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March 12, 2025 • 19 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Taylor Swift, Beyonce, Oprah and all these celebrities said that
if Trump came into office, that he was going to
strip all of us women of all of our rights.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
And I haven't lost one of them. I still have
to go to work. Like she's really mad about that.
Poor thing. Oh no, honey, I guess.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Trump's let a lot of us down start. You know,
you think about for a minute all the things that
we were told he was going to do when he
got elected. Not he told us stuff, but then the
news also told us things. Democrats, mainstream media, they all
told us that he was going to strip women of
all of their rights. I don't think he's even started

(00:49):
on that yet.

Speaker 2 (00:50):
It's all he's not even trying.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
He's been in there almost two months and he's not
doing anything.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
And what about work labor camps for the gays, Yeah,
a lot of them are just baristas.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
Now.

Speaker 3 (01:02):
I thought it was gonna put his former vice president
from the first go round in charge of stuff like that,
and I don't think he's done that either.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
Yeah, it seems like Mike Pence wasn't it put in
charge anything that would be perfect for him. Trump will
be meeting with Russia today to discuss the ceasefire deal,
and yesterday Speaker Mike Johnson was able to pass the
Continuing Resolution Resolution bill in the House. And it's all right,
cr thank you, Billy, Yeah, try to stay hip, Ginny.
My problem with this is simply that and I look,

(01:32):
I get it. It's just they're just trying to plug
the hole in the wall so they can get to
the next budget vote. Basically, a lot of that stuff
that we just took out of the federal government. Doge Doge,
you know, did all the defunding it. We doged it.
This puts it back in. Technically, we say we doged
a bullet. Now they claim that, you know, just because
it's technically being put back in, they're not going to

(01:52):
spend the money. But for the time being, couldn't we
have done a budget bill where we didn't include that
stuff when that had been better for Everyone's the point
of all that Doage talk, Well, a big brain over
here has got a better idea.

Speaker 3 (02:04):
You got to get in there and mix it up
with some of Trump's cabinet members and people like that,
because they don't know stuff like you do. I don't
get invited to cocktail parties. That's because they're afraid of
your big brain. Well, they know you would embarrass them.

Speaker 2 (02:17):
They all knew about this yesterday, Ran Paul and Thomas
Massey the.

Speaker 3 (02:21):
Worst of all. It's one thing to being just being
a stupid idiot. You know, that's okay, a lot of
people can't hip it. But to know stuff and still
not act right, that just rude behavior.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
MESSI was the only no vote in the House on
the continuing Resolution.

Speaker 3 (02:37):
We've had it up to here with the mister Thomas Massey, right,
although I wouldn't know him if he walked in the
room right now, I'd be honestweed you.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
Well, that's what Trump said too. Trump said, we got
a primary this guy, and I don't know if that's
going to work in Massy's district. Where's he from again, Kentucky? Okay,
Kentucky District eight, I think off the top of my head.
And he did not He got more votes than Trump
did in his district something, and he's not gonna get primaried.
Whenever I noticed, whenever there's an unpopular member of Congress,

(03:05):
whether it's because they're too far to the right or
too far to the left, or too much of a moderate,
you know, AOC, Dan crenshawm Arjorie Taylor, Green, whoever it
may be. When you actually look at how people feel
about them in their district, it really changes the perspective. Weirdly,
AOC is popular. Al Green is another great example. Last

(03:25):
week Congressman Al Green I protested, I interrupt for a second.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
You burnt things out, but they don't slow down long
enough to discuss. What are you gonna do the whole
show here by yourself. What are you going to discuss?
I'm gonna tell you things. No, no, you're gonna talk
to me, all right, talk to me. He got eighty
percent of the voted. Why did you say AOC is popular?

Speaker 2 (03:45):
She is.

Speaker 3 (03:45):
I want to know why you think that. It's got
like a five million followers on Twitter. That doesn't make
her popular for the voters. It means there's somebody on
Twitter likes looking at her boobs.

Speaker 2 (03:55):
I mean that's probably true, But okay, what did she
get in her congressional district? You say AOC is popular,
What are you basing that on the fact that she
has millions of you know what, she's telling people she's popular,
and she's getting other people to tell you that she's popular.
But is she popular? Well, tell me what you know?
What is it you wanted to say?

Speaker 3 (04:12):
I don't know. That's the tricky part. You're saying AOC's popular,
like you know something.

Speaker 2 (04:17):
Okay, so she's from the fourteenth New York district. Let's
look at how she did in that.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
Have they've done a poll recently? And no, she got
some votes. But is she popular now?

Speaker 2 (04:31):
Okay? It says here she got sixty nine percent of
the votes. When was that twenty twenty two? And that's
twenty twenty five. Is she popular? I don't have to day,
I don't have the twenty twenty four numbers in front
of you. Yeah, I'm gonna say at seventy percent of
the vote, yeah she's popular, and then just seventy.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
Percent of the vote three years ago. And then for
three years she's been acting like a little idiot, and
the people that voted for probably went, well, damn, that's
not good. She's she's not even representing us. She's and
for president.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
Now.

Speaker 3 (05:01):
That's what the California voters are having to deal with too.
They got a governor over there who is no longer
governing their state. He's running for president.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
You remember we tried the special election in California. He's
still one.

Speaker 3 (05:13):
I know they tried to recall him, remember, well, yeah,
the fix was in on that thing.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
Yeah, how that go.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
It is real hard to get a politician out of
office once they're in. They got that recumbency thing.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
At the incumbent. Yeah, we say, right, sure, they do that. Right.

Speaker 3 (05:30):
Well, guess what, politicians made the rules, and once you're in,
you make the rules to help stay in. That's your
first job. Make sure you don't get kicked out office.
So that's how they do you. Yeah, that's know that
AOC is unpopular, But I also don't know that she's
popular just because she's got a lot of people staring

(05:53):
at her chest on Twitter or whatever. They don't mean
that they like her in her voting dish though, five
million people from all over the world.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
Well, it just looks it up for you. Seventy percent
of the vote. I mean that's three years ago.

Speaker 3 (06:06):
Well okay, all right, you know Bill Clinton was real
popular and then there for a while he wasn't.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
You know, things go up and down with that kind
of stuff. Okay, hang on, now, I want to know
the answer. What was it in twenty twenty four, And
why isn't it listed here? Let's see sixty nine percent,
same exact amount, same exactly. You just stuck on that number,
aren't you. I didn't. It's not me. I'm sure I
didn't decide how many votes she got. Sixty eight point
nine technically, but I rounded out all. He's a rounder. Well,

(06:35):
wouldn't you if you had to decide between sixty eight
point nine or sixty nine? What do you get to say? Nice? Exactly? Ye? Buddy?
All right, So Mike Johnson made it clear there will
be no cuts to big entitlements. We've heard over and
over again they're going to take away money from Medicaid
and Medicare and Social Security, and I assure you that's
not true because the Republicans want to win the midterms.

Speaker 3 (06:55):
It's another thing that they told us Trump was gonna do,
yeah in prison with the take away all their rights,
and it was also going to take Medicare and Medicaid
and all that stuff.

Speaker 2 (07:03):
And he hasn't done that either.

Speaker 3 (07:05):
No, it's just sad watching this guy flounder around in
office not getting anything done.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
I wish he would do something with Social Security. It sucks,
but he's not going on.

Speaker 5 (07:14):
They either have an issue with reading comprehension or they
are attempting to run one of the most shameful misinformation
campaigns that we've ever seen in our lives. We filed
that the CR the continued resolution on Saturday, and as
was noted, they had already come out panning the bill
that literally had not yet been seen. They said, quote,

(07:37):
this is the House Democrat Leadership team's statement on Friday.
Remember the bill was filed on Saturday afternoon. On Friday,
they said, quote, Republicans have decided to introduce a partisan
continuing resolution that threatens to cut funding for healthcare, nutritional assistance,
and veterans benefits through the end of the year.

Speaker 2 (07:55):
Let's posit right here. Okay, we know they're not doing that.
They didn't do that.

Speaker 3 (08:01):
That's not They hadn't even seen it yet, and they're
already telling you how much they hate it. It's terrible.
What's in there. We don't know what's in there, but
it's terrible. I have Republicans put it together. I hate
it too, but for totally different reasons. But that doesn't anyway.
So yeah, they continued to make the point no cuts
to social security. They're just looking for fraud. I don't
know why anyone would have a problem with looking for fraud.

(08:21):
If you're upset that someone's looking for fraud, what does
that say about you?

Speaker 2 (08:25):
Yesterday? I'm a good question. Yeah. Anyway, Uh, Press secretary
yesterday having a little feud with AP reported the Associated
Press thinks they still matter and their relevant, which is adorable.
That is cute.

Speaker 3 (08:37):
And who is the Press secretary of these days? Caroline Levitt? Oh,
that's yeah, I know her. Here she is yesterday.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
If we could just step back for a second, when
President Trump last addressed the BRT, when he's on.

Speaker 6 (08:47):
The campaign trail, his big push was on tax cuts.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
He's going there today as he's proposing tax heights in
the form of terrorist.

Speaker 6 (08:55):
I'm curious he's not giving why he's prioritizing that o
with the tax cut, he's actually not implementing tax hikes.
Tariffs are a tax hike on foreign countries that again
have been ripping us off. Tariffs are a tax cut
for the American people. And the President is a staunch
advocate of tax cuts. As you know, he campaigned on

(09:16):
no taxes on tips, no taxes on overtime, no taxes
on social Security benefits. He is committed to all three
of those things, and he expects Congress to pass them
later this year.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
I'm sorry, have you ever paid a tariff? Because I have.
That's it. Don't get charged on foreign companies, they get
charged on the importers.

Speaker 6 (09:33):
And ultimately, when we have fair and balanced trade, which
the American people have not seen in decades, as I
said at the beginning, revenues will stay here, wages will
go up, and our country will be made wealthy again.
And I think it's insulting that you are trying to
test my knowledge of economics and the decisions that this
president has made. I now regret giving a question to

(09:54):
the Associated Press.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Good for you, Gurley. For the record, I don't tail them.
I don't love tear tariffs, but I still don't think
he explained it well. You know, we all pay property
tax even if we don't own a home, right because
if you rent an apartment, you're still technically paying property tax.
And there's some truth to that with tariffs as well.
I mean, you know, you buy something from a foreign country.

Speaker 3 (10:15):
You indirectly pay property tax just because the guy that
you wrint from he pays property tax. Exactly, you pay
him and go, he pays property tax. But it's in there, right,
it affects that, and yeah, it's going to be in there.
And tariffs are the same way. Look they are. But
the thing I find so funny about.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
This isn't it weird hearing someone from the liberal media
complain about a tax on a foreign a company manufacturing thing.
It's hilarious to listen to them complain about tariffs. You
guys loved tariffs for the last forty years.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
They also loved cutting back on the size of the
government in the nineteen nineties. Now, this will shock a
few people, and you can go look it up. I
know you will, sure. But back in the nineteen nineties,
there was a guy named Bill Clinton, and apparently he
was running the country for a while, and he took
it upon himself to cut four hundred thousand federal jobs

(11:12):
in the nineteen nineties, way back in the day, four
one hundred thousand from the federal workforce. But this is
different now because it's Trump. Yeah, because it's where Yeah,
it's a Now it's a Nazi me.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
What day is what it's called Wednesday? Pump Day, hump Day,
I'm right. Hump Pump, Pump, Pump Pump worked Walton and
Johnson Radio Network.

Speaker 3 (11:34):
I remember this song what I was expected. I remember
this song being different for some reason, me too. I
thought he was supposed to kick in right about now,
but it didn't.

Speaker 2 (11:43):
Remember that song back in the But rap was real
different back in the eighties. I gotta tell you this boy,
was it ever? It is really true. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (11:51):
I regret hating it so much back in the eighties.
I should have saved up some hate for the future
of rap.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
Yeah, no, no kidding, Yeah, it's much much more. No,
I remember this song being different. I thought it went
to see if I thought the song was called just
a Friend. I don't know. It was a guy singing,
You've got what I need, You're just a friend, and
some point tast supposed to kick in, but it didn't
kick in. I remember back in the eighties. Uh, I

(12:18):
wore diapers. I was six back then. But back then,
rappers would sing about how hard it was to get
a date. Is that right? Yeah? It was a very
different world. It sounded something like this.

Speaker 4 (12:30):
You got what I need?

Speaker 2 (12:34):
What you say just a friend? Did you say?

Speaker 6 (12:38):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (12:38):
It got much worse after this Billy terrible. Yeah, absolutely well,
modern love being what it is as awful as this
intro is. I feel like we really botch the intro
to this segment. Sometimes we have to stop once in
a while and remind people the same folks that are
in the voting pool screwing things up are also screwing
things up in the dating pool. Women delightfully mysterious, back

(13:00):
crap crazy. I pif we know the answer to that.
This report on modern Women is proudly brought to you
by the Walton Jumpson smartphone app. Oh. I love that
the Walton Johnson smartphone app allows me to listen to
this radio show twenty four hours a day. And if
they play bumper music I don't like, I could fast
forward to it through it.

Speaker 3 (13:18):
I wonder if that's really a sales to a point
you could listen to the show twenty four hours a day.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
That good or bad? Well, I mean that's what the app.
That's not like punishment to some people. No, no, that's what.
And you can shop in our online store. You can
connect with us on social media. The app is free.
It's available in the Apple App Store. Oh look at it.

Speaker 3 (13:37):
People have emailed us from the app I see them
and the Google play Store, and it doesn't cost anything,
and we don't track your data because that, honestly, it
would just be a lot of work.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
I always like to remind people what you're dealing with here.
Some people wonder, why is it that a portion of
society will go out and vote on a single issue.
In fact, of all the single issue voters out there,
you know, gay men, oil and gas workers, BLM, activists, whatever,
that single issue voter made the largest single issue voter
out there. Uh huh? Is young unmarried women voting for abortion?

(14:07):
Is that right? I mean, that's what a lot of
polling data seems to see.

Speaker 3 (14:09):
If they're unmarried, they won't ever need an abortion because
they're not doing it. Well, they're not married, are they?

Speaker 2 (14:16):
It turns out Billy had some of them are doing it.

Speaker 3 (14:19):
Oo, They're gonna have to deal with the that's between
them and the Lord. I guess, Look, maybe your pro
life go face to face with Jesus.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
What are these days? Maybe your pro life, maybe your
pro choice, whatever, you know, And we're not here to
lecture you on that, right, it's Morning Radio.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
That's not They can't can't. I just you know, do
a little offshoot lecture. I mean, sure, go ahead, all right,
go ahead, Billy. One day you go meet up with
Jesus and you gonna have to explain your behavior to him,
so it'd be careful after all.

Speaker 2 (14:45):
Right, Now, I'm going to play a recording for you
of the person you're explaining this to. Are you ready?

Speaker 3 (14:49):
Uh?

Speaker 4 (14:49):
Huh no, exactly, literally, I don't know what it's so
crazya mm hmmm, mm hmmm.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
That's every single blind date I've been on since I
got divorced.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
Your god, right, she sounds like, uh, maybe her mother
was a goat, but I didn't understand a word she said.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Be honest with you. Now try uh now, now try
courting that woman, Billy d Try sitting down in a
restaurant with the woman that speaks like that, and explain
to her what your goals are in life and uh,
you know your ambitions and what you.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
Know you're If I run into her in a restaurant,
I expect her to bring me some more tea.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
Two things I can tell you about women that speak
that way, and you're not gonna like it. The first
one is she votes. And the second one, now that's
the bad news. The good news is if you take
that woman on a date, you're probably going to get
some action at the end of Oh boy, yeah, crazy action. Sure.

Speaker 3 (15:57):
You know, going to bed with a woman is one thing.
Waking up with them it's a whole different world. You
imagine waking up with that today. You're you know, you're done.
You're trying to get out of there.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
The New York Post published a study recently about dynamics
in the bedroom the most exciting people to engage with physically. Intimately,
I'm trying to crazy crazy women. Well that's what it said. Yeah,
And as I was reading it, I thought, well, that
doesn't tell you anything. You know, like, men in prison
are probably better than a guy who's an accountant in
women that you know, a woman that might stab you

(16:31):
is probably better than a woman who gardens all day.

Speaker 1 (16:33):
You know.

Speaker 2 (16:34):
That's sad but true. It's unford. What I want to
know is this, Instead of knowing that, what is the
correlation between mentally unstable women and women that can't parallel?

Speaker 3 (16:43):
Parker car Oh, and have you done a little research
on that?

Speaker 2 (16:46):
I'm just I cannot help but notice as I walk
around the parking garage in the building where I live.
There's a lot of nice cars, but a lot of them.
I can always tell which one is owned by a
woman because I look at the rim. Oh yeah, you
know what I'm talking about. Oh yeah.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
As a matter of fact, that I believe that was
only one of those greeting cards they sell at the store.
Hallmark right has put out the picture of the rim,
nice nice rim on a nice car, and it's just
all gnarled up and it says Happy International Women's Day.

Speaker 2 (17:18):
That's it. That's what they do. It's almost like someone
took a big razor to the It's not a few cars,
it's every one or two cars. It's like every other car,
like huh, guy girl, guy, guy, girl, girl, girl, guy girl.
And then sure enough, if you just stood out there
for about twenty minutes and watch people go to and
from there, now, it's not fair. No, that's not fair.

Speaker 3 (17:38):
But you know, we're I wish it was like that,
and I wish we didn't notice, and I wish we
didn't talk about it. If we do notice it, we
should just hush, right, ladies, Well.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
Why is it that the most listened to daytime show
for men is Clay and Buck? But The most viewed
daytime show for women is.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
The view Boy that tells you something. It's a little terrifying. Right, yep.

Speaker 2 (17:58):
Here's another example what I'm talking about. Here's a young
liberal white woman. I couldn't tell if she was kidding
or not, but this sounds like she's being serious, doing
a seance to ward off immigration agents from illegal immigrants
in her community. Like she's cast in a spell. You

(18:19):
will not be deported, You will not be deported. These
are not the migrants you're looking for. If she's Jedi,
these are not the migrants you're looking for.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
What are the agents?

Speaker 2 (18:35):
Explode?

Speaker 3 (18:37):
She definitely cape Now it seems like she's kidding.

Speaker 2 (18:42):
But then if she was kidding, here's that white thing
in front of her. Uh, that's like a glowing orb,
like a candle or something. It's gonn She's got a
little vase there with a light. I assume there's a
candle and it's hard to say really, but anyway.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
She's she's putting a protective spell into whatever that little
thing was in front of her, and then you're supposed
to carry it around and you'll be protected if you
carry her her spell sponge around.

Speaker 2 (19:07):
Now here's what I wonder. Right, she gets the same
number of votes as you, but unlike you, she's probably
on a lot of psychotropic drugs, which begs the question
is she the one in the ballot box or is
it Pfizer that's going in there casting a vote? True enough?
Do you know what day it is? Today?

Speaker 3 (19:23):
Is Wednesday, preceded by Thursday as usual when he's still sleep.

Speaker 2 (19:28):
Right away, what's on the agenda for today? I believe
you're aware of my Wednesday schedule. You might have to
refresh my Matte Wolton and Johnson
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