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July 24, 2024 • 98 mins
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(00:00):
There is something happening which is notgetting a lot of pub and I feel
like it needs to because I willI will admit I was probably wrong on
this, and that is what ishappening over in Europe, specifically the UK
and now over in France. Andit has to do with the moon bats

(00:25):
who the soup moon bats and themoon bats who glue themselves to stuff right,
the stop oil idiots. There aresome of their biggest hits of course
include well, you know, somepretty significant works of art which haven't all
been damaged, as their actions actuallycreated a scenario where more and more galleries

(00:48):
were essentially bulletproofing these things, butyou know, had the potential for damage.
There have been some that actually hadto go through a restoration process.
Us early on you have the fullscale, just just lunacy of when they
went and they took over the Porschefactory, which is still one of my

(01:11):
favorites if you remember in that theyroll in to I don't know if it's
the factory, but it's kind oflike their main facility, their main office
digs over there, but they alsohave a bunch of cars on display,
so it's a bit of a touristattraction, and they plopped themselves down,

(01:33):
glued themselves to the floor right inthe middle of it, and you know,
five o'clock rolls around or whenever,you know they're done, and Porsche
just decided they're never going to gohome, turn the lights out. They
turned down the heating and air rightas you do when everybody's out of the

(01:53):
building. And the video emerged ofthem glued there trying to figure it,
very upset about it because nobody waspaying attention to them, really, and
they had to go to the bathroomand they wouldn't even give them a bucket,
and so they started making social mediaposts about how the the the officials

(02:17):
at Porsche wouldn't give them a bucketto even go to the bathroom in and
that they were cold because they hadturned their cold. I think they were
cold or hot. They were oneof the two for whatever reason. They
because they turned off the systems,you know, because it's nighttime and there's
just like security guards there and that'sit. And the security guards basically just

(02:38):
watched them to make sure they weren'tI guess, trying to burn the car
for warmth that they were glued nearand it was. It was rather amusing,
but it didn't really accomplish anything.And then there's the shutting down of
transportation systems, and it appears thatmaybe where they messed up, because there

(03:01):
is a judge over there who actuallysentenced three of these idiots to some pretty
significant jail time. And it's causingquite a buzz because now the soup idiots
are getting ready to get sentenced.In fact, they may well be sentenced.
It's happening today and obviously they areahead of us, and that very

(03:23):
same judge is the judge who isdoing the sentencing, and they're facing like
up to ten years because of thevalue and the way that the laws are
over there, right, And ofcourse the pushback is, well, you

(03:45):
know it was it was for agood cause. It was for a good
cause. But I actually read thedocuments on the sentencing of the transportation moon
beats and prosecute make a pretty significantcase over you know what the actual impact
there is, And yes, someof it is people simply being late to

(04:06):
work, but it has financial impactsthat are documentable. Right, they did
not get to work, and becauseof that, they did not this thing
that was would have happened didn't happen, whether it was them getting paid for
that time at work, whether itwas a deal going through. But then

(04:27):
you get over to the medical side, and you know, this is what
people have warned about, right youhad you had women in labor who received
substandard care because they were unable tomake it to the destination. You had
cancer patients that were not able toget cancer treatments. You had you had

(04:48):
a the actual injury of a specialneeds a student who went into anaphylectic shock
and for whatever reason they did,I guess they didn't have an EPI with
him or something, and they gotjammed up in the middle of it.
And like you know, you hadreal damages that were put down on paper,

(05:11):
and the Eco Moonbat leadership just can'tdeal. And oh, by the
way, and I know you're gonnabe shocked to learn this. One of
the two girls in the uh inthe Vang souping, I guess it would
be the term for it. Hermom is a big deal. Her mom's

(05:32):
also a big piece of garbage whenI started looking into her, right,
but her mom is really really reallysuccessful, wealthy, but also simultaneously one
of these self loathing you know,al gore types where the grift is in
and she is. So she's launchedthis full campaign about you know, posting

(05:54):
pictures of her daughter when she wasnot purple haired and crazy but just you
know, it looks like a littleschoolgirl. And is it's going to impact
her ability to study music at Cambridge? And and it's just not right and

(06:15):
and it's clear one not only ishis family a giant hypocrite, Mom's also
the one who was she hates shedoesn't like the US very much. And
it's it's evidence by there was therewas a campaign over there, and like
even though mom is a captain ofindustry, you know, they really they

(06:39):
don't want people traveling they were theywould get they would organize locals in a
lot of popular European destinations like Barcelonaand others to get squirt gun tourists to
get him not to come there,which, by the way, how do

(07:00):
I put this and not get barredfrom traveling to the EU. That's what
that's all you have, Okay,I underlook. I get that there are
companies that are players, major playerson you know, on the world stage,
that emanate from many of these Europeancountries, but basically, you are

(07:24):
your EPCOT. I don't you don'twant to hear this, and this is
and by the way, this isn'tme attacking you. This is about understanding
your role in the global economy.Right because the U asked I saw last
week everyone was arguing because you know, they always post these snotty things where
they're like, what was the tweetthat everybody riled up? Some woman is

(07:47):
like, you know, I Igo to three countries every week most but
only thirty percent of Americans have apassport. They don't understand culture, and
that's garbage. As somebody who hastraveled extensively, both in the US and
outside of the US, the UShas the ability to be culturally distinct internally,

(08:15):
more so than any European country.And it's not to say that different
parts of different countries in Europe aren'tculturally different. They are, but not
to the extent the US is noteven remote. If somebody who has lived
for lengths, you know, distinctivelengths of time in Wyoming, California,

(08:43):
Minnesota, and North Carolina, aswell as a little bit in Colorado,
but I'll count that into Wyoming,even though it does have its differences they're
remarkably different. This is like atopic I could talk about forever. Well,
we're going too. I'm just soupset, so upset they don't understand
how big our country is. Butthere's also this impression over there when you

(09:05):
read these posts and social media thatlike they believe that because we're one country,
that it's like the that there's nodistinct culture between regions, which is
complete garbage. Oh it's it's likelike if I drive sixteen hours, right,
I'll drive sixteen hours, yes,to get home to see my mother,
Yes, sixteen Now you go fromI don't know, London and you

(09:26):
go sixteen hours in whatever direction,or you're in Germany and you go sixteen
hours, You're going to pass throughhow many different countries? Right? So
I can't believe in five hours toget to northern Italy from from the UK.
Right. And we've got so manydifferent climates, right, yes,
sort of areas the snowy mountains.Do you want, the tropics? Yes?

(09:48):
Do you want? Do you wantthe beach? Do you want the
mountains? What do you want?And it's not only that, but every
area, Like I said, becauseI've lived in so many different time zones,
as well. Yes, every areaof this country is completely different,
different and culture, different cuisine,and this is something that the European mind
cannot comprehend. Different laws like that. I was explaining to one of my

(10:09):
good uh my buddy Andy there overin the UK and ment him off twitch
and he was completely like he didn'tunderstand the concept of the states. He
assumed that every state would have thesame laws. So when they see these
laws pass by, like scotis rightabout like abortion or whatever, and they're
like, oh my god, abortionis now illegal. No that now it
is the state's right to decide.I'd explain to him why you know what

(10:33):
that means that there can be differentlaws and different and that's okay. Again,
this is not me. I don'twant a hack on Barcelona, which
is where they were doing this workkun thing, because it's a it's an
amazing city. You should go there. You should go. But you have
to understand why people go and andand and and do this. They go
because they want to see you actinglike your grandfather, okay, or your

(10:58):
great grandfather. They want to go. There's a there's whole countries that we
only travel to see stuff that's ruinedright, it's not I want to see
an old, broken down castle.Man, Yes, we go there.
Oh, the the Acropolis, wego to see it because it's busted.
It's in and and and and andhistoric in that manner. When we go

(11:20):
to Barcelona, we want to gowe want to go to the piazza.
We want to go see the fountain. You want to go see you want
to go see all the stuff thecurrent Europeans didn't build, right, O.
Hey, I was seeing stuff likeI don't remember where I read it.
But they were talking about how whenit comes to passports, the United
States has the lowest percentage population,has one right sort to explain this because

(11:41):
the average American will never go toall fifty states. There the size of
this country is hard for them tounderstand. And they make these same arguments
where they're like, O, well, why don't you have high speed rail.
We have high speed rail over here? Well have you been over here?
Because what you see in common youwant you go down these rabbit holes
of uh. People from Europe thatvisit the United States or even from Asia

(12:03):
that visit the United States for thefirst time, and they make these videos
and they all have something in common. All of the people that tend to
visit here, this tends to bethe number one thing. They are all
completely shocked and overwhelmed at just howbig our country is. They have yes,
and it's stuff like you talked towhat blew me away is the most
common thing that I when I waswhen I first visited Ireland. It was

(12:24):
one of the first European countries Iever visited and was talking with people there
had been to the US. Theywouldn't shut up about the roads, right,
like, and you realize they areremarkably they're just bigger. Yeah.
Yeah. The other thing too,is I was reading I was seeing a
post about this a social media wherethey were talking about our differences when it

(12:46):
comes to the European and the likethe American mind where what we considered to
be a long journey like a longcar ride. Yes, because post you
and I must have seen the samepost, because it was part of the
rabbit hole that literally was stirred bythis woman running out and trying to protect
her daughter from being horrible. Becauseand I once to get my friend over
in the UK Andy he was likeI told him. I was like,

(13:07):
I drive forty to fifteen minutes towork one way every day and you don't
live in an unreasonable suburb. IWake Forest is common. It's like if
people live in like southern Holly Springs. I'm like, that's a a long
way thirty four, but I alsotake the long er. I don't like
go down Capitol and I don't like, yeah, five for it. I
hate all that. So but tohim, he was like, that's insane.

(13:28):
And I'm like, dude, thatis a short car ride. That's
nothing. But even my family whenthey do come to visit from New York.
I remember when my parents came downto visit, like what long time
ago, like twenty ten or whateverit was before my father passed away,
And I'm so now acclimated to howit is in the South that to me,
driving from wake Forest to say,the Fairgrounds in Rally isn't a long

(13:50):
car ride for me. That's justI'm just getting in my car and I'm
going somewhere, right. It's thedifference if you live out in the country
as opposed to the city, andthey live in the city. So when
we were doing that, they werelike, this is a long car ride.
We're driving. I'm like, thisis normal now, But it's the
same thing over the UK. They'relike a forty minute ride is like I'm
like, I don't even where Ilive anymore? Where am I? And
and and again that's fine where Iwould say, like a long car ride

(14:13):
where I'm like, man, thisis starting to get long. I would
say it's probably over over five hours. After five hours, I'm like,
now I'm kind of in the carfor a while. But like a car
or ride to the beach, ifI'm going to like topsail or whatever,
Yeah, not an issue, nota lot an issue. Yeah, probably
not even stopping at a gas station. No, I'm not might might might
you know, to just get stuffwhile we're down there, But there's no

(14:35):
there's no need to. And andso like I saw somebody made a video
of this, and they're right.They just play like Europe's living off fumes.
They're living off everything that was.And when people come to the US,
I'm going to throw out, youknow, let's talk about who made
what? All right, so stuffwe'll go with stuff that God made right,

(14:56):
natural scenery, things like that.Countries most most countries have some of
that or even a lot of it. Look, the Alps are wild,
and I grew up in the mountains. They're wild. And what Italy has,
what France has in Switzerland and everything, it's amazing. But that's not
what I'm talking about. I'm talkingabout the stuff that you built. And

(15:16):
the difference is people want to gosee what your grandfather built, right.
They want that. They want thatlittle slice of culture, They want that
little Parisian cafe. They want allof that. They want to go see
all that Rome has when you're notgetting pickpocketed, and you know what the
Vatican is. If they go visit, that's what they want to see.
When they come to the US,where do they go. They want to

(15:39):
go see the new stuff we built. They want to go see the innovative
stuff, which is why they goto Times Square and they go to La
and they do the Hollywood thing.Because whether they like us or don't like
us, or purport that every countrythat I've ever visited, every single damn
one can't get enough of American Culturemericanproducts, American entertainment, you name it,

(16:03):
it's there. And it's weird thatin many countries your train you watch
war movies with subtitles. Yeah,because we invented the modern world. Every
everything with few exceptions, or weimproved it all right, And I'll have
this argument all day, but rightnow I got to take a break.
We'll be back. Hang on.My people look to other countries and the
expectations they have, you know,for for all of the crap. I

(16:26):
gotta sit there about with the US, you know, with the US,
and oh they're just so horrible andthey go over and they do stuff and
they destabilize countries and all of thatwill one yes, yeah, yeah,
that is the thing that we do. We don't do it, probably to
the extent that we used to,or at least as openly. But also

(16:48):
when you need something destabilized, whodo you come? Ask us? You
come ask us? You have anexpectation that the US handle it. The
US will foot the bill for theNATO stuff, the US will do this,
the US will do that. Butalso you fail to recognize that you're
not on the cutting edge of innovationand almost ninety percent of the stuff that

(17:14):
you use every day and you love. Let's talk about it. Can we
talk about trains? Ross brought uptrains. I always have to hear about
trains. The state of California.You can see what happens when you're looking
at long distance light rail or highspeed rail. Excuse me, that is
an absolute money pit of doom andit's doing large. Part two one,

(17:34):
it was a lot easier to buildout this infrastructure because you built it on
existing platforms, because it makes alot of sense when you have a collective
of postage stamp companies to do trainslike I get it. But you also
can go pay eighty bucks you geton a Ryan Air and maybe get an
infection theor gross if you've never beenon one. And those are the low

(17:59):
cost airlines travel models. Something thatthe US pretty much put into play are
the rage in Europe because it's easyto go if you're in London to go
on holiday, to use the terminologyin Abitha in very short order and for
not a lot of money. Andthen when you get there to Abitha,
not only going to see all ofthe yachts and all of that, but

(18:21):
you're going to see, like manyof the islands in the Mediterranean, you're
going to see an homage to theway that things were. When you travel
through Greece, you're either going tosee you're either you're going to see broken
stuff or you're going to see portionsof the Mediterranean that are captured in time.
You're not going for the modern officebuildings and what they innovate in Athens,

(18:48):
which exists a lot of times.You know, it's crazy as a
lot of countries or a lot ofcities that you've that you've never been to,
that when you actually look at them, are surprisingly modern, but it's
uninspiring. New York City is modernand inspiring, and that's why people go
there, and they go there forthe stuff that's created. Going back to

(19:10):
the trains, the very first trainis a Welsh I don't know if you
know this is Welsh, right becauseyou actually go see this. But when
you get into the modern locomotive,you know who did that Us US And
what was accomplished with trains, notnecessarily in the tourism way that Europe uses
them. What was accomplished was theability to settle this giant swath of land

(19:37):
that we had. And is therea lot of horribleness that came with the
abuse of the people who physically builtthe railroad. Absolutely, but that's not
any different than in Europe. Idon't know if you know this. They
use slaves to construct railways. Followingthe advent of of the locomotive in the
early eighteen hundreds by the Welsh studwhose name I can't remember, we figured

(20:02):
out how to use it to builda nation and then from there. Uh,
it's not just the US. Thestuff that you want, the stuff
that you you think you want,that you uh, that you you you
put on your Christmas list, andthe latest gadget or gizmo or things likely
came from US, Korea, Japan, China to some extent, along with

(20:29):
investment made in countries like Dubai andothers which are themselves incredibly fake, but
they have so much money that itaids in the development of these things.
And because that's our place, andit doesn't mean that we don't have history
that people want to come see,uh, you know, but it's all
a little different everywhere. You know. The the history of the wild West

(20:52):
is a very popular tourism thing.It's just just one example. So you
know, understandably, when people comeout to Wyoming, do they want to
go to the Wyoming Technological Park inCheyenne just outside of Cheyenne. No,
they don't visit that. They goto Yellowstone and run from Oh, my
gosh, you see one of thegeysers exploded. Everyone's just losing their mind

(21:18):
running on the boardwalk. But nobodygot Gord and I guess nobody got Geysered
either. It just literally biscuit basinis what it's called. It just it
had enough. Just there's pretty oppressivevideo out there. So people go to
see that, and then they wantto go to Cody and they want to
go see an old cowboy rodeo,which they do every week there for tourists.

(21:38):
And so between the visually stunning stuffand maybe checking out Hole in the
Wall or the hanging Judge exhibit downby Laramie, you know, or any
one of the other hundreds of thingsout there. And Wyoming understands that.
But when you look at the wherepeople go, where the most visited things

(22:00):
are. Do you know what themost visited things are in America by foreign
tourists. I think you probably canguess a couple of them. Orlando,
Florida. Right. Obviously, peoplecome here because they want to go see
this thing, this amazing thing thatwas built and is now run still by
some of the people who built it. The majority of the buildout of Disney

(22:23):
World is within my lifetime, eventhough did the part when did a Disney
World open like what seventies early seventies. The majority of what you see as
Disney now was all built within mylifetime. But you know, Disney didn't
even have hotel properties when they firstopened, and it was like it was

(22:45):
the big whoops when they opened Disneyland. They didn't have money to build hotels,
and Disney couldn't get people to invest, and finally some oil dudes from
Texas struck a deal with him,which he ultimately regretted and told screwed them
over to build hotels because Anaheim wasin the middle of nowhere and they needed

(23:06):
that infrastructure. And once Disney realizedhow valuable that was, Orlando and what
they built over there was almost entirelypredicated on their ability to control every aspect
of everything, which is why ifyou go there, even if you think
you're not at Disney, you're stilla Disney. Every dollar you spend,
even if you think you're going toa grocery store you're like, we're gonna
go save money where you get somefood, You're probably shopping at a grocery

(23:30):
store that's owned by Disney and allof that stuff was constructed and it's still
run by people who are there,and that's what people come to see.
They want to see the amazingess ofNew York. And yeah, they want
to go see some of the naturalwonders absolutely Grand Canyon stuff like that,
but they want the modern, whichis why New York's up there and Los

(23:55):
Angeles and of course Hollywood and everythingthat encompasses it, even with the you
know, the sanity that ensues outthere today. So I get really,
I finally had enough of it yesterdayand I'm like, you know what,
I'm just gonna rant today and youall can listen to it. So it
was weird. And I also,I'm going to get to my epiphany and
kind of tie this in when Iwas watching a Jean Claude van Dam movie,

(24:18):
which even though Jean Claude van Damis you know, not, it
was not Americ. I think heis an American now, right, He
is a citizen. The even theall those cheesy eighties action flair that was
us. As much as that wasus and the expansion of the entire film

(24:38):
industry was us. And everything thatyou see in the in the in the
modern take, and it doesn't meanthat there are not people all over the
world that contributed, but it wasus, and so it's fine to recognize
that. And so you know,well, uh, we'll make sure to
point it out on the show becausefor ninety percent of those countries, what

(25:03):
is encapsulated in EPCOT, which arethe you know, the most stereotypical representations
of those are also what people tocontinue to this day to go see when
they go travel. They want tosee that, but they want to see
it for reels and in most casesthe people that are there fire and squirt

(25:25):
guns of tourists annoyed by it wouldbe absolutely financially decimated if people didn't show
up, And I understand it canget annoying. It's you know, I
make fun of tourists goring season outin Wyoming, but I wouldn't have it
any other way. I think everyoneshould see Yellowstone before they die, because

(25:48):
I can't describe to you how amazinglynot in this world you feel when you're
there. It's in cre whether you'rerunning from a bis and you tried to
pet or guysers trying to murder you, or everything's just going swimmingly. It's
it's indescribable Bryce Canyon in Utah.Indescribable pictures do not do it any justice.

(26:18):
And there have been a lot ofplaces in this world that I have
been and stood there. And whenI had no idea, even though I
had seen photos of I'm telling you, and I moved to Utah, I
felt that same way. It's Ican't, I can't. I try to.
I try to explain it to myfriends, my family back in New
York, and I'm like, thisis like, They're like, what's it
like. I'm like, well,I drive to where and this is when

(26:40):
I lived in Salt Lake. I'mlike, I drive to work, the
Mountain Range, the Other Front Range. I can't remember the names, but
yeah, yeah, you're driving there, and like I feel like I'm looking
at a painting. I feel like, yes, I'm driving to work.
I'm looking at a pay it doesn'tlook real to me. Still one of
the most beautiful places I've ever lived, and there and it's just there.
It is there every day and hadI had the good fortune to grow up

(27:03):
in that and even then, Istill when I go home, and a
lot of times I'll fly fly intoGillette rather than Sheridan because it's just easier,
and so geelet's kind of flat outin the middle of nowhere. It's
still amazing in the starkness of it. But there's a moment when you hit
the Powder River driving back towards Buffalo, and if it's clear, you start

(27:23):
seeing the tips of the peaks likeCloud Peak and Bomber Mountain and all of
it that make up that part ofthe Big Horn Mountains. And it just
as you approach and it gets biggerand bigger, and eventually you hit the
base of it. And those thoseare not the big mountains. Big Horn
Mountains are twelve about twelve four hundredI think is Cloud Peak, So like,

(27:48):
we don't even have fourteen thousand footpeaks there, which they have in
Colorado, numerous amount of them,right, And the biggest, the biggest
mountains in America in the lower fortyeight are in Washington, respectively, and
then of course uh McKinley up inalaska's the biggest. And and you don't
when you see that Himalayas what it's. It's it's just wild. And the

(28:15):
very same people who are who aresitting there and gluing themselves to stuff and
ruining paintings and all this would havea society where you couldn't experience that they
could if they're in the upper echelonlike this. This girl who's probably gonna
get five years in prison and hermom, who's got all the money in
the world and as you know,wants to control everything that you do and

(28:37):
hates you, is now having toturn to social media to try to get
a ground swell of support that doesn'tlook like it's going to do any good.
A she is using now a thingthat we built to try to save
her daughter, and the irony justdoesn't click with her. That's that That's

(29:02):
the real kicker here, right.She hates everything that we do and the
smugness of Americans and all the rest, and she's going to use our technology
because her her influence isn't enough andsomebody should explain that to her and maybe
maybe just maybe not fun to lifestylefor her kid to run around and ruin

(29:26):
everybody else's and expect that there's notgoing to be any consequences. It is
six forty eight. Hang on,all right, that's just wonderful. That's
what you get on Wednesday, though, Right, Everything's just everything's just got
to be a problem, all right, phone number eight eight eight nine three
four seven eight seven four. Thatwill get you on the show. That's

(29:47):
how we do that thing. Ifcocaine bear wasn't enough for you, Now
we have cocaine sharks. Thankfully they'rein Brazil. But you know, if
they're in Brazil and they're all hoppedup on the you know, the Bolivian
marching powder, I guess they couldbe here pretty quick. Scientists say that

(30:11):
thirteen Brazilians sharp nosed sharks which liveoff the they live off the coast of
Rio Desionaro, which that's got tobe good eating. You ever seen beaches
in Rio shock full of stuff,you know, to snack on, mostly
Brazilians. But and they found thatin the muscle tissue of all thirteen specimens

(30:36):
were pretty significant amounts of cocaine.The particular sharks were chosen for their proximity
to shallow coastal waters. There's awhole lot of them, and you know,
one of the contaminants, or oneof the things is they are they
do ship swim show shallow that theytend to spend a large part of their

(31:03):
lifetime in discharge areas. So yeah, it ain't good. Let's see here,
significant contaminate discharges. They spend mostof their life cycles swimming in this
and it causes a and then ofcourse you know people, there's a lot

(31:23):
of people using the cocaine. They'rein Rio because I don't know. I
guess if you're running a miss Bumbumpcontest and it requires that level of torque
and you got to keep your energylevels up. But yeah, let's see
here. So do you think thecartels are using the sharks to smuggle the

(31:44):
cocaine? I don't think they're usingthem to smuggle. It would be amazing.
Yeah, I don't know where you'dput it either. How do you
get a shark to swallow you know, condoms full of cocaine? But nobody's
messing with that shark? Well theyare, you ever see the videos?
Or they'll just pull sharks out ofthe water and throw them onto the busy

(32:07):
beaches in Rio. That's a goodpoint, and they're just like, look
what I found and everyone starts freakingout. The in fact, that happens
often enough, they're like, canyou not do that? Please? So
yeah, but you know they gotall the teeth. So when you're trying
to get them to swallow the thecocaine inside the prophylactics, right, that

(32:28):
you run the risk of their sharpteeth cutting them, and then the m
odon and then before you know it, you have cocaine sharks coming to murder
you. Yeah. Yeah, no, It actually does make it more horrifying
that while they're, you know,on their way to the US to smuggle
the drugs, that one of themcould burst and they would receive a super
high dosage. Back underway here onyour Wednesday morning, can we stop.

(32:57):
I understand that there are people who'sit is to go and sow excitement into
Kamala Harris, right, because youhave to. You have to convince people,
especially like did you see Black LivesMatter came out and they're mad as
hell over this this anointed thing,right because they have to. They put

(33:21):
a press release out and it's simultaneouslylike, you know, we'd love to
see obviously a black president, ablack women president, the historic nature of
it, but also screw you tous. What happened to the people being
able to actually choose and not justyou know, nineteen hundred and whatever the

(33:42):
number is delegates that you can literallycall on the phone and promise stuff to
which apparently now she claims to havethe numbers there. So there's still that
ugliness. There's the part where fiveminutes ago even people within the party didn't
like her, and you have toget people pumped. But it's just getting
obnoxious and and cringe doesn't even beginto to I guess label what's going on?

(34:15):
Like you have the I don't knowif you saw Michael Steele with his
Captain America imagery, Yeah, itmade me vomit. I'm sorry, I'm
sorry to hear you. And I'ma big Captain American fan, big fan
of Steve Rogers. She had twoshields and there's another Captain America behind her
with like a hand growing out ofhis head. Yeah. As you know,
as the drugs hit people differently,man, so sometimes it takes you

(34:39):
from a little skinny weekly in toliterally Captain America and other times horrible,
horrible birth defects. I mean,it was an impressive picture, But there's
this other one where Trump got shot, went down, bounced up with a
power fist and said fight. Thatwas pretty amazing. Yeah, remember when
that happened? Like when was thatat least like twenty years ago or someone

(35:00):
was it. Yeah, I swearit was like, oh, that's two
weeks ago, two weeks ago.Yeah, but that's what we're gonna get.
And it's it's impressive to watch peopleimmediately fall into line. I was,
I'm gonna make this analogy because afterthe after the show on Monday,

(35:21):
right, I'm this is uh,you know, this is my Now,
I'm into my little downtime in themiddle of the day, I flip on
the TV and lo and behold what'son Kickboxers on right? Remember the classic
Jean Claude Van Damn movie The Thebasically the story of the movie is his
brother is like he's fighting Ty inThailand and he's fighting the bad the bad

(35:46):
dude, and the bad dude isa really bad dude, and he's willing
to do stuff like Chung Lee waswilling to do in uh in Blood Sport,
right, he doesn't. He doesn't, he doesn't fight clean and actually
it's it's much more horrible than thatbecause there's literally like weaponized rape in that
movie. For a lighthearted movie,there's pretty deep stuff going on in there,

(36:09):
and and his brother is almost killed. It's not a unique plot point
and then Jean Claude van Dam youknow to has to avenge this and it
speaks to something that I think Hollywoodhas forgotten, and I know politicians have
forgotten. There are a lot ofpeople that are willing to suspend believe or

(36:34):
suspend disbelief, right, and they'rewilling to go along with sheer lunacy that
doesn't make any sense. The wholemovie is one of the laziest movies ever
and there's so many reasons what wonMuch like with blood Sport, like The
Bad Guy, there's no character development, right. The bad guys are just

(36:59):
the bad guys, and so you'reexpected to go along with the writers being
so lazy that they barely came upwith names for them, right, and
they didn't. Let's not let's notdo anything with more than one syllable,
right, that could be confusing.Right. So Chong Lee or in this
case, Tom is a tong tongue. Poe is the is the fighter,

(37:20):
but he's not even the bad guy. He's he's one of He's like number
three in the bad guy hierarchy becauseabove him is another dude whose name escapes
me. But it's it's it's basicallylike three letters, and he's kind of
he's the on site bad guy,but the bad bad guy who runs all
of them, who stakes the milliondollars because they were going to fix the

(37:44):
fight, the big final showdown fight. So Jean Claude van Dam's character,
who is constantly immediately recognized as quotean American, even with that accent by
everyone he encounters, is the dudewho stakes the money, who loses his
money. I lose the money.His name is and I'm not making this

(38:04):
up, Master Warlord. That's anofficial rink. It's his name. His
name is. It's a placeholder dame. It's like when they put the script
together, they're just like, whatmaster Warlords? Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, we'll come up. We'llcome up with something. It's something
that if you saw a five yearold with action figures and then there's the

(38:25):
good guy in the bad guy,the bad guy would be either who's that
Master Warlord? Right? It's solazy and and the whole all of the
plot points, right, Jean Claudevan Dam's never been a kickboxer. And
then his brother almost gets killed,which is very predictable when you see really
how everything's run there, and thosedirty tricks and so and then after this

(38:50):
happens, he needs to avenge hisbrother. So he goes and he finds
the old smart guy in the forestsomewhere, uh the forest where there just
happens to if you walk down certainpaths, be really modern stuff. Because
as part of his training, whichis the standard montage of him having his
crotch, you know, pulled apartwith vines and having a kick bamboo trees

(39:13):
down, and and then he goesand then in the middle of it,
he just walks through a jungle pathinto a bar that's really got a lot
of people in it, and itjust happens to have like a two thousand
pound Wurlitzer jukebox in it. That'swhere the meme of him dancing comes from
here, yes, yes, Thenhe then proceeds to do the most awkward

(39:34):
dance because somebody in the middle ofa jungle hauled a one ton jukebox in
there, which just happens to takeus currency. And and then all the
native all the all the village ladieswant to dance with him, and which
makes the other guys mad, buthe can fight them all. And in

(39:55):
two months time, he goes fromnot knowing anything about fighting style to the
best ever right, and and peoplewill go every bit of this is stupid
if you stop and think about it. And yet that is a that movie
is a very popular movie, andit's because a deal was struck, and

(40:19):
the deal was I'll go along withthis as the consumer, just entertain me.
It's a good piece of escapism.Yes, it just entertained me.
And what where Hollywood gets this wrongis they want that same thing, and
but they also they break the dealbecause rather than just entertaining me, right,

(40:40):
where I might go along with howOpede Captain Marvel is if in the
throughout the entire movie, you weren'ttrying to lecture me, like you go
along with the stupidity, if you'rejust entertaining me. Guardians of the Alexy
Ross tells the story of somebody whowas he found it problematic that drats could

(41:04):
hang out of a back of aspaceship making an entry onto a planet through
its atmosphere and bounce off trees andbe fine. It's fine if you don't
think about it. And as aresult, what do you get? You
get an incredibly entertaining movie where you'renot trying to lecture me. Why am
I throwing this all out there?Because this is this is what people are

(41:27):
willing to do in politics. They'rewilling to go along if you know,
even if they don't like Trump,They're willing to go along with it if
they feel that they're going to getwhat they want it. But as soon
as it looks like you're breaking thedeal, people will revolt on that.
And and my comparison continues because whathappened with Kickboxer two. I don't even

(41:52):
remember Kickboxer two. Well, I'ma spoiler for you. So they want
to go do Kickboxer two and VanDam wouldn't do it, or he couldn't,
or say there was something going on, but he's not in it kind
of and apparently it got so nastythat this is what the producers of the
film, who by the way,also ended up making like three total sequels,

(42:15):
which I didn't even know that untilI happened to look this morning.
There's Kickboxer three, and then there'sa Kickboxer with not a numerical name,
but it's like get box Er Infinityor something that came out like ten years
ago, which I wasn't even awareof. And what happened in that is
it? It's all the same cheesiness. It's really the same, all the

(42:37):
same plot points. It's a revengeflick. But what did they decide to
do? They decided to in oneof the opening scenes, take a very
poorly constructed Jean Claude Van Damn dummyand have Tongue Poe shoot him in the
head. Oh my god, sothe Iron Eagle too? Did? They

(42:58):
absolutely murder Van Dam's character and didn'tput anything around it. We're supposed to
believe the Tongue po was still soupset about losing that match that he but
he went down a rabbit hole ofdepression, got himself a gun, tracked
down Van Dam's character in La Somewhere, found him in a parking lot,

(43:20):
was able to roll up on himand shoot him in the head. You
know, you broke you broke thedeal, you broke the promise. There
you go, there, you gothere. You can't kill the main character
like the hero from the first movie. It's it's Iron Eagle too. I
remember being so distraught as a kidbecause they loved Iron Eagle. Yeah,
Doug masters right, he's a bighero that he goes to Libya he lands
the plane, he frees his warhero father, he shoots a missile from

(43:43):
the runway, he takes off,he blows up the president of Libya and
the sky out and he lives happily. Ever after this second movie, I'm
so super excited about this as akid they killed Doug Masters in the first
ten seconds, gets blown out ofthe sky. I think if by some
random Russian MiG and you broke thedeal, I'm out. I'm not watching
the rest of the movie this.And then they decided that there's a third

(44:05):
brother who now has to get revengefor the for the middle brother. And
I think they did it again inKickboxing three. I don't know I've seen
it, but yeah, you brokethe deal. And so with what's going
on with Harris right now is youbroke the deal. Look at all of
the stuff that people are willing tofall in line with politically that they may
not agree with, but if itmeans that they don't have to think about

(44:30):
politics for a few years, they'rewilling to go along with it. And
that's that's who you're playing to withthis stuff right now, where you've just
decided you're going to create a narrative, and it's going to be an easy
narrative. And the easy narrative isshe's just been weight. She's been lying
in wait, probably writing down abunch of fantastic ideas. They're all going

(44:52):
to be fantastic and great. Andthe other guy he wasn't real great,
and we understand why you're upset.But she's going to be great. Look
here she is Captain America here,and she's she's so smart. Here's her
list of accomplishments that are being floatedaround. Because you have to convince people
to go along with your stupid assscript. You have to you have to

(45:14):
convince them that you know, ourguess Tong Poe in this case is the
the people who, according to theNew York Times, may have threatened the
president with the twenty fifth and itwould be a legacy turnisher. So they're
just like, look, you cando that, or you can or you
can kill yourself. I mean thoseI mean, that's your those are your

(45:35):
choices. And it'll be interesting tosee if people will sign up for Kickboxer
two. I don't know that theywill, but also maybe they will,
because why would they then make subsequentkickboxers if they didn't make money on it,
I could talk forever all of theother things that just don't make sense

(45:57):
in the original movie. Yet peopleregard is a good movie, the original
one, but they weren't. Theyweren't willing to put up with it until
after that. It's the same reasonthe media snapped the other day. For
about a week, don't worry,they're they're fact fine, They're doing their
thing. Man. I was thinking, you know, for a week there,

(46:20):
two weeks there, we got aglimpse of what this country would be
like if we had a fair andbalanced press. And then once Biden is
out, they've turned in a diamondthat is over. But it just makes
you think, like what if.Yeah, and the only reason that they
were willing to do that, andthey're absolutely unaware of it. I saw
media members pointing out that they werealways tough, and it's really unfair to
say that there's bias there, andand it's it's laughable. It just shows

(46:45):
you what being in a bubble is. But the thing was, once they
got a whiff of the part wherethey very clearly contributed to this cover up,
and democrat, even Democrats, arewilling to come out and say things
that made people look over at themedia and go, wait, a secon
did he just say this thing?Like the former Republican Speaker of the House

(47:09):
Kevin McCarthy just randomly said in aninterview that they show up to policy meetings
and Jill's there, what are youscrew you? First of all, and
everybody else who also showed up andwent why is she sitting in here?
Wall Street Journal had an article theother day talking about how Biden had pretty

(47:30):
much just been a figurehead for thepast two three years. Yes, and
and once the media realized that theywere going to take some of that flak,
all of a sudden, they gotto kick it into high gear.
Man, they got to come outand be like God because they were the
one. They realized that they weregoing to catch it on the chin.

(47:51):
And then all of these people thatthey work with on the daily, who
will feed them information, give themscoops, give them anonymous sources. They
were they were gonna make a deal. They were gonna make a deal with
the Feds and testify against you,and you can't have that. And now

(48:15):
that that that situation's over, it'san immediate snapback to no, she's always
been smart, she's always she's alwayshad good ideas. They're trying to go
after her because they're racist by mispronouncingher name or saying sexistuff. It don't
got be wrong. Some of youare posting really stupid stuff that is wildly
unnecessary. I saw what was it, lumur or whatever, and she's like,

(48:37):
she doesn't have any babies. Sowhat does Laura Lumer have a baby?
I hope dot? And why doyou have You don't have to go
here. There's so much low hangingfruit. And this is how you this
is how you snatch de feet fromthe jaws of victory people. She is

(48:59):
tong po Let her be. We'llbe back mayby. You know I opened
the show telling you about the theactivists and and you know that they're they're
giving out real jail sentences. Andthen this mom her by the way,
the mom's name is Kathy Gethen,whose daughter is one of the moonbats.
And there's the judge, this judge, and this most of the stems from

(49:21):
the UH the attempted shutdown of likethe British interstate, the m whatever it
is. And the same judge isgoing to be handing out sentences or I
guess is now handing out sentences forgoing in and and going to the wherever
the van go was in London,I'm not sure which gallery it was in

(49:42):
and throwing soup all over it.And there's a whole bunch of these and
they just can't deal. And thiswoman who if you read about her,
is she it's it's the whole Uh. I learned it from watching you dad.
Thing. Mom just can't deal withthe decisions that her grown adult daughter

(50:04):
is making. And she just gotfour years four years. And remember,
if you go through all the evidenceof what has transpired with these shutdowns,
there's real injury to people. Someof it's financial, and then people try
to discount that, which is stupid. There is clear evidence that it actually

(50:29):
increased the release of greenhouse gases.That's indisputable. And then there's actual physical
damage from people who a woman whohad pregnancy complications and could have lost her
child, to a child that didalmost die because they had the inability to

(50:50):
access medication that was necessary for partof a seizure condition that they have because
they were just sitting there, jammedin traffic and moms on a microphone,
uh, talking about Well this mydaughter is christ Gassin. At the age
of twenty two, she was theyoungest defendant, and she has just been
sentenced today to four years in prison. This means she will not be present

(51:13):
at her brother's wedding next summer.I you know, I didn't even think
of that, ma'am. I am. I am so sorry that she won't
be present at her brother's wedding.Okay, so here's what we do.
We let her out for the wedding. Why what? No? Why?
Why? Why? Why? Listen? Why why? We let her out

(51:36):
for the wedding. And then onthe way to the wedding, we stage
a protest in the middle of theroad. Oh, for some stupid cause
like free the Manatees or people forthe Liberation of salons or whatever. They
were up in like top they wereup in like tops. One. Yeah,
so that she's she's just in hercar screaming at the protest about the
wedding, and you keep her there, trapped in front of the protest or

(51:57):
surrounded by maybe they can get acar, but for hours until the wedding
is complete. And then when thewedding is complete, you send her back
to prison. Oh that is thatis diabolical? Can we chant because what
about thees man? Can we chantmanatee slogans that don't make sense? So

(52:17):
you tell her, and you tellher like the day before, so she's
all, exct. Yeah, hey, we've decided, you know, we've
got passionate release or whatever. We'regonna let you go the wedding. All
right, here's your dress and ohyour makeup and stuff and makeup. I
didn't trust me. I didn't looklike you were making it. Okay,
Well you're you're gonna you're gonna lookand you're gonna smell great for the wedding.

(52:37):
Yeah, yeah, that's gonna benice. And he can't. You
gotta let her get most of theway there. Oh but not a walkable
distance, right not. You can'trun the risk of her getting out of
the car and hoofing it. I'dvolunteer there to save the sloughs or the
manateese. I thought it was justsay I thought it was managed whatever.
The manites sloth, that doesn't matter, the world's slowest creature would have to

(52:58):
be a manitee sloth. I don'tknow if you're aware of this. Just
lumber. Lumber isn't even a wordfor that. You just think it's dead
all the time, like, ohno, it blinked, all right,
So Ross has opted for torture.I got a question, how come how
come the brother can't move his wedding? How about that? How about how

(53:23):
about the brother and fiance are like, hey, you know, uh,
we'll have the wedding in four yearsin the day because people are sick of
this man. Did you see andyou might have talked about it when I
was at Tennessee for the funeral,did you see the protest climate wackos that
were protesting the Tesla plant in Germanywhere they were they're Naruto running at the

(53:46):
thing. Yeah, they were likeout a Tesla plant like an ev plant,
vandalizing, making noise, being stupid. Yeah, and you know why
because they said they cut the forestdown, And it turns out the plot
that they build on was a treefarm, So the forest that they cut
down was like three year old pinesthat were Christmas trees. Because wait till

(54:12):
they hear where they get the carbatteries from. Oh man, that's gonna
be well, you know what,I'd love to see him trying to run
one of those rare earth mineral miningoperations in Western China. Like to see
how that goes. That's probably gonnago real well for you guys. Yeah,
so uh yeah. And for allthe power and sway and everything that

(54:32):
this woman had, nobody cares.People who were like, I'm a I'm
an environmental activist. These people areawful, don't care and and and they're
also the other thing is too theydidn't sentence her necessarily for the shutdown,

(54:52):
along with the founder of this organization, and they have a little cutesy nick
name for him, like you know, the Central Park six or something like
that. I don't remember what itis, but it's dumb. They sentenced
actually they were actually sentenced for aplan another one that was to be upcoming
to disrupt it because they were ableto get this the conspiracy. It's not

(55:16):
quite rico stuff, but it allowsyou to get in. And then they
used examples of the harm that wasdone with other protests to show that they
knew full well that if they didthis people literally could die of medical emergencies
or suffer significant financial penalties. Soit was it was an interesting way.

(55:44):
Now the soup stuff that's going tobe that's for the physical act of doing
it, because there is a harddollar value there, and you know,
people went, well, yes,but it's just a painting, right,
and so the value is you know, is arbitrary, which is not true.
People will there. You know,there's a reason that there's a definable

(56:09):
number for the insurance policies on thisthing. And so when you go to
destroy that, and if you youknow, if you don't get your butt
kicked by some irritated delivery dude inthe truck, which those there's been some
amazing videos, it becomes very quantifiableas to the damage that was there.

(56:30):
And so in the same way thata painting that's worth fifteen million dollars and
a condo, like a high endcondo that's worth fifteen million that you went
and arsened, and it's it's likeweird people wouldn't make that argument for the
one, but not the other.So it's not an argument that holds any

(56:51):
water man. And you need thewater for the sloth vanite to live in,
which were very concerned about, allright, So eight eight eight nine
three four seven eight seven four andoh and then also they're just like this
judge is on a GHD. Maybemaybe maybe that's or maybe the judge is

(57:16):
just like you know, everywhere else, and they had a little graph of
you know, this was wild tome. Mom had a little graph there
and it had like the average amountof jail time that people get for crimes,
and you know, it had likemurder and it had rape, and
it had robbery and all of that, and like higher up in the list

(57:36):
is the average sentence for environmental protesters, which isn't by the way, it's
only the average sentence if you averagethe three that have received sentencing. The
vast majority of those arrested for protestingdidn't receive any jail time, let alone
finds, and you didn't include those. And if your problem is that the

(57:57):
average if you go and commit arape in one of these your in countries
and I don't know where they whatall countries were included in this because there's
a few different ones they're doing prosecution. The bigger issue is not that your
daughter got four years for doing thisthing or plotting to do this thing based
on other things she had done.It's that you all don't take rape seriously.

(58:20):
That's that's the bigger story there,So maybe work on that. But
this is She's also the one whois not going to be able to study
music at Cambridge for four years,and whose photo mom was holding up is
clearly her when she's like thirteen andjust a you know, innocent little schoolgirls.

(58:43):
So to come out and give apress conference and throw this out,
my daughter is christ Gathin. Atthe age of twenty two, she was
the youngest defendant and she has justbeen sentenced today to four years in prison.
This means she will not be presentat her brother's wedding next summer.
Yeah, all right, we'll movethe wedding or do Rosses thing. I'm

(59:05):
down with Rosses thing. First Ithought he was trying to be all big
heart, but I nope, hejust went He went for the evil,
all right, seven forty five racestagic. He's gonna sound evil when he
gives his forecast, but he's not. Yeah, I'm not the job he's
got to do. Man, wedo, and you know, really delivering
more of the same old, sameold. The placement of where the rain's

(59:28):
going to be difficult to forecast,but the next few days are in it.
This morning a lot of clouds orsome light rain showers, most of
them lined up east now from Greenvilledown toward Jacksonville and out toward the outer
banks. And they're moving away,so you'll get some time. If you're
heading toward the beach right now,passing through, there'll be some dry periods
mixed in a lot of clouds andsome sunshine today for everybody the beach.

(59:52):
Yeah, no, no, no, no, they's found cocaine sharks.
Due, Yes they did. Idid see that. Okay, so don't
tend people to the beach. Well, I don't know they found him on
that in Brazil. You don't Youdon't think. You don't think a shark
hopped on hopped up on cocaine couldn'tget to the outer Banks in record time.
Well, I was wondering if thatdidn't explain a few things too.
Maybe the more sightings are the moreof recent of Maybe that's why they coked

(01:00:15):
up and decided to they're all doing. They're all doing disco. Sharks do
sleep anyway, right, Yeah,that's true. They keep moving. Yeah,
so then just imagine that and movingeven more right Yeah, yeah,
but anyway, Yeah, more wetweather scattered around right through tomorrow and Friday.

(01:00:36):
There's some hope you know that weare going to see maybe some dryer
weather in for the upcoming weekend.And hang on a second, Yeah,
floodwatch just issued earlier this morning.The sharks, you're going to get further
inland. Yeah, so it addsup. There may be some flash flooding,
but the rain we've seen so farthis weekend excepts of runoff that kicks

(01:00:57):
in eleven o'clock this morning through tomorrowevenings. So another one to maybe two
inch to rain some make it more. So, well, we're in it.
But I'm really gonna be curious tosee the drought monitor tomorrow morning.
Maybe not as much as you are, Casey, but we'll see if we've
erased any of the levels of droughtwe had across the state in the last
week. And I've got to imaginewe have with all the rain. Yeah.

(01:01:20):
So one minute you're a new burntrying to see if you can find
a Coca Cola anywhere in town becauseyou know pepsi, And the next minute
there's a shark that pops out ofthe river there and eats you. So
thank you, thank you. Welcomewith your rain forecast there, all right,
appreciate it. Have a good onethere. You go to race agent
from the Weather Channel. All right, so the Secret Service director is she's

(01:01:43):
resigned and and and by the way, I did see a couple of things
were like, you know, thisis you know it was. They didn't
quite call her brave, but they'relike, gave her credit for it.
You don't give her any credit forit. And I got some very interesting
emails from folks where I was talkingabout the failure of you know, people

(01:02:06):
that are in what we consider kindof the badass rolls when things go wrong,
and what real consequences actually look like. And I threw out there like,
you know, if you had missionfailure like this in a military setting,
what that would mean? Or youjust somebody who's in the army and
you got guard duty, right,they don't screw around with this stuff.

(01:02:30):
And I kind of had asked someof our military listeners, I'm like,
what does that look like? Andit looks I'll tell you what it looks
like. What real actual consequences looklike? Man? And we'll get into
that next here on the Cacoday radioprogram. I don't have the military experience,
let alone serving in you know,a special forces capacity, but you

(01:02:54):
have to look at Secret Service likethat, or at least you used to
see. Record Service had a verysignificant, defined mission. They had an
ass an a as assets, Theyhad you know, equipment and funding to
go out and do a job thatis not an easy job, admittedly,

(01:03:17):
and there was a certain amount ofrespect and esteem that existed there, right,
and I know some of it waschipped away with the incident that happened
when they remember when they went toColumbia and they found out that while they
were off duty, I guess theywere you know, bringing the whores,
right, and and that obviously ishugely problematic. I'm not disagreeing there because,

(01:03:40):
like you know, pillow talk isa great way to get intel from
people. Plus there's the part whereif you're doing something you know you're not
supposed to, there's the ability tocompromise and maybe bribe people into giving you
information. And so that was youknow, that was kind of the black
guy. But what happened with Trumpwas insane. And so for this woman
to sit there, the now resigneddirector and not even be able to commit

(01:04:05):
that heads would roll for obvious deficienciesand acting like it's you know, it's
an hr problem at Health and HumanServices because you know some dudes are taken
too many smoke breaks, is soinjurious to the program. And I said
that this just wouldn't fly in anyother capacity. And a bunch I had

(01:04:26):
several emails and messages. I'm goingto paraphrase here so I don't get somebody
in trouble, but I think this, this one sums it up pretty well.
And this is This is from somebodydown in the Brag area who I
chat with from time to time.He said, I'll tell you what would
happen. On Monday morning. Amass relief and firing would occur. Many
would be escorted out the front gateand back into Big Army, which is

(01:04:50):
outside of the Special Forces unit.Now you're just you know, you're off
rake and dirt or whatever and wouldnever return. Rank, position, time
and unit and PAS accomplishments would carrylittle influence. The mission failure would initiate
a massive review of unit culture selectionprocess. A bunch of other stuff that's

(01:05:10):
kind of specific I'll leave out.And yeah, that's that sounds about right.
Yeah. In this instance, tworules were violated, mission failure and
unit embarrassment, and also exposure tothe outside world absolutely one hundred percent and

(01:05:35):
for her to be so callous andso you know, well, well you
know, we'll look into it.We'll let you know, maybe maybe somebody
no, all right, so wegot into a little further discussion with now
the now resigning Secret Service director.I don't want to hear how stunning and
brave it is. She might beone of the most incompetent government government officials.

(01:05:58):
And that's saying something of my lifetime. And it was rage inducing to
watch the way that she would nottell members of Congress how many rounds were
fired, you know, to stillargue that the slope of the roof is
problematic when sniper teams were positioned onmuch slopier roofs, but it also has

(01:06:20):
created tons of great memes and thelike the stunning moments within the hearing,
whereas one member of Congress pointed out, the roof is so not sloped that
if you built a wheelchair ramp atthe same grade, it would be in
compliance with the ADA. And thenyou see the pictures by the way of

(01:06:43):
also folks walking in, did yousee the window? You know, they're
talking about how hot it was andhow they had to leave these positions because
it was just too hot to beon the roof, and the irony is
they didn't even have to be onthe roof. There's four buildings there.
The building that the shooter was onis the one that is closest to the
stage but is not the highest,and the building directly next to it actually

(01:07:09):
has an interior space read that asclimate controlled space, like a like a
like an upper floor office that looksover the totality of the roof. So
if they wanted to position themselves insideof that office, and it's got a
window obviously, and you can youcan gain access to the roof out of

(01:07:30):
the window. It actually sticks upabove the other roof of the other building
and it gives you a one siteline on the top of the roof of
that building. Because you had membersof Congress that went down there and they
did this thing where they literally walkedaround with a camera and just took photos

(01:07:51):
of stuff, and at one pointthe FBI was telling them they couldn't do
that, including Senator Hawley was askedby the FBI to leave and he's just
like, I'm not, Nope,that's not gonna happen. And we found
out that she didn't. She didn'teven make contact with the agents in charge

(01:08:13):
for it could be as much asseventy two hours. How do you not
how do you not have at thevery least a conversation with the immediate protection
detail as the director? How doesthat happen that you go the rest of
the weekend and into the work weekand you never pick up a phone and
talk to him and went, whatthe hell happened? But also it's the

(01:08:38):
inability to you know, to holdpeople to account that she wouldn't commit to.
As I read there earlier, whichwas a description from a somebody with
military experience talking about what would happenin a unit, especially an elite unit,
if something if you had this thisthis mission failure like this, and

(01:09:00):
it was it was significant, Imean you would you would potentially have an
entire group of people who have literallymillions of dollars in training in them sent
back to push papers and and youknow, to to run to the end
of their military career, which wouldbe pretty quick. And and then you

(01:09:24):
get into the bigger questions of howa unit goes in that direction, And
that's real life. There's a newRussell Crowe movie I watched. I don't
know if you guys have seen thiscalled Land of Bad. It's on Netflix.
They just literally just dropped like aweek ago. By the way,
is Russell Crowe becoming Steven Sagull?I like me, Don't get me wrong.

(01:09:46):
I like Russell Crowe a lot morethan I like Steven Sagall But like
Russell Crowe is, he's got abeer belly on him. It's pretty You're
like, that dude was Gladiator andI can't. I can't complain. Obviously
I'm not in the same shape thatI was, but like to put him
in his character is is a grizzledold pilot, right, and he's a

(01:10:13):
drone operator and he operates out ofLas Vegas, which is where we fly
drones, US military drones, whichpretty wild all over the world. And
the premise of the movie is thisdude whose air force he is embedded with
the some Tier one guys for whateverreason, and they're going into I think
it's the Philippines where the bad dude, the bad guy's got a base,

(01:10:38):
a layer, whatever. Things gosideways. There's another bad guy and now
most of the units killed, butthe target, the acid that they were
trying to recover, which was anotherJaysak dude who was being held captive there,
like he has to through his communicationwith Russell Crowe's character, and you

(01:11:00):
know, all of the drone stuff. They it's all leaned very heavily on
drones and the technology, and I'msure there's a lot of inaccuracies there.
But it's cool, right, it'sa cool movie. But he's so wildly
overweight that like he can't button hisuniform so he wears just like Hawaiian shirts
and stuff. But whatever, andand the movie plays out. I was

(01:11:28):
looking at the reviews. It's got, you know, in the six six
out of ten star range six anda half, I think on IMDb and
crow essentially along with the h theactor on the ground, Uh, they're
able to. They're able to,you know, go in there and try
to complete the mission. But theportrayal of all of the other members of
this unit, including the CEO,right, his boss, the the colonel

(01:11:54):
giving him orders, they're played asabsolute bumbling fools that know nothing, accomplished
nothing, and in fact, throughtheir actions get a bunch of real,
you know, real bad bad ombresthat that you know, a military guys
that we have get them killed justthrough their own ineptitude. And you know,

(01:12:20):
I guess maybe that's the culture withinthe Secret Service there that she just
believes happens. Just crazy to me, because even the military would would start
purging all these dudes. All right, let me grab a call real quick.
Yeah, what's up? Jeremy?Hello, Jeremy Dan you hear me?

(01:12:43):
All right? We put him onhold because Ross, oh, turn
back there. All right, let'scheck. I kind of want to take
that call. Russ has given mea little insight as to what they were
talking about where they were screening thecall. I don't know. It was
weird, kind of sound like youwent in a weird cell area. All
right, Well, all right,is he good to go? All right,

(01:13:03):
he's good to go. Rock on, let's do this. What hey,
what's up? What's going on?You playing a zither? All right?
Cheers up? Yeah, I've beenlistening to you for years. Okay,
And I'm gonna tell you right nowwhat she did was in the army.

(01:13:29):
There is an article fifteen. Okay, and you're going to get in
trouble, like bad trouble, likeyou lost rank, possibly get kicked out.
Yeah, yeah, but it's notgonna go well, it's not gonna
go well, it's not it's notgonna go well. I mean there's gonna
be some investigations. I mean,like ying Yang, what what can you

(01:13:51):
what if a dude fell asleep onguard duty? How big of a deal
with that? Oh? My god? For real? Yeah? No,
people, you're good. Yeah,you've undated article Joe old number one,

(01:14:11):
right. I mean, dude,this is why, this is why this
has to drive you nuts watching hersit there and act like somebody was taking
too many smoke breaks or something.I went bunker when I sat in there
and I watched it. I'm like, are you serious? I mean,
I can turn around and tell youfive different ways to protect this man.

(01:14:35):
Yeah. I mean, I'm justa little level sergeant, but I'm like,
I can tell you. So,do you let me ask you a
question. Do you think it wasso inept that in your mind? Do
you think that maybe there it wasintentional because some people are saying that it
might have been intentional, and Idon't know, I don't know. No,

(01:14:57):
no, sir, this is intentionalbecause I mean, me and my
brothers and a few of my sisters, we're sitting there, we're talking,
We're like there's no way, thereis no way you could have missed this
up. You had literally a dogon uh, mister Casey, you had

(01:15:18):
a literally a water tower three sixtyright right right, yeah, yeah,
And that's a that's turning into itsown conspiracy there. This is this is
a little a little private on thatone. Begomber pile on that thing.

(01:15:38):
Man, they get it done.Yeah, no, it's it's it's so
bad. And and not refusing totake it seriously when you're getting reprimanded.
It just made it so much worse, uh, for for everybody, because
even if folks have no comprehension ofhow to set up a perimeter on something

(01:16:00):
like they if they've seen one moviein their minds, they probably would have
made better decisions than this and thehigh grounds number one man, absolutely no,
guys, In ten minutes, Ican turn around and get you a
good three hundred and sixty degree permier. Right, yeah, this is uh,
this is great. Well, Jeremy, I appreciate you listening out there.

(01:16:23):
Man, I'm sorry that it almostmade your head explode to sod yeah
my laughing all two doble moors.Yeah all right, cool, Thanks for
thanks for calling in the car allright, but that he's like, hey,
give me some dudes, we'll havethis nailed down. I'm sitting there

(01:16:43):
and I'm just like, give methe job, and this, you know,
this garbage was like, Oh,we we don't want you out there
doing doing rallies anymore. That's notgonna fly. That ship has sailed.
That's his thing, right, Andand you know, I understand why the
Secret Service doesn't want these things tohappen, and I absolutely respect them and

(01:17:05):
making those advisements. And we gota little of that. There were other
there were former Secret Service guys,Dan Bongino being one of them, but
others that were just saying, look, it is the job of the Secret
Service to say, in a perfectworld, this is how this thing would
look. And then it's also thejob of the Secret Service to then adapt

(01:17:26):
to the way in which the candidatewants to do things. And sometimes the
candidate wants to on inauguration day,wants to walk down the middle of the
damn street waving at people, andas as Barack Obama did and to some
extent that Trump did, and thenthey have to go out and they have
to figure out, how do youdeal with this? What is a logistical
nightmare, understandably, and and youdon't have to be in the Secret Service

(01:17:49):
for this, but it's just vastlymore important than most of our jobs because
of the consequences of failure. Ican't tell you the number of times where
Ross and I inherently know how todo something and the company wants it done
in a different way, and ismy you know, and we can crack

(01:18:13):
jokes and go this is dumb oror or whatever it is, but there's
probably a reason for it. Sometimesit's a you know, it's not in
my mind, it's not a greatreason, but it's our job to sit
there and figure out how to doit. But the consequences are not as
dire as having either the president,former president or another protectee murdered because of

(01:18:40):
what it can mean. You sawa destabilizing on Wall Street. The incident
was for a couple of days.Now Wall Street's going to Wall Street and
and you know some of the speculationstuff that they do, it doesn't it's
it's almost like you have to understandhow bad the reaction is going to be
so you can profit on the forbidden. Then people do start short and stuff

(01:19:01):
or whatever. It is, butyou gotta go ahead. You gotta go
ahead and get the job done,just like our former caller there. I'm
sure that anyone who's been in themilitary at some point has received an order
and well they may not verbalize it, they're just like, well, this
is dumb. Well I got todo it this way. I gotta go

(01:19:24):
I gotta go storm that ridge.Well, you know, whatever it is,
and then you go ahead and doit, because if you flaunt the
rules sometimes you know, there's there'snot much that happens except you know,
they're going to smoke you or whateveris the term smoke you, but basically
try to pet you to death.But but you do it. But because

(01:19:51):
at your job, seeing the issueis Trump's fall, you know, you
can't have these big rallies anymore.You need a smaller rally. Can you
do a rally in like a gym, high school Gymney's like a thousand people
or something a thousand No, whatyou do is you paint circles on the
ground that would be one person inthere. Yeah, because then you could
spot the potential shooters because they wouldbe standing in the circles. Yeah.

(01:20:12):
Yeah, you have explosives out there. I don't know, it's so do
whatever, but you know to uh, well, you can't have you doing
large scale events. That's about that'sthat was, That's how people run for
president. Man, it's not justTrump Trump. Just Trump embraces that as
his as his go to and I'msure, I'm sure he loves it.

(01:20:33):
From an ego standpoint, it looksthere's something pretty exciting about staring off over
into a crowd, and it's like, this is what rock stars feel,
right, They go up on astage and I'm sure they get jaded on
it at some point, But yougo up on a stage and you're playing
a stadium and you look out atyou know, forty thousand people that have

(01:20:54):
stopped what they're doing, probably spentway more money than they should be spending,
and it showed up because they're sofascinated with what you're about to say
to them or sing to them orwhatever it is. And I can only
it's radio. It's tougher to imaginebecause we don't see you all. But

(01:21:15):
when I see the number, wesit down with ours program director and go
over the numbers. That still hits, doesn't it? You know what I'm
saying? Ross it still hits becauseyou're like, no way that many people
or that, Yeah, but youdon't want to think about it. No,
no, it Especially people get nervousdoing interviews, and it's because I
try to tell them like you're justtalking to me and then ross and like

(01:21:35):
that's it, and you have toapproach it like that. But when you
start actually looking at the numbers andyou I can't I can't even tell you
how crazy those conversations have been lately. It puts it in perspective. So
the idea that somebody is wanting who'swanting the acceptance of millions, tens of
millions, hundreds of millions of peoplewould be wanting to do that understandable.

(01:21:59):
We'll be back hang on, becausethere's there's newsletters or things like that that
speak to it. For for usin the radio biz, there's a couple
others inside radio and then all Accesswhich are kind of like industry that you
would find it probably not that interesting, but I find it interesting. So
I actually get like the emails fromthem and they send it, here's about

(01:22:23):
one a day and it's news that'shappening, and you know, I scan
it see if it's anyone I knowwho's got a new gig or got fired
or whatever. Then they have somerating stuff, but some of it's insulting.
Ready for this ross, you're sittingdown. You're sitting down. What
you understand. This is a newsletterthat goes out to people literally in talk
radio. July's red hot news cyclecould spell big ratings boon for news talk

(01:22:48):
stations. You think you think,you think it might be a good month.
I'm not even to click on thearticle. Man, all right,
we'll see. We'll see how yourprediction, which, by the way,
you're making on the twenty fourth dayof July. We'll see if that comes

(01:23:10):
to pass. Man, all sortsof craziness. And yes, this is
a peanut butter and jelly sandwich.And I'm not an eight year old.
I don't care how adult you get. These are always good, so ros
and I eat a lot during theshow, So got to keep your energy
up, man. Not everyone couldbe cocaine shark. So and it's just
this morning, I'm like, hey, you know what, you know,

(01:23:30):
it sounds good peanut butter and jellysandwich, so boom, I made me
one and eat it during the show. You know what, appreciate it.
Probably is Bryce Young. I'm surehe had one in his Joe Namath lunchbox,
which I'm assuming was in that backpack. Do you see do you see
the photo of him showing up totraining camp and he looks like he looks
like a seventh grader? Is thejokes people are making? So, I

(01:23:54):
mean, he throws a football betterthan me, but so there's that.
But yeah, he's got to baggyT shirt on shorts. It looks like
your kid going to the first dayof middle school. Man, But you
know, some people are making jokes. Whatever. I don't think that he
cares. But is it worse thanwhat Cam Newton used to show up in

(01:24:16):
that that guy was I swear Iwas dressed as a ballerina one day.
I can't remember the exact composition ofthe of the outfit, but he had
a style all his own. So, and you know, frankly, if
you're a Panthers fan, and andthat's the that's the biggest defensive thing about

(01:24:36):
Bryce Young this year, that'd begood, right. See, if he
comes into it, you're two,it's all trial by fire for if you're
the Panthers quarterback. I get that, but arguably when you know he was
in the Anthony Richardson and CJ.What's the Texans guy whatever? You know,
those are the three, like,let's see how they are, and

(01:24:59):
arguably he is lagging behind the othertwo, but he also has a lot
less weapons. So yeah, I'mglad that. I'm glad we're getting some
football discussion in. We're gonna havepreseason here real quick, right, and
then boom, we're gonna be intothis thing. It's kind of crazy,

(01:25:21):
man, because it feels like justyesterday we were watching yet again the Super
Bowl, but it's been months andmonths, so all right, so we
got that around the corner. Thatwill I'm sorry, I'm just looking at
this picture again. He's straight.He's got to have a trapper keeper in
that backpack, if I'm if I'mguessing, and I you know, that

(01:25:45):
is basically what I'm doing, allright, So let me let me flip
back over to my stack. Herewe get a few things we got to
get in. I love watching KeithOberman flipping out over the Trump fist gestures

(01:26:08):
because he's so over the top.So if you remember I told you earlier
this week because you saw it atthe British Open Friday after the show.
I saw it right after the showFriday, where you had a couple of
golfers that were given like the Trumpsolidarity fist, which is a thing,
but Major League Baseball's taking it toa whole new level. And the Cardinals

(01:26:30):
players were the ones that were allthe photos were floating around, and now
Keith Oberman wants to essentially nuke thecity of Saint Louis. It's great attention,
Major League Baseball. These players needto be banned for life from the
game. And in fact, youshould consider confiscating the Cardinals franchise and imploding

(01:26:54):
the stadium. The Cardinals should changetheir name to the Trump Nazis, stick
to sports f the Cardinals. That'sright. The amount of people making the
shut up and dribble argument is amazing. The irony of that coming from Keith
Olberman. Stick this sports Yes,the guy that used to be in Sports

(01:27:18):
Center and was really good at it. Yes, and it was at a
lunatic and it was like musty TVfor kids before school in the nineties,
and it's just when he just wasit was sports Oberman, Yes, right,
him and Dan Dan Patrick. Andthen he did not just stick to
sports. And now he looks likeRosie O'Donnell and and he can't get he
can't get what that's now, comeon, didn't have you seen fair?

(01:27:42):
But when you see him side byside, you're like, they look very
similar now. And Stephen King,how come they all look like that?
Now? What it was? Myfavorite Stephen King meme is what was it
when you're lesbian aunt owns a bookstoreor whatever? Right that picture? Yeah,
they all kind of like they allkind of morph into themselves. And

(01:28:04):
Garofolo went there too, like whyhow is it? How is it if
it's like it's borgish at that point? Man? Well, yeah, I
mean that's the whole thing, right, it's collective. It is a collective.
I'll give you that government collective.Yeah, they all become very similar.
The difference is when you want themanager of the Yankees fired into the

(01:28:26):
sun. You don't want him actuallyphysically fired into the sun. Oh r,
No, I do. And Bidenhas a power now because of the
skotis to fire him into the sun. Yeah. If it's an official if
it is an official business official thing, Biden can write send Aaron Boom into
the sun. He can launch himinto a spaceship and write in the sun.

(01:28:50):
Well, Elon Musk probably could,Dude. That Elon Musk interview was
pretty eye opening. Did you knowabout Elon Musk kid? I had no
idea. I had no idea.If you guys didn't hear the Elon Musk
I think there's a It provides alot of context to what baby motivating.

(01:29:11):
Uh, some of the decisions toyou know, decision to purchase Twitter and
you know, this protector of freespeech. Because there's a lot going on
here. Let me let me,let me do this because we didn't get
to these cuts yesterday. I justwant to play a couple of these things.
And one thing you got to know, Elon Musk has a bunch of
kids. He likes making babies.But he's also one of these like we're

(01:29:33):
depopularizing ourselves kind of dude. Soit's not surprising. And I didn't realize
this about one of his oldest kids. But here we are come into one
of my older boys. I wasessentially tricked into signing documents, uh for
one of my older boys. ZareUh. This is before I had really

(01:29:57):
understanding what was going on and thatwe had Coke COVID going on, and
so there was a lot of confusion, and you know, I was told,
oh, you know, say Imight commit suicide. If that was
that was a lie right from theoutset. No, obviously that's Jordan Peterson's
voice. He's he's doing the interview, so just just a little context,
you kind of hear it. Sohe's talking about how they came to him,

(01:30:20):
and they I'm assuming is probably hisex is that one with the singer,
that kid with the singer, Idon't remember right, but they said,
look, your son, if youdon't sign these documents, we can't
do the medical treatment necessary to keepyour kid from killing themselves. Which you

(01:30:41):
know, the emotion of that fora parent, that's that's that's wild.
And so he signed him. Hesigned him, and he says he's not
there's not been a day that's goneby. He hasn't regretted it. Because
here's here's what actually that was about. Reliable clinician ever believed that there was
never any evidence for that. Andalso, if if there's a higher suicide
rate, the reason is is becauseof the underlying depression and anxiety and not

(01:31:03):
because of the gender dysphoria, andevery damn clinician knows that too, and
they're too cowardly to come out andsay it, right, and so that
and then we end up in exactlywhen when I saw that lies start to
propagate, it just made the hairon the back of my next stand up.
It's like, I see, soyou're you're telling parents that unless they
agree to this radical transformation that theirchildren are going to die. And you

(01:31:26):
think that's moral, and you thinkthat's true. That is so pathological that
it's almost incomprehensible. I can't imagineanything worse of I can't imagine the therapist
doing anything worse than that, orsitting by idly and remaining silent. Well
his colleagues are doing it. It'spathetic, it's it's uh incredibly evil.
And I agree with you that peoplethat have been promoting with us are go

(01:31:48):
to president all right, so obviouslyhe wants harsh circumstances. Here's the really
emotional part, though, and thisis this is what this is why it's
one thing to argue this from theoutside and another thing entirely when you're approaching
it internally with your own family members, because the thoughts that cross into your

(01:32:09):
mind are thoughts that I would assumeI'm not a parent, but I would
assume you would never want to havethis thought about your kid. It wasn't
explained to me that pubity blocks areactually just sterilization drugs. I lost my
son essentially, so you know theythey're quote dead naming for a reason.
Yeah, all right, So thereason that's quote dead naming is because your

(01:32:31):
son is dead. So my sonis Avior is dead, killed by the
woke mind virus. All right,so let's go about to destroy the woke
mind virus after that. See that'sthe that's the flex part too. Even
with all of his resources, allof his money, he's still he still
fell victim to it in his mind. And then he went, oh,

(01:32:53):
yeah, that's right. I haveall the money, and unlike a lot
of parents where you see these verysad stories where it's just they they're never
in contact with their with with theirwith their son or daughter or whatever,
he decided that this was going tobe his motivation. It's a crazy it's
a long interview, but it's acrazy interview, man, all right,

(01:33:15):
raced agic here. It won't beas long the weather forecast because we're running
round a little late, but Iwe'll still get it in. So what's
happening. Yeah, well, we'restaying in the same type of air mass,
the showers thunderstorms mainly confined to theafternoon hours a though this morning some
spotty light rain in the area,a lot of clouds in the next few
days and maybe some heavier rain.Thus a flood watch has been issued for
most of the area. So itheads up this afternoon and into the evening.

(01:33:39):
Same thing tomorrow, maybe even onFriday. May get into the little
mid eighties today, maybe close toninety in some spots, but now they
added cloud covering the rain chances howto keep temperatures down anywhay him, he's
still way up. There could beless rain around by the upcoming weekend.
Chances at least percentage wise, looklike they're going to go down. But
kind of in it here casey.For the next few days, a lot
of the rain will be con finedto the afternoon and evening hours, but

(01:34:01):
some of the mornings may see somelight rain and showers too, So a
little unsettled. We'll be continuing overthe next few days. Okay, thank
you sir, appreciate it, andwe'll come back with Jeff Bellinger. Hang
on well, good morning. Caseystocks pulled back just a little bit yesterday,
but investors seem to be in afunk this morning. The earnings reporting
season is revving up. Results fromTesla, the luxury goods Company LVMH,

(01:34:26):
and Deutsche Bank raising concerns about thehealth of global business. Alphabet's numbers failed
to impress. Right now, thefutures are lower across the board. S
and P futures are down fifty fourpoints, Nasdaq futures are down three hundred
seven points, and the Now futuresare down one hundred eighty five. We
have unwelcome news for coffee hounds,hoping coffee prices would top out soon more

(01:34:48):
increases. You're likely the prices ofhigh end Arabica beans and the more budget
friendly Robusta variety both climbing. Therehave been serious supply disruptions from Vietnam to
Brazil. Zill sellers have been raisingprices and scrapping discounts. Delta Airlines slow
recovery from last week's computer meltdown beinginvestigated by the federal government, but Delta

(01:35:10):
says this morning that delays will beat a minimum today it expects normal operations
to resume tomorrow, and Casey,it's called the mortgage lock. In effect,
homeowners with three percent mortgages unwilling totake on new home loans with interest
rates of around seven percent. It'skeeping a lot of Americans in place,
keeping a lot of existing homes offthe market. Bankrate says things are not

(01:35:32):
likely to change anytime soon. Itdid a poll. Nearly half of the
homeowner's surveyed said they would not becomfortable buying a new home until mortgage rates
drop below five percent. Casey,Okay, yeah, yeah, that's that's
the thing we talked about here recently. So thank you very much, Jeff,
do appreciate it. Okay, havea good day. All right?

(01:35:55):
Ross, Are you excited for Friday? You pumped? You ready to go?
You have the peacock cap? What'sFriday? The Olympics kick off?
Oh? Does it? Yeah?Apparently apparently if you got the peacock cap,
they're gonna go bonkers on there withall the different stuff you can watch.
There is some funny stuff happening andsome also kind of crazy stuff.

(01:36:16):
One I guess the teams are showingup and like the Olympic people are losing
their minds because the first thing they'regoing in and doing is like redecorating the
super green villages. Portugal literally hada crew come in remove all the stupid
cardboard beds, which I've also seensome videos posted a social media where some

(01:36:42):
of the athletes literally are posting thatthey did hook up on the beds.
You are able to do it.These are the beds they put in that
they said were sex proof because theydidn't want that happening in the Yeah village.
Some of the skateboarders who are husbandand wife were both competing for I
think Portugal. Actually they post didsome not so subtle posts of like one

(01:37:03):
of the beds all messed up,like Nope, no you can't, it's
so dumb. You've seen what thegymnasts can do, right, I mean,
yes, yeah, absolutely right,you got you got a collective of
young, super fit people with timeto kill. It's it's inevitable. But
they also went in and they removedall the beds and I didn't realize this,

(01:37:23):
So the beds were then they're they'reliterally made of cardboard, and then
the pillows were going to be donatedto schools, after which I don't know.
It's just kind of weird. Doyou want secondhand pillows? I don't
feel like I want secondhand pillows,but whatever. And more and more contingents
are going in and just changing thevillage because they say that it's not this

(01:37:45):
is not what the top tier athletesneed to be living in, and so
they're bringing in other mattresses, acunits, you name it. Uh.
And they just arrested a chef fora plot to stabilized the Olympics. He's
Russian. The Russians are banned kindof as a team, they're banned,

(01:38:08):
although individual athletes can participate, butnot where Russian flag are I guess,
And so they've just Russias apparently decidedto strew with the Olympics. The man
was using AI and social media.They believe it's at the behest of the
Kremlin, but I don't know thatthey can prove it. In one incident,

(01:38:30):
he used AI to create a fakemovie called The Olympics Has Fallen,
which obviously is a play on thatmovie Olympus Has Fallen, the big action
flick, and in the movie itstars Tom Cruise, except it's not real,
so it's just wild what they're ableto go ahead and do with this
stuff. Man
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