Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I like money. You got money. I like money, highlight money.
I do.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
So this whole thing about pregnant women and autism and
Thailand Hall, it's a touchy subject. CBS is add a
White House press briefing with Caroline Leavitt and they asked
the question about Thailand all. And I don't know how
dumb people are, but CBS is concerned that not taking
Thailand all while you're pregnant is going to confuse people
(00:28):
on the autism issue.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
Again, there are dreams of scientific research that suggest there's
no clear link between autism and I've seen a medicine
usage you're suggesting today.
Speaker 4 (00:40):
They may have no information on this a lot of it.
When this entire debate has the potential to confuse women,
especially pregnant women, about what to do. What do you
say to those that say what you're doing today potentially
just introduces more confusion into this creation.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
All right, before she answers real quick, I understand I
must be really easy to confuse women once they get pregnant.
It is kind of what he's saying. This is sad.
Doesn't sound like he just did a little massage, Andy,
and it did not word that properly. But we won't
make sure you know he is entitled to free speech. Yeah, sure,
that's important. I don't want any of the celebrities out
(01:15):
in Hollywood to get their feelings hurt. Again if if
somebody tells him he can't say a certain thing a
certain way, so let him. Let him say stupid stuff.
Speaker 2 (01:23):
Well, Caroline, as you know, is a mom. I don't
know if you're aware of this or not. She's got
a kid, right, is it autistic? I don't think so.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
Well good, I mean even if it is good too,
I mean, you know, still probably a great kid.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
Well, CBS thinks that not taking Thailand all while you're
pregnant is going to confuse pregnant women.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
And here's how Caroline answered.
Speaker 5 (01:43):
I think women for many years, in fact, for decades,
and have been confused by the rapid increase in autism
in this country, in the childhood epidemic that is, chronic epidemic,
disease epidemic that is plaguing America's youth. Women are confused
about that, and I want answers to that. And that's
exactly what this administration is focused on finding. And before
(02:05):
you jump to conclusions based on reports that the white
House has not even confirmed. I would encourage everyone in
this room to go into the four o'clock announcement with
some critical thinking skills and with some open ears to
actually listen to what the president and his team of
outsiders have to say about this.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
And they're now pregnant women, are they normally good at listening? Methinks?
Oh yeah. In other words, what she say it is
trying out to be so stupid, I CBS. I just
can't believe that's the concerned After all, you know, it's confusing.
They might get confused. So let them do stupid stuff.
Let them just do whatever they want to, because if
we tell them don't do that, it could confuse them.
(02:44):
I don't feel like tail and awl is a real
controversial drug, but if you just don't take it for
nine months. How often do you take tailan all? Not
very often, to be honest with you, I don't like
putting things in my I don't like taking pills for
things that I might be able to remedy another way.
See I say, better living through chemistry up with pills.
I know you're a big fan, but what they're telling
(03:07):
you here is just don't do it for nine months.
Do you think pregnant women will be Have you ever
heard this before? They're not allowed to eat cold cuts, preservatives.
I know some of this stuff's obvious, but I just
never been pregnant, So when I hear about this, I'm like, really,
you can't have a ham sandwich? And what's that thing
with the raw fish? Yeah, you're supposed to do that
when you're pregnant. Sushi. Yeah, yeah, that mercury and the
(03:29):
fish might be a problem. Of course, the old standard
and everybody loves this. Vaccines calls autism, right, don't get
your kids vaccinated. Oh well, now we just added more confusion,
all right, So the other is so tricky. Well, now
that you brought it up.
Speaker 2 (03:45):
The other thing that that SoundBite sheds light on is
some people are arguing, we're just more aware of autism now.
It's not necessarily the chemicals or drugs we're taking out.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Oh, it's something. I don't know if it's time on
all the vaccine or all of the above, but it's something.
Because the out of autism per per thousand or per
hundred thousand, or however they want to it, has gone
drastically higher.
Speaker 2 (04:08):
Is it possible that it's both that that A we're
taking more drugs and chemicals now it's causing more autism,
and B we're more aware of what autism is, so
we're you know, now telling identifying it faster.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Don't forget now. When it all shakes out, though, what
comes out bottom line is which one of these companies
wants to donate how much money to which politician so
that we can blame somebody else instead of meat. Who's
blaming you? Not me? The company? Oh, you got to
follow the lead here. I guess I got you confused.
And you're not even pregnant. I know I'm not even pregnant.
Imagine that yet not yet. By the way, the reason
(04:44):
I mentioned it freedom of speech is because that's what
they're you know, ABC Disney, that's what they're claiming about
this bringing. If you haven't heard yet, Jimmy Kimmel is
coming back on TV as of tonight, okay, and they're saying,
of course they suspended him, that his comments were just
ill timed. That's what made them insensitive. It's not like
(05:08):
lying to people is you gonna upset them? Normally people
love it when you lie to them, like Jimmy Kimmel does.
So these four hundred give or take, Hollywood celebrities all
got together and they signed an open letter by the
ACLU supporting free speech and condemning what happened to poor Jimmy.
(05:35):
And I mean, there's a list of names here that,
let's just say, it's anybody and everybody that you've ever
watched in a television show or a movie of any kind.
Your favorite actor or actress is probably amongst these four
hundred people that are supporting the insensitivity of Jimmy Kimmel. Boy.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
I can't help but now, there's been an awful lot
of times that the ACLU did not come out and
support right wingers. You remember that guy in Colorado with
the cake. They kept trying to make that Christian baker
bake a cake. Sure, the ACLU sued the Christian baker,
What about his right to free speech? Sometimes the ACLU
(06:15):
is just wrong. Oh yeah, about ninety ninety two percent
of the time. I think back in the day, the
ACLU was very helpful.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
They were very useful, and then at some point they
switched from being a free speech organization or a civil
liberties organization to just straight up leftist dribble sure politics,
pick a side. Now you can't stay in the middle
long or you'll get run over by traffic in both directions.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
You know what I wonder, as we're talking about the vaccines,
what about the Amish. You know, That's what I wonder,
and Donald Trump wonders too.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
For a second.
Speaker 6 (06:47):
I recently saw a man for Minnesota and Almish man right.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
On Amish and autism.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
Most asked him what the rates were for like ADHD
and autism, and he had no idea about ADHD.
Speaker 1 (06:59):
He did no existed it certainly what he takes what.
Speaker 6 (07:03):
It doesn't exist with the Amish community. And they don't
take all this junk. It doesn't exist. That tells you,
doesn't that time?
Speaker 1 (07:14):
That's is it possible? There's no is some I don't
know about ADHD. There is some autism amongst the Amish
as well. That's a pretty bold claim. There's no autistic
Amish people. I don't I think he meant ADHD. I
don't know. I think they beat the ADHD out of
kids when they're young. I kind of like he used to.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
I kind of assumed ADHD had more to do with technology, right, Like,
probably you're spending too much time watching TV, playing video games,
what do you think TikTok is doing to take?
Speaker 1 (07:40):
What is TikTok?
Speaker 2 (07:41):
It's a bunch of fifteen second videos and if you
don't like it, you can swipe, swipe, swipe, swipe, swipe.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
T you see one you like. Anything in that Amish
Bible about them taking tyler I doubt that that's in there.
You know, they didn't have anything called tylanol when they
wrote it up. I don't know if they use the
same Bible we do. If it's a different Amish Bible
that says you can't, you know, like use electricity and stuff.
I don't think that's in my bible. Did you know
(08:06):
that the Amish don't wear deodorant? Well, sure, okay, see I.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Don't get that you can't put something on your pits
that makes them not smell good?
Speaker 1 (08:16):
What does that have to bad? What does that have
to do with a You don't have to look it up.
I ain't know. I ain't what's called an expert on
the Amish. I don't know. They can build a hell
of a barn, no like overnight boom, Yeah, they really do,
and jams and jellies and then they make those little
electric fireplaces. But they're not allowed to use them. They
can only sell them late at night during TV commercials.
(08:37):
Do you think they they have like one of those
loopholes where like the Jews with the elevator. Yeah. Yeah,
you can plug it in just to test it to
make sure it works before you put it on the market.
All right, What if deodorant's causing ADHD? I mean, what
if you don't know, yeah, or that that autism is
is thing?
Speaker 2 (08:54):
Yeah, Billy had I think just to find out, you know,
you and I maybe we take a month off from
d see what it does to our attention span. You
know what, no problem ain't where no now what that
does explain on it? Why is every Cowboys fan like
a five foot six Mexican with long jean short?
Speaker 1 (09:10):
This is the Walton and Johnson Show. All right, A
couple of updates real quick on the things we were
just talking about. The numbers that I received from a
friend tell a terrible story about autism. Twenty years ago,
the research showed that it was one child out of
every twenty thousand kids that were born had altas. Now
(09:35):
the research shows it's one in twelve boys, one in
twenty girls. Not sure what the difference is because there's
no difference between boys and girls, and yet science shows
that there may be from one in twenty thousand to
one in twelve in twenty years. Something's going on out there,
(09:56):
and I think people have been taking Todland all for
more than twenty years. So I'm sure that's not all
of it. But even if it's just one of the reasons,
wouldn't it be good to know? Thanks for sharing. Also,
the Jimmy Kimmel coming back Sinclair Broadcasting and probably Next
Star too, but they haven't said one way or the other.
Sinclair one of the largest, well the largest affiliate I
(10:19):
think that runs that has a show that they're running
in Washington, DC, and a lot of their other markets
are along the West coast Oregon, California. So a lot
of the people that have been complaining about the show
won't get the show back because Sinclair's says they're not
(10:39):
going to run it even if they put it back on.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
All right, I'm gonna throw a wrench into this whole
autism argument right now. Monkey wrench or a regular can
would you prefer monkey wrench?
Speaker 1 (10:49):
Allen? I'll do Allen? What if that is bold? Sir,
that's a bold choice, going Alan Wrench.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
What if autism isn't a problem we need to fix?
What if it's not even a problem. What if everybody
got autism? If everyone had autism, would it even matter?
Speaker 1 (11:02):
I think it might? Why it just might? Have you
not seen Love on the Spectrum? It's a great show.
They seem like charming people. I enjoy autistic people. I
like hanging out with them. Sure, they're they're hyper intelligent.
They're bad at reading body language? That is that so bad?
Don't you share a kinship with them in some way?
There's just like a deeper connection you feel with the autistic.
Speaker 2 (11:24):
I feel like I'm pretty close to whatever they've got.
I'm on this, I'm adjacent to it, so I don't.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
Yeah, maybe your mom only took a two tititle in
all when you got a headache and some people pop three.
Maybe who knows. And let's face it, we got to
come up with something that pregnant women can do, because
all women have headaches. That's how a lot of women
keep from getting pregnant. I got I got a headache. Well,
(11:50):
here here's some tile and all. No, no, not that
that's actually pretty clever point Billy and you know, so,
could you play that part again where Trump try to
slay Metal in the stuffest in the toddle. No, I
making fun of him because I have halt time saying
some words to Kenny. You don't know what that's like
being a professional broadcaster. But some people have trouble saying
(12:12):
certain words. Some people can't pronounce these foreign words.
Speaker 3 (12:15):
You know.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
That's the thing. You just got to understand.
Speaker 2 (12:17):
The Browns, well that's what we call them now, brown
brown people Cleveland. No, No browns are hang on, it's
hold on a second. It's Mexicans, Filipinos, people from the
Mid East, people from South America, and pretty much anyone
that's not white or black.
Speaker 1 (12:33):
They're they're now brown. According to what about the Asians?
What do we call them? Now?
Speaker 2 (12:38):
I don't get a color assignment. Depends on what part
of a black brown and then nothing. They might be brown,
they might be nothing. And don't forget red. No, we
never do red anymore.
Speaker 3 (12:47):
Now.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Oh yeah, we're back to red. Now are we back
to Yeah? Back to red. The Redskins are gonna come. Actually,
they're looking like they might be pretty good team too,
So they go bring the redskins back to DC.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
And then what's the other word that's back in play
now and incoming warning folks, trigger warning?
Speaker 1 (13:02):
Oh retarded. Yeah, you could say retarded again, that's the
thing when you're talking about autistic kids.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Well, no, that's not even what they know. You could
say something is retarded when you're talking about like fire,
for example.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
Yeah, you want to stop a fire, you want to
slow it down quite a bit? Yeah, you retard the fire. Yeah.
And then what's that word for when you take something back,
billy that you like to use? Oh, yeah, that's where
you return. That's good, that's the one that you were
looking for, right, Media.
Speaker 6 (13:31):
The FDA will be not positions at the use of
I said, well, let's see how big wordin of metaph.
Speaker 1 (13:44):
A set of menifin Yeah, it's like, okay, I see
the mion Uh huh, you see the menif. That's how
you say the word A see of metaphine. Thank you
very well done, sir. Isn't that in a white stripe song?
Like you guys know, why am I asking you this question?
(14:04):
I don't know. Don't take drugs is the best tip
we could give everybody here on this one. Thank you
very much. Yesterday, I had a conversation with a friend
I hadn't talked to in years, and we were harkening
back to childhood days and some of the things that
you know, we had as kids that kids today would
find just ridiculous because they've all got electronics and screens
(14:26):
and things like that. And this was even before my time.
But he's a little older than me, and he's like,
you've probably seen the pictures or maybe an old movie
of a kid that had a pinwheel on a stick,
and that was a toy. A pinwheel, A pinwheel is
just that little thing that when you move it through
the air like a fan blade. That's what's given everybody
au tench. I think that's probably it. Yeah, No, that
(14:48):
had a separate conversation completely okay, But there was a
time when little kids wore hats with propellers on their heads,
or they would run around with a pinwheel on a
stick and just by moving it through the air, it
would it would roll, it go in a circle. That
was entertainment. That was a toy when some people were children.
And now, of course, you know, I mean they would
(15:10):
they would look at that like what is rich, It's
it's lunacy, and I suddenly flashed on a thing we
used to do every fall closer to Christmas when we
were little kids in school. Ding dong, detch Nope. Did
you ever make a Christmas tree out of a reader's digest? Oh?
(15:31):
I do remember doing that. No, what's a reader's digest?
I think it's just a way for the teacher to
keep the kids busy so she could nap, or you know,
go visit with another teacher down the hall, or maybe go,
you know, do a little drinking in her car. You
take the reader's digest, which you young people don't even
know what that is. It's a small magazine basically with
(15:51):
a hardback, and you would take each page and you
would fold it into the center and increase it, and
if you did that about two hundred times, you'd stand
it up on its end and it was a pointy
little Christmas tree made out of a little magazine. What
did you grow up in a third world country with? Yes? Yes, thanks, well,
(16:14):
never mind, all right, Smear the queer, Oh yeah, we
did that, dude. Smear the Queer was the best. We
also had some people like calling it kill the man
with the ball. Of course, you can't kill You can't
have kids running around kill him killing dude. They'll they'll
think you're serious, dude. Smear the Quaer was the best
dodgeball lawn darts. Do you guys remember lawn darts? Oh?
Speaker 2 (16:35):
Yeah, yeah, King of the Hell was great. You'd find
a hell and then whoever could stay on top of you?
Speaker 1 (16:40):
Just not the TV show. Well, the show is good too,
but I was talking about the game. It was based
off a game games for kids back when we remember,
I don't know, you probably never had the vibrating football field. Yeah,
and you put all the little men in position and
sure it just turned it on and it vibrated and
there was no skill involved at all, just some some
(17:02):
of the players would just turn in circles. Some would
run to the corner and just sit there. And I
have I don't even remember. And the little football, the
tight little football is about the size of your little fingernail.
It is made out of felt and you could just
stick it on the player's hand and then he's the
kid with the ball boy.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
I'm starting to understand why Smear the Queer was so popular. Yeah,
I get outside some and then back in the day,
old fashioned candy was like rock candy.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
It's not. Yeah, jawbreakers. I bet there's a lot of
dentists out there who would love it if jawbreakers had
a had a big surge.
Speaker 2 (17:35):
And you don't really see jawbreakers anymore now. But they
weren't that good. Actually, many too many teeth broken. I
would imagine butts up? Do you guys remember that players
would throw a ball against the wall and if someone
misses the catch, they face the wall to get tagged
by the ball.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Everybody hit some of the ball. What did you call it?
It's called butts up? Huh, Yeah, we played that game,
but didn't It's not you know, it's not the same crack.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
The web kids would hold a line run oh and
red Rover, red Rover, Oh bro Red Rover was dope.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Oh ridiculous was the stuff though.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
It was fun, but it pretty much just involved like
running as hard as you could into other people and
smashing them or tackling a lot of tackling.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
But then that's the thing about violence. I don't think
it's a good idea for the kid oas today they
can't handle it. You seem like the opposite kind of
guy that would make that point.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
Thank you. Well, when I was a kid, we used
to do all that.
Speaker 1 (18:28):
I remember.
Speaker 2 (18:28):
It was a good time. And then but I'm the
generation where it went away. I remember, Yeah, one day
we got to school and they said kids were not
playing dodgeball anymore.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
No, it's too hurtful. Well, the fat kids were the
first ones out. Obviously, they move slow and they take
up a lot of space. You could play dodgeball blind,
and you're more likely to hit a fat kid.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
So you're saying, AOC and Jasmine Crockett, we're more likely
to get hit, not when they were little.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
But now, meaning daddy on you. Oh you'll know when
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