Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
General. Did you see the video of the CEO being
shot and killed executed midtown Manhattan.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
I did. That was rather disturbing.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Quick takeaway on that, and there's a reason I'm bringing
this up at the top of the show. And I
think this is going to be something bigger than I think.
There's much more to this, but I want to hear
your theory the case here real quick.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
My thought is that either he or his family or
some group he's involved with has a beef with the
insurance company because they didn't honor a policy. That's why
he put those messages on the sides of the casings
that were left behind. I think I don't think he's
some assassin from some other country.
Speaker 1 (00:44):
You know. I agree when I saw the When I
saw the video, I asked a good friend of mine
who is a retired Tier one operator, let's say, and
I said, what do you see in that video? Is
that also a Tier one operator? That's someone there's someone
highly trained at the top levels of military Somewhere in
the road. He goes, No, guy's not wearing gloves, you know.
(01:08):
There he didn't attempt to conceal himself very well, could
have layered himself up and added twenty pounds to his body,
could have hunched over. You fake a limp, Yeah, you
fake a limp, and then you you change. You don't
go get on an e bike that's monitored, because no,
not a Tier one operator. Not an assassination. And to
(01:30):
the point where someone said, hey, I need I need
to go. I need a killer to go take out
this CEO because he's going to testify in Congress. You
know he knows things about people.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
Well, they all do.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
I sure, but if that was the reason he got whacked,
that crowd isn't hiring that guy to whack that guy,
you know. So if it's someone's going to testify against
the highest powers and then gets shot in the back
(02:06):
and heart, it's being done by a Tier one operator
and someone who most likely is going to vanish, you're
never gonna hear from them again. This guy, I'm gonna
predict it's caught, uh, which means if it's someone who's
just po that a claim got denied, this is a
pretty radical level to go. I mean, this is up
(02:27):
there like this is this is like we're on an anarchy.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
But you've got some crazy people out there too, sure,
and they can get denied.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
But this, this person, whoever it is, this person went
to a level of skill and professionalism that and and
and down to this shell, the alleged statements words on
the shellcasings. Uh, this is this is much bigger than
(02:54):
that guy's family. I'm predicting having it coverage tonight. This
is the pushback on the private greed world, the private
corruption world. Trump has been pushing back on public corruption
world since he came down the escalators in fifteen.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
He tried to get him too, and.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
They've tried to take out Trump. And now as Trump
builds his band of brothers, You're going to start to
hear I predict you're gonna start to hear a little
more chatter in the c suites on hey, I need
a protection detail, and they're going to go, well, why
do you need a production detwol you know your company's
(03:35):
not denying insurance claims. Well, I'm I'm the you know
I have this and we have all this money. And
your pe firms, your private equity firms, the big corporations
that are just robber Baron level stuff. And during the
robber Baron era, you had Mark either Marxist from the
(04:02):
left or or fascists on the right, anarcus who were gunning,
who were trying to gun down and whip up the
mad mobs to burn down Upper East Side of Manhattan,
and the robber Bearents. It has a little feel of that.
There's a lot of projection there. But I think if
(04:24):
he put those words on the side of those casings,
he's not the only person feeling this way.
Speaker 3 (04:30):
Well, he may be representing some sort of a group,
an aggrieved group, but I think that whether that group
would efficially sanction him and buy the gun for him
and send him off to do this it, I mean,
he doesn't.
Speaker 1 (04:43):
You don't really, I don't think a group really higher.
I mean, I think he's part of a loose confederation
of pod Occupy A Wall streeters. That's what I'm saying.
Don't forget we had Occupy a Wall Street and that
was the original. That was a really much an original
populist movement. Although those of us who were not affected
(05:05):
thought they were just crazies. Some of them are. But
this is another sign of the rise of populism. We
always refer to populism and a political specter a sphere,
rather spectrum spectrum. Thank you, Yes, you try to say, yeah,
sometimes I feel like I'm on the spectrum. But which
(05:28):
would be a gift? I think so, But I do,
I do think that this is a potential push of populism,
the tippy spear, you know, the banonet spear. I think
you're gonna hear a little more chatter about that at
(05:48):
this in these Wall Street Journal, New York Times and
the talking heads, the back channels, the back chamnels. At
the same time of this same week, is this guy
getting gunned down? Stock market is at all time highs.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
Well, they know the good times are coming.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
At the same time this sky's gunned down that the
stock market's at all time high. Hunter Biden gets a
pardon from his father. Okay, in the same.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Week, souther expansive pardon, I might add.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
In the same week, South Korean president declares martial law.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
They do this every twenty years.
Speaker 1 (06:33):
So backfire, that's South Korea. These are our peers martial
law because the people were getting crazy in the streets.
In the same week as the CEO's gunned down, South
Korea declares martial law and its people, Hunter Biden gets
a pardon. Stock market at all time high. French prime
(06:54):
minister gets pushed pushed out in a no confidence vote. Right,
So there's there, there, there are, There are changes happening.
And this isn't just Trump's transition team. This is so
much bigger than Trump's transition team. And this could be
(07:17):
America's glorious revolution. And let's test your knowledge. You're nodding
off over there in the corner. I'm talking too much, General,
Tell all listeners, We've got to talk about this. This
is so important. Uh, glorious revolution. England's glorious revolution was
called glorious because.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Wasn't that when we.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
I'm a pimpy pimp picking on you because you don't
know where I'm going on on our shot. You just
show up, I do.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
I'm just here to get coffee from you.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
You're on the spot. Why is it called glorious?
Speaker 2 (07:49):
I always thought that.
Speaker 3 (07:50):
Wasn't that the revolution that brought William of Orange and
Mary from Normandy over?
Speaker 1 (07:57):
We're so smart. It was glorious because it was bloodless,
largely bloodless, what we might call without that, we might
call it a cold revolution. America is having its own
glorious revolution. The first revolution is the one we're taught
in school. Seventeen seventy six to maybe early nineteen hundreds,
(08:25):
and then the Second Revolution is when the status took
over and created this giant administrator state. Now we're moving
into another revolution to people are going to get it back.
Welcome back. I'm Attorney Brad Kaffel. That is the general
Attorney Eric Wilson General. We started the first segment talk
about the CEO being gunned down in midtown Manhattan and
(08:47):
how I think that could be a harbinger of things
to come, kind of more populism popping through in the
public sector. Of public sector there being the government, and
now in the private world, where you're going to have
folks like this who simply look at the greed, the
corporate greed. We're going to see what history tells us
about this and what we could reasonably expect before we
(09:11):
jump into all that. And that is why I think
it's so important that the American people are not afraid
of Donald Trump's picks. You're going to be told that
they're unqualified, they're this, They're that this is Trump's band
of brothers, and they're storming the beach. That's what they're doing.
(09:33):
They're storming the beach. The Imperial City, and it needs
to be done. Your takes so far on Pete? Hegseth.
What's your prediction on Pete.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
It's tough to say, but I think that it's important
to put it in context. Gone are the days, apparently,
when the chief executive was given some sort of a
nod towards picking his own people. I mean, we have
a bunch of Rhino Republicans like Murkowski out of Alaska
(10:11):
and Lippia Snow from Washington. They all signed off on
people like, uh, who is that guy that heads the UH?
I forget his name? Now for Biden, the guy that
has uh the border?
Speaker 1 (10:25):
Did you have your coffee today?
Speaker 2 (10:27):
No?
Speaker 3 (10:28):
His names are? It ends with an easy I think
I forget what ever. I've just drawing a black coacher's name.
But the point is they all signed off of my
orchis Yeah, they all they all just signed off on
him and and and there was all these Republicans, and
most Republicans did because they knew that Biden he's the president,
(10:48):
he was voted in. He has the ability, he has
the right to put his own people. And if we
don't think there's those people are very good, well he'll
just have to crash and burn with them.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
Well, that's the thing. If these people really thought.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
That people he Seth was going to be a disaster,
they would approve him in a heartbeat, and they would say,
let's watch Trump crash and burn.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
That's good.
Speaker 2 (11:08):
They know that he Seth is the real deal.
Speaker 1 (11:11):
This is this is the bandit brothers, and it is
absolutely storming the beaches. Uh. You have. I love the
fact that you have our our our aristocrats, our our
own nobles and lords, the people's nobles and the people lords.
When when Vivek and Elon walk through Congress right down
(11:33):
and they're in the bowels, I don't know if that
was the Executive building or actually any Congress. Elon's got
his son up on his uh, on his shoulder.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
I noticed that. Did you notice it?
Speaker 3 (11:42):
Even with his son up there, with this little mini
me up there, he's still not as tall as Baron Trump.
Speaker 2 (11:46):
But go ahead.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
It's just that imagery of seeing those two walk through there,
who have enough money. You're not gonna you're not going
to corrupt them. You're not going to bribe them into
doing anything.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
They bribe you.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
You don't brought them, and they are the genuine article
it took me a little while to touch and feel
here on Elon where he's coming from. There's a little
bit of jury still out on that. But Vivek. I've
met Vivek a handful of times and have had Vivek.
And it's Vec. He says, it's it's Vec.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
It's his rhymes of cake. He said that.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
It's vive Everyell's friends we all call him Vivek. Okay,
well him anyway, I've met him, I've had conversations with there.
He walks into he walks into the room, it changes,
he changes the he changes the energy in the room.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
He has a sort of an aura around him.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Yes, it's beyond an aura. I mean it's a it's
a it's different. And also when I met RFK or
JFK JR Okay, there was something differ there. Even I
doesn't I wasn't even sure who I was talking to. Uh,
And that's I could tell the story at different times.
(13:08):
I wasn't sure who I was talking was just two
of us. And it was a late fall Sunday afternoon,
and he had his dog at Hyanna's Yacht Club and
he was jogging. He'd driven in and he was going
to jog out. I was just trespassing and his dog
ran up to me and started talking to But you
could just I wasn't sure, but you could tell there
(13:28):
was a different energy. So we can't squander and Donald
Trump different energy. When this all comes together like this,
When and you know what's right in your bones, you
know what they're doing is in our country's best interest
and in the best trans interest of your household and
(13:49):
your children. You just know we can't squander this opportunity.
We need to make sure that any opposition by a
Republican by GOP senators. You had a great eye. Yeah,
you told me last night. General, Yeah, what do you
do with those hold out Republican senators?
Speaker 3 (14:04):
So you've got these six rhinos and they're all not
going to vote for certain of Trump's people like Haig Zeth,
and I think what Trump should do is to go
to their states on a regular basis and say we're
going to have some rallies here, and miss Murkowski, you
are invited to come as our special guest, and we're
(14:26):
going to talk great about you and all this sort
of stuff, and you're going to be in front of
nineteen thy twenty five thousand but one of the subjects
is going to be how.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
About we're going to raise some money for you?
Speaker 2 (14:35):
Yeah, one of the subjects.
Speaker 3 (14:37):
One of the subjects is going to be why I,
as president can't name my own people and have them
approved by you? And you got a party, yes, And
you can explain that to the party, these nineteen thousand people.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
This is why do you have a party? You follow
the party platform.
Speaker 3 (14:54):
And if she refuses to come to these things, then
you say, that's okay, We'll be here next week. And
the she doesn't come to that one, we'll be here
twice next week after that, and just keep going and
going and going, and then all that money that you
raise that could go to her sure, or it could
go to a primary.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
Part brilliant, brilliant. And I hope that that's a great
not that the Trump campaign needs any help.
Speaker 2 (15:16):
This is so simple.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
This is I'm gonna I'm gonna guess right now that
that's already being discussed. They probably already have their detailed protection,
detailed canvassing the areas of Maine. But we can't waste
I'm super excited for cash Ptel when I.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Especially after Cornyon said he's going to get in.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
And you and I met Cash. Yes, we had a
fundraiser for Bernie Marino and and uh and Cash came in,
and Vivek came in. My friend Vivek came in and
if I you know, I guess afterwards and texting somebodies,
I'm like, yeah, he could be if Trump wins, he
(15:58):
could be the next director. FBI, dude, that wasn't my idea.
I heard that that night. I mean, this goes way back,
like Cash Betel's always way back. And so I'm still
waiting for my pillow guy. What's he get? Does he
get nothing? I think he sells more pillows.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
No, but my pillow guy is the pillow contract is
the White House for the Lincoln.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
Pillo guy needs a place in there. And talking about
Cash Patel, we must the American people need to know
the truth. We can handle the truth. We don't need
the We don't need to know if we're running some
sort of super covert op in the next thirty six
(16:43):
hours someplace. We don't need to know that. The American
people did not need to know about the invasion Omaha Beach.
You know, we didn't need to They didn't all need
to be said months in advance. Outside of things like
that at we need to declassify a lot of stuff.
Speaker 3 (17:04):
We are an overclassification state, and this is a This
is the next important concept that you need to brace
yourself for.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
You're going to be scared into thinking that we're going
to wind up. Trump is going to wind up divulging
national security secrets that will undermine our national security. And
the phrase that I want to focus on is national security.
Speaker 2 (17:30):
And over classification use.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
Nation, because we have two. We've got the nation of
the American people who all voted for Donald Trump, and
we have this other side that doesn't want to really
be part of this nation. These people just will not
respect at all Donald Trump or anything he does. They'll
(17:56):
never consider him to be their moral leader or their
legitimate leader. This is going to be your deep state,
your shadow government, and your administrative state. They're going to
push back. We're already hearing about it. But we need
to declassify a lot, a lot of stuff. And why
(18:18):
that's such a big deal, We're going to share with
you after the break, give you some history. We're talking
about whether or not we are experiencing America's Glorious Revolution.
The Glorious Revolution of course from English history was the
(18:42):
Catholic king. That long story short basically out with the
Catholic monarchy in with a dual monarchy of William and
Mary into College after them an awesome place, and made
sure that parliament how a superior say to the king.
(19:06):
It became very much a parliament driven nation country, and
the parliament had members of Parliament who spoke on behalf
of all the people out in the fields, right true,
until those until the royal classes are exposed for taking
(19:29):
advantage of the labor of the working class, if you're
a Marxist, or exposed for just straight corruption.
Speaker 3 (19:35):
Or if you're on money pythons of search for the
Holy Grail. That one scene where the two peasants in
the Mud are giving all this Marxist attitude to the king,
to the to the king.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
But the the spread of ideas is what causes there
to be revolutions, and I and and revolution. Ideas can
be revolutionary, And I'll share two ideas that are exceptionally revolutionary.
Number one is the Gutenberg Press and how important the
(20:08):
Gutenberg Press is and how extremely important that is to today.
And then number two, the moral natural right to free speech.
They go hand in hand.
Speaker 3 (20:21):
Was it the Gutenberg Bible and the Caxton Press or
was it the Caxton Bible and the Gutenberg Press.
Speaker 1 (20:27):
I forget it was a Gutenberg press because he used
great and olive presses to because he was a goldsmith
and a metal worker. So he's the one that made
the press. I think, yes, But there's Gutenberg Bible, which
came off the Gutenberg Press, but it was invented.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
The press was invented by William Caxton as far as.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
Well, the Gutenberg Press is the first one that got
the name recognition because it printed the Bible. Yes, yeah, okay,
which is kind of a if you're going to print,
might as well print something people are reading.
Speaker 3 (21:01):
Which is an interesting side point that I saw ancident
Scalia was talking about freedom of the press, and we've
all been conditioned to believe the freedom of the press
means freedom for news media and journalists. It was for
anybody with a press who could push the things together
and make out written pamphlets such the Thomas Paine that
(21:22):
it was merely an extension of freedom of speech. It
wasn't for guys with you know, straw hats that said
press printing, press.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
For everybody and so as you're going to hear the
Trump's band of brothers unqualified, You're going to hear that
the declassification is going to threaten national security.
Speaker 2 (21:44):
WHOOPI Goldberg saying someone's unqualified.
Speaker 1 (21:48):
You're you're going to hear the Presco bananas because Tucker
goes to Russia to talk to the Foreign Secretary of.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Russia, going to where the news is.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
You have anarchists shooting big insurance guy. I mean, there
are things brewing that are revolutionary. And when you look
at the condition what we'd say in law school, the
conditions precedent the revolutions, you see some similarities. A big
(22:23):
one if we if we talk specifically about William and Mary,
we just brought up for six to seven hundred years
the English people lived basically, you're either a peasant or
you're part of nobility. You're the small group of the mobility.
(22:43):
And that was six hundred and fifty years. That's the
way it was. And that included you know, Scotland and
Ireland off and on for quite a bit of a
time until the Glorious Revolution, which was the expelling the
Catholic Church, the Catholic Church out of the lineage and
(23:07):
it was pushing back on the Catholic Church. Why the
Protestant Reformation, Why the Bible was translated from Latin to
German and English and printed on Gutenberg's printing press.
Speaker 2 (23:21):
So that became much more widely available.
Speaker 1 (23:24):
So one of the very first things that the exchange
of ideas on in the press brought you Protestantism. They
brought you the Protestant Reformation. It brought you enlightenment. By
(23:45):
the time it got up to the Rednecks in Scotland,
you have a whole ideology of I've been no need
to anybody but God. So the ideas that are trying
to be suppressed and the information platform the press that's
being disensored is extreme. They the power nerve centers know
(24:10):
that this is how revolutions start. Now, revolutions don't need
to be bloody. They can be glorious, which what we're
talking about here with England. But the real difference in
the glorious revolution was it was by the time the
one percenters saw the corruption, by the time that the own,
(24:32):
the lords and people with some influence and power, Once
they saw the corruption, that's when the real revolution started.
That's when it became a bloodless one. Does that make sense?
It does, right, And and so the question is going
to be, how did they how's it going to happen? Well,
(24:56):
if you look back at that glorious revolution, how did
they pull it off? How they do? The Protestant fat
cats had a secret meeting with a guy named William
of Orange. William. They suggested that William go pay a
visit to King James in England and inform him that
his services are no longer needed.
Speaker 3 (25:16):
And these people are all distant cousins anyway, in a
lot of way.
Speaker 1 (25:18):
Which there's seven, it's it's I had this part of
my research. I did see this the seven Nobleman's secret Letter,
the Immortal Seven, and they secretly invited William of Orange
to invade England. They wrote it an invisible ink made
from orange juice. They smuggled it to William of Orange
in the barrel of a gun. So mister Orange and
(25:39):
his hand selected nobles and band of brothers they showed
up that King James Castle. I'm like, dude, your gig's up.
You've been here for fifty years to fat complete and
your hole. This whole cism, how it's been done for
(26:01):
the last six seven hundred years done over. And it
did help that William had an invasion fleet of about
five hundred ships, larger than the Spanish Harmana. But no bullets. Well,
I don't know, bullets may get no no no reported blood.
King James literally got on Air Force one and flew
(26:24):
to France and he lived under the protection of Louis
the fourteenth. And then in its place William and Mary
monarchs co monarchs, parliamentary supremacy. Monarch can't govern without the
parliament's consent. The parliament is representative of the people. How
do we make sure the representatives of the people don't
(26:46):
turn on us. We're going to have the Bill of Rights.
And then then he got up to the rednecks, crazy
guys up in Scotland like John Locke, and they're like, hey,
we can do this all over the place.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
What do you have about our own ideas?
Speaker 1 (27:05):
How about I mean, seriously, so this is why we
cannot have We have to have people on the outside
on the inside, and we have to back them period
to general. We're really concerned about the American people should
(27:26):
absolutely be extremely concerned about lack of transparency over classification.
The obvious now indisputable efforts by the federal government and
state government to censor, either using their regulatory agencies or
their job owning their their proxy. Push to the internet
(27:48):
providers and social media companies.
Speaker 3 (27:50):
You've got a nice podcast here, be ashamed of something
happened to it.
Speaker 1 (27:55):
So what is it about speech that the powers that
be don't like?
Speaker 2 (27:59):
Will?
Speaker 1 (27:59):
Free speech is about getting closer to the truth.
Speaker 3 (28:02):
And it also provides for a glorious revolution. It's when
people can't speak anymore, that's when they pick up the
swords and the guns.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Look how long it took. Look how long it took
men to live under the thumb of other men. And
then look at the invention of the printing press and
the translation of the Bible out of Latin and English
and German. And look what happened in the immediate one
hundred years after that you have bills of rights, not
(28:35):
just the the United States didn't comfort one hundred and
fifty years later, you have bills of rights in Europe,
Western Europe. You have nobles and lords knocking on the
castle door of their king and going, hey, your corruption
is now affecting my corruption.
Speaker 3 (28:54):
Well, and look also at how quickly technology advanced after
that too, because now technolog was not the purview of
some very very minor group of people, very very small
group of people who could read. Now everybody was reading.
Now even the lowest people can be genius.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
That's how they kept at a fiefdom, so that you
have a kingdom, and inside the kingdom you've got the fiefdoms.
And they're all these fiefs. The we, the federal government,
the deep state, the National Security Apport, the deep state,
the shadow government UH, and the administrative state are three
fiefdoms amongst this giant American kingdom. And the system was
(29:36):
set up in Europe where you were on a centralized
you were on the you were if you were in
centralized governance, you were in the family. You were there
by birth or marriage, or you you paid enough or
did something in war to get an honorific title, right,
(29:58):
and it became an got you got brought in and
all that broad became a made man.
Speaker 3 (30:03):
But all that purchased for you was a castle without
indoor plumbing or air conditioning.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Nowadays you have to do some really good you have
to take down France to get the air conditioning. Yes,
but the fiefdom works that way the kingdom is allowed
to the king is allowed to stay, the king and
his royal court as long as he allows the fiefdoms
to run around and do their thing, and the fiefdoms
it's like pyramid, right, And then you have the thiefs
(30:33):
freudy and slip the thiefs, I mean the thiefs who
are loyal nobles, knights or lords. And you can certainly
you have these same people at the federal dollar federal
trough here. Uh. And then in return for being allowed
(30:55):
to to live, you can be a peasant and work
the land.
Speaker 3 (31:00):
Right and be relatively protected from invaders.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
But at the same time.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
But when there are invaders, that's your boys were taking right,
And you're the ones that are paying in to the system,
and we're telling you, yeah, you get representation, your voice
will be heard. We have a parliament now, or maybe
pre parliament, it really wasn't and eventually the people figured
out their voice hasn't been listened to. You've been pretending
(31:26):
to listen to us. Enter the minority American population, all right,
So we have eight hundred years of European history from
basically ten sixty six to the eighteen hundreds, where you
had kingdoms England, Spain, Scandinavia or Holy Roman Empire. These
(31:47):
are where the original settlers, the original founders of America
came from these kingdoms and insite fiefdoms. And something remarkable,
how and a man with an idea revolutionized the world forever.
And that was a German young man named uh last
(32:09):
name Gutenberg. What was Johann? Aren't they all Johann?
Speaker 2 (32:12):
I'm sure they were all Johann.
Speaker 1 (32:15):
And he translated the Bible and printed mass He printed
a translated Bible, and that information got out to the masses,
and people began to question the legitimacy of the Catholic Church,
and that led to the Protestant religious Reformation, and then
(32:38):
other ideas in the in the political sphere are very
very dangerous because if you have access to the information,
if you impede the literacy of your of your population,
if you censor when a literate person speaks the truth,
that's how you stay in power.
Speaker 3 (32:56):
Well, it's got an analogy here to what Henry Ford
did with the automobile. It became so cheap that everybody
could own one, and that revolutionized the way we do
trade and made millions and millions of people be able
to afford automobiles.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
So this was the the mass marketing. You talk mass
marketing of cheap vehicles, we're now talking about the mass.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
Not necessarily cheap vehicles.
Speaker 3 (33:19):
I mean, Chess Run sells inexpensive vehicles, but they are
very high quality, absolutely a great place to shop for
your car.
Speaker 1 (33:28):
God bless the Gill family. The the ideas that were
unleashed when a man when when a man's idea didn't
just die with his family and his hovel, but it
was actually able to be pressed, preserved, preserved parts from paper, saved,
reviewed and built up upon, distributed upon, distributed to many people,
(33:52):
and then built upon like code. You had the renaissance,
and it was a renaissance of science, and it was
a renaissance of culture and philosophy. And it did it
bring back a renaissance? What was the renaissance of and philosophy?
(34:12):
Critical thinking? Critical thinking? Who was the original critical thinker? Socrates?
What happened to Socrates?
Speaker 2 (34:26):
He said, I drank?
Speaker 1 (34:27):
What what did? Socrates is famous for many things, but
the two biggies are critical thinking and teaching the youth
critical thinking, And for that Socrates was had a trial
(34:47):
And but he'd lost, he admitted what he was doing,
he lost, and he chose his form of death by
drinking himlock. So this is that's ideas. If you had
if you had a printing press back when Socrates was there,
I mean, who knows where we would be. We probably
would be living on Mars when we go. When we
(35:13):
let me jump back real quick to the Protestant Reformation.
What were the events leading up to that. Well, the
Church had maintained control over the spiritual and intellectual life
in Europe, and that was particularly threatened by the printing
press because the church and the clergy relied on the
Latin Bible that only a small trained meaning taught to
(35:38):
read and think and Latin or Latin. But when William
Tyndale translated the Bible into English and Martin Luther translated
it into German, and then they popped it on Gutenberg's oil,
(36:01):
his grape and olive press with typeset lettering, mass produce
and anonymously, no handwriting needed. And what did Martin Luther share?
Because hey, guys, are the church is heavily involved in
politics and wealth accumulation. They're neglecting it that it's mission,
(36:26):
which is spiritual mission the clergy. They're living lavish lifestyles.
They're making money on the side selling indulgences. You're Catholic,
I am, you know what those are, certainly, and the
church has come off its biblical foundation. Martin Luther wanted
(36:48):
to drain the swamp. So what did he do? Well,
William of Orange was gone, so he couldn't go talk
to William Warrene. What did he do? He just got
his band of brothers and and started their own gig,
started their own party, started their own faction and Protestantism,
(37:14):
and it made its way all the way to Scotland.
And that's where the enlightened, stubborn Scotch irishmen took the
idea of flipped the finger at that the man in
power to every redneck in Appalachia. And that's where we have.
This is this spirit of liberty, but it requires ideas
(37:35):
not to be stymied and to press, not to censor
Speaker 3 (37:43):
H