? World War War?

Speaker 3 (54:07):
There's a Baseball one, though Baseball one's amazing, there's one
in the American Buffalo.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
The I mean, ken Burns does really and I you know,
and I don't think he's juicing the message and a
lot of them. I think his Civil War documentary is
probably one of the best documentaries ever made or series.
I should say, like I can hear the music in
my head right now from that documentary. I've watched it
multiple times. The whole series very well done. And so

(54:37):
for ken Burns to then go on I guess as
a podcast or an interview or whatever it is, and
say this is really disappointing and again very striking for
somebody who claims to have a deep understanding of this nation,
because it's what he does. It's a big deal. They
killed the talking about they're talking about funding for PBS.

(55:00):
Big deal.

Speaker 8 (55:00):
They killed the the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Incredibly short sighted.

Speaker 2 (55:04):
It'll hurt mostly rural communities.

Speaker 8 (55:06):
Maybe that's there an engine.

Speaker 1 (55:07):
There'll be news deserts.

Speaker 2 (55:09):
Nobody will be covering the school board or the city
council meeting. They'll miss not only the children's and prime
time programming, but they'll miss you know, home land security stuff,
continuing education, classrooms, of the air warning stuff that comes
from the PBS signal.

Speaker 8 (55:26):
We've been hit, but we'll recover. I'm worried about somebody
who's coming up right now that has a lot of talent.
It's not going to get a grant to do that.
The American experience has been put consciously on hiatus for
a while. It will be revitalized. It's got an incredible
back catalog that can help remind us about what it is.
It's not all doom and gloom. PBS has not been cut.

(55:47):
It will take a hit. It's had to lay off
lots of people at the national level as a kind
of protective measure to try to get leaner as we
face these things.

Speaker 1 (55:59):
Okay, all right, so you know, and by the way,
he also says the two different things. It's horrendous the cuts,
but the cuts are really a small percentage, so it
won't harm anything. Pick one. But the thing I take
issue with is the news deserts, because that's the idea
that without PBS, everyone's just sitting around in these rural
communities with you know, they don't know what's going on.

(56:23):
You what are you talking about?

Speaker 2 (56:25):
Now?

Speaker 1 (56:25):
Admittedly, when I was a kid, I never watched Wyoming's PBS.
I have watched quite a few of the documentaries now
that I'm older, because you know, I like to learn,
try to learn things maybe I didn't know about where
I grew up, but ultimately you realize there's other news sources, right, Like,

(56:46):
that's the thing. So the idea that a bunch of
dumb hicks are sitting in the sticks and if you
and your buddies from the your coastal elite cities don't
pipe in historical lessons, they're not aware of them. One
of the one of my favorite follows on Twitter is
David Burge Iowa Hawk Blog, and he's really funny. He wrote,

(57:06):
I grew up in a small rural community and I
distinctly remember back in seventy three how shocked all the
grownups were to turn on PBS and learn about World
War Two for the first time. He's got a whole
he's got a whole long thread to hear on this.
But yeah, that is exactly the attitude. That's it right there.
Oh if not for us, if it weren't for us,

(57:27):
you'd all be stupid. Isn't something that's going to play well?

Speaker 3 (57:29):
Man?

Speaker 1 (57:30):
And the irony is within the sound of my voice
are tons of people who live in small little communities
that are on the edges of our broadcast signal, who
are now hearing about your lunacy, not from you, but
rather from us. Because for every PBS station, there's twenty
of meters fifty of me in the case of the

(57:53):
AMFM radio. So and that's just that's just one way,
all right. Seven forty five Jeff Marr from the Weather
Channel went a little overboard. Yeah, all right, Yes, my
mountain listeners got snow. They're sending me pictures. But one
listener lives in Bladon County, which is southeast of Raleigh.
He said they were getting snow yesterday. Yeah, right, Stone Florries.

Speaker 9 (58:15):
This was quite the cold air mass that surge in
behind this front to start off the week, and we
did have a lot of areas getting in on some
light snow and some florries and some slick conditions in
some spots, especially across the western portion of the state,
where they had significant accumulation higher up in elevation. All
fortunately we're done with all that. It will be a dry,
but wendy and cold Veterans days are about to make
your way out right now. We've got windshills down in

(58:35):
the twenties. We'll reach a high of forty seven this
afternoon with sunshine. The freeze warning ends at nine this morning.
Tonight cleared down to thirty four. It will be a
milder Wednesday, Tomorrow Sunnay with the winds out of the
west in a high sixty one will hit sixty two
and morse on Thursday, and then mid sixties for Friday
and Saturday under sunshine by the end of the weekend.
Sunday sunny with a hind the low seventies. So cold today,
but temperature is certainly moderating as we had towards the weekend.

Speaker 1 (58:57):
Alrighty, thank you much. We're talking an and uh when
we come. Yeah, yes, we had radio in Wyoming, thank
you for that. I can't tell that's an honest question
because the mountains anyway, I don't know about that. What
do you mean you don't know.

Speaker 3 (59:15):
I drove through that state once, go into Salt Lake
City and like you put the thing on auto dial,
like he find me a station radio and it would
just go through the dial. It would just be well, yeah,
if you're out in the middle of the middle, like
there's nothing here, man, and that's your fault for driving
on I aging.

Speaker 1 (59:31):
That is a long once you get past Laramie. Uh,
it basically nothing until you get towards like Rock Springs
and it's a little desolate out there.

Speaker 8 (59:40):
No.

Speaker 1 (59:41):
Actually, you know how we got our news back in
Wyoming ross that So about once a month a writer
would show up with news of the world. Well, and
he looked a lot like Tom Hanks. It was pretty crazy.
And then that was you know, that was during the
good months, because during the during the snowier months, when
we were lizarded in like the Donner Party having to

(01:00:02):
turn to eating each other, you may not see that
rider for another three months. We didn't even know. I
didn't even know who won the presidency until generally January.
Growing up, that's how it is in Wyoming. It's desolate,
it's cold, and if you're from California, you should stay out.
So there you go. Thank God for the Pony Express
seven forty eight. Hang on, So in pulp fiction, when

(01:00:24):
he's you know, doing the whole thing with Samuel L. Jackson,
you know, screaming out is equal twenty five to seventeen.
It's not is equal twenty five seventeen. Yeah, right, I
look that up. It is not that it's it's something
completely he made it all. Here's much Yeah. Yeah. Essentially
that being said, it's it's and it's not that it's

(01:00:45):
actually an easter egg because Tarantino is absolutely obsessed with
seventies eighties karate flicks, right, and so if I'm remembering correctly,
it's it's a sunny Chiba thing. But I don't remember
how the connection all gets there. So but anyway, as

(01:01:06):
long as you scream it. Now, now, when you do
scream it, you should scream the pulp fiction version, since
you're torturing your family with that. Also, Ross is very
upset over polygamy pastor. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:01:16):
The more I think about a lot of this, like
these topics, like my brain has to compute these things, right,
because they're very nuanced and you just throw around. I
don't I can't react that quickly because I'm so new
to this, and the more I think about this, this
pastor who's now like into polygamy.

Speaker 1 (01:01:31):
Like it pisses me off and may using David.

Speaker 3 (01:01:35):
Well, it's just he's in this place of power in
the church and somebody like listen, just because something is
in the Bible doesn't mean that God endorses that thing.
A lot of times these things are in the Bible
to show us how they're wrong, because.

Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
The pautionary tape. Yeah, the people doing the things in
the Bible right are human, well except two of them, right,
two of them right Jesus, it's Satan.

Speaker 3 (01:01:57):
Yeah, but the rest of them are like human beings
and they're they make mistakes.

Speaker 1 (01:02:01):
And angels too and stuff like that.

Speaker 3 (01:02:03):
But yeah, yeah, we're talking about like, you know, lust
and lust in the Bibles. Like the smartest guy Saw
and the strongest guy Samson, they were both brought down
by lust. There's this whole you know story. The more
I think about that David thing really makes me angry
because there's this whole thing.

Speaker 1 (01:02:20):
You know, David.

Speaker 5 (01:02:22):
This hooked.

Speaker 3 (01:02:24):
Yeah, he was married and and tried to like you know,
murder her husband because he you know, he cheated so
you know, slavery is also in the Bible. It doesn't
mean that God God endorses it. And it's fact. If
you take the story of Genesis through Exodus, it's an
anti slavery abolitionist story.

Speaker 1 (01:02:44):
Right.

Speaker 3 (01:02:44):
They're they're slaves and they're brought out of Egypt, and
then once they get to the Promised Land, they say, hey,
let's put some rules in place so that doesn't happen again. Right, right,
And but listen, I'm a guy who's only two hundred
and fifty one days into this stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:02:59):
This guy is the head of a church. Yeah, he
should know better. I honestly, because I think that this
is more human than theological. I think he knocked up
his mistress and it's like, how am I gonna How
am I gonna handle this with my congregation? And he
decided that he was going to because you know what

(01:03:20):
it sounds like when he's using that justification. It sounds
like when some atheists will be arguing with somebody who's
Christian and they're eating shrimp and they're like, oh, you're
eating shellfish. Obviously you don't live the Christianity, right, Just
just really lazy stuff and people who refuse to understand
that Old Testament New Testament are more than just different names, right,

(01:03:41):
They're connected, like they're connected. It's one. It's one. It's
one long.

Speaker 3 (01:03:45):
Story that that evolves and these topics evolve, and you
can't be like, oh, just because David ar Saul had
you know, a thousand wives or whatever, that gives me
the right to have a thousand wife. There's a lesson
there that you're learning from imperfect people through God's word.

Speaker 1 (01:04:00):
I think that's how we should punish people. Just give
them a thousand wives or husbands for that matter, just
for the interpersonal there. Yeah, honestly, I think he's just
trying to cover up the fact that he knocked up
his mistress. He wished to opine on any of our topics.
It is a Veterans Day, so you got that going
for you, especially if you know for you veterans. Because

(01:04:21):
I saw several lists of where you could basically gorge
yourself for free today, So take advantage of that. And also,
I don't know why. I don't know why people feel
they need to do this. It's it, you know what
it is. It's it's one of these calendar predictable videos.

(01:04:42):
Fourth of July is a good example of what I'm
talking about. So every Fourth of July, I know at
some point some celebrity is gonna come out, and usually
it's a black celebrity because it's from a race standpoint,
and they're like, I'm not celebrating this country. This country
used to enslave people, right, And we always get that take,
which is fine, think whatever you want or ross. Do

(01:05:04):
you remember the lunatic who was on the beach during
Fourth of July weekend and all the flags were there
and he started losing his crap. Yeah, we played the
audio from that guy. Yeah, yeah, like I expect to
see that. So with that being said, I saw several
videos where people thought, well, you know, you know Marine
Birthday and now it's Veterans Day. I'm going to make
a video about these greedy veterans with their pensions and

(01:05:27):
their healthcare depending on length of service there. And they're like,
you know, we just give them the way this dude
worded it and whatnot. He's like, yeah, you know, we
just we just gifted it as some sort of political thing.
And I'm like, yeah, one, I don't think you'd probably
go stand outside the gate at le June and make
that argument to people's faces, and gift is not the

(01:05:49):
correct word.

Speaker 5 (01:05:52):
There was.

Speaker 1 (01:05:52):
You know, there's a contract essentially, right, This was the
agreement you put your life on hold, you work, and
in some cases your work involves you getting shot at
and if you work and if you follow the rules
and if you survive, I guess then you go ahead
and based on your length of service and how you serve,

(01:06:14):
these are the things that will be available to you.
And it could be GI bill from a college perspective,
it could be try care, it could you know, whatever
it is. But it's not a gift, right. The gift
is what Mondahmie's trying to do right where he's like,
oh well, we're just gonna go ahead and we're gonna
we'll give you all this free stuff, just vote for me.

(01:06:35):
This is slightly different. All those people had to do
is show up at a voting booth. They're still not
going to probably get it. But no, you had people
put yours, their lives on a life on hold risk
at all. So so you can sit there and quality
gift and say they should take it away because you're
but hurt over the military. Give me a break.

Speaker 3 (01:06:52):
These people are so dumb. Well, they probably wouldn't care.
I was gonna say, you know, if we didn't have
the strong military, they wouldn't have this country. But they
probably don't want the country to begin with.

Speaker 1 (01:06:59):
So oh remember they're mad that we lost. We won
the Cold War?

Speaker 3 (01:07:03):
Right, you know, if you suit up right and you
go overseas or you're you serve over here, and no,
you deserve to be taken care of in some capacity
for the rest of your life, like that's yeah, non negotiable.
And I fact a lot of times, like how they're
treated at the v A, right, it's not exactly right,
Like they deserve better treatment.

Speaker 1 (01:07:21):
Now this guy wants it all taken away because uh,
I don't know. But again I would at least respect
that his ability to make that argument. If you would
go make it at the bar on the very north
end of Topsail with the little with the volleyball courts
there the name Escapes Me, which is usually slam packed
with drunk berens on Friday and Saturday. I all having
a good time. Go ahead, show up there, sir, let them,

(01:07:46):
let him know what you think, let me know how
that goes for you, or maybe just down the parking
lot of cherries. Was that place still around? I've heard
that's a place. What kind of what kind of sport
is it? What are they playing? What do you mean
you said it was some sort of like they were
playing like a So it's that game where you have
the hook on the wall and then you have the
washer hanging on a string and you got to try
to swing.

Speaker 3 (01:08:05):
The washers so it hooks the one at the one
at the end of Napoleon Dynamite. Dude, I'm telling you,
I was just looking for a reason to play the
top gun music. Well, they have volleyball courts twos oo. Yeah,

(01:08:26):
I've seen fights break out over the rings swinging game,
no way.

Speaker 1 (01:08:30):
Oh yeah, dude, I don't know. I don't know that
it was competitive. I was with because I was with
I was in the bar with my uh my buddy
who retired, he's now retired master sergeant. He was master
sergeant at the time, and h he had uh some
you know, some of his Marines were in there, and
uh he had to even though he's not, nobody's in uniform, like,
he had to flip the switch to master sergeant to

(01:08:52):
deal with a fight fight issue that was going on
and uh, like everybody shut up real quick man. But yeah,
I think they did. The whole fight broke out over
the ring swingy game or something. I don't know. I
was kind of off to the side. I wasn't paying attention,
but he like snapped out of his chair went over there.
I'm like, okay, I mean that's a positive.

Speaker 3 (01:09:11):
I mean, you you want people serving who want to win, right,
so yeah, yeah, I want competitiveness, you know what I mean,
like somebody who wants to win. I don't want somebody
to being like, oh I lost, It's no big deal. No,
you win every time.

Speaker 1 (01:09:22):
Yeah, that's a good point. Yeah, if you got to,
you gotta fight your sergeant. How that goes. I think
the other issue too, is one of them was one
of them was an officer was in there, and there
was some issue with that. I don't fully understand what
it was. I don't know if it's fraternization or what
the deal was, but like it was a very weird evening,
but it all started over a wing the ring swingy

(01:09:45):
game and hot tempers. So there was that. But I
would encourage that guy to go make the argument that
the military people shouldn't get any o their stuff. Let
me know, let me know how that goes for you. Okay,
all right, wonderful. So you guys remember Alison Mack. So
this is the check who was on Smallville, the actress

(01:10:07):
who also was in the cult the what was it
nixium nexium, I don't remember how to pronounce any he's nexium.
And she went to jail for a few years for
I guess she only served two. She was sentenced to
three for me recruiting. And but the way that they
recruited is she would try to recruit some cases, other actresses,

(01:10:29):
but women, and they would get compromising pictures or videos
of these women, and then she would take them to
the cult leader and then brand their genitals, and then
if they tried to leave, they would threaten to release
the stuff. Right, So that's what she went to jail for. Well,
she's out of jail and is now pursuing a degree

(01:10:51):
in social work, saying that she wants to become a
social worker. I got a question, what what who on
God's green Earth is once the social worker whose previous
gig was genital brander? Who's calling that person for? We've
got we've got some problems in our household, we need

(01:11:11):
you to intervene person who used to recruit black sexploit
and then brand genitals of unsuspecting women. But hey, I
guess you know, maybe uh, people can go ahead, and
people can go ahead and change. Let's see here she

(01:11:32):
also got married, so there's that.

Speaker 2 (01:11:35):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:11:35):
Yeah, Mac was sentenced for three years for acting as
a sex cult recruiter for leader Keith Ranier. And and
you know, it makes sense too to put her out there. She's,
you know, she probably she had relatively good looking women.
She's you know, she's got a certain amount a woman,
she's a certain amount of famous because of the Smallville stuff.
And yeah, she was very successful at it.

Speaker 8 (01:11:59):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:12:00):
The funniest part of that story, there's not a lot
of funny parts, but the one that I do find
funny is that Kirsten Gillibrand, the former New York senator
and the presidential campaign, her father was the Colt's attorney.
And I don't mean when the criminal charges broke out,
he was like their day to day business manager, right,
So he was just he was just it was just

(01:12:20):
like another business where he was essentially counseled for it.
I think he did that and then his partner provided
accounting services, which, by the way, isn't that a little
weird when you're like, all right, what's our what's our
branding iron budget this this year? Oh look you overspent
man Tis tisk so uh yeah, yeah, she's out. She's

(01:12:42):
going to be a social worker counselor and she's here
to help let's see here. Oh no, all right. So
some of our military listeners also would invite this young
man to come explain stuff to them. Yeah, no, that
should be good. All right, eight fifteen CaCO Day Radio program.

(01:13:04):
Hang on, uh Ross, will you handle the text message
that just arrived. I'm very busy. I think you're very
busy too, right, very very good. Oh so busy. Okay,
all right. So I'm I'm sitting I'm sitting here and
I'm you know, watching all the Trump Uh well, let
me let me just let me go back. I'm sure

(01:13:24):
you guys know this. So the BBC did a documentary
about January sixth, and in the documentary they took two
portions of Trump's speech that were actually spoken fifty some
minutes apart and combine them and so and it clearly
changed the context of what they were trying to get

(01:13:45):
to specifically. What Trump said is we're going to walk
down to the Capitol that we're going to cheer our
brave senators and congressmen and women. So he said that,
and then fifteen minutes later he says, I'll be with
you and we fight fight like hell. And what the
BBC did is they cut the first quote, so it

(01:14:06):
just said we're going to walk down to the Capitol, period,
and then they spliced the second part that I just
said that was spoken fifty four minutes later. So the
way they presented it, it sounded like this, We're going
to walk down to the Capitol, I'll be with you,
and we fight fight like hell. As part of look,
he instigated this clearly changing what he said, and he's

(01:14:27):
from cheering our brave senators and congressmen and women. And
then later when he was saying fight fight like hell,
he was not talking about, you know, at the halls
of Congress physically, right. So that's what the BBC did,
very scummy, very CNNY, really very very rue parish and

(01:14:47):
then it aired, and uh, you know, for whatever reason,
I don't know that it ended up on Trump's radar immediately,
but somebody pointed out, and then we just had the
two top people the BBC actually turning the resignation. Now

(01:15:08):
the narrative is it was it's a little bit of
the Trump thing, but it's also the BBC needed an overhaul.
I don't know what it is, but the BBC is
a government funded how they tax people for the BBC specifically,
it's a line tax thing, right, So you have no
choice but to and a lot of people resent that
because the BBC is very biased. But what's funny about this,

(01:15:30):
because here's what Trump's demanding. Immediate issue. Immediately issue full,
fair retraction of the documentary and any false, defamatory, disparaging, misleading,
or inflammatory statements, and do so in as conspicuous a
manner as when they were originally published. Because this is
what newspapers do.

Speaker 8 (01:15:48):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:15:49):
They would defame you on page eight, you know, the
front page, and then bury a correction on page thirty
six of section C. Right, immediately issue an apology for
the false, defamatory, disparagy, misleading, inflammatory statements. Three, appropriately compensate
President Trump for the harm caused. And this is where

(01:16:10):
it gets interesting because, according to Trump's lawyer, if the
BBC fails to meet these they will file a legal
action for no less than one billion dollars. And where
this gets interesting is in the UK. So in the

(01:16:31):
US there is a very high The more famous you are,
the higher the bar for you to be able to
win a judgment that you were slandered, libeled, or defamed.
Right now, if you're a nobody, then you know, the
bar is lower. But if you are a somebody and
he's the President of the United States, it doesn't get
much more somebody than that. It's a very very high bar.

(01:16:55):
In the UK, however, a defamation and works backwards. And
I'm not a lawyer, but I I have I have
seen people try to explain this, so I will do
my best. So it's like it's a lot easier to
get a judgment in the UK than the US, even

(01:17:15):
if you're a famous person and you almost start it
almost starts opposite where you had. The person who's being
accused of defaming has to prove they didn't. And there
was a very famous trial. I think they made a
movie about this, but a trial for a guy who was.

Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
You know what.

Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
I can't remember exactly all the things that he wrote,
but you know, it's basically Nazi stuff, right, and haang,
I want to make sure I get this accurate, just
because everyone's so gined up on Nazis right now. British
defamation trial famous, Yeah, I'm sure it'll pop right up there. Yeah,

(01:17:59):
well there's a couple, was it, Neil?

Speaker 8 (01:18:03):
Now?

Speaker 1 (01:18:03):
All right, I don't have it in front of you.
But basically they do a pretty good job in that
movie of kind of showing you how the system works
over there, So the BBC and really for the environment
in which they helped create with their with you know,
the bias in their reporting and always wanting to get
you know, the most liberal people in there being willing
to defame anyone they disagree with, like they've created this

(01:18:28):
this environment man, Right, that's how you can arrest twelve
thousand people for social media posts because somebody was offended
by it or somebody felt that they were libeled or slandered.
And they're very successful with it. So the idea that
Trump could financially stick, you know, stick a billion dollar
judgment against the BBC is not as unpossible or impossible

(01:18:52):
rather as it would be here. And for that, I
think that's just hilarious because there's no doubt that it
was scumbaggery. And and just to show you how big
a scumbag these people are, so they're they're covering it.
And I watched some of the coverage and understand they're
now having to cover a story about how they lied,

(01:19:14):
how they lied, and to do it, they're they're referring
to what happened as an editing error. So, uh, Mondomie
started announcing some of his staff, and uh, a very
interesting name has popped up, Ella Bisgard Church. Probably don't
know who that is. I didn't know who was either. However,
you might know her work. So it's one thing to

(01:19:38):
conceptually say defund the police, right, but uh, what what
she kind of got famous for is she put that
to paper, like because you can say defund the police,
but what does that look like? Like how do you
how do you handle how do you handle the police
who work for it? Do you fire them all? Do

(01:19:59):
you fi half of them? Then you make that transition
to social workers. This is her project and so she
actually got it got famous within the Democrats socialist communism
circles because she's also a political scientist of some sort.
I can't remember what her actual degree is but like

(01:20:21):
she put together the plan to do this, what what
a what a city would need to do to transition
to a she's she's the chief architect right of transitioning NYPD,
even though she had mapped it out in California, but
now she's mapped it out in New York to have
social workers respond to nonviolent nine to one one calls

(01:20:45):
because you know it's government right, You're gonna have to
figure out what that looks like, what the procedures are
going to be. So that's what she's But he brought
her in because she kind of was the first one
to map this out for either La or San Francisco.
I can't remember which city. And now now she gets
to bring her big idea and the boss's approval apparently
to New York City. So yeah, Ivy League educated California

(01:21:09):
natives how they describe her in this story, So we
do know what they think it will cost. According to
now again, this is what they think it'll cost. I'm
sure it'll cost a whole hell of a lot more.
The total plan to implement a proposals such as this
is approximately one point one billion dollars. I don't know

(01:21:33):
how they arrived at that but whatever. So what it
would do is it would develop a new Department of
Community Safety, which would replace police with mental health professionals
to deal with non life threatening emergencies. One of their
primary focus will be the safety of subway stations. All right.
So here's where this is going to go bad. What
we see crime in the subway, and I don't mean

(01:21:55):
people jumping turnstiles and all that, but that's a fair example.
We see crazy people or what we saw in the
light rail in Charlotte. And let me tell you, if
they're just going to be down there and you're not
going to have police down there, and I'm some lunatic
with a knife and you're some lady with a clipboard,

(01:22:16):
let me explain to you how quickly you're not going
to stop me. Okay, Let alone officers who you could
find themselves overwhelmed because they're having to deal with too
many people and the turnstile jump, you know, quick, somebody
where you're just scolding them for doing that, we can
just punch you.

Speaker 8 (01:22:32):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:22:33):
It's that skill set that officers will then bring, plus
the tools that are provided that not only act as
a deterrent, but also allow these situations which could pop
off at any moment. Ross how many times have you
watched on Patrol Live or Cops for that matter, where
police are having a normal conversation with a suspect and

(01:22:56):
then all of a sudden, somebody gets shot, right uh?
Or did you see the video of the officers doing
the traffic stop and some guy stops his car and
attack tries to attack him with an axe. Yeah, I
know I have seen that. Yes, yeah, I mean just
pops off at that moment. So you're going to put
people in a situation where, yeah, most of their interactions
probably are not going to require physical combat, but when

(01:23:19):
it does, are not going to be in a in
any way, in any capacity able to deal with it.
They will they will themselves become victims. And I'm shocked
a lot of times at the reaction times of these officers,
like lightning quick, Yeah we went with no time to
really process what's happening. It's just training, well it is.
And you ever got to play with any of the

(01:23:41):
shoot training seminars where they use the video screens or
any oh yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, like but the
real deal ones, No, like the ones they have at
the fair and stuff, Okay, So I've had I've got
to play with two very specific ones. One uh, they
let me play with the one at Seymour Johnson Air
Force Base. And it's crazy because you're in this scenario

(01:24:02):
where you're in there's a couple different scenarios. One you're
standing there and you're with your interpreter and you're inside
some like Taliban hut, right, and everybody's yelling, so it's like,
it's crazy, what all the stuff's going on? And you're
having to listen to your interpreter try to hear him,
and he's got an accent over the voice of the
screaming Taliban chiefs, and you have to pull from that

(01:24:26):
that the one guy's saying he has a bomb and
he's gonna blow us up. And I did a headshot
and I killed the guy and I thought I was
absolute rambo. And then they pop in another scenario where
it's a roadside confrontation and all of a sudden, some
militants come around another truck and I got murdered. So
that's one. But they also have police training where you
can use a buzz belt. Do you know what a

(01:24:46):
buzz belt is? What is that? So a buzz belt
is a device you wear like it's like the shot
collar for a dog, where if you get shot it
shocks you. And what they're trying to train there is
if you get shot, man like, all of a sudden,
it's gonna hurt and it's gonna be a little harder
to do what it is you have to do. And
you can change the settings on those. And let's just

(01:25:08):
say me and some friends decided to see how high
it could go. Do not do that or don't get shot?
But you know these are all training for that. For
these things, I can't remember what the distance is, but
have you ever seen them? Explain knife? How many steps
a person from a knife can get? It's further. A
person with a knife can be a lot further away

(01:25:29):
than you think they can be for most people's ability
a time that they need to draw and fire a
weapon accurately. Like it's not three feet away, it's like
what twenty twenty feet away or something, if I'm remembering correctly,
Because people will go why would an office twenty feet
away from them? Why would you do it? Because a
person with a knife can close the distance at roughly

(01:25:49):
the same speed at which somebody can draw and accurately
fire a weapon. That's why. That's why the person fifteen
feet away who's like, I'm gonna stab you and will
start moving towards the officer got a bullet at fifteen
feet or whatever it is. So yeah, no, But to
your point, the reaction times, hell yeah, man, just craziness.

(01:26:11):
So now you're gonna send social workers into those situations.
You're gonna send social workers to domestic disputes often described
as one of the potentially most dangerous calls that officers
go on. I don't know if that's one hundred percent accurate,
but I've seen more in enough pop off. Good luck
with that, and somehow you get to spend a billion

(01:26:33):
dollars to do it. Let's see here, what percent I'm
trying to figure out what percentage of the NYPD they
think they're gonna flip. I don't know, man, some's gonna
go horribly wrong here too. And I don't say that
hoping for it, because that horribly wrong is probably gonna
be some social worker gets their their head caved in

(01:26:53):
and they're dead. And it was just a situation where
what are you doing sending somebody who's not armed or
has police powers for that matter, And I wonder what
I wonder what they're gonna allow social workers to do.
Will they can they arrest? Will they have Will they
have some sort of powers there? Because that's the last

(01:27:16):
thing you want is some busybody with a clipboard who
also has arrest powers. Oh good lord, but we'll see.
All right, eight forty three, let's go and do it. Well,
I want to play the audio. I'll do that in
the last segment. We'll talk to Denise as well. This
couple of little clips I played earlier, but I think
they're funny, and we'll do that coming up. Let me

(01:27:36):
go ahead and grab Jeff Maher from the Weather Channel
if he's ready to go. All right, is mister Raised
back tomorrow?

Speaker 8 (01:27:43):
Right? He is?

Speaker 9 (01:27:44):
He's back tomorrow. He's gonna bring some warmer temperatures with
him when he comes back tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (01:27:47):
So that's good. Well if he comes back, right, Yeah,
he had flight, Hell didn't he? Oh yeah, that's right.

Speaker 9 (01:27:52):
Yeah, rough with the flight situation around the country. But yeah,
it's gonna be cold today again. If you're about to
head out, be prepared. We are going to be dealing
with the freeze warning that expires here at the top
of the hour, but we'll see some sunshine in the
afternoon hours. Gusty wins out of the west, though, are
going to continue to pull in some cold air of
the high today and your forty seven wind hills down
in the thirties at times this afternoon, even in the twenties.

(01:28:13):
As we start off this morning, Tonight clear with wedness
diminishing in the low thirty four. It gets milder tomorrow
and Thursday, with sunshine, highs up into the low sixties.
Sunny for Friday and Saturday, with highs in here sixty five,
and warmer even for Sunday with sunshine to hype to
seventy one degrees.

Speaker 1 (01:28:27):
All right, hey, Jeff, thank you very much. Appreciate it, sir.

Speaker 2 (01:28:30):
You got it.

Speaker 1 (01:28:31):
There you go, Jeff mar from the Weather Channel. All right,
like I said, we'll come back. We'll chat with Denise
Pellegrini from Bloomberg News said, well, let me just play
one of the Portland audios just as I'm looking at
the time here. I want to make sure Denise is connected.

Speaker 2 (01:28:46):
Just so.

Speaker 1 (01:28:47):
Somebody filmed them rallying to do one of their big,
you know, protests with all their stupid animal costumes and whatnot,
and it is the cringiest thing I have ever heard,
or witness for that matter. Listen to this.

Speaker 6 (01:28:59):
I want to hear parking. I want to hear screaming
and howling. I want to hear horse noises.

Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
I want to hear Monig, just like the Founding fathers
right when they donned their animal cost These are the
absolute state of revolutionaries these days. Man that I don't
get me wrong. Some of these lunatics are dangerous as hell,
but come on, man, I want to hear parking.

Speaker 6 (01:29:24):
I want to hear screaming and howling. I want to
hear horse noises. I want to hear Moneig.

Speaker 1 (01:29:30):
The only way that works is in a furry orgy. Okay,
not a protest against by degenerates against Trump or whatever
their what is their name? I want to hear parking.

Speaker 6 (01:29:41):
I want to hear screaming and howling. I want to
hear horse noises.

Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
I want to hear Monig. Way are degenerates against excuse me,
degenerates against fascism? Because of course that's the name, daff.
You should add a tea at the end. It would
be more appropriate. Degenerates against fascism taking over. There you go,

(01:30:07):
I just fixed it for you. Eight forty six. Hang on,
Denise Pellegrini here on your Veterans Day. What's going on, Denise?

Speaker 10 (01:30:13):
Yeah, Well, the stock market is open, bond market is closed,
a lot of things are open. A lot of people
are still going to work today, or they're trying to
travel and not going too well again today, as you've
been talking about, as the FAA gears up and orders
more flight cutbacks right down to six percent today, eight

(01:30:33):
percent Thursday, ten percent Friday. Of course, they're also working
on ending the government shutdown. And this report is sponsored
by Fidelity. Flight cancelations today, total cancelations almost fifteen hundred,
about eleven hundred of those within the US. Delays not
too bad though, only eight hundred, so of course that's
easy for me to say. If your flight's canceled, that's

(01:30:55):
one hundred percent of your flight canceled. Right, that's a
total failure. But it's at least today not looking as bad.

Speaker 1 (01:31:04):
As it was yesterday. But we'll see.

Speaker 10 (01:31:06):
Target is lowering prices on some three thousand items. This
includes on food and other household staples. Also, they're unveiling
their Thanksgiving meal, saying it is a complete holiday dinner
that you can serve for less than five bucks a person.
Target also donating to feeding America's networks of food banks,
and those cuts and prices at Target coming just in time.

(01:31:27):
We've not been getting a lot of economic data lately,
so this one is getting a lot of attention. This morning,
National Federation of Independent Business sentiment among US small businesses
has fallen to a six month low. More than sixty
two million Americans work for small businesses, so that is
a little bit worrisome. A lot of Veterans Day freebies today, Applebe's, Harby's, when,

(01:31:50):
Wendy's Yogurt Land all offering free food for veterans. Starbucks
has free coffee for veterans, also for current military service members,
and there's houses. Oh and this one isn't free, but
McDonald's is bringing back the McRib on a limited time
basis starting today. Apple is exploring adding a second camera
to the next iPhone Air to boost sales. That's according

(01:32:12):
to the information, after consumer complaints about the design of
the current one and weak sales. Stocks are kind of
mixed right now. There is some negative sentiment in Vidia
shares under pressure onward, SoftBank has dumped its entire stake
in the tech Darling to help bankroll its own AI investments,
including data centers in the US and AI robot manufacturing

(01:32:35):
in the US as well. Dow futures up nineteen s
and p futures down seventeen, Nestak futures down one twenty six.
In Casey, people are apparently trying to grow giant pumpkins
for social media attention, and that is sparking a whole
new business. Growers are spending hours trying to trace the
lineage of these giant pumpkins so they can pick the

(01:32:57):
best seeds. Wall Street Journal says individuals and businesses are
selling these seeds Casey for as much as one thousand
bucks each. I don't know the price we're winning away
off is usually only a couple thousand dollars if that,
So it's not like they're making money on this. People
are definitely in this for the accolades and the aten.

Speaker 1 (01:33:16):
Yeah, they're in it for the clicks, which is our
I saw this and I was like, this is the
only motivation for people doing it. But then I realized
every state fair where the old farmers show up with
their nine hundred pounds pumpkin, and it's like, well, they're
clearly doing it to each other, just in real life,
so whatever it makes you, Yeah, I get that.

Speaker 10 (01:33:34):
That's fun and that's cool. Right, And apparently you can
take the seeds of two huge pumpkins and put them
together and get a tiny pumpkin, So there's no guarantee.
There is an element of luck and maybe intuition here,
and money doesn't necessarily work, which is also part of
the fun.

Speaker 1 (01:33:53):
Of this, right. Yeah, Look, this is a far better
Internet based activity than the really dumb stuff where people
die so or like them.

Speaker 10 (01:34:00):
Yeah, it's sort of like you think that you know,
the tallest, most buff pitcher is going to be the best,
or you know, the biggest hitter is going to be
the best. Sometimes it's you know, the little chubby one
at least in you know, little league who gets on
base all the time.

Speaker 1 (01:34:16):
All right, well, Denise, thank you very much, appreciate it,
have yourself a good rest of your day. Talk to
you tomorrow. There you go, Denise Pellegrine, Bloomberg News
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