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April 15, 2025 • 79 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Is so different from when we last spoke yesterday. The
world has fundamentally changed. Maybe you didn't feel it. Well,
if you're in San Diego, maybe you did. I think
they had an earthquake that they felt, but it didn't
do a lot of damage.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
That wasn't it. No, no, no, no no.

Speaker 1 (00:18):
To see how the world changed overnight, you have to
go to West Texas, where a group of you know, motivated, dedicated,
hard working, highly trained astronauts made their initial flight up

(00:45):
just to the Carmen line and then they hung out
there for four minutes and then just basically dropped back
where they were. And again, I would be saying nothing
about this at all, like I mentioned yesterday, but you
wouldn't let me just go, oh, that's kind of cool.
They're sending that that uh, that pop star I know
up there, Okay, all right, and then that would have

(01:06):
been That would have been the end of it. But no,
I have for weeks been getting to jam down my
throat that this is some big feminist thing, and I'm like,
can we just can we just do our thing? Let
them do their thing. That's fine. Tell me it's some
names that I know, and then that'll be the end
of it. But but I decided to watch all of

(01:27):
that yesterday. It was about a half hour after the show.
Rocket goes up. Everything looks good. I'm glad. That's great.
And then Rocket comes down, and I even stick around
for the post game because I found it kind of interesting. Now,
to be fair, really, the only one I watched its

(01:47):
entirety was the Shatner one. Ross did you watch the
Shatner one and even and the post game?

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Yeah. I talked about yesterday how he was going on
and on and Bezos was spraying his hose with champagne. Yes, yes,
it's like big interestspective, you know, change of life event,
right right, right.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
Right, and and so so there you go. But yesterday, yesterday,
in fact, let's just real quick. Let's listen in on
this three.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
And twenty eight thousand feet one hundred kilometers.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
Welcome to space, ladies, or shall I say astronauts.

Speaker 3 (02:24):
Oh the moon.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
I will have to look.

Speaker 4 (02:28):
At the moon.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
Oh my, oh my god, oh my god.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
All this is awesome. I can't imagine freaking out up there.
That's cool, that's fine.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
It wasn't clear.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
Those are the astronauts, those are their voices that you're hearing.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
Okay, I think Katie Perry sung it's a one ear
the beautiful, see the highest point in flight, well.

Speaker 2 (02:57):
Over three hundred and forty five thousand seats.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
What was the common line, like, that's really cool to
listen to how people are reacting to it. So how
did it change? Well, it changed because I also once
they crashed or got crashed down, it's the wrong word.
Didn't mean that word. Once they landed, although it was

(03:20):
interesting because towards the end of the landing they were
screaming like it's a roller coaster. Not because I think
they were scared, but it's just weird. It's just weird
how people people react because it literally sounded like six
women screaming all at the same time. But I didn't
get the vibe it was a terror scream, so I
don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
But whatever.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
Again, that's not the issue. The problem is when they
got out and started doing interviews, because here was the
central Well, let's listen to Katy Perry and understand that
she pretty much represents everything.

Speaker 6 (03:53):
It is the.

Speaker 7 (03:53):
Highest high, and it is surrender to the unknown trust
and this whole journey is not just about going to space.
It's the training it's the team, it's the whole thing.
I could have recommend this experience more.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
This is like up there.

Speaker 7 (04:15):
With all the you know, different tools that I've learned
in my life, from meditation to the Hoffmann process. This
is up there because what you're doing is you're find
you're like really finding the love for yourself because you
got to trust in yourself on this journey. And then
you're feeling the love when you come down for sure,
and you're feeling that strength. So I feel really connected

(04:37):
to that strong, divine feminine right.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Now, Okay, divine, the divine feminine. Okay, didn't her dad
wasn't her dad? Her parents are like super religious, right.
I thought her dad was like a pastor.

Speaker 8 (04:50):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
Yeah, he's like a preacher, you think. Yeah, i'thing like that.

Speaker 1 (04:53):
Yeah, okay. When you were talking about her mom was
sitting there, you know, waiting for to come down, speaking
in tongue. So obviously like, yeah, it's a very religious fan.

Speaker 2 (05:02):
Being a music radio at the time where her songs
are coming out, it was a big deal because their
songs were you know, very sexy and she's weird, right, Yeah,
it was a thing.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
Yeah. I never knew if that was marketing, because that
sounds like straight music industry marketing. There the preacher's daughter.
All right, So here's the thing. So my beef with
Katie is not what it is with the others necessarily. Uh,
it has to do with the training.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
What the whole thing sort of pisses me off. And
like I said, I think it's really cool. It's a
cool thing, but you're not an astronaut. And then someone's
gonna call up with the technical definite listen of all
the training we did. You're not docking, you're not launching
a Space Shuttle docking with the space station. You're not
even technically an outer space right.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
Right, You're in you're in lower Earth orbit, just above
the Carmen line.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
And our our former boss, Brian the Bad boardop postedly
yesterday and it nailed it. It's a glorified theme park ride,
That's what these things are. And do you have to
do some training? Yes? Do you get to put on
a cool suit? Yes? Are you an astronaut? I'm going
to stand by No. I don't care what the technical definition.

Speaker 1 (06:09):
I know. I remember this argument, and I remember they
were starting to like recession. They were trying to groom
the definition.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
Well, no, that's okay. I can imagine those calls coming in,
so I'm preemptively stopping them. You know, shut up, you're
not an astronaut.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
You're you're a space tourist. You're a tourist.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
It's okay, yeah, and that and that's super cool. And
the same way for Shattner when he went up, he's
pushing buttons and launching the rocket and doing the math
and doing the calculus involved, and it's none of that.
You didn't go through the How many years of training
does an actual astronaut, say, like buzz Aldrin or back
in the day.

Speaker 1 (06:45):
I mean, you're talking about guys, should remember any of
them you're going to the moon or they didn't know.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
Or the the two that were recently stranded up in
the space station. How much training did they actually have?
What are their actual degrees? What are there I'm sure
they're all PhDs and something involving science, right right? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (07:01):
And and and uh, I think two of the women
on there were I mean, so that's fine, but that's
that's only part one. The and again, you invited all
the rest of the world of this party because you
wanted to make this some sort of diversity thing when
in reality, like space the the you know, it was

(07:23):
all women on there. I think two of the women
were black, one was Asian, right, So this isn't just
a not oh, it's just the way people think. No,
like like, we don't even have to bring any of
this in here. So I am unified then in the
problem that I did notice, And the problem that I
noticed is a little bit or a lot in every

(07:43):
one of the interviews where it sounded like they were
interviewing people who just did the hyahuasca thing right, and
and they're like, I I was. I was up there
and it dawned upon me. We're all in this together,
and it's so small and and I'm in fired now
to seek change, so blah blah blah. I'm like, yeah,

(08:03):
except brawling this together and tell it's an opinion you
don't like, and then you want them canceled. So stop it,
Gail Can.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
They're all turning into Aaron Rodgers in the cave.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
If you're an aspire a cult leader, hear me out,
save up the ducats, get you know, scam your first
few followers. But if you really want to grow the operation,
go on one of these trips go up there and
be like, Hey, I was up there, I looked out
the window, God talk to me. It turned out I'm him.

Speaker 2 (08:32):
So it's weird now. It at least turns out that way, right,
What do you mean? Like with these cult leaders? And
so you know, he starts off one way and then
at the end it's like the big reveal, the Shyamalan
type reveal at the end.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
Oh twenty yeah, is that what you're doing there?

Speaker 3 (08:47):
Ross?

Speaker 2 (08:47):
I'm Jesus like every time.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
And I'm sorry, I'm sorry. Do you ever go to
space look out the window and talk to God?

Speaker 2 (08:53):
I didn't, but I'm sure.

Speaker 3 (08:54):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
So if you to question me, if I did go
up there, which I wouldn't, it would be super were
cool and it would be amazing, but it would not
make me an astronaut. I don't care what you say,
I don't care what you put in front of me.
It's not the same. I'm not buzz Aldrin. I'm not
faking the moon landing in a in a in a
you know, in a studio stage, and I'm not that's

(09:16):
not me. I'm kidding about that part, but not I
wouldn't be you know, I'm not the it's not the same, man,
it's just not.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
I saw you. I saw your as I saw your
astronauting skills. I tuned in when you were playing that
one video game.

Speaker 2 (09:32):
Oh yeah, deliver Us the Moon. Yeah, that went great.

Speaker 1 (09:35):
No no, no, no, the other one, the star or whatever,
the big one.

Speaker 2 (09:39):
I don't know which one that is. I was a yeah, Starfield.

Speaker 1 (09:44):
Yeah, although I only watch you use the like character
create things.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
No, because I I did know. Yeah. The first thing
I did was, let's see what happens when I take
my space helmet off. Yeah, you know.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
So my point is like, you would probably need some
additional training based on what I was saying in there,
I don't think you're supposed to take it off. Now
Here is all of this full circle because you're like,
I was kind of joking about the cult thing, but
let me, if I could, for just a moment, let
me not joke about it and be more specific. Okay,

(10:19):
all right, So on the very set, you know, obviously
with everything going on here, I'm sitting there and I'm
watching some of the other coverage, and I guess they
during the morning show yesterday, So when we were on
the air the CBS Morning show or whatever it is.
They had a former astronaut. Okay, her name is doctor

(10:41):
Mae Jemison. She did not just go through the carbon line.
She you know, went to the space station. This is
so astronaut fine with that. The problem is she also
is super woke. How do I I know? Because of
this exchange with the seat whoever is interviewing her on

(11:05):
the CBS Morning.

Speaker 9 (11:06):
Explain to our audience why even a trip like this one,
all the trips that we.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
Take in the space benefit mankind.

Speaker 8 (11:15):
So it benefits humankind. And I'm gonna keep correcting and
the man made and the man missions, because this is
exactly what this mission is about, is expanding the perspective
of who does space.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
Well, women in space is not a new thing, and
nobody I know has a problem with it. Do you
remember how excited everyone was around Raleigh. Well, I probably
stayed in North Carolina. But the NC State woman who
went up there, uh, well, she was going to do
what the first and then they were gonna do like
the first double female spacewalk, but then they didn't have

(11:52):
enough suits or so. I can't remember what it was.
But she was up there for a very long time
and everyone was very proud, and that's great, especially you
know all the wolf packles awesome, one hundred percent. Nobody
had a beef with it. The problem, the problem I
have is you couple that attitude, right, that, that smug
know it all attitude with a bunch of very influential

(12:15):
Hollywood people that could go up there or you know,
others with an industry, and it turns into, well, your
opinion is invalid because you've never seen the earth from
where I have. Do you kind of get the vibe
with that that that that that that little inserted cast
system there where? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (12:35):
But I think the issue with that is most people
are going to look upon that and say it's so dumb.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
Okay, but you're another example, Ross, How how do you
have opinions about European politics? Uh?

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Not really, I don't really care about it.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
You've never done a story in the UK and you're like, oh,
that's insane because they're turning in sharpened spoons, right.

Speaker 2 (12:54):
I tend not to have a lot of like, I
just don't care about Europe. I don't care about it
enough to learn about it even.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
It's my point is, you know you've heard people go, well,
if you've never been over there, how can you comment?

Speaker 2 (13:08):
Well, No, it's so dumb though, because you can pay
for this. It's just space tourism. Like you said, I
agree with you.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
I'm saying it's going to be a problem when a
bunch of celebrities get together and a bunch of you know.

Speaker 2 (13:18):
I don't think anybody cares about celebrities these days, so
it's not going to have any well.

Speaker 1 (13:21):
The ruling class, so to speak with anymore. I understand that,
but I'm telling you that's not going to stop their
smug miss their smugs saying there.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
They're always going to be smug forever about everything. The
problem is the majority of people, and you see this
with the ratings and the oscars and with political endorsements.
People don't care anymore. It holds absolutely no waight, like
when you're in space. Yeah. That woman doesn't.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
Even claim it's going to be impactful. I'm just claiming
it's going to be damned annoying.

Speaker 2 (13:48):
It is.

Speaker 1 (13:49):
I'm more worried about the cult guy who figures it out.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
All right, it'll be completely annoying. Yeah. I wrote down,
by the way, the definition of man kind when I
heard that, because it was like space lady must know
more about language than I do, because she's really smart
and she's actually so man mankind is a noun. It
means the whole of the human race, including both men
and women. Synonyms are humanity, and even when she's using

(14:13):
the word which is a human kind, it still has
the word man in it. She's an idiot.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
That should have been I actually looked, I actually looked
up the definition.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
Yeah, and the definition is Mick Foley, So I did. Yeah,
that was the second definition. Oh all right, correct, Yeah,
so I was tweeted that yesterday. But it's just so
it's so dumb.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Ah, but she's doctor.

Speaker 2 (14:39):
That should have been the end of the interview. That
should have been, like, you're so dumb, I can't continue
this interview. Bring me a real astronaut with a brain.

Speaker 1 (14:45):
Yeah, buzz Alder and still are out. At least he
punches people. Get him in there.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Then I'd ask him about that sound studio and then
he punched me right square in the jaw, and it
would be the greatest moment.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
Of my life. You know what made that dude? Nobody
knew who that WORDO was, So.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
You're telling me if buzz Aldrin punches you in the face.
That would be a top ten moment of your life.

Speaker 1 (15:05):
You don't wash your face for a while, even know
you don't get it cast a blaster cast or something
with your jaw off to the Sidecause he was a
real man who did a real training and flew really
crazy aircraft. So now and and again, if you want
to go on the really expensive ride, go ahead, but
it does not make you an astronaut.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
Oh oh, yesterday it was the first time Marky had
seen the Blue Origin spaceship. Like what it looks like? Yeah,
she had never seen it before, and she's like, that
looks like something that that. Why does it look like that?

Speaker 1 (15:36):
What you mean like a pringles can or something like that.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
Oh yeah, well there's theories. There's stairs the way it
looks like that.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
Uh. And then do you see Katie Perry get out?
Hold she had a daisy she brought with her. She's
like holding up in the air. You didn't see that.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
I can't believe she made potatoes out of her own poop?
Did you see that? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (15:55):
I just think it's I just think it's clear that
she misunderstood what women and stem mean. So probably want
to work on that. So but hey, I'm glad everyone
had fun. But oh except a lot of Hollywood is
very mad at them because you know, Trump or Eco
or who the hell knows, but whatever, Livia Wilde, Amy Poehler,

(16:17):
several others, We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (16:19):
Hang on.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
I was just talking to uh Tell Ross about when
they were doing all the screaming going up the ship.
Oh my goddess, And she said that was Katie Perry.
Whatn' her? If I remember? Great, wasn't her father or minister?

Speaker 1 (16:33):
Yeah? Yeah, yeah, I think I just mentioned that too. Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5 (16:37):
I mean I don't have they want to adhere to
all this stuff from way way back when, but that
the Bible says, you know when Jesus told when the
teaching the sciples out of praise, said our father, who
are in heaven, right, it shouldn't be a debate and training.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
That's again, this is training.

Speaker 5 (17:01):
Go ahead.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
I was gonna say again, I wouldn't care what some
Hollywood individual says, but you guys cram this whole diversity
part of this flight now my throat. So you've now
engaged me. And then secondly, I'm just I if there's
if they're gonna be really annoying, not just necessarily them,
but the more of the uh, you know, the celebrity
class or the political class that you shoot up into space,

(17:26):
the more obnoxious it's going to be to listen to them,
because they're all going to feel like they have great
insight and they just went on a right and that's okay,
it's okay to do that.

Speaker 5 (17:33):
I just don't know how you change your your whole
lexicon of how you speak to say, yeah, have you.

Speaker 1 (17:42):
Heard of pronouns?

Speaker 2 (17:43):
Sir?

Speaker 5 (17:44):
No?

Speaker 1 (17:45):
Look the training they're getting, it's not like they're not
getting functional training. And they have actual astronauts that literally
on staff because trying to get yourself. I actually saw
this described not necessarily I think they described it a
little yesterday, but saw this described by I can't remember.
I can't remember what the guy's name is an he's

(18:07):
an astronaut who or what what flight he was on.
He was on one of the later moonlands. He was
like in the second to last moon landing, whichever one
that was. And I remember him talking about like like
how every little thing required, you know, NASA to science
it out man, and literally they had to develop little

(18:31):
things just how to get yourself back in a seat
in zero gravity and all the steps that go with it.
So this is the stuff they're training. This is what
bothers me about the actual astronaut with that running with
the Oh, I'm gonna have to correct you. It's explain
to our audience why humankind even a trip like this one.

Speaker 2 (18:49):
All the trips that we take in the space benefit mankind.

Speaker 8 (18:53):
So I benefit humankind, and I'm gonna keep correcting mankind
man made.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
But here's the deal. This woman probably has I again,
I nerd out on the science stuff. Give me some history,
give me some space stuff. You know what I fell
asleep too last night was a space documentary with David
Attenborough's voice. Oh that's good stuff. Oh that's great stuff,
good stuff. YouTube's littered with it. Check it out anyway. So, like,

(19:21):
I want to learn and I'm beat. She has some
really cool stuff to impart. Now I don't care because
I'm just like, oh, it's that. It's that shick. She
isn't suffering, right.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
You're just discounting it immediately because she used the word
and the word that she replaced the other word has
the word in it like humanity. Yeah, we're not going
to say mankind. I mean we could say humankind. Oh
you mean like humankind. What are you talking about?

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Huh Oh? Look at you caught her, and you're right right.

Speaker 2 (19:50):
She probably is some really cool stories. There's something she
could teach us. And at that point I'm like, I'm out.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
Yeah, But then I realized, uh, I'm right there, So
she's she's not my space better because I ready, I
when I was in Seattle, I went to the space
needle and ready for this.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
I've been on space Mountain.

Speaker 1 (20:14):
I feel like that's a that's a double, that's a
that's a dub. There, Rossier been on space Mountain.

Speaker 2 (20:19):
Girls, I'm gonna be available anywhere.

Speaker 7 (20:21):
You see my name on the marquee. How you can
ride space Mountain all night long?

Speaker 1 (20:28):
Foreto did you're eighteen years old or over?

Speaker 2 (20:32):
I have not ridden space Mountain. I have not not
that space mountain.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
A different one.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
Oh which one?

Speaker 1 (20:39):
We are trying to start stuff? Why do you have
Rick Flair random space mountain in the system.

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Why would I not?

Speaker 1 (20:47):
I don't think he was talking about space Mountain.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
I mean he said space mountain in the cut.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
Yeah, I mean I don't. I don't think that's what
he was talking about.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
I think it might be something now, you know, we
went to Tweetse this past week two weeknds ago whatever
it was, and they have this ride where it like
it's uh, it takes the kind of piston thing where
it takes you up way in the air and it
drops you. I'm a space I'm an astronaut.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
Oh that's cool. Did you go above the Boone Big
Beer line?

Speaker 2 (21:17):
Not quite that high? I mean at that point, if
you're in the Boone Big Beer you're an official astronaut.
That's yeah, it's the space station up there. No, it's
a glorified theme park ride. That's what happens. And it's
cool and it's awesome, but it's not what they're making
it out to be.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
And and I've and I have long argued that I
want this, by the way, because you had all these
people like this is irresponsible. Only the rich people get
to go. Yeah, that's how big innovations in travel have
literally always been.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
That's how all innovation has worked, right when you think
about the.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
Yeah, but I'm trying to just keep it a travel
But you're correct, Yeah, you could get out.

Speaker 2 (21:53):
Every awesome thing that we have now originally was just
for wealthy people.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
Go look at this one of the like the the
latest cees the big electronics store, and there'll be some
insane TV. They're like what if your entire house was
a TV? Right, And you're like, that's amazing. How much
they're like a million and a half And you're like, well,
who would buy that? Really rich, really rich people will
buy that, and enough will buy and then the price

(22:19):
comes down. And then the technology because you get to,
you know, produce more, that makes it more acceptable and
cheaper and cheaper. And like try an HDTV. Remember back
in the day when you're having to go through and
like figure out what's gonna have burn in not gonna
have burn in the US like five dand I remember
there throwaway one hundred dollars.

Speaker 2 (22:40):
Now how expensive a VHS video cassette record player was
because we had a beta. We couldn't afford the VHS.
We had the beta, okay, and it was a piece
of gard It would suck because you would go to
Blockbuster to pick up a video, right, and you'd have
this whole entire store of VHS tapes in this one
tiny aisle of beta.

Speaker 1 (22:58):
You go in the pores room proom, but don't go
in the other room. That's for the adults.

Speaker 2 (23:02):
But that's funny, right, because eventually everyone could afford a
VHS and it was like nothing. I mean, that's how
everything is everything that yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
And so this is how and and specifically this is
how travel ends up blowing up. Like there's so many
historical references and I'm gonna have to just go to
the you know, the brink of aviation. You know, traveling
on a ship, a good ship was not something that
poor people were doing. And and then you know, and

(23:35):
then you got you got larger ocean like they would
commission ships. I'm seriously going back to like Columbus kind
of stuff. They would commission ships. That's that's not cheap.
You'd have to have your own. And then you know,
they figured out how to uh, you know, build that,
and eventually you got into these ocean liners that while
they weren't cheap, they were affordable for people. And then

(23:57):
they became so affordable that immigrants could put together everything
they owned, which wasn't much, and head towards Ellis Island
for a very nominal charge. And they were packed in
there like cattle. But it was. It was in that
burgeoning time when you know, you if you got enough numbers,
you could you could expand it and expand it. And now,

(24:19):
for like three hundred dollars, if you want to go
down to Miami and get on a carnival cruise and
uh and just hang out with just the worst trunk
people you've ever seen for three days, you can do it.
That's that's the thing you can do. That's insane. And
then air travel remember, remember you start to see pictures

(24:40):
I'm sure you have, and some of you might even
remember it air travel in the fifties, sixties, especially like
early sixties. Or they're all sitting there in suits.

Speaker 2 (24:49):
Yeah, you're putting on a suit for that thing.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
And and like some of the plane the seat layouts
are like you know, everyone's got their legs crossed, they're
all looking at each other. There's nine thousand stewardesses. They're
serving you cocktails and straight you know, actual like cocktail
or martini glasses. That wasn't you didn't have there's that
was expensive. But eventually now you can go and you

(25:13):
can go check in if you get one hundred dollars
ticket at Frontier and then get charged ten dollars because
your one bag's oversized and fifty for your other. And
that's got it. Look at that innovation, man, that's where
we are.

Speaker 2 (25:28):
Anyway.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
No, Boston Paul, your input is not needed. Boston Paul's
making dirty jokes in my email there anyway. Uh sorry,
I ranted on that for a while. Don't worry. We
got other stuff to get to. Like uh, oh, I
will say this because I'm gonna we'll get into the
audio here in the next segment. So, I guess Trump

(25:50):
made a little joke about going to space, and now
I see these idiots on Twitter. They're like, So you
have people on the left who are like, yeah, he
said he's gonna do it. He should, he needs to
do it. He cracks some joke. I didn't even hear
the joke. But whatever, I saw people debating this yesterday,
and it was far more interesting than watching all of
you debate each other over real ID all weekend, which

(26:11):
ruined my Twitter timeline. But whatever, Ross, you know what
I mean?

Speaker 2 (26:16):
You see some of that. Yeah, from what I gather, right,
you have to get the real ID. If you keep
it real. Is that how it works? Oh, I'm keeping
it real? But what happens when keeping it real goes wrong?
Is that? Wow, that's a that's a good question. Casey, Yeah,
have you ever thought of that? You should make They
should make a documentary about it? Nerd just one. Yeah,
maybe like an ongoing series.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
Oh okay, all right, yeah, I want to keep it updated.
So so anyway, and and and then so the left like, yeah,
I shoot him into space, Like I actually understand their motivation.
But then I saw people there clary Trump fans like yeah,
you should go to space, like he drove a garbage
truck and he he serve McDonald's fries. And I'm like,
we're not going to shoot the eighty year old president

(26:57):
into space, okay. And and by the way, it's it's
not to say that an eighty year old can't go
to space. Wasn't buzz older in eighty when he went up?
William shatter was what how old is William Shatner when
he went up?

Speaker 2 (27:07):
But ninety or something?

Speaker 1 (27:09):
Right, So I'm not doubting that Trump could physically, but
he's the president.

Speaker 2 (27:13):
Yeah, Plus he those elon musks. So first what they
would do is they would put him in some sort
of mech suit or something. They'd put his brain into
the cyborg suit and then they launched him into space. Right,
that's what they would do.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
What that was a movie I watched not that long ago.
But whatever, No, they're not going to do that. That's
not a thing. We're also we're not going to shoot
the president in the space. Okay, they don't let the
dude drive. I know you're not allowed to drive, but
here strap yourself to this bomb essentially. And by the way,

(27:47):
I also don't trust some moonbat not to pull a wire.
And I mean that, I don't even care if it's
Elon's company. There's just so many people, so many people,
And I remember what happened to Jody Foster movie Contact, Right,
all takes is one lunatic who saw God and thinks
he is God. Look at that full circle. We'll be
right back. Boys. You miss out because it turned into

(28:10):
this at one point, this crazy tag team match on
Caitlin Collins, which she earns every bit of it. And
it's over the narrative of this guy who they're like
this Maryland Father. Sorry, this is how they frame it.
Maryland Father accidentally deported to this prison in El Salvador. Okay,
A couple things. One, he's not a Maryland father. He's

(28:35):
a citizen of El Salvador who came to the country illegally,
has not one but two findings of being MS thirteen.
But even if not MS thirteen, if you want to
hold onto that, he also has had deportation orders. And
of course Collins is gonna beat on this dead horse.

(28:58):
So they did like a round robin to her. It
was Bondie, it was Rubio, it was Steven Miller, and
and Trump himself. However, the most and I'll get back
to the other thing, but the most thorough takedown was
actually Bouquel the Salvador, and I want you to consider

(29:20):
it from his perspective. And frankly, I don't know what
these did, these judges think they're gonna do. Send rambo
in listen to this on this.

Speaker 5 (29:32):
Do you plan to return him?

Speaker 2 (29:33):
Well, yeah, I suppose I suggested that I smuggle with
terroristed today the United States?

Speaker 1 (29:41):
How can I return him today?

Speaker 4 (29:42):
And that it's just like I smuggle him into the
United States or whether you.

Speaker 3 (29:45):
Of course I'm not gonna do it.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
It's like, let mean, the questions for busters, how can.

Speaker 9 (29:51):
I smuggle the terrorists today?

Speaker 1 (29:53):
United States.

Speaker 9 (29:54):
I don't have the power to return him to the
United States inside of Hell.

Speaker 4 (29:58):
Yeah, but I'm not releasing I mean, we're not very
fond of releasing terrorists into our country.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
We just turned the murder capital of the world to
the citius country of the Western hemisphere. And he want
us to go back and to the releasing criminals so
he can go back to being the murder capital of
the world.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
That's that's not going to be. But they'd love to
have a criminal, you know, I mean, I mean there's
that's a fasting.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
They would love it.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
Yeah, sick.

Speaker 9 (30:21):
These are sick people, all right.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
So and he's right, he's a thousand percent right. What
do you you What you're asking him to do is
he has two choices. One is to smuggle him into
the US. I know that they'd say. Another choice is
to hand him over the US. But we only have
we only do that when we are when we have
some sort of extradition, international extradition, or under a narco.

(30:47):
There's a narco exception, which if you remember, we've used
with El Chapo, we used it on the Columbian drug cartels.
This is none of those things. So you're asking Bukeul
there to smuggle him into the I guess, or fly
him in, which wouldn't be legal, that would be a problem,
or to release him into the interior of El Salvador.

(31:08):
And if Bouqul and his government also believe he's MS thirteen,
why would they do that? And so would that soothe
Caitlin Collins that another head of a state that she
has no pullover follows her demands to go ahead and

(31:28):
release this guy into the interior. That's insane and that's honestly,
that's all. That's all you need. That's why this judge,
And yes, I understand the Supreme Court kind of upheld it,
but what they upheld is an order that if they
were going to do it, then they need to abide
by it. But if Bouquel's not going to do anything,

(31:49):
because his position seems pretty clear, then the then even
what the little side ruling from the Supreme Court, it
wasn't a full panel, it doesn't rigor into what they
say has to be done. So this is the issue
is done. It's there's no there's no there's where, there's
nowhere else to go. And yet obviously they're still going

(32:15):
to dwell upon it Now, that wasn't it? Because depending
on where you were watching the the whole press conference
yesterday in the White House when they started in on
Caitlin Collins. Is it only tuesday? Oh? Man, boo hate that?
Oh well, or no, excuse me, not tuesday. My brain's

(32:37):
not working, is it? Is it only Tuesday? It's I
should say, is it only Thursday? And then you know,
possibly we can get out of here a little early
because I was just looking at it. Ross. We don't
have we don't have vacation until well, I mean we
have vacation, but we don't have like a company holiday forever.
Oh this time of the year, man, Ross, and I

(32:59):
do have a coming up my long about way of
reminding you why I got my calendar to stay open.
Thank you. We will be off the week of the
fifth through the ninth. We'll be training to go to
space or something. I can't remember, is that what it was? Ross?
You guys are you're doing space training?

Speaker 2 (33:16):
I know they're putting us in one of those tourney
chairs that you've seen in all the movies. Yeah chair
and like flips around.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
Yeah yeah, well you're trying to Yeah, So we're going
to be in that chair for a week straight, passing
out over and over again. Yeah, that's the commitment there, man,
that's what you gotta do. So you know, put that
on your calendars to freak out and pretend like I
never told you. Okay, all right, very very good. So
I was mentioning in the in the oval office yesterday
it just turned into it. You know what it was.

(33:45):
It was like it was like a wrestling match between
two people and all of a sudden, the referee gets
distracted and like three other nWo guys run in and
then you know, beat them with a chair for a
while on.

Speaker 2 (33:56):
The run out.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
That's what was happening with Kaitlyn Collins yesterday. But she
really brought it on herself. And I played the audio
from the president of El Salvador is like, you're telling
me that I need to deport I need to smuggle
one of my own citizens into your country. No thanks,
not going to do it. That's my it's my citizen.
Who the hell are you, Caitlin Collins from CNN. But

(34:19):
if you watched it on CNN or if you watch
it on Fox, you've got two different experiences for really
the rest of it. So let me play out just
a snippet of what happened. Here's about a minute of it.
This is on the Fox broadcast. O.

Speaker 9 (34:30):
What they've done to us at the border should never
and can never be forgotten. It's a sin what they did,
and you are helping us out and we appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Prince.

Speaker 9 (34:45):
Actually, what you're doing with the border is remarkable as
drug what ninety five percent? It's murder as this morning,
nine ninety nine point to be exact.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
Why are those.

Speaker 9 (34:58):
Numbers not on the media, Well, they get out with
the fake news.

Speaker 1 (35:01):
You know, CNN over.

Speaker 9 (35:04):
Here doesn't want to put them out because they don't
like they don't like putting out good numbers. They only
like putting out because I think they hate our country.

Speaker 1 (35:10):
Actually, yeah, but it's a shame.

Speaker 9 (35:13):
You're right, isn't that a great question?

Speaker 1 (35:15):
Why doesn't the media?

Speaker 9 (35:16):
Why don't they put out numbers?

Speaker 5 (35:19):
It's crazy, right, we're doing right?

Speaker 1 (35:22):
Okay, all right, you think that's not remarkable unless you're
unless you're the executive producer of whoever's running the broadcast
on CNN. And let's hear hell out.

Speaker 4 (35:32):
We have been listening to a lengthy live dose they
cut out conference inside the Oval office with the leader
of El Salvador bu where we have heard a lot
of uh it's of information, a lot of news nuggets
that we want to definitely focus on a lot.

Speaker 1 (35:52):
By the way, can you hear it dripping in her voice,
how not pleased she is with what she just heard,
because remember you can tell they cut away because she
doesn't really know what to say. She has no idea
what to say. She's just a rambling fool, all right, which,
by the way, I'm actually I'm surprised because it's something
you learn to do. You guys have no idea how

(36:14):
many times I'm going to go cut to Ray or
I go to cut to a guest or a phone thing,
and then in my ear while I'm still talking, Ross
is telling me things and you have to just be
able to roll with it. So it's actually like, how
can you not do that?

Speaker 2 (36:28):
Just roll with it?

Speaker 1 (36:29):
Were you know?

Speaker 2 (36:29):
I mean, I think you're not giving yourself enough credit
because it is a talent to do it. I wouldn't
be able to do it if I was CNN level.
If you work at you're at that point you should
know how to Yeah, because.

Speaker 1 (36:41):
TV people are getting cues in their ears A lot
more than I.

Speaker 2 (36:44):
Am, right, because I would be like, yeah, I raised
not there, you know what I mean? Like I would be.

Speaker 1 (36:50):
Oh man, all right. So anyway, so it's just dripping
in her voice.

Speaker 4 (36:53):
But listen to this of some misinformation as well. But
we want to digest all of this right now with
our terrific panel here and our reporters. Jeff Zelliny, I
want to start with you, you are at the White House.
Before I get to you, I just want to say,
for the record, since we heard President Trump say in

(37:14):
the Oval Office that CNN hates our country, CNN does
not hate our country, that all really should go without saying.

Speaker 1 (37:22):
IM sorry, are you? Are you the spokesperson for CNN,
because I also work for a big media company and
one of the things that they beat into us during
training ross do you remember this where we don't speak
on behalf of our company? Right, They're very clear you
do not speak on behalf of the company. You speak

(37:43):
maybe on behalf of yourself, and it needs to be
within the bounds of your job, but you don't speak
on behalf of the company. And frankly, that's a standard
employment agreement thing for just about everywhere. So this Cnnacre,
did you run around and do a poll? Real quick?
Do you ask everybody at CNN if they hate America?
I don't believe you did. You are fake news.

Speaker 4 (38:00):
Continues, and I see a rhetorical device in him trying
to say such a thing.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
Right, Okay, So CNN's mad because you because there is
an interpretation of one's actions or words that you then
use to draw a conclusion or that Trump did, because
that's literally what you guys do every day, and the
way that you do it is what Trump is in

(38:30):
fact critiquing. But also, you know what, if you gave
me vibes of it, gave me vibes of like high
school bully stuff. It like where you know some it's
like a group of students is picking on another students.
They they start a rumor going like, oh, you won't
believe it pooped himself a gym class. And then now
you're that dude, right, and eventually you got to go

(38:52):
out and you got to like, I didn't poop, I
didn't do that, right, And then it's all like and
that was the goal to get you to do it,
because now you're explaining, which means you're losing. Dude, we
had we had a kid in school. He was two
grades ahead of me, So I had no part in
this naming that poor son. His name was Morgan and
everyone called him big m Little Organ. Well not everyone.

(39:14):
He was a senior when I was a sophomore. But like,
that's what that poor son of it. And he would
try to explain a lot which was really weird. And
that's what that's the vibe I was getting right there. Man,
So you got absolutely bodied in the oval office. Uh,
you got bodied by a dude in his third language.

(39:38):
That's crazy, that's crazy. He took you apart. I didn't
have I didn't have to interpret that. I didn't have
to find somebody interpreting that. He took you apart in
this third language, going away to say your numbers. Suga
was in the media do it, which is really really
funny because from an outside perspective looking in, and if
you just threw it to somebody who really didn't have

(39:59):
a in the fight, that's a very fair question, like
why would they go from insanity to ninety nine percent better?
And nobody would report it? That's what that's what. That's
what an outside looking in person who could honestly be
an arbiter and didn't really have a skin in the game.
Although I understand that Buckell and Trump seem to have

(40:20):
a relationship.

Speaker 8 (40:20):
But.

Speaker 1 (40:23):
Like that's a logical question, and that's where we find ourselves.
Also we find ourselves with this is a mixed bag here. So, uh,
remember publisher's Clearinghouse. I know you're all still waiting to
win it, very excited. Well not anymore, apparently a business
bottle of just giving away millions of dollars, not a

(40:47):
long term thing. But also the part where you know,
magazines aren't really a thing anymore. They have announced that
they will file for bankruptcy.

Speaker 2 (40:55):
Yeah, this is karma or for disavowing Ed McMahon. Oh,
here we go, all right, explain this, Okay, it's a
it's a it's a famous Mendela effect where when I
was a kid, he'd publish his clearinghouse and their spokesperson
was Ed McMahon, absolutely, and they would show him on

(41:16):
TV and he would show but your door with a
giant check in the balloons and his face was on
the envelope. His face, the imprint of his face was
on the envelope. And apparently they say that never happened.
He was never part of Publisher's Clearinghouse, had nothing to
do with it. Was never on the envelope. Bull crap.

(41:38):
I must be from a different universe at some point
I transferred over to this universe. And that makes it
a Mendel effect because they say that was never it
never happened.

Speaker 1 (41:45):
What were we seeing him on TV all day for? That?

Speaker 2 (41:48):
Was it never happened?

Speaker 1 (41:49):
Oh? He was just on Johnny Carson, which I didn't
watch because I was too young, So I should have
no memory. You and I should have no memory of it.

Speaker 2 (41:58):
Right, It's completely insane because that happened, right he was
He was on the envelope, dude, and I saw a
video of a person.

Speaker 1 (42:06):
It was some TikTok or something that somebody's claiming that
that's it.

Speaker 2 (42:09):
No, that is a thing. Google it. He never had
anything to do with Publisher's Clearinghouse. I'm not joking. There
has to be a lot of people right now going
you're out of your mind. He was part of it.
If you look it up, apparently we're all crazy, all right?

Speaker 1 (42:26):
Hold on, Oh, he was a competitor for American Family Publishers,
not Publishers Clearinghouse. According to yes, Yeah, I don't believe it. No,
it was publisher's clear published, I know. Shut up.

Speaker 2 (42:41):
Yeah, no, you're wrong. It had nothing to do with it.
He was never on your porch holding a giant check
with balloon.

Speaker 1 (42:48):
You know, it's tough growing up on a ranch because
you realize they're never even if they were, like we
did win, they're like, I'm not driving all the.

Speaker 2 (42:55):
Way out there. There's a video I saw though, it's
from some you know, TikTok account that was retweeted on
Twitter x. Yeah, and they were saying, you know, why
does gen X have such a problem with authority and
people in control? And you might think, oh, it's covid h.
You might think it's you know, the stuff we've seen
in the government. But what it really comes down to
is we were all raised, we all saw ed mcmahonon

(43:16):
the envelope, and now you're trying to tell us it
never happens, So we don't believe you about anything.

Speaker 1 (43:20):
Yeah, No, that's that's absolutely one hundred percent fair. Although
here's the duality of this of this update though, and
I guess you know what, maybe it's a good thing.
I was gonna say. The bad thing is you're never
gonna you're never gonna win the publisher's clearinghouse anymore. So
if that was your dream, you will not achieve it,

(43:41):
I'm sorry to say. The other thing is, now there's
no reason to answer your door when.

Speaker 2 (43:45):
Somebody knocks on it, not at all.

Speaker 1 (43:47):
That was the only that literally was the last reason,
right because now if somebody knocks on your door, who's
who's there?

Speaker 2 (43:55):
Joseph witness the Mormons.

Speaker 1 (43:56):
Somebody that you wanted to tell you something could be
religious and maybe they want change for quarters or whatever.
Do you want change or oh, no, five dollars in quarters,
just one at five dollar quarters? Could be that person
could be your kid's annoying friend. You're not answering the door,
and you don't even have and here's the deal, and
you go, well, what about food delivery? They'll leave it

(44:17):
right at your door, So technically it's not answering because
you wait for them to go away. Because if you break,
if you make eye contact, your food doesn't taste as good.
I know you guys know this. Yeah, it's science. I
tested this during COVID. So if you never see the
delivery person, food's awesome. If you guys make even brief
eye contact, it just SAPs the flavor. So no reason

(44:42):
to answer your door ever. Again, absolutely amazing. So that
is I guess the one upside all right, seven nineteen
Hang on the guy in custody, Cody Balmer's name, who
allegedly bombed firebomb the governor's mansion up in Pennsylvania. We
talked a lot about I'm not going to get into
all the details, but they were giving him the old
purp walk right, and she's you know, flank with Trooper's handcuffed,

(45:07):
and he's making like he's sticking his tongue out and
stuff and making weird faces. Although he has quite an
interesting look, and I couldn't put my finger on it.
And then I realized what the dude looks like. He
looks like one of the bad guy the bad cowboys
in a western, but not a high ranking bad one,
so like one who you know, the man with no

(45:29):
name is probably gonna shoot within a moment, very early
on in the gun.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
Fight, like they kind they pull out of an outhouse.

Speaker 1 (45:36):
Exactly. Yeah, he just got pulled out of an outhouse,
never stood a chance. Yeah, that's exactly what this dude
looks like. He looks like one of the dudes who
was in the in the in the house playing poker
there in Big Whiskey while his other dude was getting
murdered in the outhouse. So he runs out and gets
himself murdered because they shouldn't have cut up that whore.

(45:57):
So yeah, yeah, it was a very interesting look there,
all right. So and I am seeing reporting and of
course we're we're already into this where we're playing the
what's his politics game? I I I don't know. I
still I don't know that we have a full handle

(46:19):
on it. I think some people are finding where he
was doing some socialism stuff. I think the dude just
hates government man, and he has particular beef against the
Pennsylvania government. So I guess, I guess we'll see when
more information came out. I'm not a fan of Trump.

(46:40):
There's he's tweeting pictures or posting pictures on Twitter of
himself with f Trump and uh and he's got he
posted like what do you what's the thing where you
needle point right where you so into like a circular
thing to make a picture. It says, be the light
you want to see in the world. It's a picture
of a Molotov cocktail, So there you go. Obviously he

(47:08):
wants to see it burned down. We just still don't
know all the reasons why. But yeah, I did think
the purp Wlalk thing was pretty interesting. In fact, it
was my though. It was the second most interesting purplok
I saw the most interesting happened here in North Carolina.
I'm gonna explain that to you. Coming up in just
a moment, real quick. Phone called David, What up? What's

(47:29):
going on? Good morning? Good morning?

Speaker 5 (47:31):
Kay?

Speaker 3 (47:32):
Yeah, the lady, well, I will want to go back
to the published clearing house.

Speaker 5 (47:40):
Yeah, all the people that got their money every month
or once a year, there'd be out.

Speaker 1 (47:47):
No, they these are annuities. They buy annuities, and it's
a whole thing. They're gonna be fine as long as
the insurance companies there.

Speaker 5 (47:53):
Oh they're gonna be fine.

Speaker 2 (47:55):
Okay, then it ain't me though, let me tell you that.

Speaker 1 (47:57):
And I mentioned purp Walk. And of course the guy
who was accused of fire bombing the governor's mansion in
Pennsylvania looks like a bad outlaw in a Western That
was one of them. But the one that I think
is great is local. So maybe you heard this story.
I did to hear Kyle had this in news, yes,

(48:20):
yesterday he mentioned it. But you had you had two
men connected with an attempted murder of a deputy in
Franklin County. So here here, let me give you that.
Let me explain kind of what happened. Okay, specifically, so

(48:41):
the deputy is, why didn't that didn't pop out there? Okay?

Speaker 2 (48:47):
Sorry?

Speaker 1 (48:49):
So anyway, I believe that it was marijuana possession, possession
of cocaine, felony, fleeen arrests by car, and resisting a
public officer. All right, So that's uh, We're just looking
at some the charges here. But the gist is this,
the deputy is attempting to, I guess, do something with them.
I'm not sure what the initial rest was, but at

(49:10):
some point one of the criminals is alleged to have
attempted to kill the deputy by shooting into his vehicle
which he was in. Thankfully he didn't hit the deputy.
But what's crazy? And actually I don't know why I
got to clip off my thing there. Hang on, hang on, sorry,
I did not realize that till just now. But let

(49:32):
me go go because I have it right here. Sorry, sorry,
very unprofessional. But Ross and I were talking string theory
during the break, so I was it was a booboo
not making sure I had.

Speaker 2 (49:44):
My thing here.

Speaker 1 (49:46):
In case you're wondering what we talked about during the breakes, man.

Speaker 2 (49:52):
Do do do?

Speaker 3 (49:53):
All?

Speaker 8 (49:54):
Right?

Speaker 1 (49:54):
Here we go. This is This is the description from
Sheriff Kevin White, who is the sheriff there in Franklin County.
All right, so the the deputy's name is Spleeze. I
hope I'm pronouncing that correctly. And here's what happens. So
on Saturday morning, two individuals tried to kill him, firing
multiple rounds at his squad car. So he didn't get hit,

(50:17):
and that's great. What do you think he did? Do
you think he went, oh all right? You know everyone
showed up like, oh this is crazy, all right, sit
this one out, go ahead. Yeah, you've had a long day.
Somebody's been shooting at you. Its is very We're gonna
we're gonna send the other the rest of them ount
and hopefully they catch the guys. No, that's not what happened.
That was good enough for Deputy Spleeze or Sheriff White there. So,

(50:41):
according to White, Spleeze then spent the entire rest of
the day leading the man hunt to capture both of them.
And there's this great photo of dirt bag dirt Bag
number one being let out of literally you can see
he's like run into the woods, I guess. And and
here is the deputy who got shot at just hours earlier,

(51:03):
who got his man, and it was just just like
a dog with a bone. Man, he wasn't gonna let
it go. That's pretty badass man. And then I saw
and then I saw people commenting on the r L
part of it, and like, I don't you know, this
is the problem. He's not in the right frame of mind.
If you send him to go, you know, arrest these guys,
he's he's gonna be angry because they shot at him.

(51:25):
He's gonna murder him. You know, well maybe you would,
because you don't know how to you know, exert control
keep your head in certain situations. This guy is uh,
I believe marine as well. I want to make sure
I have the correct branch here, like a million I don't.
I don't know if I have it in front of me.

(51:46):
But the dude, you know, dudes serve time in the military,
and partly you know, transferred then into uh working in
law enforcement, which is not unusual. But like, he obviously
kept his head about him because he didn't go just
run down and shoot the guy.

Speaker 2 (52:01):
Right.

Speaker 1 (52:01):
This isn't like when Boston Paul was around Boston. You
shoot a cop, you're as good as dead kind of stuff, right,
you see in the movies back in the day. No, No,
he went in there. He clearly led an effective man hunt,
and he and the rest of his colleagues apprehended these two.
And they're gonna go and they'll face you know, they'll
face a justice system. And if in fact they did

(52:22):
attempt to murder this officer and it's proved beyond a
reasonable doubt, I hope they never get out of prison.

Speaker 2 (52:30):
I know.

Speaker 1 (52:32):
Yeah, if you're willing to murder somebody and you have
all the rest of this stuff stacked on, I don't
want to see stuff laying there. So hit him with
the top attempted murder charge, hit him with the drug charges.
If in fact that's what it is, you don't get
to do that. That is a conscious decision to fire
into a squad car. So kudos to this deputy for

(52:53):
being like I you know, no, no, no, I'll handle this.
I got this and actually gotting it apparently. In fact,
I retweeted out I'm gonna retweet just the sheriff's thing again.
So it's right at the top you can see the
picture of him being let out of the woods there
by the deputy who got his men. I should say, wait,

(53:14):
can I say men? Ross? Or am I going to
get corrected by that astronaut check? That'd be very careful?
All right, hold on there, All right, yes, Tyler, what's up?

Speaker 2 (53:24):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (53:24):
Yes, sir, I was just calling in.

Speaker 3 (53:26):
I was on Molten Road where they found those guys.
My uncle lived like right there in the area where
they picked the the suspects. Up at that day when
I was coming off that road, all of that was unfolding,
and that was the largest police presence I've ever seen
in our county. So tudos to all the guys here
in Franklin County and the surrounding areas that all pulled

(53:49):
together to keep everyone safe.

Speaker 2 (53:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (53:52):
Yeah, literally, Like, if there's two ways to get all
the police there, one if somebody decided they were gonna
shoot at or god forbid, actually kill a police officer,
it tends to amp up the rest of their colleagues
and uh, chicks fighting at spring Break. You'll get a
lot of cops there for that. Man, I want to keep.

Speaker 3 (54:13):
Everywhere probably not probably not hard to get them to
show up for that.

Speaker 1 (54:16):
I want to keep it. That. That is their thanks
for have called. That's their commitment to ever tell that
story about Daytona. When I was down at Daytona Beach,
it was it was not as spring Breaker was right
on the edge of it. And there's uh it's down
by where the w Hotel is. I can't remember the
name of this bar, but it's just across the highway
from literal Daytona Beach. There it seemed like a I

(54:37):
don't know, it's a weird three story business center. So
but if you sit up on the upper balcony, you
see you can watch everything. And these there was like
these these girls that got into this fight and everyone
like hair pulling, bikini tops were getting ripped, and every
bicycle cop in Daytona Beach showed up to keep the
public safe. Good on them, but uh yeah, those would

(55:01):
be the two. All right, check this out, Hey, you
want some science That CBS then had to woke up.
So here we go. Researchers have located, for the first
time in Guatemala, an ancient Mayan child sacrifice altar that

(55:23):
was part of what was now thought to be a
very metropolitan, very weighty toity kind of place where people
from all different cultures would come to, I guess watch
children get sacrificed and trade goods. And it's they've been
uncovering this for a year and a half, but it's

(55:43):
really every This thing is really impressive, and it actually
has a carving of one of the known or the
previously unknown Mayan gods that is a secondary storm gods.
They're all geeking out over this thing, which is very cool.
So that should be the story, right, Well, no, you'd
be wrong because if you scroll through the CBS news article,

(56:05):
they ignore the archaeologists who led the discovery after the
first two paragraphs, who are you know, nerding out as
I said, And then they decide to bring on another one,
an archae on other archaeologist. Her name is Maria Blaine Mendez,
who is a kind of woke archaeologist, which is exactly

(56:26):
what CBS wanted because she then says the following thing. Okay,
we see how the issue of sacrifice exists in both cultures.
So what she's talking about, she's talking about up in Mexico,
that part of the of you know, what you had

(56:46):
up there, and then of course what you have now
down in Guatemala. So she's looking at comparing, contrasting some
other known stuff of the Mayan between three hundred and
five hundred a d. And then she says this, it
was a practice. It's not that they were violent. It
was their way of connecting with the celestial bodies.

Speaker 2 (57:06):
Right, they have to defend it in some way, you.

Speaker 1 (57:09):
Know what I mean, you can call it violent. I
don't know if you guys know this. The further you
go back into history, kind of the more violent things
were ross any you're reading the Old Testament right now,
any hints of violence in their.

Speaker 2 (57:22):
There is a bit, yes, Okay, But I saw this
on Twitter yesterday, like people in the comments trying to
defend this, and they're trying to like step away from it,
like oh, you know there was this reason or that reason,
and it's like, well no, I mean, they were sacrificing
children for the climate. Really, when you think about it,
it was right, we want good crops, So you know,
it's to bring up little Bobby on the altar here
and so kind of what they're doing now, Well, yeah,

(57:46):
you need to sacrifice a lot for climate change. It's
the exact same thing. Well not really. Yeah, it's a
little different.

Speaker 1 (57:52):
Yeah, but it's like, no, oh, well, they weren't violent
because they just if they just thought that they had
to do it, does that count because that's that's literally
the worst excuse. Hitler just thought he had to reunite
the Rhineland. You want to go down this road, give
me a break. But yeah, no, they I just think
it's funny. They had to drag in like an outside

(58:14):
person so they could get the woke taken there and
we could have dumb arguments like this anyway, raced agic
from the weather Channel. You see yuh all right?

Speaker 2 (58:24):
Not on the phone today.

Speaker 1 (58:25):
That's what I like to see.

Speaker 6 (58:26):
Oh yeah, normal, normal, back to normal.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
Oh no, it's not going to be normal. Yesterday wasn't normal.
Yesterday was June. What are you doing, man? June?

Speaker 2 (58:36):
Not likee June.

Speaker 1 (58:37):
But I go like later May, yeah, late May. Yeah,
no no argument there. It's gonna get a little fouled
up for a few days. Allergies are awful today. Oh yeah,
Ross is just awful to men. Well, they it was they.
They targeted him because not only is there you know,
all of that, but they had freshly mowed the like
the grass in this I sneezed.

Speaker 2 (58:58):
On the way to work probably thirty forty times in
the car, and at one point I'm driving down this
road and it's just all like cut grass, and I'm like, od, it's.

Speaker 1 (59:04):
Towards Yeah, hey, by the way, real quick, I'm sorry,
I'm gonna have to Yes, let me just say this,
but I know a bunch of people anna call in. Yes,
I understand the abortion reference to the the Guatemalan thing.
So now it's been said, yes, I do understand that.
So if you don't think that's finely don't think all
right anyway, I'm sorry. I just I just saw all

(59:25):
my calls blowing up, and I know they only make
the same point. So all right, let's make a weather point,
and better make it a good one or you know else.

Speaker 6 (59:33):
Yeah, yeah, today probably the worst of the next five
seven days. Those June temperatures will come back after We're
more seasonable for the rest of the week until Friday,
maybe a little relief with a shower trying to pass
through noontime into the early afternoon hours, but really not
gonna be much rain, and those showers associated with a front,

(59:56):
so with gusty wins. As the front gets in, we're
in the upper sixties low seventy today, the winds a
gust twenty five plus a little cooler tonight, load to
mid forties, clear, and then sun mid upper sixties tomorrow
with a stiff west wind, so you know, temperature is
a little bit below normal, and then tomorrow night we'll
be in the upper thirties to low forties, and then
we'll start a nice recovery as we're close to seventy Thursday,

(01:00:18):
closer to eighty by Friday, and the weekend looking pretty
good right now, Load to mid eighties mostly Sunday, Saturday,
Easter Sunday partly sunny. So early today, which isn't really
going to be all that bad. It's probably going to
be the worst of it. The only shower mentioned. After that,
we get a big bridge high pressure're gonna park off
the east coast and kind of dominate our weather for

(01:00:39):
several days near season will temperature some cool mornings, pleasant
afternoons un till about Friday, then we'll start warming up
right now, a nice sunny to partly sunny, warm and
dry Easter weekend.

Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
Okay, all right, that's it better be, because then you
never had the kids have to do it. It's a
little rainy out and that's what egg hunts and they
get all dirty. Yeah, by the way, did you ever
put well, you know what, I'll approach you with this
in the next hour because I was going to start this.
Let's see, I'll explain it then. But thank you, Ray,
appreciate it. Correct, All right, there you go.

Speaker 2 (01:01:10):
Race agent from the Weather Channel.

Speaker 1 (01:01:12):
We were talking. It was funny Ross. We were talking
about the Mandela effect and it's just popped into my brain.
And it's not a Mandela effect thing. It's just you
ever do something in your community growing up, or the
way that you did something, and you just assumed everyone
did it that way, and then once you'd leave, you
realize you're the only ones who do it that way.

(01:01:32):
I'm not doing a good job of describing, but this
will make sense in just a moment on case O
Day radio program. Just assume this is how everyone did
the Easter for the kids, right, Although there were some
we did have some family friends who are very religious
and they would not do anything but the religious component.
But you know, we did. Yeah, four kids, I think

(01:01:53):
my mom just want us to shut up. So so,
you know, they would conduct an Easter egg hunt and
most the time to do it there sometimes the cousins
come over whatever, so it would grow. But so we
do the Easter egg hunt. And I thought the way
that my family did it was just normal because that's
how I kind of knew all the rest of the
families did it. Imagine my surprise when I learned later

(01:02:15):
in life that most families didn't just use actual hard
boiled eggs with one exception. So everything was a hard
boiled egg with the you know that was colored, and
then there'd be one that she had one golden plastic
egg and inside would be like ten dollars, so there
was only one of those. And then I, you know,

(01:02:36):
I leave the little cocoon that is, you know, growing up,
get out in the real world, talking to buddies at college,
and like, no, man, what do you mean you put
actual eggs out there? Is that even healthy?

Speaker 2 (01:02:46):
We had the same experience growing up in New York.
We would use real eggs the night before or the
day before you a few days before we would die
them and color them. And then those were the eggs
that were hidden to find. And it wasn't later on
until I started hanging out with Markey's family when we
started dating, and there was at Easter and she they
were using plastic eggs, and the plastic eggs had money

(01:03:08):
and and gifts inside them, and it completely blew my mind.
I was like, I was cheated as a child. Not
only that, but the eggs were hidden outside because growing
up in the city, our eggs, the real eggs. We
didn't not even a gold egg with some money inside.
It just all go real eggs. They were hidden in
the flat because we didn't even have a real house.
We had a flat in the city.

Speaker 1 (01:03:28):
Well, I want I want to point out too that
you didn't get to keep the money. I left that
part out in mind.

Speaker 2 (01:03:33):
Oh we attacks, No, you tithed it, okay.

Speaker 1 (01:03:37):
Yeah, so when you went to when you went to
Mass for Easter Sunday, you had to put it in there, which,
by the way, is not an easy thing to do
as a kid.

Speaker 2 (01:03:44):
Right now, it's a pretty sacrifice for a kid.

Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
Yeah, but let me tell you, it created a mindset
where me and my siblings. Even though we knew that's
where it was going, we still wanted to be the
one to do it and rolling here on our number three.
So yeah, So, so we were just talking about So
Ross has explained this to me. I don't have kids,
so I have I have not kept up with where
Easter egg hunts have gone. How have they morphed into

(01:04:10):
a prize package from the Wheel of Fortune?

Speaker 2 (01:04:13):
Oh, you're talking about the easter baskets these?

Speaker 1 (01:04:14):
Well, yeah, the Easter baskets which in my day had
and you correct me if it's different for you.

Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
You would have the.

Speaker 1 (01:04:20):
Basket and then you would have the you know, the
fake grass stuff that would get everywhere, and like if
it did get everywhere, we'd get in trouble. And then
it would have a lot of little the tiny chocolate eggs.
I would get the reeses because I like chocolate less,
but I like the peanut butter more, and you know,
just and then it might be candy corn in there
for those of you who like candy corn. And but

(01:04:43):
that's what it was. I mean, you were it was
probably like two dollars worth of candy. You're not breaking them.

Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
Yeah, but it was still amazing because you would get out.

Speaker 1 (01:04:50):
Oh it was great. I'm not down in it.

Speaker 2 (01:04:52):
Yeah. No. When I was a kid, once again, we
had real eggs and we would hide the eggs in
our flat. We didn't go outside because you can't hide
an egg by what outside by the fire hydrant or something,
and we didn't really have a backyard. It was very time.

Speaker 1 (01:05:03):
The crackheads would steal it, right exactly.

Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
They'd pawn them or whatever, especially eggs nowadays because they're
super expensive, so you can't do that.

Speaker 1 (01:05:09):
Point.

Speaker 2 (01:05:09):
But no, and the easter Easter basket was a basket
full of candy with a chocolate bunny. That's what you
would get. And now nowadays kids get like presents and
stuff in their baskets. It's like I woke up and
there was an iPhone in my basket, or there was
what do you need an iPhone for a box? Or
there was a video game or there was yeah that's

(01:05:30):
a thing. Now how did that work?

Speaker 1 (01:05:32):
Like all right, so you will never you will not
have to suffer eternal damnation, and you need an xbox?
Like how many gifts do you need this weekend?

Speaker 5 (01:05:40):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:05:40):
I know I saw somebody. I think it was like
a family friend or something a few years ago where
they woke up and there was like a bike in
front of the easter basket.

Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
Stop.

Speaker 2 (01:05:48):
Yeah, I don't know when that happened, but that's definitely
the thing that happened. I escalated that.

Speaker 1 (01:05:55):
So do you do you do you do an Easter
egg hunt with Lincoln around the house.

Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
We do do it. And because we have know, we
have a bigger yard they had when I was a kid.
You know, when when you when you get in in
a good relationship, or you know, you get in a marriage,
you have your traditions from your family side and your
spouse's side, and you sort of you can either go
with one or the other or compromise. So sure and listen.
When I first started, like I said, hanging out with
Marky's family and realized that their traditions were so much

(01:06:20):
different than ours. They didn't use real eggs. They had
property outside they would hide the eggs outside. That makes
complete sense to me, if you have the property and
your you live in the country, whatever. But also they
had the plastic eggs that they would put little candies in,
put money like they took money in their eggs, And
I remember thinking, man, I was like robbed as a kid,
and you realize it's it's kind of like a class thing,
like we couldn't afford the plastic money eggs. So yeah,

(01:06:45):
we get the plastic eggs and we put little stickers
and stuff inside them, and we hide them outside. They're
they're all outside.

Speaker 1 (01:06:51):
But do you put hard boiled eggs too?

Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
We do not, Okay, because because because I eat them
all and they won't last in the house.

Speaker 1 (01:06:58):
That's a good point, so they won't make it out there.

Speaker 2 (01:07:01):
All right.

Speaker 1 (01:07:02):
Yeah, this is just one of those things. I was
just thinking it was so funny because it was such
a shock to me. And you're right, it was probably
a class thing because remember most of the people were
telling me about how they were doing it, were you know,
Southern California kids, I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:07:16):
Or it's a generational thing. Maybe somewhere like the easter
baskets evolved, maybe the real eggs evolved into the plastic eggs.
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:07:23):
Well, when I was well do, when I was very little,
we used to have to reach into the chicken and
get them ourselves. Oh well, yeah, so that that farm
ranch living will do for you.

Speaker 2 (01:07:32):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
You got to sit there, you got to sit there
in like a gilly suit and wait for the hen
to lay, then snatch it before your siblings. It was
very competitive. So all right, Well, I'm glad I wasn't
alone on that because I just thought, for a moment,
maybe it was just an an agricultural kid thing, right,
because you know, most most of us had chickens and
stuff like that.

Speaker 2 (01:07:51):
So you know, they've been trying to evolve Saint Patti's
Day for a while. I know that's been a thing,
and and Lincoln said it once or twice and we
just stopped that imdiately. He's like, what is the leprechaun
bringing me today the tomorrow? Or like he's never gonna Yeah,
I'm like, this is never gonna happen in this house.
What if he brings a bottle of jamison? You got
to watch out, man.

Speaker 1 (01:08:10):
You haven't seen the drunk Eleprechaun on the weather forecast thing.
We talked about this extensively. What do you think that
guy's bringing you an STD? Probably you know there's some
patties that's not a good So they're trying to make
that No, you can't have the adult holiday. I'm sorry,
what are they doing for Cinco to Mayo. You getting
your kid a rodeo bull or a matador's outfit. I mean, hey,

(01:08:35):
you don't want the other kids to think he's poor,
So you got to go in this jout. What'd you
get for? What'd you get for for sinking to Miyou
I got to gore a bull in a matador's outfit
was amazing, by the way, singing to Mayo. Uh, let
me just give you some predictions here because we have
this story. Uh, the city of Chicago has canceled this

(01:08:59):
year's sink Go to Mayo. I predicted this going back
to Saint Patrick's day when I was doing my annual
making a point that you could never have an obviously
drunk cartoon mascot helping you do weather. You hear the
weather forecast. In the holidays, they have little graphics. They
always have this Leprechaun. It looks like he's been drinking
for two days straight. And then Sinko to Mayo. You

(01:09:21):
could never have like a drunk dude in a sombrero
taking a siesta. Right, everyone can lose their minds. But
then I pointed out, what Trump doing the deportations this
they're probably going to cancel Sinco to Mayo. I was
tongue in cheek. It was a throwaway joke in another conversation,
and yet here we are. Yes, the City of Chicago.

(01:09:45):
Organizers say immigration policies from Trump administration are creating fear
in the Mexican community, and canceling the event put safety
over profit. All right. Two things. One, go to any
bar that's having a Sinko to myol party this weekend,
or maybe you go for the crew from work on

(01:10:06):
Friday or something whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:10:08):
Go in there.

Speaker 1 (01:10:09):
When is actually when, actually is Cinco de Mayo this year?
Hang on what day of the week. It's a Monday?
Oh man, look at that. You guys got an excuse
to drink on a Monday? Oh good? And I avoid
the nerd holidays. It's on Sunday.

Speaker 2 (01:10:23):
That's bonus.

Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
So go there. And it's nothing but drunk white college kids,
I mean, and like office goers. And that's okay whatever.
I don't begrudge you that. But it's not like the
only people showed up for a Sinko to Mayo thing,
which most people don't even recognize what it is. They
think it's Mexican Independence Day and not a battle thing.
And whatever, that's fine. We pride ourselves in not knowing things.

(01:10:50):
Have you seen how many don't even know what the
Holocaust was? I mean we're doomed historically with some of
the teaching. That being said, there's plenty of people are
still gonna go out wear a sombrero or not because
you know they're woke. But they're gonna drink too much.
They're gonna come in on Tuesday. They're gonna be relatively unproductive.
It's just the way of things. However, I do have

(01:11:13):
one additional theory because I would do it if I
was one of these moon bat woke protesters. I think
you're going to see people protesting people having fun on
Sinco Tomiel, Right, So if you do have like a
big gathering, like they had a huge Sinko to Mio

(01:11:34):
thing that they do in Santa Barbara every year, and
it would take over like parts of State Street. So
if you want to say this is cultural appropriation while
while their history is being a race by this evil
Trump administration, I promise you we're going to see some
videos of Sinco to Mio party going, you know, Frat

(01:11:54):
Bros or whatever, and then some other woke pain in
the ass kid they go to school with, who's got
it all figured out, glues himself to stuff out there, going,
how dare you celebrate this while the world's burning with
Trump in the office. It's going to happen. It may
not happen right here, but I bet it happens near

(01:12:15):
a college campus near probably, I don't know, Maybe I
think California is a good bet. I'm just trying to
think of really the hyper focus New York right anywhere
you're gonna have an these big celebrations. Man, they're gonna
be out there, and ironically, they'll probably end up protesting
people who are of actual Mexican heritage who are legally here,

(01:12:38):
which is not who anybody has a problem with. And
you know it'll turn into yet another example of some
woke white chick yelling at a person of color over
appropriating their own culture. And I can't wait for it.
I'm super excited because you know, I love playing audio

(01:13:00):
of really the dumbest among us speaking of the dumbest
among us, Ford's chief learning officer, And I don't know
what that is. What a bad time to be doing
this right here. I'll share that story coming up here
on the CaCO Day radio program. There has been another
helicopter crash. Obviously, you've probably been following what happened up

(01:13:22):
in New York. I see the conspiracy theorists can't tell
the difference between a family photo and a news photo
from two years ago, so they're now pretending that it's
two different helicopters.

Speaker 2 (01:13:33):
Have fun.

Speaker 1 (01:13:33):
I guess that's how you spend your time on Twitter whatever.
But you know, it's a pretty gnarly accident there, and
talking about literally the rotor blade just shearing off.

Speaker 2 (01:13:45):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:13:46):
I saw a video of a guy who's a helicopter
flight instructor, and he was talking about some movements on
the I can't remember what the secondary joysticks called.

Speaker 2 (01:13:54):
And it's not a joystick.

Speaker 1 (01:13:56):
I know you can get mad, but whatever that The
the upper stick is that if you pitch it downward
and you do it too abruptly, you can shear the
rotors off of which makes sense, right the amount of
force now you're putting up onto those things. And I
don't know if that's what happened, but that is kind
of what happened with this other one. This one happened

(01:14:16):
in South Africa, though, and the question then becomes why
would a pilot who knows what he's doing in a
helicopter pitch the helicopter so aggressively downward so as to
shear the rotor off the top. And the answer is
the pilot didn't. According to investigators, the crash of this Sorry,

(01:14:39):
my mike's a whistling today.

Speaker 2 (01:14:41):
This screen's in the wrong position. There we go.

Speaker 1 (01:14:46):
Apparently they figured out that the cause of the crash
and what caused the the stick there to essentially do
this movement and share the rotor is described as an
unsecured penguin yep. According to officials, the chopper was transporting

(01:15:11):
a penguin out to Bird Island or coming from so
there's you know, you get penguins that obviously come up
to the islands there and even come up to Southern
Australia and South America and especially South Africa there, and
so they were hauling up. But they just kind of
put it in the cab and apparently it freaked out

(01:15:31):
and it hit the Yeah, the controls pitched it down,
tore the roader and of course they crashed. Now, it
initially had been in a box but was sitting on
the lap of one of the pilots, which is crazy
to me. And they just busts out of its box
and then goes willy nilly in there. How do you

(01:15:52):
this is what I understand. How on God's green earth
do you don't put that thing in something a little
more substan It's in a cat carrier box, you know
the like the cheap plastic box you would get when
you when you get the replacement cat at the you know,
the at the pound, because you actually ran over your
kid's cats. You have to go find one that looks
like it. And and so that box because it flipped out.

(01:16:14):
I think everybody knows. Until you put an animal in
a car a few times, you don't know what.

Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
It's gonna do.

Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
Some some cats, dogs, penguins probably I don't know, they're
cool with it. You put them in a vehicle. There
a lot of them. Just if they're chill, they just
go to sleep. Or if dogs, they stick their head
out their window to their eyeballs should be dry and
they're just living loving life. Man, God forbid, they see
a squirrel, you ever stuck and I'm sorry, they pick
on cats. You ever stuck a cat in the car? Seeah, well,

(01:16:44):
that goes Rozi ever had to transport one of your
cats in a car? I did, Yes, how'd that go?

Speaker 2 (01:16:51):
Back? When I still had the minivan?

Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
Smooth sailing?

Speaker 8 (01:16:54):
Then?

Speaker 2 (01:16:54):
Huh all over the place? Yeah, all over the place. Yeah,
it was. I was like, well, I'm gonna die.

Speaker 1 (01:17:00):
Yeah, that's worse than a bee in your car. It
is because of the b You're like, all right, maybe
I get stuck once with a cat. You're like, you're
gonna rip bib balls, aren't you?

Speaker 2 (01:17:10):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:17:11):
Man, So yeah, yeah, it's probably probably. I don't want
to transport him like that right there. I feel bad
because clearly it looks like they're trying to do a
good thing there. But oh man, ty you got this
is why you got to tie your penguins down. That's
the rule. Man, trank the little guys.

Speaker 2 (01:17:28):
I don't know, man, but uh.

Speaker 1 (01:17:30):
Yeah, what a crazy You just don't ever hear accident
assessments in the US like that, Oh what happened unsecured
penguin like that? That you can make a band name
out of that? Good for you, all right, let me
pivot away from uh murderous penguins. I mean that's the

(01:17:50):
other thing. What was going through that penguin's mind, right,
maybe it's like this is what a what a what
crazy life I live? I don't do anything, it's all
always cold, it's hard to find fish. The other guys
are just come by and push you in the water,
which is something penguins will do to other penguins. He's like,
I'm out of here, which is very unfortunate. All right,

(01:18:13):
let's talk about this Ford guy real quick. So for
this is interesting because obviously with everything going on with tariffs,
and you know a lot of it, the discussion is
around us not being able to sell vehicles into many
markets without huge, huge tariffs, whereas every other car on
the road in the US is seemingly a foreign vehicle

(01:18:35):
clearly not with huge tariffs. Many of them are among
the most affordable. So how did we get here? And
how our company is going to respond? And you know,
Ford Ford. One of the ways they're responding, and I
think it's a very smart way for them to respond,
is hey, remember us, we're Ford America. I think they
actually have a new slogan. It's like from Americans for Americans,

(01:18:57):
which is almost fu boo but close. And if you
buy and and we manufacture the most here, and if
you buy our vehicles, then you don't even have to
worry about tariffs. And oh, by the way, we're going
to do employee pricing. I saw they rolled that out
for f one fifties, so that's a smart way to go.
We're the company that didn't take bailouts. We're doing American

(01:19:19):
pricing and our employee pricing. And if you're buying American
manufactured here in America, you don't have to worry about
any of the tariff insanity. That is the way to
tackle it.
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