Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Coming up on the show, did Jesse Waters sexualize aoc?
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Well, keep you cloking that.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
But what are you guys whispering about?
Speaker 2 (00:07):
He said he wasn't planning on getting up here this early,
but somebody made a racket.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
Guys, this is when we always get to work. I'm
trying to do a show here, people. Can you get
dash not figure that out? Yeah, I'm sorry. We're waking
is where it starts. You just don't usually get to
work at the same time as us.
Speaker 3 (00:22):
But we already are work. I went to sleep at
work last night. I've been sleeping at work all day
and week. Okay, so did we everybody is that's part
of the fun.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
We're having.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
A week of us singing Comba y'all around the fireplace
and the snow.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
Yeah, it's like we're camping out together. Isn't this great?
MYSTERI yeah, that's real great. Uh, that's snow. That's that's
the way to live. Right there, y'all go here?
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Do uh black people snow?
Speaker 1 (00:48):
Black people don't really camp, do they?
Speaker 3 (00:49):
Not?
Speaker 2 (00:50):
A lot of camping going on in my people's neighborhoods?
Speaker 1 (00:52):
No, I mean somebody does, right, you know?
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Well, yeah, I mean you know, there's no reason to stereotype.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
No, we would never know. I'm just speaking of it's
a broad generality. We just get on the show and
tell everybody to go back and lay down. We'll call
you if we need you. How about that, it's Elvish Day.
People have a little respect.
Speaker 4 (01:09):
All right?
Speaker 2 (01:09):
January the eighth. Everybody knows Jay eight Elvis Day. So
party on, Wayne, Why is.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
It Elvis Day?
Speaker 2 (01:16):
What's his birthday? Oh? January eighth? Kenny, Come on, I
know you're young, but you're not that young. You ain't
never heard of Elvix Preshley.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
I mean I've heard of him, yeah, but you know
he's been dead since nineteen seventy seven. People have a
tendency to miss some of those things if they weren't
born until two thousand and five.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
For example, I wasn't born until the next generation.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
So you know that woman in New York I was
talking about that, she was crying and wadded up her
face all teary because people called her out on some
of her lives. She's only been an adult for about
twenty years. She don't know enough about what's going on
in this world to start telling us how we ought
to live.
Speaker 1 (01:56):
Okay, I don't like it. Yeah, well so there I
feel the same way that woman that got shot by
the copy yesterday, same kind of thing. She's grown up
as an adult for the past twenty or since two
thousand and five or two thousand and six. So she
has grown up in a world where nothing's supposed to
happen to her.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
Nothing.
Speaker 3 (02:16):
She's supposed to be able to mouth off, say anything
she wants to do to anybody, because she's seen it
on TV, she's seen it in the internet, she's seen
it on the news. It's everywhere. You can just go
mouth off to people, say anything you want to Nothing
gonna happen to you ever now and then as the
fa FO situation pops up, you.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
Know you would think so. And then for some reason,
people who objectively did things wrong seem to get rewarded
for it these days.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Yeah, that happens a lot.
Speaker 1 (02:42):
Let's see. A state university professor Austin, PA State University
professor has been reinstated after he was fired over a
controversial social media post following the assassination of Charlie Oh
That yeah, gentlemen who said some savory things about murdered
(03:02):
moments earlier has been gifted with I believe a half
a million dollars.
Speaker 2 (03:08):
Isn't that special?
Speaker 1 (03:09):
Yeah, so it's okay to just go ahead, and I mean,
there's no consequences anymore.
Speaker 3 (03:13):
Is just exacly an interesting tie in since this week
we noticed it was ever issue of January sixth, just
two days ago.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
Obviously, uh, and.
Speaker 3 (03:26):
Get mentioned during the show on j six and all
the things that happened then, And yet none.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
Of these people that talked about the.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
Woman in Minnie and none of none of them seem
to make any sort of a mental connection between that
woman and what and what happened to Ashley Babbitt who
was doing nothing but standing on the other side of.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
A wooden door. Well, you know, there's something to be
said about all this. It's like a outrage is often
driven by tribalism. If someone finds out the victim is
a conservative, it changes how they feel. And frankly, I'll
be honest, I think it's a problem with both sides.
I just think it's more absolutely, I think it's just
more of a problem with the other side. It does
seem to be a little bit one sided. If you
(04:09):
start taking a look at some of the stats.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
We talked about how aw enforcement in general has been attacked.
From January twenty last year to today, they said there
have been more than one hundred attacks on law enforcement
of some kind, police, ice, border patrol, whoever. They more
(04:31):
than doubled the number of attacks with vehicles with cars.
A surgeon. Vehicle attacks attributed to all of the inflammatory rhetoric,
rhetoric probably from the sanctuary city politicians, the leftist activist
mainstream media. They stack all this stuff up for everybody
(04:52):
to look at all day, every day, and so people
get in their cars and they go, well, they were
doing it over there, why don't we do this over
here too. That's a pretty big increase. The attacks on
border patrol specifically have gone up fifty eight percent.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
The attacks on ice because ICE is out.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
There more now than ever, thirteen one hundred percent more
attacks with vehicles, And then you wonder why those agents.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
Might be a little antsy when somebody tries to run
them over.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
Yeah, and please hear me when I say this, this
is very important. People on the left aren't mad about
someone dying, Oh god, No, they're just mad that the
person who died wasn't the ICE agent. If the ice
agent died, they'd be parading around in the street. They
have that that video everywhere of the car running them
over and as the tire and it would have been celebrated,
(05:45):
kind of like the murder of Charlie Kirk. But while
we're in Minnesota under Tim Walls, spending searched over one
hundred and sixty one million dollars a year from two
point six million dollars, with auditors flagging overwhelming fraud risk.
Critics say the dismissal reveals Governor Walls actually fired a
(06:08):
whistleblower before the Somali fraud testimony, and critics say the
dismissal reveals an industrial scale cover up designed to protect
political leadership from accountability. I mean, I think this is
a big deal. Minnesota Governor Tim Walls terminated whistleblower Eric
Rumdell one day before his scheduled testimony on fraud in
the Housing Stabilization Services program.
Speaker 3 (06:29):
You think that's the only one that happened to That's
just the one they know about. That's just the one
that they know about. Oh, that was going on all
over that government. People was walking out of that at
that state and that city with big suitcases full of cash,
millions and millions of dollars, went to the airport hopped
on a plane. Now, if you and me try to
get on an airplane today with say fifty thousand dollars
(06:52):
on us, they're gonna stop us. They gonna find that,
they gonna act you. Boy, you got fifty thousand dollars?
What you doing with that? But these people went to
the airport with millions of day and suitcases and they
just hopped on a plane and.
Speaker 2 (07:03):
Flew off, mostly to Somalia.
Speaker 4 (07:06):
Here is Congressman, we have any doubt that Governor Tim
Walls knew about this fraud as it was occurring.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
He absolutely knew that it was occurring.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
Thank you.
Speaker 4 (07:17):
The Housing Stability Services program was estimated to cost about
two point six million per year, but before it was
shut down last October, it was on track to run
about one hundred and twenty two million and twenty twenty five.
In fact, I think they sucked one hundred and sixty
one million out of it from the point it started
in twenty twenty until it was finally shut down.
Speaker 2 (07:35):
Isn't that correct?
Speaker 1 (07:36):
That is correct, And Joe Thompson believes that ninety percent
of that was fraud.
Speaker 4 (07:40):
Yeah, the Quality Leering Center, as uncovered by Nick Shirley,
received almost ten million in funding.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
Is that accurate?
Speaker 3 (07:48):
I believe it is.
Speaker 4 (07:49):
There are more than eighty autism centers in Minnesota under investigation.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
Is that true?
Speaker 2 (07:53):
I believe it is.
Speaker 4 (07:54):
Yes, it's clear that someone is criminally complicit. You can't
just let this amount of money get out of your administration.
Speaker 1 (08:02):
Over guys, the over eighty autism centers under investigation, Boy,
it'd be great if we had somebody around. It'd be
really good at counting all these places. That would be
some Yeah, if there was you know, some individuals, particularly
good accounting. Yeah, you know, I don't know who could
we get? They can help us identify how much fraud
and how much money was wasted nearly opening up a
daycare center and an autism center. I mean, that is
(08:25):
just the ticket to riches in that state anyway. I'm
sure they're doing it in others too. It's really interesting
when you draw a line about the political evolution of
these daycare centers in Minnesota. Back in twenty twenty one,
right after Trump was removed from office, Glenn Youngkin in
Virginia won the governor's race and he wanted on what
(08:45):
issues that parents were mad about, what was going on
in public schools, transgender ideology, critical race theory, that sort
of thing. A teenage girl was raped in a bathroom
by a boy who identifies as a girl, and I
think it was Loudon County, Virginia did nothing about it
because they didn't want to offend the trans community.
Speaker 2 (09:05):
Oh no, you don't want to do that.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
So all of a sudden, the Republican Party started winning
elections local elections, state elections, national elections over the next
four years off issues that were really upsetting parents, involving
public education, that sort of thing. It had been decades
since this happened. Democrats had been winning all the elections
when it came to public school related issues, and suddenly
(09:26):
the Democrat Party had a problem. They had to pivot,
They had to shift. They had to get the average
parent back to voting for them because they'd lost them.
So what did they do last year? Last year they
started pushing the idea of free daycare, free childcare. They
did it in our city, Lena Hidalgo, the Harris County Judge.
They did it in New York State. They did it
in Florida, anywhere where they thought they might be able
(09:48):
to beat a Republican. They started talking about daycare. There
was a guy in our city named Isaiah Martin running
for Congress as a Democrat in Sheila Jackson Lee's community,
got arrested at the state capitol. Claimed that when he
went to jail, he held a town hall with the inmates,
and on his Twitter account he said, the issue they
care the most about is free child care? Does some
(10:10):
boo shine is what is now underneath it all? It
turned out this talking point from people on the far
left about daycare and child cares nothing to do with
child care. It had nothing to do with taking care
of your kids. It was a new way for them
to steal money, for them to funnel and embezzel money
from the taxpayers. And they got caught, and they got caught,
(10:31):
and now they're gonna need to come up with a
new thing to try to buy your vote away from you.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
That in a nice distraction is always helpful. Uh well,
look we got a cop shot a woman. Oh that's fun.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
Yeah, exactly. And if you look at the video from
a misleading angle, it seems like this this guy's really bad.
Let's focus all our attention on this.
Speaker 3 (10:51):
I did check with the law, though, and it turns
out that ICE agents are allowed to defend themselves from
people trying to murder them with the car. Imagine that
they're American citizens.
Speaker 1 (11:03):
Why would someone do a radio show on a Thursday.
Speaker 3 (11:05):
Walton and Johnson Radio Network on the ball here, Dan
bon Geno?
Speaker 1 (11:15):
Is he a is? Did he expose the deep state?
Or did he protect the deep state?
Speaker 3 (11:20):
Sound like he might have exposed a little bit of
himself when when he was saying some things and doing
some things, because what he said a couple of years
ago ain't the same thing he saying to day.
Speaker 1 (11:31):
And a lot of people wants to know why as
a Secret Service agent, Dan Bongino protected people like Hillary
Clinton in Obama from harm and over a decade later,
that same bravery shields their child molesting donors and puppetmasters
from exposure.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
Whose words are those?
Speaker 1 (11:49):
Uhs? I'm just reading funny things on the internet here
from some blogger named Nero. Anyways, just an odd character
in the Internet insiders, and I know him as the
pedophiles pit bull. That's one person's opinion. I get it.
I understand why people are man at Dan Bongino, the
guy wrote books to expose the deep state. He built
(12:12):
an entire media career out of the fact that he
used to work at the government and he saw as
a foot soldier the government, he saw dark, disturbing things
and someone needed to expose it. And then finally Donald
Trump put him as one of the top dogs at
the FBI, number two at the FBI. Now's your opportunity
(12:32):
to expose all the things that you told us about
when you were selling us books.
Speaker 2 (12:36):
And did he do it?
Speaker 1 (12:37):
In twenty twenty three, Bongino basically said, listen that Jeffrey
Epstein's story is a big deal. Please don't let the
story go. Oh you just stay on. This man goes
there's some bad people doing some bad things. And then
in twenty twenty five he said, I've seen the file.
He killed himself. Nothing to see here, Dan only wanted
you to talk about it when he was making money.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
For talking about it.
Speaker 1 (12:56):
I don't care for that. Yeah, and he made a
lot of money talking about it. Anyway. If you're curious
how his supporters feel about this, I'm just reading the
comments section here on the live stream. For his latest episode,
Bongino went back to his show for the first time
this week.
Speaker 2 (13:11):
He lost a lot of fans and our listeners or whatever.
Speaker 1 (13:15):
Here we go, Dan, nothing to see here, Bongina, You're
a disgrace. You should be ashamed, you puppet. Here's another comment, maggots,
we the people are done with all your bs. Bongino,
take your fing criminal friends and get ready to go
to hell. Here's a journalist named Mark Dice before working
for the FBI. You pretended not to know which country
(13:35):
Epstein was blackmailing people for.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (13:40):
Now, so they don't really care. And here's eleven months
of service under the Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
What what did he do? Well, that's the question.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
Did he do anything? I mean, I know Pam Bondie
ain't done much, but she did something. I don't think
Dan Bongino ever. Is there a list of accomplishments? Dan
came in here and he did ABC? What did he
do one anything?
Speaker 2 (14:08):
Yeah? Not that we can find.
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Well, yeah, exactly now that you've been there, Now that
you did that, that's why he's out. So either you
were lying the whole time when you said there were
secrets that needed to be exposed, or you're lying now,
which is it? Anyway, Dann Bongino's back, everybody, yeah, or
is he not quite what we thought it was? God?
Speaker 2 (14:30):
Now exactly.
Speaker 3 (14:31):
Look, I know it's real early and everything, but since
we up, you know what the hell, figure might as
well just update of early listeners on a little sport
activity that might be of interest to them this evening.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (14:42):
I don't know if you're aware of it or not,
but college football ain't quite over yet. We have not
quite a picked a champion for the year yet and
is starting up again tonight.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
It's a Walton Johnson Sports Your party sprout to you
by could.
Speaker 2 (15:01):
It bemipillow dot com?
Speaker 1 (15:03):
It always is well cutamipillow dot com. Today they got
the New Year's sale going on. Save a ton of
money on great products for your home, your bathroom, your kitchen,
your bedroom. He's promo code w J saved the most
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Speaker 3 (15:17):
At my pillow dot com. Now there's probably some more
coaches got fired. I ain't uh looked at it exactly.
Speaker 2 (15:23):
Now.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
I know there's some not not head coaches, but like
Dallas got rid of their defensive coordinator since they didn't
have any defense last year, they figured, why should we.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
Have a coordinator.
Speaker 1 (15:32):
So make sorry to sense out.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (15:34):
Uh, but back to the college football to playoffs going
on starting tonight Miami, UH number ten. Uh, they're still
in there. They holding tough. Uh, they gonna They're gonna
get taken down tonight though, Old miss number six in
the seeding UH is taking on Miami tonight and I
predict a nice, big, healthy win for the Rebels that'll
(15:56):
be on the ESPN. And then tomorrow night, UH over
a good number five versus Indiana, who has looked strong.
They number one, and the you know people said, well
they ain't played anybody. Well, they played somebody in the
playoffs just recently, so yeah, they have played somebody and
they have still dominated. So we're gonna find out tonight
(16:16):
and tomorrow night. It's about college And then starting Saturday,
we got like a couple of couple of NFL games
for the playoffs on Saturday. They got three more on Sunday,
and then the one everybody cared about is on a
Monday night with the Texans and the Steelers. And if
y'all know the history of Houston football, you might know
there's a little bit of an ancient history between a
(16:38):
team called the Oilers and the Pittsburgh Steelers back in
the day, and a lot of people still ain't forgot
that there's a Houston Pittsburgh rivalry that has been simmering
for decades.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
Wow. Boy, some people just never let it go, do they.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
Well they shouldn't.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
In the meantime, the John Harbaugh era in Baltimore is
over after eighteen years and Hall of Fame coach Tony
Dodgy is pested. On Tuesday, the Ravens owner decided to
part ways with the franchise's longest tenured coach after a
full day of meetings.
Speaker 3 (17:09):
That we had a great career with them, eighteen years.
They had playoffs and all kinds of great stuff, but
just lately things they ain't been going on, and owner said,
we just we need some change. We need a little
fresh blood in there. We need to, you know, kick
things up a little bit.
Speaker 4 (17:24):
Me.
Speaker 1 (17:25):
Two days after, the Ravens kicker Tyler Luke missed a
forty four yard field goal that, had he made it,
would have won the AFC North and put the Ravens
in put the playoffs.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
Because that one guy missed that one kick at the
end of the game that got the coach fired after
eighteen years of working for the same people. I wouldn't
worry about it, though, awful Tyler. It's not like this
will haunt you for the rest of your life. Well,
one bad kick, I mean, how could that hurt your career?
Speaker 1 (17:50):
Right?
Speaker 2 (17:50):
Oh wait, I remember Pet Detective? Remember that movie?
Speaker 1 (17:54):
Sure?
Speaker 2 (17:54):
Yeah, Jim Jim carry.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
By the way, Horrorball has already got like half a
dozen offers from, you know, from all the teams to
be head coach.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Some of them ain't even fired the head coach yet,
and they offered him a job.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
They're like, well, you take it, we'll go cut our
head coach is neck today.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
So Tony Dungee took to X and he wrote something interesting.
He said, John has coached the Baltimore Ravens for eighteen years.
He took him to the playoffs twelve times. He won
the Super Bowl for them the last four years. They
were ten and seven, thirteen and four, twelve and five,
eight and nine. They made the playoffs three straight years
and missed this year because their kicker missed the game
winning field of goal. That that was the whole problem,
(18:30):
and he was fired. I'm sorry, but I don't understand.
Good luck Baltimore and finding a better coach.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
Yeah, that's the trick.
Speaker 3 (18:36):
So you fired a guy because you think maybe h
Thanks is getting a little you know, relaxed around the
place or whatever. Maybe after eighteen years somebody need to
come in and disturb things up a little bit.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
But are you gonna get a better coach? Probably not.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
We've heard that women sometimes they'll do that too, really, yeah,
that the times are tough and they'll leave their husband
thinking they'll get a better one and then they don't.
Speaker 3 (19:00):
Sad it's because they keep picking men like that. One
woman told, uh, the I forget who that lady was.
She was talking to her and she's like, you know,
you're just so beautiful, you're just so wonderful.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
You deserve something better than a man.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
Wait, I'm confused. Don't don't you exclusively date men? You're
I'm not talking about myself.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
I'm talking about the way women think. Oh, come on,
it's Thursday. Walton and Johnson Radio Network