Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
If you ever wonder what the normies are up to,
the people that aren't really concerned about the direction the
world's heading in, they're very upset today about All D
shopping bags.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
What's going on there? That's grocery store? Right.
Speaker 1 (00:13):
All D is kind of like Trader Joe's, but without
all the like yuppie news to it. I guess it's
it's like Trader Joe's for regulars.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Are they charging people for their bags for their groceries?
I think they do.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
But they had a promotion going on earlier this week.
They had a promotion where they were giving away one
thousand of their big bags with the All D logo
on it for free.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
And then that's the you're supposed to bring the bag
with you when you go shopping, so you don't have
to use paper or plastic.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Or get a box or yeah exactly, yeah, And so
they were giving them away. It was supposed to happen
at nine am on Tuesday. Apparently they sold out within minutes.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
What the bag worth? What are they normally charge for
that bag? Is that like a dollar or five dollars
or something like that? That is a great question. I
don't know, It's not much I mean, you know, it's
a bag. It sounds like it's Prada or you know,
something like that. Two dollars and fifty cents. I so
to give it away a prize for two dollars and
(01:08):
fiftyes in and people just went in there and just
gobbled them all up.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Yeah, they all went away very quickly. Listen to how
this young woman reacts to the news.
Speaker 2 (01:16):
This message is for Aldi and Aldi only.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
I went online at nine o'clock this morning to get
the Aldie big bag. It didn't get dropped until nine
oh one, and I clicked it to add it to
my car.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
I waited in the cart.
Speaker 4 (01:29):
It is now nine to eighteen. It continued to tell
me that it was thirty eight minutes, and then counted
all the way down until twenty three minutes. And then
it tells me my cart is sold out.
Speaker 2 (01:37):
Oh yes, you had a thousand bags. But I was
in there.
Speaker 4 (01:40):
I died out wide technically nine o'clock.
Speaker 2 (01:43):
I just wanted a big.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
Bag, and she didn't get a big bag, and she
wanted it really bad, and.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
So she's a victim. Obviously.
Speaker 3 (01:50):
That's the best thing to be in America right now.
And somebody's gonna have to do something about this.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
You know, it's interesting about her, that's who picks the
next president.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Oh God, I hate when you do that. It's not us,
it's not even the Democrats.
Speaker 3 (02:03):
You know who I'm voting for, and then you know
who they're voting for, of course, But who's that middle
ground voting for? Who can't make their mind up until
like the very last day.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
And there's almost a part of me that's jealous of
these people.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
Wouldn't you like to not care about all the horrible
things happening out there? Wouldn't you like to wake up
and not know about crime and war and disease and poverty.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
And she is not eat up with this whole Charlie
Kirk thing or the Jimmy Kimmel thing, or whatever the
Taliban did or whatever Trump said to the royal family.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
None of that.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
What's concerning her is a two dollars and fifty cent bag.
Speaker 2 (02:42):
That she didn't win.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
Every morning, in about twenty minutes, I get news from
the BBC, Fox News, I get ABC News, and I
get Al Jazeera. I want to know what the left
is saying. I want to know what the right is saying.
I want to know what friendly foreign media is saying.
I want to know what opposition foreign media is saying.
I look at Russian Times, I look at the Chinese
Global Times.
Speaker 2 (03:02):
I know all of that before I even get to work.
You know you could read Chinese.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
Well it's in English. Oh that's helpful. It's their state news.
I like to know what kind of propaganda's out there.
I look at all of it while I'm walking Milton.
I look at X, I look at the news headlines.
I have all of that, and it's never good.
Speaker 2 (03:17):
No, no, no, Why would you put good news on?
And in all that time.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
When I figure out what kind of battle is happening
in the Mid East, what kind of war is happening
in Eastern Europe? And this woman is mad about all
these shopping bags, and.
Speaker 2 (03:30):
I'm jealous of her, and I'm jealous.
Speaker 3 (03:32):
It would be great if you could just let all
the the important happenings on the planet that affect your
day to day life just roll right off of you.
Speaker 2 (03:43):
I wish I didn't have to care good. Yeah, it's awful.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
By the way, we're checking the emails, you know, pretty regular.
If you got something to say, you go ahead and
say it right there at Walton Johnson dot com hits
a little email thingy and yeah, type of way. Yesterday,
later in the show, I kind of went off a
little bit.
Speaker 2 (04:01):
Maybe maybe I got a.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
Little heated because we were talking about the fact that
this young generation now and what are they the disease,
the gen z Zellers. They're they're about to start taking
over the world. They're they're out of college. They're just
farting around out trying to figure out what to do.
But sooner or later, as the older folks start, you know,
getting older and going away, gen z is gonna move in.
(04:23):
These are kids, they're still kids, even if they're thirty,
that have never been held accountable for their actions. They
don't know what consequences even means. And one of these
days they're gonna be in charge of stuff.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
It's not good. They grew up.
Speaker 3 (04:39):
Everybody gets a trophy, everybody's a winner, fun fair blobboy
blah uh. You know you you did your little crime
when you were fifteen. Well, yeah, yeah, we'll just overlook it. Everything.
You know, the parents raised them telling them they're the best. No,
they're everything is perfect.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
In the world. You're the You're wonderful.
Speaker 3 (04:59):
And then we get to an email from Dawson here,
and Dawson said, going on, after what you said yesterday
about gen Z taking over as a gen z er myself, Yeah,
there are a lot of crazy, dumb idiots in this generation.
But isn't it the parents fault for how they raised
(05:20):
their child? Just like in the past, and all the
generations getting more and more soft. It's the parents who
are making them soft by wanting them to not grow
up the way they did. I went through hell when I.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Was a kid. I don't want my son to go
through hell.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
Actually, that's why we're such great adults, is because we
did go through hell and now yeah, yeah, we do
have to take the responsibility ourselves. And I just wonder
what kind of kids the gen zs are raising. You know,
I absolutely agree with this point. I mean, look, anytime
you find that you don't like the way the new
generation is, just remember that, younsion.
Speaker 1 (05:57):
They were raised by the last generation. They learned their
values from you. Oh you don't like the thing you created?
Uh huh, oh, well maybe you should have made it differently. Ever,
thought about that? Oh you think zoomers or monsters? Guess
which call which?
Speaker 2 (06:10):
Guess?
Speaker 1 (06:11):
Which generation of college professors made them into monsters?
Speaker 2 (06:14):
What's so great to be gay? I'm out of this,
it's not on me. Nah, you can't say that anymore.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
Now the gays have the IVF right now, you guys
are Here's what I wonder, right because they always said that.
Speaker 2 (06:26):
Gay was a recessive gene. Have you heard that before?
Speaker 1 (06:28):
Of course, But if two gay men go out and
they use an artificial test tube to create a baby together,
then the baby's got the genes from both of the homosexuals.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
It still doesn't necessarily mean the child will be gay.
It doesn't necessarily mean that. But would you agree able
to take that chance? Do you? There would be a
statistical increase. It's a risk. Come on, it's not like
you know, retardation or something. I mean, come on, hey,
I take that back.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
I prefer those people to the normal people yourself right now,
I do. I'd much rather hang out with people that
have a mental disability that hang out with the normal people.
Speaker 2 (06:59):
They're nicer. Make me take you outside and do things
you will regret. What would you do? Oh man, you
don't want to know. Patrol You all know the drill. Now,
one Mexican is to get past this border. Not a
single one. Yeah, wal Toney Johnson.
Speaker 3 (07:12):
Will leave a bait going now between emailers here at
the Walton Johnson Show. You remember the email I just
read you a minute ago.
Speaker 1 (07:20):
Sure, but real quick, this is Bad Company with BlackBerry Smoke.
Speaker 2 (07:24):
Okay, good? Isn't that cool? It's good music?
Speaker 1 (07:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (07:26):
I think so too. What were you going to say?
I was saying it? Yeah, Well, god, are you rudely interrupted?
Speaker 1 (07:31):
Well before I turned the music off, I just wanted
to point out that bad BlackBerry smoke with Bad Company
and it's new music.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
They just put it. I think that's interesting. I didn't
mean to interrupt.
Speaker 4 (07:38):
You go.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
All of them are handsome. Yeah, see what he does?
Speaker 3 (07:41):
I don't know he's so Dawson email said it was
the parent's fault, not the kid's fault, that they grow
up being a bunch of idiots. Well, Al would like
to dispute that response from Dawson. He said, I have
to disagree.
Speaker 2 (07:58):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (07:59):
Charlie Work's assassin was raised by a conservative family, sure,
but influences turned him. I agree with Al. Okay, uh yeah, out,
you're right. They tried to raise their boy right, but
then they send him off to school. Say what happened
to him in school? I'm sorry who sent him off
to school?
Speaker 2 (08:17):
The parent? Oh, they sent him there?
Speaker 1 (08:19):
Did if I send you to the ghetto in the morning,
you do not send your kids to school, and you know, homeschool,
that's the answer Liberty University.
Speaker 3 (08:29):
All right, but they did send them school like they did.
You're right, hundreds of millions of other parents have sent
their kids to school. We still falsely believe that they're
educating our children in school.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
They are not.
Speaker 1 (08:44):
It's not my fault. Those Jews died in the Holocaust.
All I did was force them on to a train
and sent them off to Aushawitz, said Billy ed Hatfield.
I did what, No, it's it's that went way over
his head making a point here. You're trying too hard,
you know, well, Nazi analogies. I figured the lowest hanging fruit.
Speaker 3 (09:01):
It's the parents' fault that they send them to school,
because it's the school's fault that they turned them into little,
you know, mentally ill lefties. Mmm mmmm okay, Well the
debate will continue it So it's not my fault. Though
I don't have kids, No, you don't. I don't have
kids either. Uh, okay, let's talk about this today. Billy,
you're gonna love it. I promise you're gonna enjoy this.
(09:22):
Cue the music plays. Oh, I like it already all right.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
Seattle yesterday they have a thing called University Bridge in Seattle.
And it's why it's a drawbridge, I think. Is that
what it's called. It's an up and down bridge bridge.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
That's a drawbridge, right.
Speaker 3 (09:37):
They open from the middle and the two middle pieces
raise up at an angle so that tall you.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
Know, chips and stuff can go under.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
I don't agree with what this guy did, but at
the same time, I've always wanted to do it. We
all wanted to do this as kids jumped the bridge.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Yeah, oh who did it?
Speaker 1 (09:54):
A car jumped in open University Bridge in Seattle at
twelve out or a little afternoon yesterday. It appears it
was being for shooed by police at the time. There's
a video of it on the Walton and Johnson Instagram account.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
If you want to.
Speaker 3 (10:05):
Look, how far was it open when he jumped Just
a little bit, but enough that it was a legit jump.
Speaker 2 (10:10):
You want me to pull the video up on the screen, like,
take a look at it. See what to jump after
there's traffic.
Speaker 3 (10:16):
Yeah, he goes he's he's fleeing the cops, so he
goes around the traffic. So the barricades were already down,
the bridge has already started to tilt up.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
In a white station wagon with what appears to be
a kayak or a case for a kayak on the
roof of the vehicle.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
Broke through the barricades and then.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
Just hops the bridge. Look at that bam and the
cut and the police stopped. All three police that were
chasing him decided they didn't want to do it.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
That wasn't that big a jump, be honest with you.
Speaker 3 (10:42):
I mean it's you know, it's impressive, but I saw
Nicholas Cage jump in one way bigger than that.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Bro.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Come on, I would have done it if I was
a cop and I was chasing a guy and he
did it first.
Speaker 3 (10:52):
Yeah, you know, you'll be fine. But remember the bridge
is still opening. The cops were several seconds behind him,
and every second that they're behind him, that bridge is
opening higher and higher and higher, and they didn't want.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
To go over it. Well, you know, it wasn't a
smart movie.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
If you want to see the video, it's on the
Walton and johnson Instagram account. Now, the cops didn't want
to copy what he was doing because he was a criminal, right,
Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett.
Speaker 5 (11:16):
I understood what was kind of pushing them there, And
so I do want people to know that just because
someone has committed a crime, it doesn't make them a criminal.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
Roll that back, well, but just that last part.
Speaker 5 (11:29):
What, okay, just someone has committed a crime, it doesn't
make them a criminal.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
Whose voice is that? That's a great question. That's Jasmine
Crockett on a podcast for white people.
Speaker 3 (11:41):
I've heard Jasmine Crockett speak before, and she don't sound
not like that. No, she's not a podcast for white people.
That's what I'm trying to tell you.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
Oh, okay, this is she's being interviewed by a white person.
When she's interviewed by a black person, she sounds like this.
Speaker 5 (11:54):
Because these people are great because they always look about
how christian.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Is that's jazzy. But when she's on a white person's
podcast that.
Speaker 5 (12:02):
Just because someone has committed a crime, it doesn't make
them a criminal.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
How is that the same person?
Speaker 3 (12:08):
How is it that she makes such an idiotic statement
like that, and everybody just goes right, yes, thank you.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
By the guy the way that it's dispensary Jesus. Look
at the guy interviewing her. Oh, he does look like
but like if Jesus worked at a weed dispensary.
Speaker 2 (12:23):
Absolutely, that should be like the poster child for weed workers.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
And on that note, I don't know if I believe
this today, but there's a recently released study from the
European Association for the Study of Diabetes in which doctor
Ibraham Cammel from the Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
Cammel yeah with a K, yeah, oh Ibraham too.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
He says that if you smoke pot, you have a
four time increased chance of getting diabetes. I'm going to
cast a little doubt on this. I don't think it's
cannabis that's doing that. I don't think cannabis is quadrupling
your chance of getting diabetes.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
True, wouldn't you have already at least lost one leg?
Speaker 1 (13:02):
I mean for sure, Yeah, But also, don't you think
it is more to do with the kind of food
that pot smokers eat than the pot itself.
Speaker 3 (13:09):
That pot that will drive your hunger panes And sometimes
people get a little desperate, especially in the middle of
the night. You'll wake up in the middle of night
and you got to eat right, you know, for whatever reason,
and maybe not something healthy has been prepared, so you
take what you can get.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
We assume that marijuana makes you eat unhealthy food. But
let's go the other direction on this. Is it possible
the kind of people that eat unhealthy food like smoking pot. Yeah,
it's the same thing with laziness. People say, well, weed
makes you lazy. Hang on a minute, Is it possible
that lazy people just like weed? Because I know plenty
of people that smoke pot who are fully capable of
succeeding in business or whatever.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
They're chosen time job and they seem successful in life. Yeah,
but they managed. But we all micro focus in on
that guy.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
You're lazy, unemployed brother in law who sits at home
playing video games and smoking pot all day. Is he
smoking pot because he's lazy or is he because he
smokes pot?
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (14:02):
So now that since we've got the Dukes of Hazard
video on from Seattle to you know, straightening the curves
and flattening them.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
The heels, the videos on the Walton Johnson Instagram account.
I know I said that, but I just want to
make sure everyone knows what we're looking at.
Speaker 3 (14:15):
I guess the only thing left to do is head
over to Florida and see what was happening to folks
over there.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Wait a second, is Seattle the Florida of the West coast?
Speaker 5 (14:26):
You know?
Speaker 3 (14:26):
Now that you mentioned it, I think maybe they are.
But isn't Portland the Florida of the West coast?
Speaker 2 (14:31):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (14:31):
Yeah, But wouldn't you use a competition, wouldn't you say
that Compton is the Florida would There's so many terrible
places on.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
The West coast.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
All right, we're gonna go to Florida after this coming
up in just a little bit, we're gonna get gay
for space. We're touching back down with the Taliban. We
got a lot coming up. It's a Friday Walton Johnson
Radio Experience. Shove it in your ear.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
Canal just got the wrong Mexican Walton and Johnson