Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is Dan capless and welcome to today's online podcast
edition of The Dan Caplis Show. Please be sure to
give us a five star rating if you'd be so kind,
and to subscribe, download and listen to the show every
single day on your favorite podcast platform.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
This evening afternoon, Matt dunnin for Dan capleas today again,
so honored to be here. I practice dentistry Incentennial and
of all things, a texta studio just comes in that says, quote,
the Bill Buckley quote may get me to start flossing again.
Thank you. End quote. And I'll just tell you text
(00:35):
to studio, that is just music and joy to my
ears to see that, to think of you out there
flossing again. You go for it, and you have our
full support and the win from us at your back
as you pursue that. Well done. And again, I was
(00:55):
looking at a headline here that puzzled me when I first,
and I thought I would just share it briefly. I
thought it was something, but then it turned out to
be something else. And when you do headline writing, you
want to capture it accurately so it can't be misinterpreted, right,
And I did a little time. I actually used to
(01:15):
work for the Veil Daily newspaper. Of all things, I
guess I was more of a skier, but I did
do a little work at the newspaper in Veil back
in the day. Also a lift ticket scanner. I was
very good at that job, man, was I good? You
know the little thing, you know, you press the button
and it like makes the little beet when you're they
(01:36):
check you into the ski lift. Anyway, USA Today by
James Powell. The headline is quote General Mills to close
pet food and pizza crust facilities in Missouri. And just
so you have that again, General Mills to close pet
food and pizza crust facilities in Missouri. And I thought, wow,
(01:57):
they make pet food and pizza crust in the same
facilities in Missouri. And I thought, maybe that doesn't sound
wonderful to do the pet food and the pizza crust
in the same place. So of course I had to
read on and I did find out that, no, it's
not the same facilities. The pet food facility is in Joplin, Missouri,
(02:21):
and the pizza crust facility is in Saint Charles, Missouri.
So just as a bit of a public service to
anybody who saw this headline in USA today. I went
deep on it and I actually read the story and no,
that's not the same facility. So it's probably okay for
pets to not worry they're going to have pizza crust
(02:43):
in their pet food. And it's probably okay for pizza
crust eaters to not think that there's going to be
pet food in their pizza crust. Okay, so we have
got that worked out. You're welcome for that. And now
I will say this, Yesterday I did something where I
(03:03):
offered a little counseling, maybe even a little therapy for
Rosie O'Donnell, a long time commentator who did move to
Ireland because she's having some sort of enduring, ongoing, insurable
Trump derangement syndrome scenario and to the point that it
(03:24):
was even surprising her therapist. And I thought maybe I
could chime in with a little therapy, just again more
public service, you know, a good hearted, kind hearted soul
that I am looking for, that I thought I might
consider doing offer a little therapy for former MSNBC commentator
Joy read here, who does seem to have another dose
(03:47):
of that shall we say Trump dearrangement syndrome that seems
to be possibly incurable and seems to be making her
less happier again, not living the best life that she
could be living in this country. And uh, you know,
we might have some ideas, we might have some ways
to be helpful, and maybe you know, people could check in.
(04:08):
By the way, the phone number three O three seven
one three eight two five five and the text to
studio line five seven seven three nine, and they just
keep flowing in. I'm going to try to keep up
with the text the studio. They keep cracking me up.
And I hope, I hope that individual is already flossing
out there. Who is Who's going to turn over a
(04:29):
new leaf on the flossing hold on?
Speaker 3 (04:31):
Isn't it fun though that you get to how's the
show with the dentophobiac?
Speaker 2 (04:39):
And okay, but you got over that already then you
not yet? Okay, you have no idea it's happening.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
You have no ideas.
Speaker 5 (04:52):
Happening right now.
Speaker 2 (04:53):
She's afraid of you, tiny little me sitting here.
Speaker 4 (04:58):
Oh, I'm telling you it. Adam has my husband.
Speaker 3 (05:02):
He's literally had to carry me into the office from
the back door, so nobody sees me because I'm so
jumped up on valuum.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
Well, Druggy, that still sounds like progress when you say
that's in the right direction.
Speaker 4 (05:19):
I mean, I got it in the chair.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Yeah, you went in there and you did it.
Speaker 3 (05:24):
And uh, all you have so much what do you regulation?
What is the thing called the laughing gas? What's it
called nitrous ox?
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Yes, you got it, nitrous oxide.
Speaker 4 (05:34):
Nitrous oxy. Yeah, okay, I have to have that. I
have to have the blue pills, not.
Speaker 3 (05:40):
The ones that make men have sex, but but the yeah, yeah, yes, yeah,
and and valuum and all this stuff that they have
to give me just in order to get me into
their And I can't do the aquarium because, like all,
I don't know if you have this, please.
Speaker 4 (06:01):
Tell me you don't. Okay, do you have an aquarium?
Speaker 2 (06:05):
No? No aquarium?
Speaker 4 (06:06):
Okay, that's good.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
That's good. Yeah, no aquarium. No, that's better? Is that good?
Not the hell? You can't do aquarium fish swimming around.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
Because when I was a kid, my dentist and my
orthodontis both had aquariums and they thought it would be calm.
Speaker 2 (06:26):
By the way, should it be a quaryi or should
it be aquarium AQUARII?
Speaker 3 (06:29):
I have no idea y aquariaia.
Speaker 2 (06:33):
The age of aquaria aquarys.
Speaker 4 (06:36):
I just I just know it's scared the crap at it.
Speaker 2 (06:39):
The fish. Yeah, they like paranas or something.
Speaker 3 (06:42):
No, No, they were like, you know, stupid overgrown goldfish.
Speaker 4 (06:46):
And we're the ones with the lion.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
Yeah, with the things sticking out of them. Exactly. You
don't touch those when you're snorkeling or scuba diving, like
you'll turn different colors.
Speaker 3 (07:00):
Have them in aquariums, you know, in Dennis offices.
Speaker 2 (07:03):
And I'll tell you this, and this is a full confession.
No aquarium at my humble dental office, Kelly. But I
do have one at home, so I well, I want
to help. Yeah, and I dutifully feed our fish every day,
and I tend to them and I watch them and
I don't pet them or anything, you know, but but
we do sit and watch them.
Speaker 4 (07:24):
One that's really mean. Is it like it starts of
the pea?
Speaker 2 (07:29):
No?
Speaker 4 (07:29):
No, no, no, no.
Speaker 2 (07:30):
But beta?
Speaker 4 (07:32):
Is it a beta?
Speaker 2 (07:34):
I'm not sure the mean. I don't have any mean ones.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
I think it's a beta.
Speaker 2 (07:39):
Yeah, you might be right.
Speaker 4 (07:41):
You know, they go in and they eat all the
other fish.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
That sounds like an alpha more than a Beta to.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
Me, well, I don't know. I mean, you guys go.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
Yeah, I didn't catch a piranha once. I was in
Bolivia and I went piranha fishing. You the way you
do it is you get this little stick and you
tie a little fishing line to the end of it
with a little hook on the end, and you go
around and you try to like get a piranha to
bite the thing. And I finally did it. It wasn't easy,
and as the dnist, I didn't expect the teeth of
the piranha, and that little tiny piranha has these gigantic teeth.
(08:17):
I could just imagine ollot. Yeah. You know, as a kid,
there was all those shows about piranhas, you know, and
like horror moves about. So I always figured that, you know,
even growing up here in Denver metro area, if you
set foot into a creek or a stream or the
Highland canal, that you better check for piranhas first because
they're probably there. What you described sound is incredibly dangerous.
(08:38):
Did you have to sign a waiver or something? Well,
I was in a boat, and you know, you don't
want to fall in, You don't want to like lean over,
you know, you can lean over and tip the boat over.
Oh yeah, don't do that. Yeah, don't do that. I
didn't do that, and I'm glad I didn't. But there's
a lot of them around, you know. You get in
there and their teeth. Do you eat parana? Can you
eat them? Good question? I don't know. I mean, they
would probably rather eat you, but they're probably edible, but
(09:03):
there's not They're not very big, so you'd have to
get a lot of piranhas to to get the job done.
And oh man, I was going to get into a topic,
but by gosh, we had to build up a segment
with piranha action and uh, oh okay, Well when we
come back, I'm going to get to the matter at hand.
And all right, Matt don in for Dan Caples, be
(09:23):
right back.
Speaker 5 (09:30):
And now back to the Dan Kaplis Show podcast.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
Oh, Flower Children, Hippies one and all. Kelly, you see
what you got us into here? The Age of Aquarius.
Thank you for that. By the way, I love that song.
And then in the middle of that song it switches
into the let the Sunshine in Oh, greatest transition ever.
You just got to feel. You got to feel that one.
We're going to offer therapy for joy Reading a second,
(09:56):
if you text the studios quote tell doctor to get
a gold Okay, only with Kelly's approval? Do I do
that correct? Quote? One hundred year Purina lease in Denver
ends in twenty thirty eight? Oh wow, that's interesting. You
know if you know Commerce City or is that Denver?
(10:16):
That might be actually Denver. I think of it as
Commerce City. The Purina thing twenty thirty eight, So what
would that be? If I do some math here, thirteen
more years to go there? It is? Okay? Did I
get it right? You did? Hey, you nailed it. Calculator
wasn't needed for that? Oh yeah, I'm that quick. Ryan.
(10:37):
Here's a text. Until we see low income people taking
advantage of electric cars, Let's stop the madness. Did we
talk about ev electric cars today? Anyway? But thank you
for that sentiment and enjoy Read, ladies and gentlemen. Joy Read,
by the way, who I believe grew up here in Denver.
(10:58):
That's great And I would tend not to agree with
joy read uh politically on much of of anything, but
certainly respect for an individual Denver kid who has gone
on to great success in the media. But again, Trump's
arrangement syndrome. She seems rather unhappy and on Baldwin in
(11:19):
Company some kind of it's either a TV show or
a podcast she is. She came out with a statement
that I don't know. I saw this and I thought, well,
let's let's play it, and let's talk about it. Let's
have it. Ryan parents.
Speaker 6 (11:33):
My father was from the Congo and my mother was
from Diana, and so they were the immigrants who came here.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
On purpose, and they got the root of wakening. My
brother got the like O, it's graces, that's weird.
Speaker 5 (11:49):
Tell me this is the land of opportunity, but not
for me.
Speaker 2 (11:53):
So and it might have been hard. There's a little
bit of background chatter going on that particular audio clip,
but essentially she says, when my mother came from Guyana,
she realized it is not a land of opportunity for
people like us. End quote. And I just I do puzzle,
(12:14):
and I do wonder that somebody who has been so
successful and had such a great American life, and even
you know, Hale's run right around here in Denver, Colorado,
can the reflex can be you know, somehow negative towards
this country. Negative. And so I just thought this is
where I can intervene an intervention and do a little
therapy here. I mean I'm good at that. I think
(12:34):
I was great offering therapy unsolicited. De Rosie O'Donnell. She
hasn't sent the check yet for that. But if you
look at Guyana, where Joy Reid's mother came from, don't
know if it was directly to Colorado. What is the
average salary of a guyan and wells yan? And you
(12:55):
since you ask, two hundred dollars a year fifty two
hundre okay, Now, Joy Reid back in the MSNBC Glory Days,
her salary was three million dollars. And so if I
do more quick math, Joy Reid was making two million,
(13:15):
nine hundred and ninety four tho eight hundred dollars more
per year than the average gion. And but you know
it makes you know, you think land of opportunity, Land
of opportunity. I think that Joy Reid, you know, has
has experienced it here in this country. And I don't
know why there isn't just more of a reflex to gratitude. Gratitude, Hey,
(13:39):
you know, there's some things to be thankful for. And
now you know I've had some good stuff happen. I mean,
maybe she does that in other contexts. But jd Vance
got involved in offering some unsolicited advice to Joy Reid,
and he said this in a in a tweet earlier today. Quote.
Joy Reid has had such a good life in this country.
(13:59):
It's been overwhelmingly kind and gracious to her. She is
far wealthier than most, yet she ooses with contempt. My honest,
non trolling advice to Joy read is that you'd be
much a much happier person if you showed a little gratitude.
End quote. That's just from jd Vance, who seems to
(14:19):
be edging into the therapy business as well here, which
I think makes sense. I mean, wouldn't you want to
get a little therapeutic advice from the vice president? Well,
some people might might not. Have you ever tried this experiment?
And you can try this at home, You can try
(14:40):
this in the car, you can try this going about.
You can try this at the grocery store. Can you
sit around and feel gratitude, really feel gratitude at the
same exact time as you're feeling anger? Can it be done?
Can you conflate those two? Can you blend those two together.
(15:01):
Can you feel gratitude and anger at the same time?
And once in a while I'll try this. Not that
I'm very disposed of feeling angry about things anything, but
sometimes we do need to remind ourselves to feel gratitude, right,
gratitude for things for the people around us, for friends,
for family members, for experiences, for the things that we
(15:24):
get to do, and in a country that does remain
since Joe Biden left office, the greatest country this world
has ever known, in my biased and but accurate opinion.
But I don't think you can mix those two together.
And which one do you want to feed? Do you
want to feed the gratitude side or do you want
(15:46):
to feed the anger side? Which one do you feed?
In that polarity? And I would submit that I think
we're onto something here to say, what if we started
feeding the gratitude more? What if that got more emphasis,
you know, at the grocery store, in the car, going
about your daily business. Joy Read also said, then I
(16:08):
mentioned this yesterday quote. This is a she made a
point about these nefarious MAGA plans going on out there,
which I kind of like. But quote said, joy Read
no income tax, no regulations, earn as much as you
want and leave it to your children with no taxes.
(16:29):
That's the world they want. End quote. Those MAGA people
seem to be interested in freedom, they seem to be
resistant to regulations, and they seem to want to earn
as much as they want and leave it to their
kids without taxes. And this is can therapy be done?
(16:51):
Can you bring therapy into this situation here? Or is
this beyond therapy? Joy Read's opinion about MAGA. And that's
where I begin to have a few doubts about Joey
Reid's prospects on this front, and that she seems to
not totally be in favor of freedom, freedom in the
(17:13):
American way. She seems to be really thinking that the
higher the income tax the better, the more regulations the better,
putting limits on what people can earn, and then not
letting them leave what they earn to their children unobstructed
by taxation. She seems to be opposed of all those things.
So that might require some sort of intellectual discussion conversation
(17:39):
to move the needle on that front. But I said,
had gratitude. What if we worked on the gratitude a
little bit? You know, Let's what if we took this
little upcoming break and worked on some gratitude that again
we always have to remind herself you ever forget that,
you ever forget, you know, forget gratitude a little bit
and when you when you get it going, anger goes away.
(18:00):
Done in for Dan Capless.
Speaker 5 (18:08):
You're listening to the Dan Kaplis Show podcast.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
To be able to show up and say a little
hello and just visit a little bit, chat, converse back
and forth, offer therapy for Joy Reid and Rosie O'Donnell
and other sundry personages, text the studio, flying in, Doctor
Matt always great to hear you. Hurry back on the air.
Steven Littleton, thank you, Steve boy great to see Steve
(18:34):
retire e l e O checking in. Hey, this is
like two in a row here quote doctor done, another
great show. Thank you. I truly missed your quick wit
and great sense of humor. And thank you to Ryan
and Kelly. And yeah, the sense of humor. It yeah,
it's a usually pretty far off, but we try, we
(18:58):
do try to try to keep it light. You know,
you come in, you get to just joke around a
little bit, you know, and make some points, but you know,
might as well keep it light right now, And I
think that's good now. I've been having some thoughts of
you know, I always think about this politically. You know,
what is the way to go if you're a political figure, right,
(19:18):
even if you're a political commentator. Should you be nice, nice, nice, nice,
nice nice? Should you be obsequiously nice or should you
be I don't know, more angry, more fiery steam coming
out of your ears. What's like the right way to
do things? Or is it just depend on your mood
(19:39):
and on the day and what you had for breakfast,
that kind of thing. But with the assassination of Charlie Kirk,
that debate has been going on, and I have noticed
there are certain branches of the Christian faith that I
think are finding fault with Charlie Kirk for his fourth
(20:02):
right way of speaking and addressing issues and addressing controversies.
And again, I know I've been around Charlie kirkabit and
he was on the station I had been on for
a long time, and just a gentle, good nature, gentlemanly individual.
But I was really struck by something I saw from
I believe he's a pastor. His name is Jim Davis,
(20:25):
and he is, and I want to get this right.
He the TGC and that I wrote it down somewhere
what that actually stands for. But it's a it's an
evangelical organization. And I kind of feel like some some
(20:45):
folks are blaming Charlie Kirk for his assassination and this
I don't I don't like that. I think that is
so so far gone. And there are certain ways you
can You can take faith and approach faith that puts
you into this place where you start making these distinctions
and these decisions that are really veering off in the
(21:07):
wrong direction. And if we have that clip number nineteen
from Jim Davis, let's let's hear that real quick.
Speaker 7 (21:14):
And the more we understand and appreciate Jesus's sensitivity toward us,
the more sensitivity is going to grow in us toward
other people. So it's not a gifting issue. It's a
gospel issue. And this is the only thing I'm going
to say in the sermon about the events of this week,
specifically with Charlie Kirk. This kind of gospel sensitivity could
(21:39):
have spared our country a lot of pain this week.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
And I don't just mean in the.
Speaker 7 (21:45):
Murder, in the things that led up to and even
followed in the aftermath of that assassination.
Speaker 2 (21:55):
Hmm, you hear what he's saying. There is this Jim
David And by the way, TGC Council, the Gospel Coalition Council,
Jim Davis is on that council. And what I think
he's essentially saying here, which I object to, is that
you know, you need more sensitivity, you need more Gospel sensitivity.
(22:17):
You gotta be more sensitive. And what he's kind of
saying is that, you know, a Charlie Kirk wasn't sensitive
enough and he offended people, and now look what happened. Wrong?
Turn there? Why why go there? Sean Davis, who is
(22:40):
the founder of The Federalist, which is a great news publication, said,
in reaction to the same thing, quote, Ah, yes, if
only Jesus had been nice like these spiritual eunuchs, he
wouldn't have been crucified. These people would hand their entire
flocks over the worlds if they thought it would make
them more popular among the wolf set end quote describing
(23:05):
evangelicals or you know Christians who sort of go in
that direction. And you know sensitivity, I mean, you want
you have prudence in your communication, right, And I suppose
you know, you don't want to like seek to be offensive, right,
And I guess I'm probably doing that right now while
I'm not seeking to. You know, some of this is
(23:26):
gonna be unconscious in some ways, but think that through
a little bit. You know, at what point can you
be so bombarded with the need to be so sensitive
that you can't like get out of bed in the morning,
You know, you can't open your mouth and say anything
or do anything because somebody might think that what you've
done is insensitive. And then you know, who knows what's
(23:47):
going to happen, right, You can't live that way, And
at some point you have to have debates and you
have to have conversations, and you have to stand for something, right,
And so I I just you know, I guess there
some strange strains of different religions around the world where
you hear of some people of certain faiths that like
the very concerned about the welfare of animals or bugs
(24:11):
and insects and things, and like they're afraid to like
even walk because they might squash a bug or something,
or might you know, step on a worm or something.
And alas can we live that way. We can't quite
do it. To exist, you know, you do have to
put one foot afflet you another, and you have to
move forward. And I just submit that you want to
(24:34):
avoid what I would call a spiritual Is it a
spiritual disease to go in that direction, to be to
be thinking the way that individual thinks, and essentially the
cast blame upon Charlie Kirk for his assassination. And I
just submit that is wrong. I mean that that is
very wrong to go that way. And I'm a little
surprised to be seeing some of that happening right now
(24:57):
from from certain areas where you wouldn't necessary fairly expect
to see it. And this ties into another aspect of
political life in this country, which I think is worth debating.
And Donald Trump was asked this question. He was what
I call a chopper presser. He was out in front
of the helicopter. He's asked questions by the media. I
believe a question here comes from Pete Doocy over at
(25:20):
Fox News. We'll play that here in a second. But
when James Commey got indicted, the former director of the FBI,
and I believe that's been a little over a week ago, now,
boy what a deserved indictment there. You know, He's asked like, oh, hey,
I mean what about do you think you're going to
have people retaliate against you politically and try to indict
(25:40):
your FBI director? And I think Trump's answer to this
is very principled and very forthright and very spot on.
Let's hear that one, Ryan.
Speaker 5 (25:56):
And now back to the Dan Kaplass Show podcast.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
Genius the lyrics, however, that was written mad don In
for Dan Kaplis. Let's see here just a few more
Texas Studio quote. Democrats would like to return the United
States to feudalism, where you own nothing and you work
for the government and then return the government if you
just and the government essentially returns to you just enough
(26:22):
food to survive and work another day. End quote. That
would be yes, yes, feudalism, Marxism, George orwell, that sounds
a lot like animal farm there. Texas Studio quote. I
guess there was always a gentleman's agreement between presidents they
wouldn't prosecute one another after office. But I guess that
(26:43):
all changed with Obama. Yes it did. Folks and the
Bushes and the Cheneys and the mccains, and the Romneys
were all in for that. Boy, how much respective I
lost for Bush's Chineese, McCain's Romney's go down the list
over these past few years. Big salute to Donald Trump
(27:04):
for taking all of that, I would just say, corrupt
political establishment on and coming out on top. I mean,
what a deal, what courage. H kudos. Here's another one quote.
One thing for sure, Bush and Cheney wake up every morning,
turn on the news making sure that they're still after Trump.
(27:27):
End quote. Yep, thank you for the text to studio
ladies and gentlemen. Thanks for allowing me yeah to be
in here and sitting in for Dan. Thanks to Dan
Kaplis for allowing me to drop by one thing. We're
talking about political retaliation. I saw this news just a
little bit of go ed. Martin, who is the DOJ
(27:49):
Director of the DOJ Weaponization Working Group, trying to root
out the weaponization that has happened in the past wielded
by the DOJ against people like Donald Trump, is investigating
Andrew Weissman. You should know that name, Andrew Weissman, who,
in my opinion, was actually running the Mueller investigation because,
(28:11):
as we know, former FBI Director Mueller was not in
charge of any of his faculties when he was actually
running the Mueller investigation and writing the Mueller Report. I
think it was Andrew Weissman heavily involved behind the scenes
in that. And now Ed Martin is investigating Andrew Weisman,
And Okay, I think that needs to happen because you
(28:35):
can't allow what happened twenty sixteen to twenty twenty and
afterwards to keep on happening. And there does need to
be you know, get to the bottom of this stuff,
what actually was going on, and people do need to know. Yes,
the worm can turn and has turned, and real quick.
I mean, this government shut down. Who's going to blink first?
Speaker 7 (28:57):
Who?
Speaker 2 (28:59):
I think? Could I be wrong? I think the Democrats
are going to blink? And even Jake Tapper over on
CNN is talking to HAKEM. Jeffries and I don't think
he had a sombrero on in this clip, but admitting, yeah,
they're wanting to get money to illegal aliens for health care.
Let's let's hear that clip if we could. I believe
(29:20):
it's twenty four right, So.
Speaker 6 (29:22):
Let me ask you about a provision that the Republicans
are talking about quite a bit I know you want
to talk about and Democrats want to talk about extending
the Obamacare subsidies which expire at the end of twenty
twenty five, but they talk about the provisions and it's
right here, Subtitle E. And this has to do with
the repeal of healthcare subtitle changes and specifically what it
is they're how they characterized characterize it as you want
(29:44):
to give health insurance to undocumented immigrants. I understand that's
not really an accurate depiction, but what it does.
Speaker 2 (29:50):
Do is it's a lie. It's a lie.
Speaker 6 (29:53):
But what new support does bring back funding for emergency
medicaid to hospital, some of which does pay for undocumented
immigrants and people who don't have health insurance. And also
there is this provision and it's not about undocumented immigrants.
It's about people with asylum seekers and people with temporary
protected status, et cetera, et cetera, but about their ability
(30:14):
to get medicaid. So they're non citizens, they're not undocumented,
they're not illegal. Why even include that in a bill
knowing that they're going to seize right upon that and
use that to a message.
Speaker 2 (30:26):
Why even include that, asked Jake Tapper over at CNN.
Running the best possible cover he can for the Democrat Party. Ooh,
that's getting tough when CNN is playing defense, when Jake
Tapper is playing defense, and they're having to ask, you know,
Keem Jeffries, why even have that in there? Why even
(30:46):
have that in writing? Ooh, see, that's who's playing defense,
that is who is having this scurry around this matter.
And by the way, did you love us like that? Oh?
The republics are going to seize upon that. They're gonna
seize upon.
Speaker 5 (31:01):
That, seize or pounce.
Speaker 2 (31:02):
Yeah, seize and pounces like it's like a bad thing
to like, you know, point out the truth of what's
actually happening. They're seizing upon the truth of the matter.
They're pouncing upon the truth. And they should they should
learn to be the kind of people that don't ever
do that. You know, if they were nice, they wouldn't
seize and pounce upon the truth. I think, I think,
I like how this is looking. And again there's sombrero
(31:24):
memes keep on coming, and they do seem to be
highly effective. Ladies and gentlemen, Oh there is our outru music. Hey,
Brian and Arvada, I would grab you if I could,
but we've we're getting near the end here. Bless you
Brian for checking in. It is Matt Dunn sitting in
for Dan Caplis Ryan Kelly behind the glass. Thank you
(31:46):
for allowing me to drop by and regale you with
whatever I've just regaled you with, and uh we helped
you back at some point before too long. Matt Dunn
signing off and a big thanks to Dan Capless