Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
About this for a while.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
I don't have time with he. He's got his own problems.
We got to deal with some other stuff that's happening
right now.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
We got plane crashes and elections and now this, this
is tragic. I have just learned that both CBS and
NBC News have disbanded their race and culture unit. What.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Yeah, they don't care about racism and the culture anymore.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Yeah? Now who will label things racist and disguise it
as the news? Right?
Speaker 2 (00:27):
Well, I guess maybe they didn't need a unit for it.
Now they've all been trained how to do it. They
can go. They're on their own. They just took the
training wheels off.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
That's all. If your job at NBC News or CBS
News is to call everything racist and then make a
blog post about it, and then your boss comes in
and says, the whole department's going away, what would you
call that? Wait? Did they just unintentionally do a racism Oh? No,
(00:53):
it's a messed up world, ain't it?
Speaker 2 (00:55):
Boy?
Speaker 1 (00:55):
It really is Good morning, Billy at Hatfield. Just one Wednesday,
It's Wednesday.
Speaker 2 (00:59):
I like it when that little it says that. Man,
it makes me laugh every time there's that little Das's name. Oh,
that would be Cartman.
Speaker 1 (01:04):
Yeah, Cartman. He's a good tweesday. It's tweez day, but
it is.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
It is Wednesday, and I know there's a lot of
excitement about the election last night, but not in Kentucky. Boy,
in Kentucky, they just got mad, mad, mad, Oh, in Louisville, well,
all over Kentucky. I know there was a plane crash
in Louisville, but I'm talking about the elections. Social media
in the Bluegrass State, that's what they call Kentucky just
(01:29):
lit up with complaints yesterday from people showing up to
vote and finding the doors shut, locked, closed, nobody even
there working the polling place. It got so bad. State
officials had to come forward and calm the crowds down.
Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Adams put this statement out
(01:51):
to try to control the people's anger. We're getting calls,
he says, about the polls being closed, and yes, they
are closed because.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
Kentucky doesn't have an election today. Oh my god, that's
so awesome.
Speaker 2 (02:06):
The people of Kentucky have been watching the news and
seeing all these reports about what's going on in Virginia.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
In New York City, and New Jersey.
Speaker 2 (02:14):
And they thought these these ones did anyway, the ones
who got mad, they thought they should get to go
and vote. You cannot vote in Kentucky for the mayor
of New York City or the governor of Virginia.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
Sorry.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
Some social media posts seem to suggest that people thought
some other states elections were nationwide. I guess everybody in
the country gets to vote on the mayor of Virginia.
You better be you know. They glad it wasn't so.
You know, they talk about how the democracy works, and
democracy is at its best when people show up and vote.
(02:53):
That's that's what's important, when everybody participates and knows their
vote counts. Now, the next big step after telling everybody
it's important to vote, is letting them know that their
state is or is not having an election, and maybe
even researching what's on the ballot ahead of time. Because
think about this, these people in Kentucky, they were going
(03:13):
to go vote, right, They had no idea what they
were voting for.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
They didn't care.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
They were just going to go in there and they
were just going to vote, you know, dim or Commy
or whatever it was they were interested in. They don't
educate themselves about who's running or what they stand for.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Okay, And so early voting just started in Louisiana. But
technically I don't think yesterday was election.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
They did November fifteenth, and I don't know if that's
Napoleon's fault or somebody else, but they do things their
own way.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
Yeah, in Louisiana. And they have the jungle primaries too.
Do you know they do? Is that Ray sister? Yeah,
of course it is. Okay. Well, anyway, so yesterday in
New Jersey, multiple bomb threats at polling locate in all
the conservative parts of this state. What an honor?
Speaker 2 (04:04):
Interesting So whoever allegedly put a bomb out wanted to
blow up Republican Well, obviously we have to blame MAGA
for that. That's uh sure, that's what you want to do.
You want to blow up your own voters, clear as day.
That's a mega problem. Well, you guys were right to
everybody that won an election yesterday was just jumping on
the Trump trampoline, put your golf spikes on and just
(04:27):
start jumping up and down on him.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
Well, these were in deep blue parts of the country.
You know, what would you have expected there? But to
your point, It's almost like they didn't learn anything from
a few years ago, because all the people that went
out and belt a campaign out of being anti Trump
are now being indicted for reasons.
Speaker 2 (04:44):
And on the Democrats side, that's all, you know, like
we're going to do anything to stop Trump. And the
Republican side is, like, like you said, with Corning, he
just stapled himself to Trump's coattails and everything that Trump did,
John Corny and was right there with him, probably leading him,
letting him know that he's got this all right. So
(05:05):
now the government shutdown, that's going to take over the
headlines again because this has become the longest government shutdown
in American history, they claim. And I've got to assume
that given the fact that some people believe this was
some massive victory for Democrats, even.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Though I think we've already explained how it's not. Optics
are more important than reality in politics. The Democrats now
have a bartering ship with the Republicans. Look, guys, you know,
when there's a momentum going in one direction, you've got
to assume it's going to start to hurt your political
party come the midterms next year. Republicans are probably going
to cave on some stuff. And I'll bet to Ted
Cruz's point, the government shutdown probably does that pretty soon,
(05:42):
Ted Cruise predicted today.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
I don't know if it'll happen that quick or not,
but yeah, pretty soon, see, because somebody's going to have
to give. And you know how it is in the past,
at least most of the time, the given comes from
the Republican side.
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Yeah, they're they're the more reasonable, pragmatic side. So this
UPS flight crashed in Bouisville, Are they gonna blame that
on the government shut down? I've got to assume someone
already has.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
Uh sure, except you know, air traffic control didn't get
to deal with it because it never got in the air.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
Sure, but I'm sure we'll blame them anyway. Fact Schmacks, air.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Traffic control guys also do control traffic, you know on
the runways. You take that runway, don't don't go there.
There's a plane over there, you know, they they but uh,
it did look suspicious. You guys were right to think
something might have been up. Wonder was there was there
some cargo on special like super secret cargo on board
(06:37):
this aircraft for UPS that nobody knew about. Except some
terrorists and decided to blow it up. Might have been
you know how Indiana Jones went around looking for that
that that Arc of.
Speaker 1 (06:49):
The Covenant thing. I remember.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
They might have been transporting the Arc of the Covenant
and then then somebody heard about it and they went
and made it blow up.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
Wow, that's it. It could have in that or it
is one of those things. Billyead I am, I am
amazed that you've just solved this whole problem here out there.
You know I did.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
I did do some thinking on it on the toilet
this morning. All Right, a couple more details. Maybe you
could peel the onion back for us and tell us
it's got to help when I can.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
All Right, So this was a flight from Louisville to Honolulu. Now,
what would people in Hawaii you want with stuff from Kentucky? Hmm?
Is it just filled with bourbon? I mean, that would
explain why the explosion was so big. It will it'll burn,
won't it? Bourbon is flammable. Yesterday we were trying to
understand scotch and we have some buddies who just love scotch,
(07:39):
but most of the people in this room are just
bourbon drinkers. Listener told me yesterday, scotch tastes like if
you filled a glass of bourbon with cigarette ashes. Okay, yeah,
I get that. It's pretty much it.
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Yeah, some people think they named it scotch because it
tastes kind of like what it would taste like if
you were chewing on scotch tape. Huh, which is not
a pleasant taste.
Speaker 1 (08:01):
Actually, that doesn't make scotch tape seem more delicious, but
it makes scotch seem less delicious right by comparison. I
do question this with that massive blaze after the plane
crash near at Louisville, was there a DEI pilot back
in the cockpit or what was the you know, what
did the pilot look like? I'm just scaring. I know
it doesn't matter, but it kind.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
Of Underfortunately, we're not gonna scramble the Walton Johnson entourage
and head to Luell and do any of our independent
research that we're famous for. We'll have to pretty much
stay here at the station and wait for news reports
to come in.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
All right, Well, the good news is here at the
radio station, is where we can get breakfast among other Yeah,
so we got that going for us. What day is
it Wednesdayday? Is it Wednesday? Did I stutter? Walton and
Johnson Radio Network. It's still funny to me to think
that at one time the clash when on tour in America,
(08:58):
they left England, they came to Texas, and when they
found Austin, Texas, they thought, wow, this looks a lot
like the Sahara Desert. We should film a music video
here for rock the Kasbah. They did that. Yeah, and
there's an armadillo running around in it injured. Well yeah,
you know, just like in the Mideast armadillos of course.
(09:19):
H yeah.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
Well did they discover Austin. It's kind of how that
worked out. But look what we discovered.
Speaker 1 (09:26):
That must have been it, yeah, back in the eighties
and all those people that were there who've missed all that.
All right, we now take you to the French island
of all Iron. We have breaking news just moments ago.
Are you gonna do the really bad exaggerated accent? Oh?
That he's not something I would do. No, he's not
in my I love it when y'all do that. The
fromage and to have the wine. I don't know, it's
(09:50):
just how they talk. Yeah, I don't know at least
ten people have been injured, four critically as a man
drove a car into a crowd shouting Allahu akbar, orkner,
Allahu akbar, and the driver is now in custody and
authorities have no idea what motivated and let me.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
Let me guess that there's no reasonable eve. This is
a terrorist incident, so no move along, not at all.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
Same lady that was in New Orleans on New Year's
Eve and people on the scene could be heard saying,
all we're asking for is sensible car rental regulations to
stop these future incidents from taking place. Would that do it?
Speaker 2 (10:26):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (10:26):
I think if only there were more rules about who
could drive a car, then this would never happen again.
Speaker 2 (10:32):
Maybe instead of gun control and knife control, car control,
maybe we need Muslim control.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
Let's just get down to the root of the problem,
shall we. Yesterday in New York City, a woman from Kenya.
It's probably the most it's probably the nicest way you
could describe this person was interviewed by a TV reporter
at CNN and she said she's voting for the.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
She's an American obviously, yeah, yeah, because she's going to vote,
and everybody knows it would be wrong for some woman
from Kenya to come over here and start voting without
becoming a red, white and blue, patriotic, country loving American citizen.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
Correction, not New York City. Is that what I said? Virginia,
she's from Kenya, she's full burka, the whole deal, just
draped from had to tell, covered in clothing. And she
said she is voting for the Virginia governor, the Democrat,
to stop Trump.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
I always vote since I became a citizen, and that
was twenty years ago, and I migrated from Kenya originally.
My family's back home in Kenya. And how I see
how things are going on with families being separated as
a human being, as a mother, separating families, especially children
(11:48):
from their mothers.
Speaker 1 (11:50):
You know they're not separating the they're not doing that.
You can go with them if you want. Oh, your
dad's in the country illegally. Well, good news, you're all
leaving the country.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
I bet their family. Miss I wish we could find
a way to reunite those kids, to denaturalize and deport
all these people. You came here from another country.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Recently, we gave you voting rights, and you're trying to
change our immigration laws.
Speaker 2 (12:12):
We shouldn't have let you into the country. They're inside
the walls. Remember that old horror movie where the girl
called up the police and she's like, somebody's threatening to
kill me. Somebody's threatening to kill me. I said, well,
next time the phone rings, will tap the line and
we'll listen in. And so they tapped the line and
they listen in. Oh my god, what's happening? And they go, Okay,
did you trace the call?
Speaker 1 (12:33):
She hung up.
Speaker 2 (12:33):
I'm so scared somebody's trying to kill me. You trace
the call? Police said, yeah, we traced the call. So
where's it coming from inside the house? Don't dun't dug?
Oh did you get kills? Oh?
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Yeah, the call was coming from inside the house. The
killer was already in, just like this. And weirdly, the
killer had a Kenyan accident. Yeah. Help. Somebody's still mad
at me the other day for playing a guy talking
in Swahili and saying it was zorhan mom. Donnie.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
Think they'll get over it eventually. I thought it was funny.
Everybody hit in the room, laughter, what he did it?
People get mad at us about something or another because
we like to goof around, have a little phone every
now and then it's like, well, hopefully you'll you'll get
over it.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
If not, move along. I've got this photo of Alex
Soros wearing a four hundred dollars t shirt and a
seven thousand dollars suit, and he's embracing a man who, weirdly,
the billionaire political donor looks like he's holding a guy.
That is this guy in the right look familiar to you,
billiad uh, that's just the next mayor of New York City.
(13:39):
That's all. No, that can't be right. This guy says
he hates billionaires. Why would he be hugging Alex Soros.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
It's a dang good question. They just hate the billionaires
that won't give them some of their money.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
I thought he hated Jews too, But he loves this
Jewish billionaire as long as he pays him. It's kind
of like prostitution, ain't it. I'm gonna pay you to
love me. If you were an elderly Jewish person that
survived the pandemic and that other thing with the Jews
and the Nazis, okay, right, and you had Cuomo right
as your governor almost kill you in New York State
(14:13):
and then he left office, and then I run for
mayor against this guy that says we have to get
rid of all the Jews in Israel. That's what he
That's what more, that's what Zorhan mom Dommi said, right,
He wouldn't he wouldn't disallow people that wanted to exterminate Israel.
You're an elderly Jew, who do you vote for? This
guy wanted to destroy your homeland. This guy wanted to
(14:34):
send COVID infected patients to your nursing home.
Speaker 2 (14:37):
New Yorker suggested they just didn't have a choice, did they.
And Sliwa got like seven percent of the vote, it
wasn't enough. If he dropped out, Cuomo wouldn't have won. No,
not every Sleiwa vote would have naturally gone to him.
I think some of them would have just stayed home.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
Yeah, some of the sleek Zoran got more than fifty
percent of the vote. So you know, do the math, guys.
That means that even if everybody that voted for Sliwa
had voted for Cuomo, it still wouldn't matter. Those are
Mancherian candidates. So the sexual predator that killed people during
the pandemic, hundreds of thousands or the guy in the beret.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
Well, yeah, they did what they did, and it's not
a surprise even though people were you know, they were
trying to fight it. It's been locked in for months.
They've been telling us this guy's got a thirty point
lead back in the summer. He's a It was supposed
to scare people into voting for some other person, but
it didn't.
Speaker 1 (15:31):
You know me interesting. You know, in New York City
the charter limits mayors to two consecutive for year terms,
but it does not prohibit non consecutive terms. You know
what that means. Rudy could have won. I mean, Rudy
could have ran. I don't know think ituld have won.
That might be a stratch Rudy Julian. Wouldn't that be
interesting if Rudy julia how he ran again. It's a
whole new world now compared to when he was running things. Well,
(15:52):
right back then, people actually cared about Islamic terrorism. Fortunately,
it's not a problem anymore, except, of course, on that
island in France last night where a guy's to law
who act bar and drove a truck into a crowd
of people. But other than there, just because he screams
at while he's murdering people. Does that make him a
Muslim terrorist?
Speaker 2 (16:09):
No? If anything, he was probably motivated by Trump. We'll
never know for sure what caused him to want to
do something like that. Might as well just move along.
Nothing to see here, Okay, we just know for sure
that it wasn't terrorism.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
All right, Speaking of we've been talking about the you know,
Africa and Kenyan people and stuff like that. I'm amazed
by this. As upset as American liberals are about Palestine,
they really don't seem to give a damn about Dar Forge.
You know, there's a war in Sudan right now where
like three hundred thousand people are dead, always is.
Speaker 2 (16:45):
But whether it's a war officially or not, they're always
killing each other doing a macheti choppings and stuff.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
I'm just curious, if it was so important a piece
in Palestine, why don't they care about this? Three hundred
thousand dead, two point seven million displaced. Violence seem to
be pretty bad right now. Rebels accused the government of
neglecting darfour and oppressing non Arabs, and as it turns out,
the Arabs disagreed. They said, well, yeah, you're wrong about that.
(17:12):
And if you say it again, we'll murder you.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
I'll tell you this though, that that band you were
talking about, that videos whatever it was in Austin.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
Yeah, the Class Class. Yeah, they should have tried dar four.
Now that looks like the Desert. Okay, So the problem
with that is, and I know this is, oh it
is the desert. Oh well, then that would have worked
out just great. I mean it's a great idea. But
the clash doesn't get a lot of gigs in Darfur,
it turns out. But in Austin they were getting booked
(17:42):
quite a bit back in the seventies and eighties.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
I think they just needed to make an effort. Yeah,
they just didn't. Really, they didn't warm up to Darfur
the way they should have, you know, to your point,
they really didn't even try. Yeah, no, all right, So
if you're one of those people that doesn't like when
children get murdered, I would avoid taking your family to Virginia. Now,
as that guy, Jay Jones, that's him. Yeah, I looked
(18:06):
up a couple of things he said. Because it's been
a month or so since it made the news, they
talked about him.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
You know, he was given a choice of three terrible guys.
Speaker 2 (18:16):
One was his opponent and the other one was you know,
like Hitler and Paul Pott or somebody. And he's like,
you got these three guys, but you only got two
bullets in your gun. And he's like, well whatever his
opponent's name was, Well he gets both bullets. Then that now,
you know, that's okay. Then he suggested that he wishes
his opponent's wife. His opponent's wife, I wish that she
(18:38):
could see her children die so her husband would reconsider
his political views on gun violence. That's all it would take,
just you know, kill his kids and then we'll be
better off in the long run. And they also mentioned
a phone call in which they were talking about maybe
if some more police officers died then they would stop
(19:00):
killing people.
Speaker 1 (19:02):
Jay Jones denied making the comments, but U but he did.
Speaker 2 (19:06):
They were kind of recorded, which is a little you know,
whoopsie to deal with. But Democrats are standing with that.
That's the kind of candidate Democrats in Virginia, in probably
a lot of other states are supporting right now.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
You know, that reminds me all this talk about death.
People are still reacting in the news about Dick Cheney.
At least he died doing what he loved the most,
shooting someone in the face. Hey, good morning, welcome to
the show. Is it Friday year? Not yet?
Speaker 3 (19:35):
Not yet?
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Well then what is it? What is it?
Speaker 3 (19:39):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (19:41):
Wednesday?
Speaker 1 (19:41):
It's Wednesday, Wiesdy Walton, N Johnson,