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February 21, 2025 39 mins
THE GUYS (EXCITEDLY)  DISCUSS THE EXPOSURE OF THE FEDERAL CRIMNIAL CARTEL
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
Oh my, if only Rush Limbaugh was still alive. General,
what do you think what would Rush be saying?

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Maybe he is?

Speaker 3 (00:09):
For all we know he is. Just what is Rush.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
Saying right now? He's loving every minute of it. He's
looking down and he's saying, this is the best thing ever.
I could never have expected things.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
To go this Well, now we know why they went
after him, not Rush, but Trump so hard. Now you
know why they quote they went after him so hard?
And they we've been dancing around this Who's day, which
goes back to who took the potshot at not potshot?

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Who took the assassination attempts at Trump? Who's they?

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Well? You know that's It's funny. Remember from Conain and
the Barbarian when James Earl Jones said, now they will
know why they fear the Knight.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
Now we know why they went after him so hard.
The boss of boss is you're fired and General. A
couple of years ago, we did a series called American Incubus.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
I think it was twenty twenty two, I think two.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
We talked about American Incubus, and incubus, of course, is that.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
Demon fairy thing.

Speaker 1 (01:20):
That comes into your bedroom at night when you're sleeping,
and you know, takes advantage of you.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
Right.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
We did a show a few.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
Years ago because we I mean, we've just known in
our gut and our instincts as conservatives and constitutional conservatives.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Where we've watched this.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Blob bureaucracy, administrative, state, welfare, state, warfare, state.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
Veer so far off the rails that we went back
in time.

Speaker 1 (01:52):
We said, you know, we got to go back in
time and figure out when did this thing start to.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
Jump the tracks?

Speaker 1 (01:58):
And we couldn't really pinpoint it, right, I mean, we
just couldn't sort of like, all right, well.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
Maybe it was Obama.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
No, maybe it was with in the sixties when uh Carter, Yeah,
maybe it was Carter. Maybe it was when did it
jump the tracks? Did it jump the tracks when JFK
was shot and killed?

Speaker 3 (02:19):
Did it jump the tracks?

Speaker 1 (02:20):
After World War Two? When did it jump the tracks?
We couldn't figure it out. So we're like, all right,
let's do this. Let's go all the way back in
time to the beginning of the country, and let's go
decade by decade and see if we can figure out
when it jumped the tracks. And that's when we talked
about the federalists and the anti federalist. We talked about

(02:40):
the bank wars, Andrew Jackson, the first populist, the rise
of populism and revivalism in the late second half of
the eighteen hundreds, but we still couldn't quite figure it out.
It still wasn't answering when did we jump the tracks?
So we go even back further in time and two.

(03:04):
We decided that the East India Company would be the
best place to start. And the East India Company was
the group of men with some money that put together
a ship that would go explore and imperialize other countries,

(03:25):
basically engaged in the trade.

Speaker 3 (03:27):
The trade routes there and.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
In the East Indies, which we would say now is
kind of Southeast Asia.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
Yes, yes, there are a lot of Dutch holdings there.

Speaker 1 (03:38):
Too, but the Dutch did it before that. But we're like,
you know, we couldn't pronounce the Dutch names. So we said, well,
let's start with the Anglicans. And we saw how groups
of men with some money put together merchant ships and
fleets and then locked arms with the aristocracy and said, hey,
if we can do this under the the flag of

(04:01):
England of Britain, then you know, we get the military protection.
So we started to see that, right and the coalescence
of that power.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
Well, and to be fair, the the the the East
India ships did actually have their own canons and they
knew how to use them. They just weren't on the
level of the British men.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
Of war we had.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
We started to see right there when you have the
merging of private mercantilism and the the government, the government
there being the monarchies, and what flew what what? What
came from that was the founding of the United States.
And we had a tabula rasso. We had a blank slate,

(04:46):
blank slate, and let me but we're going.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
To set up the show.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
And this this show and next week show is a
very radical approach.

Speaker 3 (04:58):
It's going to sound very radical to you.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
Sadly, but it's really not.

Speaker 1 (05:03):
It's actually the original intent of the founders, based upon
what they learned from the two hundred and fifty years
before them. That goes back into the you know, the
late fifteen hundreds and sixteen hundreds, when they when they
saw how concentrations of power and money corrupt.

Speaker 2 (05:22):
And frankly, this is the only way.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
And so our dudes, our ancestors, our great great great
great grandfathers, our founders came up with.

Speaker 3 (05:35):
The United States Constitution.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
The Bill Wrights, and all the things that we fought
for and we take great pride in. But how radical
was it in seventeen seventy six? Now, I want to
point this out to our listeners, and then for the
rest of this show and next week's show that General
and I are going to are going to snow plow

(06:00):
right through some ideas that are as equally radical today
as the foundering father's vision of this new land was.
Then put this in perspective, the United States had an
elected government, no king, very very very radical right. For

(06:24):
hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of years, if not thousands
of years, it was king's monarchies, no such thing as
an elected government.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
But there was an advantage to that at the time,
which was the certainty of having a monarchy, the certainty
of who was leading the country.

Speaker 1 (06:42):
But it's so there was divine right. I mean, what
I'm saying, I'm trying to set up. You tell we
don't prep the show very well. We're trying to set
up the show, General, that what we're going to talk
about on the rest of this show and next week's show.

Speaker 3 (06:56):
And maybe indefinitely after that.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
Are ideas that sound so radical, And I think Trump
and Doge and the men and women that Trump has
surrounded himself with, are they're going this direction.

Speaker 3 (07:14):
I think they're going to go to the direction we're going.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
To be talking about today and next week. But first,
how radical was it to have a republic versus a monarchy?
Hugely radical? A written constitution with limits on power very radical.
Everything else was unwritten for a millennia before that was unwritten,

(07:38):
and customary power, divine right, brute force, the idea that
the states retained most of the power from the federal
government very radical, the idea of states very radical. Separation
of powers, three independent branches as opposed to the king

(08:00):
in the King's court, very radical. Voting rights what voting rights?
Aristocrats don't want voters. That doesn't work, No, it doesn't.
And then a bill of rights.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
I mean, we had the Magna Carta hundreds of years.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
Before this, you had the the English Rights of Man.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
But this stuff was very, very radical.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
The doctrine of enumerated powers just as important.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
So bear in mind that are founding fathers that call
it let's just say, fat math who have studied the
two hundred plus years that preceded them and had new land,
and say, what have we learned? What do we do
now to make sure that we are free from tyranny?

(08:59):
And as a result, we have the United States of America.
It's still the greatest nation ever. There's such pinned up.
There's still a tremendous amount of creativity, ingenuity, enterprise, entrepreneurialism,
capitalism that is just waiting to explode. But we've got

(09:19):
to get this freaking elephant off our chest, which is
this federal government. And the beauty of the United States, guys,
is that we are a self correcting nation, unlike any
other empire before think about that we are self correcting.

Speaker 3 (09:35):
We have the ability.

Speaker 1 (09:37):
We have the ability to think radically again and look
back over the our preceding two two hundred and fifty
years and say what do we blow up and what
do we replace it with. That's what John and I
are going to be talking about today and next week.

Speaker 3 (09:57):
All right, here we go.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
We are We're going radical on you, guys. But of course,
now the the American people are waking up. We have
a woke two point zero, and millions of us have
suspected this for a long time. Where is all the money?
Where's all the missing money? Let's start at the DC

(10:20):
suburbs for starters, right, and the silence, the crickets coming
from the blob. Chuck Schumer is doing the best he
can to to scare his twelve listeners into thinking that
Trump's just doing this to.

Speaker 3 (10:40):
Get tax cuts for the rich. That's all Chuck Schumer has.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
He's a one a one trick bony.

Speaker 3 (10:46):
And then the CNN people.

Speaker 1 (10:49):
The only I'm only catching this, you know, I catch
You gotta watch, you gotta read the New York Times,
you gotta gotta pay attention to see. And then you
got to see what the other side, the statist, the corporatist,
the moralist, the pious status. What they're saying, the con artists,
why do they all look the same now, they're all
wearing these big black, square frame glasses.

Speaker 2 (11:10):
They're called smart girl glasses. It's the smart girl glasses,
and it's it's the rage. It's all the rage because
you mean, you've got to look smart with what you're
saying is that stupid.

Speaker 3 (11:23):
Day they are look smart glass? What do you call them?

Speaker 2 (11:25):
Smart Girl glasses. Those are smart.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
Girl glasses absolutely, And now one of those nimrods, I
think Jim Acosta is wearing them now or one of
the other CNN buffoons they're wearing.

Speaker 3 (11:37):
They're wearing smart Girl glasses.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
Even Mark Cuban, it's tough to discern Mark Cuban from
Rachel Maddow.

Speaker 1 (11:42):
Now, aside from the media, they're fraud Rachel looks a
little more mascular. Aside from the media, they're frauds. They're
not criminals. The criminals. The criminals are the ones who
aren't speaking right now. You know why, as criminal defense
lawyer lasts thirty one years, why I'm not afraid of criminals.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
Because they're frauds. They are puppies.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
Once they get busted, investigated, arrested, they turn into puppies
what they really.

Speaker 3 (12:09):
Are, which is why I'm really I'm not afraid.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
I'm not intimidated as a defense lawyer being in that
world because I see them after they've been exposed, and
you see these people in court and they're just not
only they're total frauds on the outside before they get
caught criminals, but when they do get caught, they just
turn into puppies, and that's what we have now on

(12:32):
the other side. That's why there's just this very little
bark from the other side.

Speaker 2 (12:37):
Well, you can also discern who they are because they're
always selling something that's too good to be true, like politicians.

Speaker 1 (12:43):
So we are in the midst of potentially reinventing America.
But we really need to make sure that the American
people are able to keep up and understand where this
is going. Is going to come across as very radical,
no doubt about it. And when this is done in
twelve years, we're going to need another Mount Rushmore and

(13:08):
we're going to put some faces as some men and
women on Mount Rushmore.

Speaker 3 (13:12):
A few we know now, a few more we don't know.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
I'll say right now, Donald Trump may get his own
Mount Rushmore and Elon Musk might get one too.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
We'll see what goes.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
But the people need to keep their feet on the
gas pedal because right now, the Democrat Party, the uniparty,
let's not let them off the hook.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
Right wait till we get to the Defense Department. Then
you'll see some Republican grows.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
Let's not let the Republican neo CON's unit party establishment
off the hook. These are pro fraud fraudsters. These are
pro fraud criminals. And America is going red. America is
going red. So when Stephen A. Smith from ESPN saying

(14:00):
there's no other voice for the Democrats, and he's saying,
he's suggesting he might run, you know, you've got these
people down their their their shorts are down around their
ankles and they're trying to run away. When Steven A
is thinking he's going to have to run for office,
oh my, and then it's going to come to the
States and then the cities, I say we, I say

(14:21):
very shortly, we need to do the same thing at
the cities, then we move to the States.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
It's very interesting that you spoke about Stephen A. Smith
because this morning I was listening to a book by
Murray Rothbard and he was talking about that when you
have when you have a uniparty like we do, the
only thing the voters have is the personality of the candidate. Correct,
And Steven A. Smith has a wonderful personality, he's fun
to listen to and all of that. But that's right now. Yeah, Well,

(14:50):
the gigs, that's the selling point.

Speaker 3 (14:52):
Yeah, the gig's up on that.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
I do think we need to get rid of this
type of person from the city. I think we need
to jump the states and get right down to the cities.
Why because when we're done with this, it's going to
be local, local, local, and that's where politics needs to be.
That's where governance needs to be, that's where accountability needs

(15:14):
to be. That's where it's most easy to be transparent.
And it's going to dovetail right into our proposed constitution
for the America two point zero, which we'll get to
later in this show. I also have some business ideas general,
tell me what you think about this Ice TV.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
We have cops, how about Ice TV? I think there
might be something.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
I know there are Fox News reporters embedded with the
ICE units, but we need Ice TV, which includes special forces.

Speaker 3 (15:51):
Going into Mexico. I want to see that those fireworks.

Speaker 2 (15:56):
It'd be an interesting way to monetize it. Yes, and
you know, all of the profit that's from the show
could go towards reducing the debt.

Speaker 3 (16:02):
Why why wouldn't we?

Speaker 1 (16:03):
I mean, hell, we had the first time we had
cameras and reporters embedded in the military was Vietnam, and
look what it did to the spirit of America. This
is the anti Vietnam.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
It got us out of Vietnam.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
This is the anti Vietnam. This is literally protecting our homeland.
And let's get with all the tech we have. Put
some dreeperrons, dreeper rouns, put some reaper drones up. We
have this new military defense contractor, guy by name a
Lucky Palmer. Have you run across Lucky yet, I've dogs

(16:38):
all right. He's got a company and drawn a blank on.
Anderil is the name of this company. Right now, you're
going to hear a lot more about Lucky Palmer here
in central Ohio and his company, Anderil. Let's get some cameras,
high def cameras up on drones, and let's watch our SF,
our special forces protect our borders and push them back

(17:00):
through the down deeper into Mexico. We have the Navy
in the Pacific right now, and we have the Navy
in the Gulf of America right now. We are preparing
for some military I'm not going to call it intervention.
We're preparing for some military ass kicking inching too.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
You mentioned Mexico. You mentioned the drone idea. The Mayor
of Los Angeles has been going around saying that all
of the people who is whose sights have been burned down,
they're all now free to go in and the rebuilding
is starting, and so on and so forth at everywhere freedom.
And then Adam Carolla the comedian, flew a drone over

(17:41):
the area and you still see all the roadblocks up.
Nothing is happening.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
He proved transa to transparency. We have the tech, we
have the desire. The door's been kicked open. Sunlight is
the best disinfectant you are. You want to see your
tax dollars at work. Put some high def cameras on drones.
Fly him over Mexico the North, their their northern border,

(18:09):
and let's watch our military do what it does. I
don't need to see us taking out uh, we don't
need to see taking out tribes in Afghanistan.

Speaker 2 (18:19):
Well, let's let's put a go pro thing around Elon
Musk's forehead. Doose TV, that's my next idea, and watch
him go through Fort Knox and and go around sniffing
for signs of gold paint.

Speaker 3 (18:32):
Mmm. I want dose TV.

Speaker 2 (18:36):
Again.

Speaker 1 (18:37):
You've got go pros body cams. Let's see DOSEE doing
its work. When you go into the Department of education.
When you go into we can't do in the Pentagon,
but when you when you go into some.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
Of these other agencies, I want, I want to see
the firings.

Speaker 2 (18:52):
What you're gonna see, strangely though, is you're gonna see
a bunch of empty offices because it's only six percent.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
Let's go knock on their townhouse. Yeah, let's go knock
on their townhouse. Speaking of which, what a great time.
Two things.

Speaker 3 (19:06):
We need to take our law license.

Speaker 1 (19:07):
Well, no, we don't want to do this, but good
time to be a criminal defense lawyer and a federal
criminal defense lawyer.

Speaker 3 (19:13):
In the DC area.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
A lot of people are Google had a spike in
search terms attorney search searches in d C in the
last two weeks looking for criminal defense lawyers. Phenomenal and
great time to be a realtor. Great time to be
a realtor. So we've been breeding entitlement and statism in America,

(19:37):
at least at least since FDR.

Speaker 3 (19:42):
I love the idea of.

Speaker 1 (19:46):
Polygraph on some of these federal agencies workers. I don't
know if you saw this, Oh gosh, who is someone
wants to polygraph some federal employees to make sure they're
not leaking the ice raids. So anyway, after the break,
we're after the break, we're going to jump into some
of the radical ideas that I think you're going to

(20:07):
be hearing about in the next few months. In general,
we talk about Doge dividends that's popping here as of
this recording.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
Doge dividends.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Should they go to people who voted for Kamala Harris
and Joe Biden?

Speaker 2 (20:30):
And this will be controversial, but I would say yes
because then those people say, Ah, this isn't so bad.

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Okay, I got it, this isn't so bad. You changed
my mind on that, Okay, all right.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
I talked at the beginning of the show about Rush
and we would love to have Rush Limbaugh.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
Right now, and so I I.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
Think it's important to channel Rush Limbaugh and to figure
out what Rush might be saying.

Speaker 3 (21:03):
What do you think? What do you think? What would
he say? Could he'd say?

Speaker 2 (21:08):
The trouble with predicting what Rush would say is because
is that he would say something that is common sense,
but he would do it in a way that is provocative, interesting, entertaining.
And that was why he was paid twenty and thirty
million bucks a year because nobody could do what he
could do.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Correct, He would say that we've been fed a whopper
of lie for generations.

Speaker 2 (21:33):
Yes, we quote we.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
Are the government, and the government is just a bunch
of friendly folks we elected to do our bidding. The
federal government is not you, it's not me. It's not
some community bake sale. We're all pitching in for the
common good. That's what I thought it was growing up.
That's what I was told. It's an institution that ain

(21:57):
Ran said. You mentioned Murray Rothbard, who very important.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
I don't think they disagreed much with each other.

Speaker 1 (22:06):
Very important for you nerds out there, econ history nerds.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
Murray Rothbart.

Speaker 1 (22:12):
The government, now you know, is an institution that is
turning out to be against us most of the time.
As Murray Rothbard said, paraphrasing, the government is not an
extension of society. It is the opposite of society. It's

(22:33):
not your neighbor, it's not your business partner.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
It's not your friendly neighborhood police officer.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
Yeah, it's the thing that takes from you that results
in this fraud, waste, and abuse.

Speaker 2 (22:45):
And it doesn't it's even worse than that. As Robard's
Rothbard pointed out, it protects large corporations from upstart corporations
from new corporations.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
It was the anti trust regulations one hundred years ago.
That was the anti Monopoli stuff. Are you telling me
that that was all bs, all of it, all of it.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
All this regulation of rates and all that kind of stuff.
It made it so that new railroads couldn't come in
and charge lower rates.

Speaker 3 (23:17):
I think this sentence sums it up, general.

Speaker 1 (23:20):
And if you're listening a little bit and you just
have us in the background, please listen.

Speaker 3 (23:26):
I think this sums it up.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
When we say the state, we mean the government, the
federal government, the state.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
It's this.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
You know, the state is.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
A ruling class that survives by taking from the productive
and handing out favors to the connected. A year ago,
you say that, you sound like the government gets richer,
the suburbs of northern Virginia get richer, Bluer, well in
Bluer while yours, well, your state gets poor. You get poor,

(24:00):
and your state turns redder?

Speaker 3 (24:03):
Is that a word?

Speaker 2 (24:03):
Redder?

Speaker 1 (24:04):
All this money that is disappearing, we can talk about that,
but stop and ask how did it get the money
in the first place.

Speaker 3 (24:12):
You and I. We have to earn it.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
We work, we hustle, we produce. The government what does
the government do. The government doesn't produce a damn thing.
The government doesn't produce a damn thing. It doesn't create wealth.

Speaker 3 (24:24):
It takes it.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
They call it revenue for the public investment. You now
know that's all bs.

Speaker 2 (24:29):
When they say we want to invest in something, it
means we want to take your money and give it
to somebody else.

Speaker 3 (24:36):
It is simply theft under the color of law. And
then the.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
More subtle theft is inflation, which is simply cranking out
the printing press to get more federal reserve notes into
the hands of the banks and bankers and up the
cost scope cheap money. And they get it first, they
get to spend it before the inflation kicks.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
In, and you get the weakened do you get to.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
Mark it up and resell it?

Speaker 2 (25:09):
See well, we did a segment on gold and how
hard currency used to have gold in it and all
of the problems and what money is.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
The Americans, you don't want to hear this, You don't
want to know.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
It's boring, it's complicated. Whatever stayed listening to our show.
We're going to break this down. This has been the
bane of our existence for years. We finally have an
opening where we don't sound like we're looney tunes.

Speaker 3 (25:36):
They print money out of thin.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
Air, have diluted the value of the dollars in your
wallet and in your retirement account. They call it monetary policy.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
You know who, quantitative easing.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
They got it quantitative easing, thanks Alan Greenspan. You know
who doesn't suffer The government, the banks, the elites.

Speaker 3 (25:53):
They get the.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
Fresh, new shiny dollars first before prices go up. By
the time the money trickles down to your grocery bill
is doubled. Your savings are worth half of what they
used to be. Folks and I have been getting robbed
blindly and been telling it it's for our own good.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
And remember too, even though your house gains value, they
take that back in capital games.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
If you dare complain, you're a fascist. Do you know
what the definition of fascism is? The supremacy of the
state over individual rights, centralized government, severe economic regulation, social regulation,
and the threat of force or use of force to
silence dissent.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Well, it's a partnership between government and the economy, the industry, basically,
whereas in communism it's not a partnership, it's the government
just owns the means of riat.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
Been living in a pseudo neo fascist state, and again
it sounds crazy to you to even think that we
live in some sort of a fascist state.

Speaker 3 (27:01):
It might be even worse than that. It could even
be more of a techno feudalism.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
Well, fascism and communism on the political scale, are right.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
Exchange do the same thing? Yes, and one comes from
the left and one comes from the right.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
Well, well, I mean I don't I wouldn't say that
fascism does come from the right. I think it's a left.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
Well, historically, that's why, that's what we're taught. That's right, Yeah,
that's what we're taught. Abou's right, Miss tupt and Maga.

Speaker 3 (27:22):
You know, uh, you know.

Speaker 1 (27:23):
Hitler becomes the poster boy because he espous nationalism.

Speaker 2 (27:28):
Denesh Jsuza said that the reason during World War right
before World War Two, that the Nazis and the Soviets,
or the Nazis and the Communists fought so much for
Germany was because they were fishing from the same pool
for members finga. They were so close to each other.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
So, now that you know in your heart of hearts
and you are not a fascist, you're not a tenfoil
hat conspiracy theorist. Now that the truth is coming out,
finally you can safely tell your kids and grandkids, Hey, uh,
your federal government is not the friendly neighborhood HOA. It
is the only institution in America that operates by coercion

(28:06):
rather than volunteery exchange.

Speaker 3 (28:08):
Let me explain.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
If you don't like your job, you can quit. If
you don't like your grocery store, you shop somewhere else.
If you don't like the service at a restaurant, you
don't go back. But the government, you don't get a choice.
We don't get to opt out of taxes, the income tax.
Our founder said no, no direct taxes. People used to
say that Social Security was a pyramid scheme.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
Well it's not. You can get out of a pyramid scheme.

Speaker 1 (28:31):
You don't get to opt out of taxes. You do
not get to opt out of regulations. You don't even
get to vote on rags. You don't even get to
talk to your congress person.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
Talk about unelected people, talk about unelected people making rules.

Speaker 3 (28:45):
You don't get to say no, thanks, I'll pass on
that policy.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
No, the state doesn't ask a commands and if you've begun,
if you disobey, they find you, jail you, or if
you're a.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
M they might take a shot at you. In Pennsylvania.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
And it survives not because we love it, it's because
the people fear it. Be honest, the state doesn't persuade,
it compels, and that's what makes it different from every
other institution in America. Now, don't get me wrong, I'm
not saying we need anarchy and we don't need any
form of government.

Speaker 3 (29:14):
At all, but we do.

Speaker 1 (29:15):
It is now high time to strip away the myths,
the lies, and the fairy tales. It's a racket, it's
a shakedown. The bigger it gets, the worse it gets.
And after the break the general night, what do we
have we have there's one more segment on the show. Okay,
after the break, we are going to set up what
we would like to see the next United States Constitutions

(29:38):
to say, yes, we are talking about doing what Thomas
Jefferson always thought we would do, and that is rip
up what's not working and bring in something.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
New to keep up with the times. All right, we're back.
We need a first before we end this show. Certainly
applaud and thank our sponsor.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Salutely.

Speaker 3 (30:01):
I would tell you again the Gill family.

Speaker 2 (30:05):
And uh.

Speaker 3 (30:07):
Chez run.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
I was trying to say, Chevron, the Chevron doctrine. It's
an important doctrine, not as important as a chess run.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
Another.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
I don't know how many cars and trucks we've sold
up there for them, but thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (30:24):
Guys.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
It only makes sense to patronize people who believe the
way you believe.

Speaker 3 (30:30):
And we were so close. Let me say this quick sidebar.

Speaker 1 (30:34):
We were very close in the middle of Biden's term
or whoever was running the country of kind of wrapping
up the show, I mean.

Speaker 3 (30:42):
It's just it was just it just got too.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
It was just too it was it was too crazy,
too heavy, too not even heavy, but just like we
are so far gone. I was talking to my besties
and my best friends and my besties. I'm not seventeen.

Speaker 3 (31:00):
I was talking to my best buddies and my wife
saying where do we go?

Speaker 1 (31:05):
Like, where do we go if Kamala wins, we're out?
I mean, like what country do we go to? I
mean we could probably go out to the Rockies for
a while and be there for be safe there for
a decade.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
Or John Gould did yeh Atlas shrug.

Speaker 3 (31:21):
We're going to talk about I rand are we?

Speaker 2 (31:23):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (31:23):
We do.

Speaker 2 (31:23):
Also, I need to reach out to the people who
work with Donald Trump and do all of his you know,
show prep as he goes to do a speeches.

Speaker 3 (31:33):
But I think he's got a pretty damn good job
right now.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
He literally got But you know, he keeps out coming
out with the Lee Greenwood Proud to be an American thing.
I think he's got to come out with Hall and
Oates She's Gone that song? Why because Kamala is gone.
It's such a it's I don't know how nice it
is to wake up every morning and not have to

(31:56):
listen to her talk about the word salad, things that
mean nothing. And then you've got Hall and Oates with
one of their greatest songs, was She's Gone.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
You know what I want?

Speaker 1 (32:07):
I would like to see Trump have some He does
need to up upgrade update his walkout music.

Speaker 3 (32:16):
Right, I would be great. General.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
We this is for my This is for my my
Archie Bunkers coffee group. I get together, so lucky, so
so so grateful, I got a group of guys. We
meet every morning eight am to nine am.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
We have cup coffee and we talk. It's Mara Archie Bunkers,
what we call ourselves.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
And there just needs to be a space where guys
can be guys, right, Oh, Archie guys can be guys.
And so it's the Archie Bunkers and uh we this
is for them, This is for my group, my my
all the guys who have stood by me through the

(33:01):
years when we took nasty hits, when we complained so
much about the schools closing during COVID and and I
sued Upper Arlington schools to reopen. Who stood by me
when the Upper Arlington eliminated little girls' bathrooms and little

(33:23):
boys bathrooms and put in all gender bathrooms. And I
had twin daughters that were going to be freshmen in
high school. And there's no hell, no way in hell
that my girls were going to go in and clean
off the toilet seats. So I had to assume again,
you know. And the people that stood behind me and
who continue to listen to the show, the Gill family

(33:46):
that pays for the show, and that's that's no cheap
show to put the production. We're here at iHeartMedia, iHeart
chips in. They don't charge us full boat, thank you
very much.

Speaker 3 (33:57):
We have the show heirs.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Three times on the weekends Friday six pm, Sundays eleven am,
and Sunday seven pm. We continue to get a ton
of downloads. We get the show gets downloaded on Spotify,
on iTunes. We have over a million downloads. We are
going to have a social media account. We keep talking

(34:20):
about this. We we we We've been approached by some
folks in Nashville.

Speaker 3 (34:28):
To do to go national. I'm not there yet. I
kind of like right where we are.

Speaker 1 (34:34):
Right if we talk about politics being local, I think
I just want to stay local.

Speaker 3 (34:39):
I like to be here in the heartland. I like
to be here in the great state of Ohio.

Speaker 1 (34:43):
And I'm super excited for the governor's race in twenty
twenty six. And we're gonna have a lot to talk.

Speaker 3 (34:49):
About on that.

Speaker 1 (34:51):
But guys, what we must do now is take back control.
These are no longer empty words, right. The scam has
been exposed. The has been exposed. This is an absolute
racket that is the federal government.

Speaker 3 (35:05):
And what do we do about it. Let's be honest.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
The politicians, the bureaucrats, and the complicit media are never
ever going to voluntarily shrink their own power. No no, no, no,
no no, That's not the way this works.

Speaker 2 (35:17):
It's up to us.

Speaker 1 (35:19):
It's up to the people who produce. It's up to
the people who serve others. It's up to the people
who actually work. It's up to the people who are
not physically or mentally able to work but still get it.

Speaker 3 (35:34):
It's up to the people who actually built this country
and for their next generations.

Speaker 1 (35:43):
The men who fought, the young men who fought in
World War Two, sure as hell did not fight and storm.

Speaker 3 (35:49):
The beaches for this crap.

Speaker 4 (35:51):
This is bold.

Speaker 3 (35:53):
They did not fight for this.

Speaker 1 (35:56):
And we jumped the rails and ran off into Vietnam
and took out a generation of men and women to
be and then Nixon ripped us off.

Speaker 3 (36:06):
The US dollar. We can talk about that.

Speaker 1 (36:09):
We're totally exposed, totally. The US dollar is totally exposed.
We got to do shows on that. We need to
push back very hard and unapologetically. Stop trying to argue
with the illiberals. Stop referring to them as liberals, because
they're not.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
We are liberals. Explain explain why we're liberals.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
Well, liberalism has.

Speaker 3 (36:36):
And how much is the fine for using the BS word?
I'll pay it if it Who wants to pay the
fine for us? We'll let you know.

Speaker 2 (36:42):
That's right. We got a cookie jar, were there. The
trouble is with liberals is they're always redefining it.

Speaker 3 (36:49):
No, we're not calling them liberals. Why are we liberals?

Speaker 2 (36:52):
I should say the left. The trouble with the left
is they're always trying to redefine terms to match their
crazy outlook, and so they tried to start calling themselves
liberals because liberals were people who were for freedom, yep.
But they're not for freedom.

Speaker 3 (37:09):
Every freedom freed.

Speaker 1 (37:10):
Those are liberals. That is liberalism. Liberalism is not tyranny.
Liberalism is not monarchy. Liberalism is not statism. It's not
high taxes, it's not we live in This is a statism.
It is no different than a monarchy. It is no
different than an aristocracy. It is no different than a
king and a king's court. Liberalism and the Enlightenment pulled

(37:34):
the pen and through the grenade on Europe. As our
ancestors fought the indigenous people here.

Speaker 3 (37:43):
They're not Native Americans.

Speaker 1 (37:44):
Those are indigenous people and we need to have honest
conversations about what what happened there.

Speaker 3 (37:51):
But aside from that, we are liberals.

Speaker 1 (37:54):
We are pro liberty, pro freedom, very very anti big government,
anti government, not anarchist, and we do need capitalism with
some with a light.

Speaker 3 (38:06):
Touch of regulation.

Speaker 1 (38:08):
But we must demand the government stop stealing our wealth,
stop micromanaging our lives, and stop pretending like you own us,
and stop talking down to us. When the uniparty politician,
anyone that goes to a county fair, let's watch this

(38:28):
in our governor's election, who shows up at the county
fair in brand new Denham jeans and a brand new
shirt from Rod's Western Palace, always a plaid shirt.

Speaker 3 (38:41):
They're they're pandering, all right, But Trump? What does Trump do?

Speaker 1 (38:47):
Right?

Speaker 3 (38:47):
Suit and tie? He's him.

Speaker 4 (38:49):
You know, there's no illusion, there's no fraud, there's no bs.
When they show up like this, it's an extension of
the fraud, that's all. It's it's an extension of the odd.

Speaker 1 (39:01):
Now.

Speaker 3 (39:01):
I don't know what Vivek's gonna do.

Speaker 1 (39:03):
I'm pretty sure he's gonna run for governor Ohio, and
I hope the Veke sticks to what he wears and
doesn't dress out.

Speaker 2 (39:14):
I think that's a that's a relic of the political
past and everything.

Speaker 1 (39:18):
You know. I see John Houstad, he's post stuff on
X and it's still a relic of the eighties, right,
So proud to.

Speaker 3 (39:29):
Be supporting this too. I'm like, stop, stop dressing like
a Republican. Be normal, get it. I mean, it's just
be you. But everybody, wake up. We're way over time.

Speaker 1 (39:44):
Waked up and realize we're not citizens and we haven't
been for a long time.

Speaker 3 (39:49):
We're suckers and subjects, but no more.
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