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November 8, 2025 132 mins
On this episode of BZ's Berserk Bobcat Saloon Radio Show: POLITICS! Yes, color yourself shocked -- BZ will be talking about politics! Plus: POTENTIAL GUESTS! Who wouldn't want a show with a hint of guests, an inference, a suggestion, an implication, an insinuation of guests? PLUS: • Talking! • Promos! • Intro Songs! • People using mics! AND: • Much more non-specific stuff! 🎙️ New to streaming or looking to level up? Check out StreamYard and get $10 discount! 😍 https://streamyard.com/pal/d/57680291...



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“The speech is free — the booze is not.”
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
It's Jim Pembriman. Talk to him. What's the problem, Officer, Well,
I'm investigating the death of Frederica Bimmel.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Bill Randalls six point fifty, Dorothy s ma'am, the Axle,
Wye and Peppermint Endurance Company in Bashful Johnny c. Home
of the Grand Old Conglomeration, Fanny Hill University, and the
Bathtub of the South. It's seven point thirty.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
You're listening to Late nine Radio on the SHR Media
Network cushion. There will be mature themes explored and potentially
adult language used. If Conservatorian words, phrases, certain concepts or
rhetoric offends you, tune out now.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
I have come here to chew bubble gum and kick
asks them all out of bubble.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.
We didn't pass it on to our children in the bloodstream.

Speaker 6 (02:35):
The only way they can inherit the freedom.

Speaker 5 (02:36):
We have known is if we fight for it, protect it,
defend it, and then hand it to them with the.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
Well taught lessons of how.

Speaker 5 (02:44):
They in their lifetime must do the same. And if
you and I don't do this, then you and I
may well spend our sunset years telling our children and
our children's children what it once was like in America
when men were free.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
I'm climbing through the keyhouse, got them back, left the stars,
ain't google this and pushing them back from the sunhon
to the gearhoa's.

Speaker 7 (03:27):
Just spitting their road constitutions.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
My compass live.

Speaker 8 (03:30):
It is big gods creaking shadows on the land. Fans
with the schemes trying to bind.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
On my hands.

Speaker 9 (03:37):
But I'm the shirtfer gotten through the storm.

Speaker 8 (03:40):
Wn't do your freedoms and more they spin it's hairs.

Speaker 10 (03:44):
Better see through the haze me maggots lost in the maze.

Speaker 3 (03:48):
I'm calling it out.

Speaker 11 (03:49):
Don't fearing my soul.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
This Patriots firing, You're losing control.

Speaker 8 (03:54):
Bots over and shamper leading the vine, touching.

Speaker 12 (03:57):
The darker and better in the.

Speaker 8 (03:59):
Nuts, the true who battle of the game.

Speaker 10 (04:02):
Sure bulls, come and remember my name.

Speaker 8 (04:17):
This jode is twisted, trying to steal our rights, but
unlocked and by gotta been sights from Change six to
the border of the selling a southtain.

Speaker 11 (04:25):
I'm screaming from the mountain.

Speaker 9 (04:26):
Out they b the fly stars and stretch forever under
God's open sky.

Speaker 10 (04:33):
Nor globullus change is gonna change this land.

Speaker 9 (04:37):
The sheriff bollet the truth and they.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
Pushed their in the bottom bringing the ball.

Speaker 7 (04:42):
They promise it's empty.

Speaker 9 (04:43):
They're heart sized, Colt. You can't bleeding the part I'm
fighting for the.

Speaker 8 (04:48):
People with the warriors shirt, the charging, the burning, staying
for the truthful battle.

Speaker 13 (04:58):
The games.

Speaker 6 (05:00):
Come and remember my dad.

Speaker 10 (05:13):
The storms walked the line forty one years badge on
the grind.

Speaker 9 (05:18):
Now I'm the day, my voice like a blade cutting
through the.

Speaker 7 (05:22):
Lines that the trade has made hurricanes rage.

Speaker 8 (05:25):
Both standing tall sheriffs and the Consort for sentence are
in the car.

Speaker 9 (05:33):
Taking America.

Speaker 8 (05:37):
Sumb this static voice, conservative of Freedom's battle ground, assert Bobcat.

Speaker 1 (06:08):
For God and country.

Speaker 3 (06:09):
This fot is real.

Speaker 1 (06:11):
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, children of all ages,
Welcome to Bez's Berserk Bobcat Saloon, Berserk Bobcats Sloon Radio Show,
where I am broadcasting right this very microsecond from North
Idaho in an actual free state as opposed to California
always fell over a k. I got here in twenty
twenty one. Best damn thing I ever did. I happen

(06:35):
to be your conservative, sure, but guiding you through the
mailstream of demarrat leftist and globalist lies, chaos to seat
and betrayal and pre Okay, I can apparently this week
and a part of last week. I can never do
the opener without screwing it up in some fashion. So

(06:56):
you know, at least put something in the positive column.
For me, at least I'm consistent. What you're about to
hear for the next two hours or so consists of
my opinion, in my opinion only in those of my guests, plural,
and I do have guests, and I want to let
everybody know that I'm fundamentally changing America, one one leftist

(07:17):
diaper at a time, ensuring that we don't water our drinks,
just like we don't water our conversations. We are still
serving lad we are still serving stiff drinks in the saloon.
Almost sounded a little bit robotic there, speaking of robots.
Oh you guys, you guys, you little twizzlers. You. We're

(07:40):
talking about facts, history, logic, rationality, proportion, clarity, context, tradition,
and common sense for normal people. And the things we
talk about include politics, religion, crime, culture, race, sex, economic science, law, war, peace.
We talk about it all right here at the saloon
with the speeches for you, but the boos is not.

(08:02):
I am streaming a whole bunch of different places right now.
Let me see if I can put this up there
right now, Look from left to right speaker, YouTube, Apple, Podcast,
rumble X, Twitch, k l R and Facebook and k
l r N and by the way, k l r N.
Why did you guys get the feeling that I'm talking

(08:24):
about kl RN? And did you get the feeling that
I'm talking about kl RN? And did you get the
feeling that somebody is here from klrnuh Rick, Welcome to you.

Speaker 6 (08:35):
Sir, sir and sir well, well, hello, good evening, sir,
how are you?

Speaker 1 (08:40):
And folks? I saw it in chat on you guys
what you wrote when I was talking about sir. You
guys spelled a C you are. That's just wrong on
its face. Don't do that to me, Don't do that
to him, Don't do that to anybody. Wait, let's go
back up up here. Let's go back up.

Speaker 14 (09:01):
Who do we have?

Speaker 1 (09:02):
We have unpleasant blind guy, We in fact have Rick Robinson,
We have the Phantom. We have Zelda Gabriel, sister of Gabriel,
the Angel is what I heard Cosmic Bard, leader of
the Alpha Century Science and Technology Division, is here. You
can safely start now.

Speaker 6 (09:19):
Thanks ever so kindly, everyone covering your six is the
alien is in the jet.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
That's what I make sure six and especially if you
have the old god what were those called, the things
with the flap, the flappy jammys, b the one pieces
the hell yes, make sure the piece is covered there too.
Andrew Young is in here as well, and MRM mission

(09:44):
ready men, welcome to MRM, who has his own show.
Zelda says bz's rocking out too. Heard someone calling amblams.

Speaker 6 (09:54):
Okay, even that's that's not your fault, that's hers. When
she sees somebody bouncing like that, she assumes they're twitching
like she does.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
So that's okay. Well, what people don't know when I
have guests is that as they appear before the show,
I am customarily playing some kind of rock music, be
it King Crimson or Asia or gentle Giant. In this case,
it happened to be thunderstruck by ac DC, so a

(10:24):
gentleman won right here, and I happened we happen to
be rocking out on that and we're having a great time.
So allegedly Sean is going to be here when he
gets in and perhaps earl mission readymen looks, oh jeez,

(10:45):
look we have some more comments. Rick sir, oh oh oh,
Rick comments Rick, what the hell, mister, what the hell?
Good god?

Speaker 6 (11:00):
Well, I mean they were they were They were technically
calling me a cur which is also acceptable.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
Oh wait wait wait, but wait this just in do
do do do do do do do do do do
do do. Okay, I don't know if that's true, but
but there it is right there.

Speaker 14 (11:15):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
The other thing I want to put up if I
can right now, is Okay, there was controversy, and I'm
telling you controversy with an adversi before the show even began,
and it went down here and people, if I'm not mistaken,
people were making fun of the elderly. So okay, I

(11:37):
put this up as a promo for the show, and
I went into great depth as to how I had
to create that. Had well okay, it's the only way
that I was able to create that. So folks took
that and they thought it was funny. Zelda right here says,
I like that. You just stuck a picture of Rick
onto a picture of you and Sean without like any

(12:00):
photoshop or anything, and I said something similar to photoshop.
Oh you give me way, way, way, way too much credit.
And then there was this, well, Rick, explain where this
came from? Comma, sir, Well, so.

Speaker 6 (12:16):
What it happened was because you know, Zelda's one of
those people that once she starts talking about something, you
just kind of got to take care of it. Otherwise
she just keeps talking about it.

Speaker 14 (12:25):
So uh yeah, but so so so.

Speaker 6 (12:28):
What I did was, and it's it's a little grain
near than I wanted, But I went into Groc and
I originally tried to have Grog redo the entire image,
but the only thing you could get right was the
blending of the pictures together. So I basically took the
original image, put it into a meme generator, took the
part that Groc fixed with the picture, and then overlaid
them and shrink to fit. Which is why it's kind
of weird on there, because I didn't realize the edges

(12:50):
were still weird until I fixed it like the fourth time.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
So is it just me or does it seem that
Groc gave you a beard?

Speaker 6 (12:59):
I mean I have a beard, sir, you do have one?

Speaker 1 (13:03):
But it seems as though they made you harrier. And then,
of course Zelda says later on snort laugh poor Beezy
and Sean. I'm sure she means that anyway, Thanks to
everybody for being here. There's fifty eight people live watching
right now at this very moment in time. See, Sean

(13:24):
is going to miss the cool stuff. Let me pull
this back because you know, if you're late, Shamy.

Speaker 6 (13:32):
In Shawn's defense, I think he's fighting off a gypsy
curse lately.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
Oh oh oh, okay, thanks for opening that door, Rick,
because oddly enough, I don't know should I should we
talk behind his back or should we go Jacques use
in flush in front of his face? Because that's almost

(13:58):
not as much fun that's doing that. Well, he's gonna
be my My only rule is are you going.

Speaker 6 (14:04):
To say if he were here? Would you say it
to his face? Because as long as the answer to
that is yes, you're free to say whatever you'd like
and you can always repeat it later.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Okay, well let me see if I can I can
go someplace right there. See this this screed, you can't
read it because it's really really small. But this creed
had something to do with with sean man. I was
going to bring that up tonight, but I'm not gonna
let him read it. Oh no, no, I'm gonna read.

Speaker 15 (14:29):
Walk into pharmacy, open up the pharmacy. This is lady
standing there with an arms cross. She goes, you work here?
I said, no, I'm just back here stealing some How
can I help you? What an attitude?

Speaker 16 (14:45):
She's like, who you is?

Speaker 15 (14:49):
But I had to be professional because I'm a pharmacist.
So I said, ma'am, I is the pharmacist.

Speaker 12 (14:57):
How can I help you?

Speaker 6 (14:59):
I'm here to pick up my subscription.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Don't tell me we haven't heard that.

Speaker 15 (15:08):
I said, so whis magazine? She's like, I don't want
no magazine. I want my medicine. I said, oh, prescription.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
She was like, same thing.

Speaker 6 (15:29):
I was like, nah, well a.

Speaker 15 (15:34):
Yeah, I said, ma'am, what's your date of birth? Why
so I could plan your birthday party?

Speaker 3 (15:44):
What do you mean why.

Speaker 9 (15:47):
I'm trying to find your prescription?

Speaker 15 (15:49):
When's your birthday?

Speaker 1 (15:50):
In a couple of weeks, they live amongst us.

Speaker 6 (15:59):
I said, ma'am, forget it. What's your name?

Speaker 15 (16:01):
She's like te Quasa Brown. I said, spell it like
the color, ma'am, I have a doctor degree. I know
how to spell brown. How do you spell the quasa?

(16:23):
She's like, capital T lower a dash capital q U
s h I A. I'm taking to myself. Did she
give me her name or her wi FI password? I said, okay, ma'am,
I looked, I can't find anything. Are you sure they
sent it here? She's like, well, the doctor sent it
to CBS, but this was closer.

Speaker 14 (16:46):
Okay. I know people like that.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
I'm sure you know people like that. We know people
like that.

Speaker 6 (16:52):
OMG. Yeah, well, first things first, as somebody that's done
stand up now, granted I've never done it professionally. I've
only done an open mic now a couple of times.
But he missed some little hanging fruit because when when
she when he said, when she said, what's your birth date?
And he's like, why because I'm trying to find your
damn subscription?

Speaker 1 (17:12):
Perfect right there? And speaking of right there, look who
is right there?

Speaker 14 (17:18):
Someone who had to be right here?

Speaker 1 (17:20):
You're right there?

Speaker 14 (17:21):
It might as well be me, it.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
Could be you. It will welcome. Did Sean write another
book posing as a Twitter post?

Speaker 6 (17:30):
Doesn't he usually about twice a month?

Speaker 1 (17:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 14 (17:32):
Yeah, I'm good for a long one here and there
who wouldn't.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Well and who wouldn't want to This is again wonderful. Oh,
come on, thanksait, here we go.

Speaker 11 (17:43):
He's made a lot of positive statements about the good
things Hitler has done in the past.

Speaker 9 (17:51):
That's pretty big news. That's not news. Come on, it's
out there. Look God, Trump uh praises Hitler. Praise is Hitler.
And then we'll do what snoopes just well, you can
do in real time Hitler. Hatch we do that one?

Speaker 12 (18:12):
He did that? Yeah, he did.

Speaker 9 (18:14):
He did some good things. Which one do you want?
Either one Hitler did?

Speaker 6 (18:19):
Hello, chick in the bikini?

Speaker 9 (18:23):
What do we got?

Speaker 17 (18:23):
Viral posts claimed the former president reportedly praise the Nazi leader.

Speaker 9 (18:29):
Unproven, right, unproven. We'll look at the other one. Okay, okay,
look at the other one.

Speaker 14 (18:35):
I don't like the answer you gave, so I'm gonna
shot the other one.

Speaker 9 (18:39):
Generals that Hitler had, that's a big one. People that
support him, not the democracy, not the.

Speaker 14 (18:44):
Country, you know.

Speaker 1 (18:45):
Can you stop there for a second, Oh God, yes, please.

Speaker 14 (18:49):
So one of the things that I learned as a
parent is that children will when they don't like your answer, parents,
they to the other parent to get the answer. That
they want. They also have this in school with a
teacher shop. They'll ask the teacher one thing, the teacher
will say no, so they'll go ask the teacher again.

(19:11):
The teacher will say no. And it's called teacher shopping
or mentor shopping. That is exactly what that guy did. Oh,
I don't like that answer, So keep going until I
hopefully you find one that I like and fits my narrative.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
And so it was, let's continue what I got about
thirty seconds.

Speaker 9 (19:34):
I'm this in a video of him saying this.

Speaker 14 (19:36):
Do you think I imagine?

Speaker 12 (19:38):
I mean, I've seen.

Speaker 9 (19:39):
A lot of stuff that would say a lot of
people I think.

Speaker 12 (19:43):
I don't think.

Speaker 18 (19:43):
So you don't think some people that love Trump don't
anything that's negative about Trump.

Speaker 12 (19:47):
They don't believe it.

Speaker 9 (19:49):
And uh, okay, this one's unproven as well.

Speaker 19 (19:53):
All right, all right, well.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
Now what do I do? So welcome, Welcome everybody, one
and all. There's a lot of people in chat. I'm
the eternal fat guy. Over here. We have a rowdy
Rick and also we have Sean Lewis. Now Roddy Rick
back here is from KLRN. There's Sean Lewis. He's from

(20:23):
Edge of liberty, rowdy. Rick has a lot of shows,
Sean has one rock. Rick has a whole bunch of shows.
I'm busy and thanks for being here. A ton of
people in chat. As I said, now, we were discussing
before you got here, behind your back, which is probably
why your ears were burning. I want to read this,

(20:46):
Oh god. I don't know if if I even dare
put it up on the screen, but I figure it's
fair game because hey, you know, I could have you
read it, Sean, or I could read it. So it
has it's really small, there's a lot of it.

Speaker 14 (21:07):
Oh god, the bazillion typos in it.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
Oh that's okay. I can read, so I think Sean
would prefer. But you know I do this. I'm laughing
with Sean. I'm not laughing at Sean or anyone else,
because guaranteed all of you, me, you, everyone else, we

(21:32):
had a motherfucker of a day just like this the
day before or last week or over the weekend. And
here it goes Sean. Oh, by the way, follow Sean
at two against Tyranny on X. This will be quick
and easy. The title of my biography and the sentence
that doom is me always have a laugh on me.
So my last two weeks no. Three to five years

(21:55):
has been a dumpster fire of sorts. But I'm trying
to make the best of it.

Speaker 12 (21:59):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
My truck has one hundred and forty one thousand for mileage,
and I've done almost all the service and oil changes
on it. Except for a few large items under warranty
oil changes. I've done probably twenty five or thirty that
were done. I also do the coil pas, plugs, rear
deaft breaks, rotors, and shocks. I found out that my
driver left my drive left rear bearing is gone, and

(22:22):
that's the word that it makes. And I just don't
have the resources to do it myself, so I scheduled
it for tomorrow.

Speaker 14 (22:28):
Now, if you're going to read the typos, could you
at least change it to what I was supposed to say,
because that was the driver's side, like career.

Speaker 1 (22:34):
Okay, Well, sorry, damn it, Jim.

Speaker 14 (22:37):
Remember I was typing in anger.

Speaker 1 (22:39):
Yeah, well that's true. But trust me, however, when I
say this, you don't want me in your head.

Speaker 14 (22:44):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
So sometimes anticipating some of this stuff is going to
be a little bit difficult. Okay, So today I was
going to do the oil filters and service, as well
as replace the color on my gas frillerneck. It's old plastic,
it's cracked. No problem for screws, three star tips, easy pas,
narrative voice. But it would not be so, not at all,

(23:07):
not at all. So I start with the plastic collar
of the filler neck. The forest crew as they're supposed
to be, were pop rivets. Well why because somebody at
RAM Engineering hates me. Okay, not big no biggie, can't
drill the rivets in place. I'll pop the neck off
and drill them out. Except there's e vent tube some

(23:27):
EPA filter electrical for the filter in those lovely plastic
clips that snap when you touch them. Been there, done that,
got the broken clips myself. So I decided to pull
it down and leave it attached, drill it in place,
muck around with all the other stuff. These rivets are
smaller than the holes in the plastic from the old
neck crumbles or they're floating. Stop let me ask this.
Weren't you afraid of any of that crap falling back

(23:48):
into the gas tank? For example, I was.

Speaker 14 (23:51):
Under the truck and I had pulled the whole gas
tank though gas neck filled down. So actually it was
positioned just fine for that because it was all coming
onto my face, including the hot metal bits that I
drolled out later.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Okay, I was afraid that was I was thinking, oh geez,
wait a minute, this is gonna be bad because you
know it's only gas petroleum. Okay, Vice grips the hole
them my drill mount and realize I don't have ribbets
small enough for the holes. I now can't drive because
my fuel neck is dangling. Talk to my buddy. He
has a small set and can drop them off later.
Cool took forty minutes instead of fifteen. But okay, I

(24:28):
should have stopped when I broke even so I get
to the oil change, put the truck on ramps. Set
up hole. You went all in on this, mister. Set
the truck on ramps. Oh yeah, I have.

Speaker 14 (24:38):
I have the hole setup for it. I've done it
so many times.

Speaker 1 (24:41):
Holy crap. This is great. Set up cardboard because the
filter is the worst place and it leads everywhere down
the frame and misses the catch. Can put the catch
can down, pop the dream hole for it. Angle it
good to go. Get the filter, ratchet and a gallon
plastic zip lock to try and catch some of the
oil from the filter and the filter itself. Then the
shit hit the van. I cracked the oil drain plug

(25:03):
and the flow drag the catch can drain plug into
plays closing the drain, oil starts backing up. I had
no idea. I was adjusting the angle for the flow,
and suddenly there is oil overflowing at least one to
three quarts, has Matt Security Award all over the cardboard

(25:24):
and now the driveway. I use my finger to plug
the hole to stop the flow. I fumbled with the
other hand to clear the obstruction in the catch can
and get to the drain. All the while I'm now
laying in the drained oil. Insert curse words at a
volume and frequency of a crazy person on crank who
can't get to their imaginary friend to stop yelling at them.
I'm losing my shit now. Oil is everywhere. Three rags.

(25:47):
Three rags, which is all I ever need, all I
own and all I had left, pathetically trying to sop
up my own exon Valdize moment. Nice nice analogy.

Speaker 14 (25:57):
I like that.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
Appreciate it. I literally had it. Well, it is what
it is, breath and just finished the drain so that
I could do the filter. Now my rags are soaking
in oil, so my hands are slippery, and I bust
a knuckle trying to unscrew it. I finally crack the
seal and get the back in place to catch the
oil spin it off into the bag. Except because RAM
designers hate me, I can't really see in and I'm

(26:20):
going by feel like the feel of the oil dripping
on my head. The bag caught something and got a hole.
That hole was now funnel in the head in my
head of old oil. Cue the screaming of a wild
American gorilla driveway mechanic. But I get the filter in
the catch can looks like a bad gory horror movie
except substitute oil for blood under the truck, and I'm

(26:40):
ready to take a sledgehammer to it all. I slide
out and gather my tools. I get the garbage bag can,
and I do it all I can to minimize the dripping,
which is now like Saddam Hussein invaded and is attacking
my oiled fields as retaliation in the best I can. So,
folks have The only reason I say that is because

(27:01):
it's in the public domain, and so I figure. Okay,
if if Sean can write about that, well I can
write about that too, and I can point it out.
But like I say, I'm not laughing at anybody.

Speaker 14 (27:12):
It is like, fuck me.

Speaker 1 (27:14):
Everybody has had a day like that. Nothing can go easy,
nothing is simple. Everything is complicated, as in what the hell?

Speaker 14 (27:26):
And you didn't even read the second part where I fell?

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Oh oh wait, wait, you're right, there's my knife.

Speaker 6 (27:36):
I feel I feel like we're in an infomercial because
we've now hit the But wait.

Speaker 1 (27:39):
There is more. I'd forgotten about that. I didn't see it,
So let's put that up on the stage. Because I
talked about two minutes before the bottom of the hour break.
I think I can rip this bad boy off in
about two minutes. So part two, that's what she said,
That's what I So. Now I have to fill the oil,
get my funnel, get my six point nine wink, it's

(28:00):
of oil.

Speaker 14 (28:01):
Ready.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
I go to stand on my stool because it's on
ramps and apparently I have oil on my souls or
some of it dripped while I was moving the boxes
covered in oil, and I shoot off of it.

Speaker 12 (28:13):
What happened?

Speaker 14 (28:16):
Oh? I landed? I landed much like have you ever
seen a gazelle after it gets hit by a or
after a deer after it gets hit by a semi truck,
And it kind of like helicopters before it hits the ground.
Because when you get to sixty five two seventy in
motion and then you take out the footing of said motion,

(28:40):
the objects in motion tend to stay in motion, right,
Bad objects and motions tend to stay in more motion.
And that is what I did.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
So and listen, I've been there. I've knocked myself out
a couple of times I have to do. And it's
when you say, okay, I'm on the ground. Systems check, okay,
oh yeah, Have I done a systems check before? Yes?

Speaker 20 (29:07):
I have.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
Welcome to Earle. By the way, biggy E Jackson, thank
you for being here. Earl just popped in. So it's
like systems check and a heightened state of anger. I
take the five part log. I use my knife to
add an airbent for smooth A smooth. Poor. My knife
proceeds to break try trying to cut the plast eight.
Fuck it, we'll do it live. So I get out poor,

(29:32):
So get all six point nine into the truck. I
go in and try to wash the best I can.
And let me guess you had to trudge as much
crap as humanly possible into your apartment.

Speaker 14 (29:43):
Yeah, my shoes kicked off at the door. I took
off my shirt at the door. I left it there
because I wanted to at least get as cleaned up
as possible before I went back and finished. But my
hands everything was just covered.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
Levels are good. Now I have to get the driveway
washing de greaser scrub the driveway. I'm wearing a huge
fucking happy face right now. Everything is better, right, So
I get it all cleaned and sorted, put away all
the tools I won't need, and I go to do
the air filter for clips four. They always stay on
the air box, except today one decides stuff fuck off

(30:15):
and launch somewhere into the engine bay. I'm sorry, I'm
not laughing at you. I swapped the filter. I'm playing
hide and seek with the clip all over the editing bay,
all over the engine bay. It's only one point one
by two point five inches and black, like everything else

(30:36):
in the engine bay, easy to find. So I get down.
I shove myself under the truck again. Find it fifteen
minutes later. Now I got to walk because my gas
intake is still dangling to the hardware store for a
speedy dry and driveway wash. Did I remember to grab
a small set of rivets? Nope, no, no, no, So

(30:58):
I got home. I'm laughing, but like a bad guy
in a superhero movie, he's about to reveal himself for
the first time, nice and maniacal like now, I'm just
like laughing because what else can you do? Hopefully that
that's all my bad luck for right now.

Speaker 6 (31:12):
And he himself right there.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
Oh yeah, And to cap it off, he said something
similar to, oh, well, no problem, this won't take long.

Speaker 16 (31:23):
Conservative media done right. You're listening to the shr media
network mission log intrigues. I mean, let's face it, who's
even counting anymore? A Lost wonder is officially off course
chasing road rocket launches, fringe science, and things that probably

(31:44):
violate causality if it burns fuel, ends time, or make
scientists very uncomfortable. Yeah, I'm probably gonna talk about it
every other Sunday on KLRN Radio A Lost Wonderer because
space doesn't come with a roadmap, and honestly I wouldn't
follow if it did.

Speaker 17 (32:05):
Hello, I'm Matt A student at Hillsdale College. Here is
Hillsdale President Larry arn on the continuing relevance of the Constitution.

Speaker 11 (32:12):
Many argue today that the Constitution is outdated because it
addresses problems peculiar to the eighteenth century. Some parts of
the Constitution do read rather quaintly. Consider the adjunction it
gives titles of nobility in Article one, Section nine of
the Constitution, but is not so outdated. The purpose of
the injunction is to prevent the government granting special privileges

(32:33):
to some for partisan reasons. This strikes at the heart
of the rule of law. The cony capitalism so common
today is a place where the government bestows favors and
tax dollars on some businesses to give them a leg
up over others. This is exactly the kind of thing
the Constitution was meant to prohibit. The Constitution is not
so outdated, after all.

Speaker 17 (32:52):
This Constitution Minute was brought to you by Hillsdale College.
To join the national conversation on the Constitution, go to
constant who should minute dot com?

Speaker 1 (33:03):
Hey, fellas, are you mission ready?

Speaker 13 (33:06):
You need to check out Mission ready men via Earl
Biggie Jackson On Tuesdays and Thursdays nine am Pacific, eleven
am Central and noon Eastern. It's a show that equips
you to navigate our society's challenges from a Biblical perspective
with courage and conviction. Students of Mission Ready Men, as
we examine our culture through the prism of Biblical troops,

(33:28):
teachings and how to apply them in our daily lives.
Prepare to step out, stand out, and step into your
role as a man as ordained by God. That's Mission
Ready Men, hosted by Earl Jackson on the shr Media
Network and get Mission Ready.

Speaker 21 (33:49):
Want to make an immediate difference in the life of
a critically ill child. You have the ability to do
that right now. Make a donation to dream Makers for Life,
the organ is that restores dreams to seriously ill children
and their families. You can sponsor a dream back for
a child which contains a clear PBC backpack, a dry

(34:10):
erase board, adventure coloring book, a journal, and dry race
markers to inspire a critically ill child to envision a
future adventure and hope. Want to become a dream Maker
for life yourself, go to dreamflife dot org. That's dream
for Life dot org. Help a child help a family.
There is always hope.

Speaker 7 (34:32):
You're listening to to the s HL Media Network.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
And I'm back, I'm bus Look, there are four people here.
Let me go through everyone first, it's the bulbous one
right here. Then in numerical order, came on. It was
rowdy Rick, And we'll get to everybody here in a second.
And let everybody tell where they were, what they are,

(34:57):
who they are, and show is here tonight, and also
Big Eve is here and I uh, let's see I
watched his show earlier this morning, So let me start
at the start again in numerical order. It's not by
age or anything like that. Rick, tell everybody a little

(35:18):
bit about you, your show's your station.

Speaker 6 (35:21):
All that go, yeah, but shut up.

Speaker 12 (35:28):
Anyway.

Speaker 6 (35:28):
So general Manager Kaylon Radio been doing radio work, live
broadcast work for about seventeen years now. At this point,
I have built up my own little fiftom with a
really awesome crew, and we put out about forty hours
a week content. I am involved in about eighty percent
of it and do a lot of guest spots everywhere
else kind of like right now. And I also write

(35:51):
for Twitchy dot com, Misfitspolitics dot com, and I also
produce podcasts through my production company, that is aside from
Kaylon Radio, including folks like Michael Loftus's podcast, The Loftist
Party was Jumps on Tuesdays.

Speaker 1 (36:04):
Nice, Nice, and of course number two Sean, what about you,
sir Well.

Speaker 14 (36:12):
I can be found every Monday and Wednesday on my
show The Edge of Liberty eight pm Pacific eleven on
the East Coast and occasionally making spots on other people
shows when they'll have it. And actually tomorrow morning, I'm
really excited to tell help somebody tell a story that
needs to be told. Anna Jierra Telly, who is a

(36:32):
reporter for The Washington Examiner, announced this morning, as everybody's
focused on DC and the crime issue going on there
and what the Trump administration is doing to help counteract that,
that she was a victim of a sexual assault back
in twenty twenty in DC, and she just broke her
story today and tomorrow morning she's going to join me

(36:54):
to tell her story, and I'm going to air that
tomorrow evening. I'll replay it on YouTube. We're not going
to do it, We're gonna do a recorded session. So
really excited and thankful for Anna to come tell her story.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
Okay, and say that once again for people who who
didn't get it, they understand where your show is. But
you're recording it tomorrow.

Speaker 14 (37:15):
Recorded tomorrow morning, and probably post the interview itself tomorrow night,
and then obviously my show on Monday night, I'll probably
play it again. But I didn't want to sit on
it for the weekend because it's a pretty incredible story
and the source is obviously very credible, and it's very
germane to what's going on. And more importantly, you know,

(37:36):
she was a victim of a crime and it doesn't
need to happen, and this is a story that could
probably be told a million times in all of these
major cities with high crime problems. And I'm fortunate that
she agreed to do the interview, So we'll record that
tomorrow morning.

Speaker 1 (37:49):
Okay, I don't want to big bigfoot your show. But
how did you come across her? Did you see her?

Speaker 14 (37:54):
It was on X She posted it on X and
I read her whole thread and it was just The
response from the DC Police was poor. The initial responding
officers were fine, eventually the investigators were fine, but the
administration of the DC Police and the court system who

(38:15):
kept the suspect kept getting arrested and kept getting released,
and you know, without telling too much of her story
because I want her to do that. It's just a
story that gets played over and over again in this country,
and it's a tragedy. And this soft on crime politics
and this whole emotion you know, criminal justice system via
emotions just doesn't work. And she's and she's the homeland

(38:39):
security reporter for the Washington Examiner, so I mean she
understands this as well. So it's going to be interesting
not only to hear her entire story, but to hear
her professional opinion on this as well.

Speaker 6 (38:54):
Dude, that's an awesome game.

Speaker 1 (38:55):
Yeah, that's that's a pretty amazing get Yeah.

Speaker 14 (38:58):
I just try to do her justice. That's all she
deserves it, just like every other victim out there does.

Speaker 12 (39:04):
Absolutely.

Speaker 1 (39:06):
So I was going to go into some amusing stuff
and weapons grade stupid, but since we're on this topic, let's.

Speaker 14 (39:15):
Let's kind of all has to go en roll. We
haven't done early yet. What's that You didn't Earl introduce himself?

Speaker 1 (39:22):
Oh damn? Okay, sorry, godly, okay, we do this. Let
me feature him. I'm sorry, Earl, please.

Speaker 14 (39:31):
Sir, No Biggie the comment I could have right now.

Speaker 1 (39:35):
Listen, listen, don't you?

Speaker 12 (39:39):
Don't you?

Speaker 14 (39:42):
I'm helping.

Speaker 6 (39:43):
Hey, listen, you're already number two. Do you want to
make it worse?

Speaker 14 (39:47):
How much worse could my wee get my six hundred
dollars wheel bearing turned into coal?

Speaker 12 (39:56):
Wow? That sounds like a whole other story. Well. I
am Earl Diggie Jackson. I am the host of the
Mission READYMN Briefing right here on the SHR Media Network,
and I can be found here every Tuesday and Thursday
at eleven am Central, nine am Pacific, and I talk

(40:23):
about politics and the news of the day, and I
come at it from a Christian Biblical perspective, and I
try to talk about the role of men in this
country and how we can help, how it's our responsibility
really to bring everything back to the way it's supposed
to be. So tune in every Tuesday and Thursday at

(40:46):
eleventh Central.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
So to everybody, thanks for being here, Thanks for the
folks that are listen watching live right now. I'm looking
at the little let's see October in this corner way. Wait, wait,
there two hundred and fifty three people watching live right now.
Awesome and that never happens with me. That only happens
when I have ess me like the important people that

(41:11):
you are. But since you opened the DC door, I
want to go there too because and again, Sean, if
you would tell the people the name of the individual
that you're going to show feature on your show on Friday, it's.

Speaker 14 (41:24):
Anna, Jerry, Telly g Iri. Telly is how probably most
normal people would say it. And I just say it
with the Boston accent. But yeah, she's on X. She's
a reporter for the Washington Examiner. She's been around for
a long time as a reporter on on X. If
you want to go read her story, it's at Anna

(41:46):
Underscore g I A R I T E L l
I Gira Telly.

Speaker 1 (41:52):
Okay, And since we went with that story, I did
this Tuesday night briefly, not as perhaps as longer as
well as I should have. She's not the only person
that was affected and has been affected by DC crime.
There's a very good friend of the SAHR Media Network

(42:13):
by the way, name of Ken McClinton and missus Ken.

Speaker 12 (42:21):
He was well.

Speaker 1 (42:25):
He had his stepdaughter murdered in twenty fifteen on the
streets of DC. Gosh Now there's a story. This story
right here is published in twenty fifth excuse me, twenty nineteen,
four years later. Now, what a lot of people don't
know is essentially a journalist from DC was killed on

(42:50):
the streets. Now, she wasn't a big name journalist, but
she was equally important as anybody else in DC or
in the world of journalism. A man who murdered a
DC journalist is still on the loose four years later.
Charnese Milton was on her way home from a story
when she was shot and killed after she got off

(43:12):
the bus bus in Southeast So she covered the Capital
Community News at Eastern Market nine point thirty. She was
heading home on Metro bus, transferring at good Hope Road
in twenty fifth Street. And Ken said, when my daughter
left from Capitol Hill that night, she and I had
this understanding. She would always text me I'm sorry, Francine

(43:35):
Milton said her mom Milton still has a message on
her phone that her daughter sent that night on my
way home. And Captain Anthony Haith, DC Metro Police said
we believe she was caught in a crossfire. Haith said
the shooter was on a dirt bike or an ATV
scooter opened fire at the intersection as Charinese was walking

(43:59):
from the bus. There were early reports that a man
grabbed Charnese to shield himself, but Haithe calls that a
rumor the investigators never confirmed. He said, however, four years later,
no suspects, no persons of interest, They don't know who
was the target of the shooting. Except one thing. Charnese, Milton,

(44:21):
at the age of twenty seven, is no longer with
us on the streets of DC.

Speaker 6 (44:24):
And there's no crime in DC. There are no consequences
to be paid.

Speaker 14 (44:29):
This.

Speaker 1 (44:30):
You know, it's like a song years ago and I
can't even think of the game, the name of the
guy that sang the song. You know, it doesn't really matter.
It doesn't really matter. She doesn't matter. Nobody else matters.
And unfortunately that's a stance that has been taken altogether

(44:52):
too many times. By the way, I discovered did some
stat looking some research and found out been in twenty
fifteen there were sixty six zero unsolved homicides in DC.
And I would like to make this comparison as well,
when we talk about oh, DC crime, this is all over,

(45:15):
it's it's exploded. There is no real crime in d C. Well,
let's do a comparative analysis. D C has a population
of seven hundred and four thousand people. New York City,
which has a lesser crime rate, has a population of
eight point four million people, a slight differential. The other

(45:38):
thing that I'm discovering is that there are lots of reactions.
Thank god. President Trump's historic takeover in DC is praised
by the residents, including.

Speaker 12 (45:48):
This individuality as quiet as a church motion.

Speaker 22 (45:53):
I came all the way down Pennsylvania Avenue this morning,
so peaceful, I own smell, no we.

Speaker 9 (46:00):
I don't see no homeless people.

Speaker 22 (46:02):
I mean I came all the way through the southeast side,
all the way down here.

Speaker 9 (46:06):
You see now I'm at the White House, don't way
It's quiet.

Speaker 7 (46:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 12 (46:10):
It's a shame that it takes.

Speaker 22 (46:13):
Somebody to have to sit in your classroom in order
for you to be in order, you know, because that's
what it feels like.

Speaker 14 (46:20):
Man.

Speaker 22 (46:21):
You gotta be babysitters to do your job. Man, stuffing
out of corotrol for years.

Speaker 1 (46:30):
You you gotta do.

Speaker 22 (46:32):
Better, you know, you gotta do better, man, and mainly young.

Speaker 12 (46:35):
You got the problems.

Speaker 22 (46:36):
It's us, man, It's always us, giving everybody a bad name.
We'll see how long this last year. How many murders
was it last night? How many carl Jackins was it
last night? Talk to me and y'all keep on posting
all these data numbers and things of that nature.

Speaker 1 (46:53):
That y'all Okay, wet's stop about that. Let's talk about
the data and some of the numbers. I'll get back
to her in just a moment. The numbers were jury
rigged by a DC Metro captain. And then slowly but surely,
I'm noticing that some of the people that you would

(47:14):
least expect to chime in are chiming in.

Speaker 20 (47:16):
DC has been, with all due respect to our nation's capital,
a shithole for a long god.

Speaker 1 (47:22):
You know, it reminds me of the old LaGuardia Airport
that you know it was.

Speaker 20 (47:27):
It was became so ghettoised and so grim and dark
and uh and and melancholy that you get.

Speaker 1 (47:34):
Used to it.

Speaker 20 (47:35):
Remember, these are citizen soldiers, the Guard and Ford Strokes.
I agree that the military should not be deployed for
a law enforcement purpose, but these people, the Guard, the
citizen soldiers, are there for a different reason.

Speaker 23 (47:50):
So, folks, I'd like it a weigh in if you
want to please, I would like to first point out
that the first time Donald Trump ever called DC a shithole,
GERALDO otherwise know, Jerry Rivers.

Speaker 6 (48:00):
Lost his damn mind, and now he's admitting the DC
is a shittle The scariest thing about this and I've
been I've been having this conversation on x now for days.
There's supposedly a twelve percent drop in the murder rate
from twenty twenty four to twenty twenty five in Washington, DC.
That puts us from up until August seventh, one hundred

(48:22):
and fourteen total murders in twenty twenty four ninety I'm sorry,
one hundred and thirteen ninety nine in twenty twenty five.
And you guys want to talk to me about the
twelve percent drop of the murder rate. There have been
eight hundred and ninety eight robberies through August tenth, one
hundred and seventeen violent carjackings, one hundred and thirty four
carjackings in total. But you want to tell me how

(48:42):
much better the crime rate is in DC and it does.

Speaker 14 (48:46):
Not happen within like a ten square mile area. Are
some ridiculously small.

Speaker 18 (48:51):
Yeah, I mean it's area, it's all centered in the
same place, and it's all the same areas where the
scariest thing about this is, you know, the DC commander
got suspended because you know, he's allegedly been cooking the books.

Speaker 6 (49:04):
But now the Fraternal Order of the Police has been
coming out and saying, no, this is a much more
widespread problem. It's happening all through the district. When the
police union is willingly starting to throw people under the bus,
that should tell you exactly how bad it is, because
they're the ones that usually surround everybody with the blue
wall and try to protect them. They're pushing them out

(49:25):
of the blue wall and turning around.

Speaker 14 (49:28):
And you go on a wider stance on reporting. The
Marshall Project has several times reported that there's numerous cities
that will report and amend, report and amend. They don't
always report all of their numbers up front, or they'll
amend it after the facts that the initial numbers will

(49:50):
come in low, and then three months later they, oh, sorry,
we missed seven or eight bodies. We forgot to count
those dead people, and they amended in later. And that's
been a problem with law enforcement via CompStat for years
and I'm sure DCD is CompStat busy, I'm sure, or actually, everybody,

(50:12):
I'm sure you guys all remember what CompStat is. CompStat
started as a great way to discuss, to review and
discuss problem areas and policing. They would bring up on
this board or whatever, all these problems and this is
where it's located. That's where it's located. And that's what
it started as. And I think Bratton started it in
New York in the late nineties mid nineties. But then

(50:34):
what happened was chiefs and I had one would then
find a way to turn Comstat into a way that
they could downplay crimes and find a way to break
them apart. And I talked about this on my show
the other night. Where they'll take what is an obvious
felony and break it down to two misdemeanors and that's
how it gets filed. Instead of an unarmed robbery, which is,

(50:56):
you know, the taking of another's property through forcer fear,
they'll break it down to a petty theft and a
battery or an assault and they'll turn into a misdemeanor.
And as we see in in DC, if you're eighteen
to twenty four, only twenty five percent of those misdemeanors

(51:16):
are being prosecuted. The rest are being dealt with as juveniles.

Speaker 6 (51:21):
Yeah, going into family court, getting ice cream, socials and
yoga classes.

Speaker 14 (51:25):
Yeah. So it's just the numbers are so vastly skewed.
It's and that's not even including the ones they just
throw out and don't file for one reason or another.

Speaker 1 (51:36):
I had Ralph Chittams on Tuesday night. Ralph Chittams is
a forty seven year resident of DC. One of the
things that metal don't realize. Yeah, I know kidding. Ralph
is an amazing man for having done that and for
having put up with that. But people like that and
they have all sorts of connections. Ken McClinton as well.

(52:00):
And one of the things that he said that not
very many, if hardly any people realize is that a
local policy for prosecution is that people under twenty five
will have their crimes invariably dropped. People twenty five and
under are treated as juveniles. The other thing we've been

(52:22):
discovering is that people that, god, this is going to
date me, but there's there's just a digital way to
do our people. But when I received when I'd fill
out a crime report on a particular crime. On the
flip side of the backseat of the sheet was yeah,
go ahead and laugh, pape, I know, I know, fine, fine.

(52:47):
But on the back sheet of the face page of
whatever crime you you reported on was the uc our
Universal Crime Report, and you entered information into that, and
the information that you entered about that particular crime went
right to the d excuse me, to the FBI.

Speaker 14 (53:05):
I have to ask, Bez, did you have the rolodex
with the all the all the breakdowns, because it was
normalized on the federal level, they all had the same
this equal what was it? And I think it was
decimal system, right like a two point one seven six
point blah blah blah, and then it would actually be
what the what the crime was. So there was a

(53:27):
giant rolodex that you used to have that you'd have
to go through and find your what your local crime
was and what it got reported as in the UCR.

Speaker 1 (53:35):
Well, the only thing that I could tell you is
this is we would could the back but the people
that were out on the street in patrol, like myself
at that time, were not the individuals that took that
information and translated it by the rolodex so to speak
over and then that's how the information got sent to
the FBI. But what DC has been doing and has
been caught at, is they the FBI does not take

(54:00):
felony assault stats. Oh now they will if it's a
knife or a gun, but the statistics have been skewed
on this so that they're coded as a felony assault
not with a gun or a knife involved. And you
can see where that goes on up to the FBI.

Speaker 14 (54:21):
So mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (54:23):
You know this is I made mention of this.

Speaker 14 (54:26):
When you move the flagpoles or the goalpost rather, it's
really easy to change the score. It is.

Speaker 1 (54:33):
Do you guys remember the HBO series The Wire? Oh
god and two and Brauer I'm and oh god, Well
that was homicide.

Speaker 14 (54:43):
Oh that was homicide. You're right.

Speaker 1 (54:45):
That was the NBCTV series Homicide. Don uh Don Pierce
and uh or Wendel Pearson, a whole bunch of other
people were in The Wire. It was a series on
HBO probably there for about four or five years. Well,
there was a guy when I was in homicide that
wrote a book about Baltimore homicide called Homicide. And the
guy who's name was David Simon. David Simon was an

(55:07):
integral in starting the NBC series Homicide, but he also
started the Wire back in two thousand and two. Even
back in two thousand and two, they were talking about
one of the characters was talking about Baltimore CompStat and
the fact that the figures reskewed even back then because
the precincts and the commanders and the word commanders didn't

(55:28):
want their stats to go up. So it was common
knowledge from the line to the top that the books
were cooked, even back in two thousand and two. In
twenty twenty five, nothing has changed.

Speaker 14 (55:42):
And you think about it. You have all of these
district chiefs or area chiefs who are trying to get
promoted at some point, and what's the way to do that.
Crime is down in my district. I've been doing what
I'm supposed to do. Promote me. During the next opening,
it became, like I said, a change from what it
was supposed to be to hey, we can use this

(56:03):
to find problematic areas through statistics and actually get in
there and start dealing with it. And it changed to hey,
how can I use this to make me look better
as a chief or a district chief, and how can
we dull it down so it doesn't look as bad.

Speaker 6 (56:20):
You know, when I realized how bad it had gotten
was when shows like Blue Blood started proving the point
that they were basically picking the books to try to
get promotions. Yeah, okay, that's how public it was. If
they're starting to talk about this on regular TV, this
is them trying to let people know what's really going on.
And I've had that theory about Hollywood for a while,

(56:41):
but we're all those those after school specials that started
cropping up when we were kids. I think those were
I think those were producers ways of trying to let
everybody know what was really going on on Hollywood. And
somebody was like, Oh, they're trying to slip on past us,
so we'll just label it as an after school special
and show it as as a as a cautionary tale,
when in reality, everybody was trying to let the cat

(57:03):
out of the bag.

Speaker 14 (57:05):
Well, and you just have to look at this major city, Chicago,
New York.

Speaker 12 (57:11):
LA.

Speaker 14 (57:12):
I brought up the Marshall project earlier. LA. When it
comes time, your status are supposed to be in I
think the first quarter after the end of the year,
and they don't turn them into like the third quarter,
and what they do turn in isn't even complete. You
have all of these cities with these soft on crime
policies and counties with these soft on crime policies who

(57:33):
constantly find a way to cook the book so you
don't realize or the average person who doesn't look into
it can't realize how bad it is. And the other
thing that they do now and the media is absolutely
hand in hand at this of don't you believe you're
lying eyes we're telling you there's less crime. I don't

(57:54):
care how many bodies you had to step over today
to throw your trash out to the corner. It's not
that bad.

Speaker 12 (58:01):
And the other thing they're doing is they're underreporting or
not even reporting at all, any of the stats to nighbors,
to NCIC and so that's how they're that's how they're
trying to convince people that crime is down, because well,
if it's not in a uniform crime report from the FBI,

(58:23):
well then obviously that's the truth. And of course it
didn't happen. And of course nothing could be further from
the truth.

Speaker 6 (58:30):
Right, Yeah, I ad you say, otherwise I didn't want to.
I didn't want to make everybody listen to it. But
my favorite thing of the last few days was listening
to Mika Prezenski get caught on a hot and saying,
damn it, he's made us root for crime.

Speaker 14 (58:44):
Yeah, it's amazing. You know it's bad when Chris Matthews says, hey,
you're getting caught into the trap of immediately defending anything
against Trump and now you are pro crime, It's it's
incredible to me. I said it before. I think I
said in my show last night. If you make pretend

(59:06):
crimes are bills that the city has, and I mean, like,
you owe this amount of money to this of the
actual bills that you would get like in the mail,
and you're underwater, you can't pay your bills. And then
somebody shows up and says, hey, I have all this
extra money I'm gonna throw at you. Now you can
pay all your bills. Are you going to turn around
and say, well, I don't want your fucking money because

(59:26):
you're Orange. No, you're gonna turn around and say, yes, please,
thank you for helping us out. It's the same thing.
And the worst part is is this is just a
political football because it's Trump doing it. If this was Obama,
as Bez played the other night, like he did in Baltimore,
who is sending in the National Guard and the federal

(59:49):
cops into DC, which he has. You'll notice they're not
suing to get him to stop. They've all accepted them. Legally,
he can do it. There's nothing they can do to
change that. So you had was it the Baltimore mayor
who said, well, you notice he's only doing this with
black mayors, right, And it's like, no, he's only doing
it with Democrat mayors that he's calling out. Yes, that's

(01:00:11):
what color they are.

Speaker 12 (01:00:13):
I said on my show earlier today, he wouldn't have
to do this if the leadership in these cities, whether
black or white, whatever, were doing their job being good,
they were actually policing properly, If they actually had chiefs
that knew what the chain of command was, then none
of this would be happening and Trump wouldn't have to

(01:00:33):
send in the National Guard and.

Speaker 6 (01:00:36):
Generals they fired the last like three years ago. I
found a clip from three years ago where the chief
is having a meltdown on that yes and telling everybody
exactly how bad Washington, DC was. He got about like
a month later, he was just going.

Speaker 14 (01:00:52):
Yep, he's essentially he had that weird honesty moment where
he was getting interviewed on all these questions and he
just like he had that weird moment of honesty that
no politicians should have. Which police chiefs are politicians?

Speaker 1 (01:01:04):
And he was like, well, do you realize how fucking
bath the city is?

Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:01:08):
And everyone was like, whoa DC can't keep a chief DC.
The longest you can keep a chief in d C
is probably three or four years. Now. If I told
you something similar that I have a video about Morning
Joe when we get back, would you believe me?

Speaker 14 (01:01:29):
I think you would.

Speaker 1 (01:01:30):
We'll be right back, folks. Don't go away.

Speaker 3 (01:01:37):
Media done right your name to the SAHB Media Network.

Speaker 24 (01:01:46):
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Speaker 14 (01:02:23):
Be there.

Speaker 6 (01:02:24):
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Hi.

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Speaker 14 (01:03:21):
It's Sean from the Edge of Liberty, just like the Bidens,
I too am moving, only in my case it's days
and times.

Speaker 12 (01:03:31):
That's right.

Speaker 14 (01:03:32):
You can now find the edge liberty Monday at eight
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(01:03:55):
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That is Monday and Wednesday, eight pm Pacific eleven on
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live on the air.

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Tension.

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Speaker 14 (01:05:17):
With that declaration, America was born inspired by a belief
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Speaker 13 (01:05:30):
Well.

Speaker 14 (01:05:32):
The founders of our great nation shows independence, as do we.
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Speaker 7 (01:05:47):
You're listening to to the SHL Media Network.

Speaker 1 (01:05:50):
I'm busy. Welcome to the saloon. It's good to see
you here. Everyone is here tonight we have seawan We
have big E, we have Rick, we have a cast
of thousands, we have you. I have my drink. I
have my happy crying baby mug, which I customarily i'd

(01:06:11):
like to feature this. Look, this is the bug from
which I some leftist tears and they get put right
in here. And oddly enough they look really clear and
almost like water, maybe potato water.

Speaker 6 (01:06:27):
Or something like that.

Speaker 14 (01:06:28):
I hear.

Speaker 1 (01:06:29):
Those are just those are nasty tumors that are going
on right now. Let me put this up right now, because.

Speaker 14 (01:06:35):
This is the truth.

Speaker 1 (01:06:37):
Democrat mayors report violent crime is down forty percent since
they redefined violent and crime. Now did we not just
damn well talk about all of this before the break?
And the answer is yes. So this is from the
Babylon B. And everybody knows that humor is only funny

(01:06:58):
and amusing and entertaining when it contains elements of truth. Truth,
And this is the exact same thing that we were saying.
And then the Babylon B.

Speaker 12 (01:07:12):
I actually thought that was real headline.

Speaker 14 (01:07:14):
Yeah, I was gonna say, if you had put any
other news organization over that, I could one hundred see
that being realistic. It's amazing to.

Speaker 12 (01:07:26):
Me because they love to redefine words. They love to
redefine words in language, and so that that to me
was just.

Speaker 14 (01:07:36):
Brilliant.

Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
Yeah, you know what.

Speaker 14 (01:07:38):
I get mad at the Bees sometimes because I'll be
scrolling and I'll see the headline like oh ship that's
and then I'll read that like, oh they got me again.
But it's never like it is never to their credit,
it is never that can't possibly happen. It's like, oh, good,
they finally admitted it, and oh nope, that's just a

(01:07:59):
b article.

Speaker 6 (01:08:00):
Two years ago when the Onion was funny. It actually
they actually got me more than once with their parody
YouTube videos because they were like putting out like fake
sentence speeches and I was there was one that I
put like halfway through a privateized that it said owen
in not c and in. I'm like, son of a bitch.
But I'd like to back up this a second, because
when BZ did the promo for his mug and he
started talking about the baby Sipin' mug something about the cadence.

(01:08:23):
The way he said it put the Puppy Baby Monkey
commercial in my head. Remember the super Bowl commercial from
like three four years ago.

Speaker 14 (01:08:33):
Yes, I know exactly which one you're talking about.

Speaker 6 (01:08:36):
So I had to share the pain, which is why
we backed up, because since it was in my head,
I had to put it in everybody else's.

Speaker 14 (01:08:42):
I will tell you the Onion back before it went
woke was absolutely hysterical. Before they even did video, when
they just did their writing, they used to have all
these ridiculous things like a newspaper. Right. One of my
favorite segments was asking Navy Seal, and it was supposed
to be like ask Aunt Peg or ask you know
one of those famous UH authors that would write a response,

(01:09:06):
and so it'd be like, you know, dear Navy Seal,
my husband has been really distant today, you know our
lately it's been our tenth anniversary and the kids have
been a real struggle. What's a good way for me
to spice up our relationship? And every single time the
Navy the quote unquote Navy Seal's response was just how
to kill somebody. It had nothing to do with with

(01:09:27):
what the question was. It's like, well, I find the
best way would be to sneak up with somebody on
a very sharp serrated blade where you slide it across
and make sure you press against the larynx it's quite rubbery,
and it would just be this long in depth, and
it was brilliant. I used to laugh, like hell at that.

Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
Look what I found.

Speaker 6 (01:09:44):
I'm not just chilled tonight, baby, monkey baby, monkey baby.

Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
Hell, it's so resous. I never seen this.

Speaker 14 (01:10:09):
Back in a similar time.

Speaker 1 (01:10:14):
Oh my god, I never saw that. Okay, I consider
myself entertained.

Speaker 14 (01:10:20):
Right now at this point.

Speaker 12 (01:10:23):
Yeah, I've never seen that either. Wow.

Speaker 14 (01:10:24):
Oh god.

Speaker 1 (01:10:25):
Okay, Well, I gotta point this. Put this up because
I said I would just like people say, okay, demarrats,
they've been shoved into the corner. How we have to
support crime? This was Morning Joe.

Speaker 26 (01:10:38):
The answer to this, this this problem for Democrats is
not everything's okay, there's nothing to see here.

Speaker 1 (01:10:46):
But that's what they're saying. It's okay, there's nothing to
see here. Along, move along.

Speaker 26 (01:10:53):
Oh, Washington has dropped twenty four percent or whatever in crime.

Speaker 14 (01:10:59):
Well, let me give you some other numbers.

Speaker 26 (01:11:01):
The Washington Post took.

Speaker 1 (01:11:02):
Okay, stop, let me ask everybody at this point right now,
why are they doing this when everyone else is doing
the opposite. Why is MSNBC and Mourning Joe doing this?

Speaker 14 (01:11:15):
And they even if you can look at the the
title there increased police presence and not just like Trump
invades DC or Trump uses please to you know, whatever,
the ridiculousness that they always put up there, you know,
civil rights violation and DC. Right, they're doing this because

(01:11:40):
they know it's so obvious that the left is on
the wrong side of history here and they just can't
not do it. Either that or the DNC said to them,
we need to get the message out that we need
to change our stance on this pretty quickly.

Speaker 6 (01:11:58):
You're half right, but there's a simpler answer. Comcast is
spun off all of their news properties, so they're now
fighting for their lives.

Speaker 14 (01:12:04):
Yeah, that's that's very true as well.

Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
Oh I had forgotten about that. Yes, Oh my gosh.

Speaker 12 (01:12:14):
But I think Seawn's right though. It is it is
such a blatantly obvious thing that if they said anything else,
if they were if they were a CNN, if they
were oh we know Rachel Maddens on the same network.
But but if if they were to if they were
to try and back Muriel Bowser and all these people

(01:12:35):
were saying crime is down and and there's move along,
nothing to see here, they they would be that they
would be looked at as just total clowns, even more
so than they are.

Speaker 6 (01:12:48):
There's a little bit more to it too, though, because
remember eight nine years ago that worked. They did it
all the time. Remember there was there was the dude
on the news with cars and buildings burning behind him
talking about mostly peaceful protests, and everybody bought it because
they were still primarily the gatekeepers on information eight to

(01:13:11):
nine years ago. They are not. The damn is broken.
People are getting their news from multiple sources now, which
is why everybody's starting to spin off their news properties.
Because if you pay attention to pop culture and news
information for the for Hollywood and everything else as well.
Regular TV is starting to die and they know it.

Speaker 12 (01:13:29):
You know how I know.

Speaker 6 (01:13:30):
The easiest way to tell is because Paramount Plus, which
was just bought out by Skydance, just bought the rights
to UFC where the sports goes oh TV merger.

Speaker 1 (01:13:43):
Yes, completely. Well, let's continue with this because I have
a follow up to this as well. Akapole.

Speaker 26 (01:13:52):
In late April early May, ninety one percent of Washington
residents say crime is a problem. The ninety one percent,
fifty one percent it is an extremely serious problem.

Speaker 1 (01:14:08):
Okay, do you not ask yourselves, as I do frequently,
how much does this great to have the words come
out of their mouths like this, the exact opposite of
what they internally believe. And look at for example, look
at Mika next to Joe. Look at the crossed arms.

(01:14:33):
She's not very fucking happy right now.

Speaker 26 (01:14:35):
And John Heilman, we've had people before put this in
racial terms, and this is I must say, this is
one thing that I think Democrats have gotten so wrong
about crime, so wrong about crime.

Speaker 6 (01:14:54):
Well, let me just read, let me just read the
Washington Post.

Speaker 1 (01:14:57):
Here there are stark divides. These must be such sour,
bitter words to have to speak on air.

Speaker 14 (01:15:05):
It's just a thing.

Speaker 6 (01:15:08):
Not necessarily, I would like to interject something because something
occurred to me. Something occurred to me the other day
when we found about when we found out about the Baileys.

Speaker 1 (01:15:17):
The constituency consumer has invented.

Speaker 6 (01:15:20):
In his head and has been spouting off about about
thirty years. Let me explain to let me explain to
you my take on this one. He is he's batshit crazy.
So let's just leave that there. But here's the other thing.
This was his way to get out in front of
the cameras and be able to tell everybody exactly what
he believes while wrapping somebody else's name around it to

(01:15:42):
avoid all the ire of the crazy leftists. So the
reason you're seeing some of them that are finally coming
out and saying this stuff, including that the news desk
from ABC that was talking about the other day about hey,
two years ago, I had my car stolen right out
in front of the right out in front of the bureau.
This happened two weeks ago to somebody else, is because
they're finally getting cover to be able to tell people

(01:16:02):
the truth again because they've been under lock and key.
If anybody's ever watched Babylon five, remember the last couple
of episodes before it went nuts with season five, and
the news people were like, we're so sorry, we've been
gone for so long because they made us say these
things to you. This is what's happening. People are starting
to tell the truth again because they don't have a choice,

(01:16:22):
not necessarily because they want to, which is why you've
got sour Puss still over there going like this, Oh yeah,
because they don't have a choice because if they don't,
their jobs are going to go right now.

Speaker 14 (01:16:31):
Well, first, and foremost. One of my favorite things is
Chuck Schumer haf been having to invent his own George Glass.
If anyone ever saw the Brady Bunch back in the day,
you don't know who that is. Forget you know the Bailey's,
you wouldn't meet them. They live in the Niagara Falls area.
It is incredible. But the other thing you have to remember,

(01:16:53):
one of Trump's promises going into this campaign is that
he was going to deal with crime in this country
that has been for years, and that is a truth.
That is crime. We saw the soft on crime prush,
We saw all the Soros das, We saw everything being excused,
nobody being held accountable. Yeta, YadA, yeta. Crime was a

(01:17:15):
major issue going into this last election for the American people.
By and large, it polled. I want to say it
was third behind the border and the economy. That's pretty intense,
right and they know that. And if their biggest fear
is to be on the wrong side of history, if
because it'll get played back. Now they're starting to learn

(01:17:36):
the internet is forever and people can pull up what
they said three months ago and they can't deny saying it.
If Trump is successful and all of a sudden, he
can turn DC around. Right, It's not going to be
thirty days, it's not going to be sixty days. It's
gonna be a while. But if he shows, hey, with
the right amount of policing in a metropolitan city and

(01:17:57):
you have federal partners when you need it, you're actually
prosecuting crimes that need to be It cleans up the
street that now locks in that criminal justice in this
country a works and be as a good thing for
the people not committing crimes. And they don't want that.
That will be detrimental to the Democrats for years.

Speaker 12 (01:18:19):
Yeah, you know, I have that.

Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
I have never historically liked to quantify things in this fashion.
But there are from I don't know twenty fifteen, twenty
fourteen on out when I have no other choice but
to craft arguments and observations in the terms in which
leftists demand they be crafted and or performed. And that's this?

(01:18:45):
Why is it? And I have never understood this, But
I'm going to get racial for a second. Why is
it that everybody seems to think that blacks in leftist
urban rat cages are not do any kind of police,
that they shouldn't be the recipients of protection, that they
want police protection, they would like to have police protection,

(01:19:08):
and no they're just there. Okay, why then if another beasy,
if that equation, why then, if that's true, did this
woman make this video? I didn't make that.

Speaker 14 (01:19:31):
I got a simple answer.

Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
She's happy, she's overjoyed that that is occurring. But according
to all the leftists, no, no, no, you are not
in accordance with God's great plan.

Speaker 14 (01:19:47):
If you're thinking that way, what the hell well modern
plantation that they want to keep minorities under if you will,
not just black Americans, but Hispanic Americans and other Americans
that live in your middle to lower class neighborhoods, right,
the people that work sixty hours a week to keep

(01:20:08):
their life going, the people who take care of their kids,
and da da da da da, they're just a voting block.
They're not really humans to the Democrats, and they never
have been. History has shown that. You see what the
Democrats use illegals for today. Right, They don't give a
shit what happens to legal aliens. They just want the
vote that's going to come from it, and they want

(01:20:28):
to be able to raise money off of them. It's
a tool the same thing with these inner cities where
that you have high crime and a lot of Look, statistically,
we know nobody kills more black people than other black people, right,
that's a statistic that's not up for question. That's a
sad reality. They don't care if those kids keep getting killed.
They don't care if Sharnice gets killed coming off the bus,

(01:20:51):
they don't care if the twelve year old kid gets
killed in a drive by. What they care about is
to be able to show up and say this is
horrible and if you give me more money, will change it,
and then never be held accountable for not changing it.
That's all they give a shit about.

Speaker 6 (01:21:05):
And then using our screwed up education system to enter
into evidence things like the Bogus sixteen nineteen project, which
basically is all policing was readed in slave chasing.

Speaker 12 (01:21:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:21:16):
I mean, so that's the other reason why you have
all these leftist leaders that are like, oh, the police
are terrible, because they've bought into that stuff because our
education system is terrible.

Speaker 12 (01:21:24):
When a system is absolutely atrocious. When I watched these
these I'm sorry to cut you off.

Speaker 6 (01:21:31):
Go ahead, No, I was going to say, you know,
in Oklahoma up until recently, the average reading age in
my entire state was fourth grade. And I used to
work for the Department of Human Services on contract through
the University of Oklahoma, and they kept doing surveys with us.
What can we do to make your job easier? How
about we stop sending letters out that sound like they
were written by attorneys, since you know, nobody in the

(01:21:51):
state can fucking read them without an attorney.

Speaker 12 (01:21:56):
How about that, chadget The education system is just homeschool
your kids, as far as I'm concerned. But you watch
these these man in the street videos when and there'll
be a guy asking like basic questions like how many
minutes in an hour or how many hours in a day?

(01:22:16):
And and what what country? What city are you in?
I mean, just just the most basic things. And these
people will say Spain is the capital of Ohio or
some such nonsense, or it's just insane. And and every
time I see something like that, I am absolutely dumb founded.

(01:22:37):
And at first I thought it was fake. But you
see it so often, it's like this is what this
is what the American education system has wrought, and it
is it does not bode well for the going forward
at all.

Speaker 1 (01:22:56):
Now, it doesn't let me continue. We're running out of time.
I got about seven more minutes before the bottom of
the hour break. But the hits just keep on hits,
just keep on coming. This is CNN.

Speaker 12 (01:23:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 27 (01:23:14):
I think that Democrats have to get it around them
that Americans are far more hawkish on crime than they
think that they are. What are we talking about Trump's
not approval handling crime? Where was he last year? He
was way underwater at minus thirteen points views of term
number one.

Speaker 1 (01:23:29):
But look where he is now.

Speaker 27 (01:23:30):
He's on the positive side of electric He's on the
positive side at plus one point. Americans view Trump far
more favorably now on crime than they did a year ago.
And while this polling doesn't take into account what's exactly
happening in DC right now, it does take into account
what happened in Los Angeles, what's happened earlier this year,
and Americans for the most part, actually view Trump favorably.
Crime is one of Trump's best issues. It's one of

(01:23:52):
the reasons why he wants to talk about crime, because
it favors him.

Speaker 1 (01:23:55):
But now we know why it is that they're doing that.
It's not necessary because they are concomitant with the thinking
and the philosophy. The fact is that, well, they like
their coin, they want their jobs, they want their million
dollar jobs. Let me go back to what I said
earlier Tuesday night with Ralph Chitthams, and I reminded him

(01:24:19):
and this is true. This is Larry Elder is one
of the coolest dudes I've seen in a long time.
I used to listen to Hugh Hewitt, and I was
a big devotee of Hugh Hewitt when he was down
in Los Angeles, and he was on at five o'clock
every day at five o'clock that I would listen. Then
he went away, he went up to DC, and then
he went on super early in the morning, and I

(01:24:40):
couldn't listen to him anymore. Then they brought this guy
on named Larry Elder, and I thought, fuck Youwett. This
guy is sharper and faster and cooler than Hugh Hewitt
ever was Sean. We spoke to Larry Elder, did we not?
And we have photographs of Larry Elder, do we not?

(01:25:02):
When we met him at Pest in twenty seventeen, and
I was unaware that he was a libertarian at the time.
One of the coolest sharpest guys ever. And I will
never forget what he said. And this isn't a black
white thing, this is a Larry Elder thing.

Speaker 12 (01:25:22):
He said.

Speaker 1 (01:25:23):
The formula for achieving middle class success, if you want it,
is simple. One finish high school. Two, don't have a
kid before the age of twenty and three, get married
before you have the kid. Applicable to anyone and everyone,

(01:25:46):
ad nauseum infinitum.

Speaker 14 (01:25:49):
Its help you.

Speaker 1 (01:25:51):
It's just my god. You know, Sean, what impression did
you have of Larry?

Speaker 14 (01:25:56):
I mean, you stay Elder.

Speaker 1 (01:25:58):
I just took the photographs you spoke to him.

Speaker 14 (01:26:00):
Larry Elder was one of those people that you talked
to and as smart as you think you might be,
about thirty seconds into the conversation, you're like, oh, I
guess I'm a dullard. I didn't realize just how dumb
I am.

Speaker 12 (01:26:11):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (01:26:12):
And I gets into the conversation, Sean's going to be
Sean's be like, I'll be over in the corner with
my creons and my juice box.

Speaker 14 (01:26:17):
Yeah, we had bourbon there, so it was bourbon.

Speaker 18 (01:26:19):
No.

Speaker 14 (01:26:19):
He but he is unbelievably intelligent, Like you said, he's
unbelievably sharp. His ability to recall statistics is incredible, and
he is also one of the nicest human beings that
you could possibly meet. He was sweetest pie. And not
just to us, and not because we're on the air.
You watch him with everybody up there, and once people
realized who it was, he was getting swarmed on a

(01:26:41):
regular basis and he was just incredible. He was just
an awesome guy.

Speaker 1 (01:26:46):
He should have won California governor, but he was. He
was well number one smart, too smart for the state.

Speaker 14 (01:26:52):
He yeah, he did.

Speaker 1 (01:26:56):
He was fighting the Republican Party.

Speaker 14 (01:26:59):
Well, he's too smart for the state. That's the problem.
They're used to people like Gavin Newsom, who just speaks
in a whole bunch of bullshit and says a lot
and does nothing and uses small words. But he does
this a lot, so people are like, oh.

Speaker 1 (01:27:15):
He's just like me.

Speaker 14 (01:27:17):
And unfortunately you have to actually be able to sit
and listen for an extended period of time to obtain
the information that's coming from Larry because there is a
bunch of information and I honestly feel he was just
too smart for the state for people to understand it.
It's sad, but it's true.

Speaker 1 (01:27:35):
Well it is, and you know every one of us.
There are a few people that I've come across maybe
that I've met personally. Three, and then I'd like any
of you to weigh in on this are There have
been three people that I've met in my life who

(01:27:56):
are the fastest thinkers I've ever countered. One of them
was our association president, Wendell Phillips. The guy could think
on his feet and was probably a good five to
six steps ahead of you when you began speaking to him.
I would place Larry Elder into that category. And then

(01:28:20):
there was another guy, Judge Ransom in the Sacramento Superior Court.
I'll never forget the time that he I was going
to get a warrant signed by Judge Ransom, and I
made the mistake of peeking through the open door while
his court was in session because at the time I
didn't know how to get back behind to get his clerk.

(01:28:41):
He stopped court, motioned me in read the warrant, signed
the warrant while also fielding questions from the defense and
the prosecution simultaneously, as in, holy fuck, what have I
stepped into? This guy is like a mental god. And
before we wrap up, before we we go to the

(01:29:04):
bottom of the hour break. Have you guys encountered people
like that?

Speaker 6 (01:29:08):
Oh yeah, well yeah, one of those, one of those
in the chat and has a very self deprecating sense
of humor. He's probably one of the smartest people I know.
He's currently writing coding to automate his damn show, and
I'm over here in all of everything he's doing.

Speaker 1 (01:29:22):
Oh well, yeah, I think you're probably talking about that
that kind of individual. And I responded to Cosmic Bard
earlier and he went into Twitter on well, you know
with my new show, I want to do this and
I and I said, dude, you lost me at want Okay,

(01:29:43):
anything following that.

Speaker 6 (01:29:46):
I just well, as you, as you pointed out with
Steven yesterday, you were both fellow techno ldites.

Speaker 1 (01:29:52):
So yeah, well yeah, Cosmic Bart, No, No, he's not
anybody else. Have a an individual. There's that just you know,
when you're in front of them and you speak to them,
and you notice that they have a presence, if you will,
and you're predominantly astounded that they can feeld so many

(01:30:16):
things at once.

Speaker 14 (01:30:18):
Earl, It's okay to say me, I want.

Speaker 6 (01:30:23):
Well, so you want them to lie on the air.

Speaker 12 (01:30:29):
Well. One of the One of the one of the
first people that comes to my mind for me is
my dad. My dad is a Harvard Harvard educated lawyer, preacher,
school and and whenever I talk to him, I i
I learned something, and I just know that that he

(01:30:50):
is without a doubt. And I've had other people to
tell me this as well, that he's one of the
smartest people they've ever met.

Speaker 1 (01:30:58):
And I have to agree that's absolutely stounding. I'm BC,
these are a bunch of people. We'll be right back.
Conservative Media done right. You're listening to the SHR Media Network.

Speaker 28 (01:31:16):
Listen in to the Reaver of common Sense, where we
cut through the noise of news and politics with a
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a refreshing dose of reality. Jersey Joe fearlessly tackles the
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(01:31:40):
shrmedia dot com where you can hear the Reaver of
common sense and action. He may not always be polite,
he may not always be refined, but one thing's for sure,
he always tells it like it is.

Speaker 12 (01:31:56):
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faith in love for your country, and check out seven Armors,
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Speaker 4 (01:32:39):
Are you looking for bold, honest conversation about the issues
shaping America, Well, let me welcome you to Unleashed one
oh one with Jeremy Hanson, where we take you beyond
the headlines. We dive into politics and culture, struggles of
everyday life.

Speaker 9 (01:32:58):
It's wrong unfilter. If you're ready for truth with a punch,
pull up a chair and join us.

Speaker 6 (01:33:08):
That's right unleast one O one where we'll talk feels
like home.

Speaker 4 (01:33:14):
Find us at unleast one o one dot com, Spotify,
Apple Podcasts, I'm on radio and more.

Speaker 3 (01:33:23):
We look forward to seeing you unleashed one O one
with Jeremy at.

Speaker 6 (01:33:38):
Freedom.

Speaker 10 (01:33:41):
One nation in all of human history was built on
that bedrock. Ours a republic of the people, by the people,
and for the people. Self government requires freedom, just as
freedom requires an individual willingness to self govern. Freedom has

(01:34:06):
made America exceptional, but it can only last as long
as you and I seek the good as expressed by
the laws of nature and Nature's God. It can only
last if you and I choose to act as people
of character. Forging character has been the pursuit of Hillsdale

(01:34:29):
College since eighteen forty four.

Speaker 7 (01:34:37):
You're listening to the SHL Media.

Speaker 1 (01:34:40):
Network the final half hour of the show tonight. We
have Sean, we have Earl, we have Rick. We have
a classic baseball team right here of winners who are
going to kick the I can't say that great folks,
and I have to say this. I'm not a young dude.

(01:35:05):
I'm far from it. I used to be a lot
sharper than this. But of all the people that I
know and I'm associated with, these are some of the
sharpest folks that I currently know. Sean Lewis and Earl
Jackson and Rick Robinson, and anytime that they come aboard,
it's an honor for me to have them here. And

(01:35:25):
it's going busy. You are twenty dollars that worked wonders right.

Speaker 14 (01:35:30):
Now, I have all the times because I didn't get
a chance to tell you about two of the smartest
people are the two of the quickest people that I know,
sure please. One of them was John Amerll guy used
to work four years ago, one of the smartest year
I've probably told you about him, one of the smartest
and quick, quick, wittest with the wittiest persons i'd met,

(01:35:55):
and I know, I know right, and he he was
just unbelievable. I mean, there was just he was like
a computer with information and he could spit it back
out at you and he could do it while telling
a dirty joke and wrestling somebody to the ground, So
it was really a trifecta. And then actually the other
one was my former broadcast partner, Clint. Clint's another person

(01:36:19):
who was unbelievably recalling information interesting. He was not only
fast with his responses, and how he responded was also
questionable sometimes because you didn't know what you were going
to get when you asked a question. But he was
like a walking encyclopedia of information.

Speaker 1 (01:36:40):
And we you and I when we were doing the
Sacads radio show, and I was blessed to have been
invited to do that, I ended up welcoming him. Contrarian Clint, Yes,
because during the show you'd make a point, I would
make a point, and he'd go out of his way
essentially to fuck with us, say well, no, that's not right,

(01:37:01):
and this is what's really happening. It would be one
hundred and eighty degrees to whatever it is that you
just said.

Speaker 14 (01:37:07):
Just for fun, Yeah, just for fun. He would be
unbelievably wonderful as the defense attorney when you were getting
court training in the academy. Oh yeah, he would have
been the best at it.

Speaker 1 (01:37:22):
Yeah, is this a good spot?

Speaker 20 (01:37:24):
Project twenty twenty six The King Jeffries plan to remake America,
raise taxes on working families, impeach President Trump.

Speaker 9 (01:37:31):
Donald Trump must be removed from office. I'd like to
face the bastard right now.

Speaker 1 (01:37:37):
Open the border, restart the invasion.

Speaker 9 (01:37:42):
It's about defunding the police.

Speaker 12 (01:37:44):
A riot.

Speaker 23 (01:37:45):
They believe we are unapologetic about our socialism, the abolition
of private property.

Speaker 12 (01:37:50):
The chip at it aggressively until we can unravel the
whole system.

Speaker 16 (01:37:54):
They want to turn America into a socialist, crime filled dystopian.

Speaker 14 (01:37:57):
We want.

Speaker 6 (01:38:00):
Are you going to let them?

Speaker 1 (01:38:03):
So? You know, just today I was watching I don't
even remember, and it's immaterial what what TV station it
was or what channel. People are saying in semi droves
now in DC, Well, it looks like it's fate a

(01:38:25):
complay that mom Donnie is going to become mayor of
New York City in November. Again another BZ if then equation. Okay,
so each one of us here, if that happens, then
dot dot dot sean.

Speaker 14 (01:38:47):
I don't. I don't think so. I really don't think so.
You know, it's do you remember in every single election
that the Democrats lose, they are seemingly always winning in
the poll was going into it this last election, the
election before that with Hillary always they're always seemingly winning

(01:39:10):
in the polls, And there's always so much fever and fervor,
and everybody's really pulling for this. No he's doing what
or he's getting the kid glove treatment from media. He's
getting the kid glove treatment from all of the pundits.
He's getting kid glove treatment from all of the other
Democrats because for them, well, I have to support the

(01:39:31):
brown guy who's running as a socialist in New York.
Is if I don't say anything positive about him, somebody
will use that against me later, and I'm trying to
court all the other socialists around the country, so I
have to do this. I don't think it's real. I
think it's AstroTurf, much like they were telling us how
Kamala was just going to wipe the floor with Trump

(01:39:51):
and why would we even show up that day because
it's going to be such an ass kicking. I don't
think it's real. I think that the adults in the
York outside of the ones you see protesting every single thing,
which will eventually show up to the polls, and it's
sad because it's gonna I think Cuomo is gonna end
up winning at the end of the day just because

(01:40:13):
they're gonna vote for him because he's Cuomo. They're sick
of Adams, so I don't think that's gonna go anywhere,
and they don't want Mondami. This is he'll He's gonna
be like Stacy Abrams, where he's gonna never win anything,
but he's now going to be in politics forever.

Speaker 6 (01:40:27):
Now, So a couple points one, I think Shawn's right
to a point. I think Cuomo probably will win it,
which will be a great time to pimp a friend
shop go to Shop do before the Week dot com
when the show's over shirt because that's purpose the only
that's the only place the guy deserves to be, and

(01:40:49):
they actually have it over there. I wish we'd have
thought of it, but I didn't because I don't live
in New York. But the other thing is, I hope
that all the adults in the room haven't already fled
to places like Florida and then and we've got the
half back folks that went to Florida and then it
was too hot. Now they fled to North Carolina because
it's kind of the halfway point. So I don't know
how many I don't know how many actual Republicans are
left in New York, but I'm hoping there's enough adults

(01:41:11):
in the room that are seeing the story about the
market in Missouri, you know, the government run markets where
they bought the shopping for like twelve million dollars and
then invested another twenty nine million dollars in it, So
they're like thirty some odd million in the hole, and
they just had to close it because the shelves were
empty because everybody keeps stealing from it.

Speaker 14 (01:41:30):
Imagine if somebody gave you thirty million dollars to run
any business, I don't care what it is, and you
can't do it. I'll tell you right now, somebody gave
me thirty million dollars to run a grocery store. I've
never even worked in the grow. I worked as a
community store as a kid in a liquor store, but
I never worked in the grocery store. You better believe
I'll spend a million of that figuring out how to

(01:41:51):
do it effectively. Right then the other twenty nine million
can go into my salary in the store.

Speaker 1 (01:41:57):
Geez, Louise, Okay, now this isn't interesting. Point below a
cosmic bard said, and is this true? Because I'm not
familiar with the Northeast anymore. Ironically, most of the Republicans
work in New York City live in New Jersey. Is
that true?

Speaker 14 (01:42:10):
Yes, so they won't have.

Speaker 6 (01:42:11):
A real day.

Speaker 14 (01:42:13):
Oh I don't. I don't think the Republicans even factor
in on the grand scheme of things. I just think
that when it comes down to the socialist, lunatic kid
that wants to start, that wants to put out. The
other thing, too, is when the bodega owners and all
the private and there's still a lot of private shops
in New York. You have to remember that you get

(01:42:33):
away from Times Square in the big areas, there's still
a lot of mom and pop places, especially the Italian bakeries,
the Italian delis. YadA, YadA, YadA. You start dangling cheap
government runs stores in front of people and threaten businesses.
As much as I have problems with New York City,
a lot of those businesses and bodegas have been owned

(01:42:54):
by the same family for generations. Once you start screwing
with those groups, I think people are gonna be like, yeah, no,
I'm not risking my favorite Italian bakery down the street
and my favorite Italian deli and the people who've been
run it for years. I'm not risking them going out
of business because you can now buy Oscar Meyer for
two ninety nine at the government run store. I just

(01:43:15):
think that that actually is going to play much bigger
than people think.

Speaker 12 (01:43:20):
I think. I think you're giving them too much credit.
I really do. Yeah, I don't think. I'm not gonna
say I think Mom Donnie is a fad of complete
But I don't think I think Cuomo or or or
slee w. I think he's probably he's probably done anyway.

(01:43:42):
But yeah, it's gonna it's gonna take a it's gonna
take a lot of work to get him out of
that front run a spot. And I really think that
I'm going to talk about this on my show today
in regards to the UH, to the government run grocery stores.

(01:44:02):
I think that New York is going to get what
they deserve because the other thing is with New York. Yes,
their voter turnout is atrocious. I mean AOC won her
seat with fourteen of the eligible voters. I mean, I
don't the voter turnout is terrible. And I think for

(01:44:23):
as much as people talk about how much they don't
want a socialist or a communist, which is what he
really is, I will be shocked if enough people turn
out to keep him out of the mayor's mansion.

Speaker 6 (01:44:38):
I mean, if the only people, if the only people
show up to vote vote for that guy, I say,
New York City gets what it, what it pays for.
And I say we start the amical divorce process because
I'm not bailing them out.

Speaker 1 (01:44:50):
No, No, our days bailouts are done. That's like our
days of lockdowns are done.

Speaker 14 (01:44:56):
I will tell you that the the and we probably
won't see it in our lifetimes. I might the rest
of you as won't.

Speaker 6 (01:45:05):
Hey, I got two words for you, one of them
years old.

Speaker 14 (01:45:08):
Anyhow, is it could be the experiment that actually sinks
communism socialism in this country for a while. And I'm
not saying I want that experiment to be performed, and
I'm not saying I would like I want to see
it happen, but we all know if it happens, it's

(01:45:28):
going to fail miserably, and it's going to fail the
point that I think you'll see New York City back
into the seventies between crime squalor a city on fire.
I think that that will absolutely happen.

Speaker 1 (01:45:44):
That's when I was there. I was there during the
time of John Lindsay. You know, I'd work in the
I had to work in the fucking FBI. I worked
at WMFO. I got assigned to New York City. That
that's what turned me off completely on federal law enforcement
is just being in the Northeast. That was like an

(01:46:05):
assignment from Hell. But it's like what I said, pick
a city, do it soon, enumerated, designated, identify it. And
at this point, I say, New York City, let's do
They are self choosing, is what I'm saying. So let's
make it be New York City. Let's defund the police,

(01:46:26):
Let's let the communists rule it all, Let's let the
taxes explode, let's drive businesses out, and it will be
a piece of shit, worse than anything I ever envisioned
and personally saw under Lindsay, who was a piece of trash.
But I don't think we're I don't think we're going
to be able to avoid this experiment. Come November.

Speaker 12 (01:46:52):
And look at look at what happened in Chicago. Lori
Lightfleot was hands down the worst mayor in the country,
and they elected somebody worse. I think that's going to
happen in New York City.

Speaker 14 (01:47:06):
That wasn't her fault. They kept her out of the
water for too long.

Speaker 6 (01:47:12):
You see.

Speaker 14 (01:47:14):
They could have just dipped her in the river every
once in a while and the oxygen would have got
back to her. Brain, what too soon?

Speaker 24 (01:47:19):
That was?

Speaker 14 (01:47:20):
That was over the edge? That was? What's over the edge?

Speaker 2 (01:47:22):
Come?

Speaker 6 (01:47:23):
I mean, well, there's a reason your coat, your show
is called the.

Speaker 1 (01:47:25):
Edge admortal acbar. I'm sure gets that reference, yes or
maybe not? Uh. In any event, I think we're gonna
that's gonna be a self fulfilling prophecy.

Speaker 14 (01:47:40):
Oh yeah, no, I mean, look, if they do it,
it's the equivalent of all of them jumping onto a
wooden ship and then sitting the middle of the ship
on fire, in the middle of the ocean, just to
see what.

Speaker 6 (01:47:51):
You know, you know what we do if they elect
the socialist bastard? We just wallo it off like the movie.

Speaker 1 (01:47:57):
Well that's what Steve said, Mae, Snakelis I.

Speaker 14 (01:48:02):
Was, you know, I was say, somebody in the chat
mentioned snake Pliskin, and I think that's going to be
more applicable than you could possibly think.

Speaker 1 (01:48:09):
Yes, Snake Bliskin, I thought you were dead. This is
California right now, though, And this this is a great
sales pitch, isn't it?

Speaker 14 (01:48:21):
Amusing?

Speaker 1 (01:48:27):
Hollywood?

Speaker 14 (01:48:30):
Oh yeah, it's wonderful.

Speaker 12 (01:48:36):
Which city is this?

Speaker 14 (01:48:38):
I'll give you one guest, don't tell them what do
you think just from looking at it, where do you
think this is?

Speaker 1 (01:48:46):
I know, close.

Speaker 14 (01:48:50):
Hollywood, yep, But the two are to the two are
indistinguishable at this point. You can't really tell them apart.

Speaker 1 (01:48:57):
It could be it could be any city in northern California.

Speaker 14 (01:49:02):
That could be downtown Sacramento right now too. Oh, it's
all the same. Yeah, it's incredible to me, the whole
thing that Gavin's doing right now. I laughed, because nobody's
talking about the fact that the guy hasn't fucking run
anything for the state of California in two months. The
only thing that he's doing today he had his soft

(01:49:24):
launch for his presidential campaign. That's all this is. And
he's using I want.

Speaker 6 (01:49:29):
To talk about let's talk about all the money that
he's drifted from Commedyfornians who need to rebuild their houses
and all.

Speaker 14 (01:49:37):
Well, and how about the fact that we're in a
financial crisis in the state. We're already the budget's already
under water for next year, and he's crying poor mouth,
but he wants to spend two hundred and fifty million
dollars on an election that it's not really clear if
he's going to actually win or not. To redistrict for
something that's not a state problem. It's it's not a
problem what Texas does. I said this on my show

(01:49:58):
Monday night. Excess gaining seats does not necessarily mean California
lose the seats. If it was the other way around,
nobody would have any problem with it. It's just the
Dems don't want to give up power. And I've already
heard the word fair come out. Well, they have to
keep it fair.

Speaker 1 (01:50:14):
Fair.

Speaker 14 (01:50:14):
Well, it wasn't fair when thirty one or ten to
thirty million fucking illegals flooded into this country that would
completely reshape the districting all in of itself after the
next census. Nobody cried fair then, But now you're worried
about fair. Meanwhile, you're trying to change a state law

(01:50:36):
that was just voted on by the people Ina to
have an independent citizen review do the redistricting. And it's
already jaded because one of those fuckers on that review
panel spoke at the event today.

Speaker 1 (01:50:50):
Well, let me ask you this. This is a perfect
point to interject, Sean. Will they pull it off? Will
they get the people to vote and say, you know
what do you think? I'm not there so I don't
have any insight.

Speaker 14 (01:51:04):
What's yours, then, I don't think so. I don't think
anyone's going to show up for it. I think the
people in this state are sick of Gavin Newsom, even
the Democrats, and they may be sick of him for
a different reason, but I don't think people want to
give him a win one way or the other. Right now,
it's good, I'll tell you right now, it's good for
his career that he's not running for governor again, because

(01:51:25):
I honestly don't know if he could win. His approval
ratings sucks, and you talk to people and they all
hate him. And more importantly, I think people in this
state who would come out and vote for the state
constitution to be changed are kind of pissed that he's
spending all this time, money, and effort on something that
doesn't really affect the state. It's a federal thing. So

(01:51:46):
I don't really think they can put it off.

Speaker 12 (01:51:50):
Oh yeah, I don't. I don't think so either. It's fairness.
The whole thing of fairness just doesn't doesn't compute. When
you look at Massachusetts, thirty five percent of the electorate
as Republicans, and they have no representation, and the same

(01:52:11):
in Illinois and Maryland and all these other leftist run states.
It it smacks of this is like you said, this
is Gavin Newsom's soft launch for his presidential campaign, because
this would make that That's the only way this makes
any sense. That's the only way this makes any sense.

Speaker 14 (01:52:34):
And he needs this win. If he doesn't do this,
he's done done. This is the only thing that would
have got him to primaries. If he doesn't pull off
this November special election and he fails, he's got literally
nothing to run on. Because people in California forget the
rest of the country, even liberal states kind of fucking
hate California. And I don't blame him. I live here.

(01:52:57):
I don't blame them. They don't like the way California's run.
They don't want to be California. You know. It's like
that old Sopranos line where hey, I don't want any
of that California bullshit, Right, That's exactly how a lot
of the country feels.

Speaker 1 (01:53:11):
But then it also makes you wonder, Okay, we know
in California always spelled over with a K. Kamala Harris
is gone. Cammy the cackler has said, I'm not going
to go there, and so let's go let's do the
if then equation with BZ and let's do it with Sean.
If then Gavin Newsom places all of his political ducks
in one basket, and then he is not successful. Who's

(01:53:35):
waiting in the wings in California? Or is this a
vacuum where somebody who is smart, I don't know, Steve
Hilton name it.

Speaker 14 (01:53:43):
So I'll sell you right now. I'll tell you right
now if he he's going to run for president, I
don't give a shit what happens. He's just not going
to go for it. He's done right. Kamala is going
to run too, which that's interesting to see how those
two are going to play nice or not play nice.
But I'll just say back and eat popcorn and watch that.

(01:54:03):
Then you're gonna start looking at people like uh Wiener,
Scott Wiener out of San Francisco. You might get like
London Breed, you might get a maybe Bass makes a
run at it, But nobody's serious that outside of their district,
anybody really likes Steve Hilton actually would have a good shot.
The only problem is, Yeah, it's great to have a

(01:54:27):
governor who's not a raging lunatic liberal. But they also
they'll maintain a super majority in the Assembly in the
Senate and can still cram a bunch of shit through.
So you really aren't doing anything until you start actually
taking care of the local districts.

Speaker 1 (01:54:44):
Well, and perhaps that's an excellent time, because boy, do
I have a video for you.

Speaker 6 (01:54:50):
It's time for happy, happy stories and good times.

Speaker 1 (01:54:55):
How about the.

Speaker 29 (01:54:59):
Outside of it a downtown la venue where Governor Gavin
Newsom was actually holding a press conference today, and it
appears that those Quorter patrol agents are making arrests illegal
immigrants that I don't know if they were at this
press conference, if they were in the area. But this
is the very as John put it when we first
saw this video, very in your face way, uh, to

(01:55:20):
let your Democrats know that you were going to do
your job, that you're in.

Speaker 1 (01:55:25):
Your face, Govin Newsom. I think that's wonderful. And then
of course following that, I think what happened, Oh, this
person corked off. This is glorious. Not believe that this
just happened to be a coincidence.

Speaker 6 (01:55:40):
There is no way this was a coincidence.

Speaker 19 (01:55:42):
This was why that the governor and many of our
other elected officials were having a press conference here to
talk about redistricting, and they decided they were going to
come and thumb their nose in front of the governor's face.

Speaker 1 (01:55:55):
Why would you do that?

Speaker 14 (01:55:56):
Is Why wouldn't you do that?

Speaker 8 (01:55:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 12 (01:55:58):
Exactly, Why wouldn't.

Speaker 14 (01:56:01):
The governor's thumbing his nose at what the people voted for?
Why not your nose at him?

Speaker 12 (01:56:08):
Here's here's what I think. It's glorious. I think President
Trump and the people in power are doing what we
elected him to do. Is wield the political power that
we've given them. Republicans for far too long have have
just never taken the high road and and and never
actually used the power that they've been given when we've

(01:56:30):
elected them. And President Trump now is doing that, and
I think that is outstanding.

Speaker 1 (01:56:34):
I wouldn't even say it's the high road. They they've
taken the cowards invertebrate road.

Speaker 6 (01:56:40):
Yeah yeah, yeah, well, but they've always claimed the high
road when they've done it. But that that's just it.
I still don't feel like they've done enough. But that time,
but I did want to back up this one thing
just for a second, because the only reason Gavin Newsom
has in the oxygen right now is because of the
DNC debit card crowd on X. If it wasn't for
the folks that are getting paid eight hundred bucks a

(01:57:01):
month by the DNC to push out all their bullshit,
and nobody would be paying attention to Gavin Newsom right now.

Speaker 14 (01:57:06):
I'll tell you right now, it's even worse that the
DNC is flooding so much money into this right now.
I've made two comments on and everybody knows that Gavin's
not posting his own stuff to X. It's Brandon Richards,
his little his little helper there that twerp. So but

(01:57:29):
I've commented on two of those posts and the amount
of bots, and this is how you tell a bot
on social media. It's really simple. They have a ten
year old account, a five year old account. They only
have like two hundred people to follow. Well, if you're active,
you'll have five hundred porn bots following you on X
like just by default. So it shows that you only

(01:57:50):
fire up that account when you need to, when you're
being paid to. And it's the bot farms active and
all of them will give you like two word responses,
insult you somehow or just so well, he's triggered and
run away. So I was calling them all out on
it today and they were going batshit crazy about it.
I was like, hey, look, you have a ten year
old account, you only have one hundred and forty seven
people that's following you. You must be part of the

(01:58:11):
bot farm. And they would just come back with like
five word responses, and then eight seconds later another account
that's almost identical would respond the same type of thing,
and I'd go through the whole process again. But that
is this tells you how nervous they are about the
midterms and how badly they need these five seats in

(01:58:32):
California to feel like they're going to be even in
play at the midterms. Oh dude, you kicked.

Speaker 1 (01:58:37):
Over the bot farm. I scrolled through that stuff that
you were doing. I went, well, that's fun, Well that's fun,
that's stupid. That's a bot farm, that's a hive, that's
a beehive. Kicked it right over. I was so damn
proud of you, mister.

Speaker 14 (01:58:52):
Yeah, thank you, thank you very much. That's how I
knew I was. I was close to the mark.

Speaker 1 (01:58:56):
Oh yeah, baby, ah okay, well let me do this
let me let me go over something. Let me go
over wax on, wax off, some things. Show, yeah said,
so let me start and I want to end up

(01:59:18):
with Sean. So, uh, Rick, if you would tell us
about your show, your show of shows and what's coming
up next? Uh, if you would please? Sir?

Speaker 6 (01:59:30):
All right, Well, tomorrow we have the extended edition of
the Rick Robinsons Show, so it'll be from ten am
to one pm Eastern Time because we do the Friday
news roundup and from the noon to one hour with
Brad Seager.

Speaker 1 (01:59:41):
From seven am Pacific. Right, Just want to make sure
that I get it seven am Pacific.

Speaker 6 (01:59:46):
Yes, So come in, come in for the last hour,
so you're not crotchety. It's good you have a hall
of past and what do you give you a the merit?
Just come in for the last hour since we're doing
the extend and the and then Saturday night I'll be
actually Friday night, I do, he said, She said with
the lovely agurekon. That's more of a just we kind
of pick a topic and have fun for about an

(02:00:08):
hour and a half with it. Saturday night, I'll be
pushing buttons for the front Port Forensics Screw, which is
our true crime drama that we do well true crime
podcast that we do every Saturday that starts at eight
pm Eastern Sunday night. I'll be pushing buttons for Korn
Nimick and Korn's Reading Room. Yes, Jonas Quinn is on
my network.

Speaker 14 (02:00:27):
I just want to point that out.

Speaker 6 (02:00:29):
And we do that show seven pm Eastern time every Sunday,
and then Monday night usually America Off the Rails sometime
around ten usually an opening act for that guy right
over there before I ship him over before I used to.
I used to ship up to Boston with the dropkick Murphy's.
But then I got a letter said no more of that,

(02:00:49):
No please, no more.

Speaker 1 (02:00:50):
I have sad. I love those guys.

Speaker 6 (02:00:53):
Apparently they don't like us.

Speaker 14 (02:00:56):
They want their money.

Speaker 6 (02:00:58):
Well, that's just it. I even showed the the proof
that I pay for the licensing. They're like, even with
the licensing, we can still tell you no one, we're
telling you no, Like, okay.

Speaker 14 (02:01:06):
Thanks, you might have something to do with me. I'm
just saying no.

Speaker 6 (02:01:09):
It has everything to do with the fact that they
hate Trump. They actually were just they just had like
a big old meltdown in.

Speaker 12 (02:01:15):
One of their contents. Yeah, I heard about that, and I.

Speaker 6 (02:01:17):
Got an email like a two weeks later. By a
week later, we're like, we've noticed you've been playing this
song where we're asking you to quit. Like fine, whatever,
go ahead be that way, comma. But anyway, so yeah,
that's that's pretty much it. And then I mean, because
otherwise I'd be here till like one o'clock in the morning.
You'll everybody everything I do, speaking of which, my name
is Rick Rick Robinson. I'm a workaholic. My last meeting

(02:01:38):
was for anever ago exactly.

Speaker 1 (02:01:42):
So Rick, thanks for being here, sir, appreciate it. I swear, well, okay,
I kind of maybe pinky swear like this that I'll
try to be there at seven o'clock tomorrow.

Speaker 6 (02:01:53):
Dude, don't just come in when you can.

Speaker 1 (02:01:56):
It's just don't Josh, won't come in when you can.

Speaker 6 (02:02:00):
It's fine, It's okay.

Speaker 1 (02:02:01):
The water is fine. Rick, seriously, thanks for being here tonight, sir.

Speaker 6 (02:02:06):
It's been fun. Jents, have a good night, okay, take care.

Speaker 1 (02:02:09):
And also this gentleman, let me see if I can.

Speaker 14 (02:02:14):
Okay, why can't I do this?

Speaker 18 (02:02:15):
Now?

Speaker 6 (02:02:17):
There we go?

Speaker 1 (02:02:18):
There we go. Someday I'll get this Learnt and also
Earl Jackson. Now you had your last show this morning,
But what have you got upcoming? And when can your
show be heard and where can it be seen?

Speaker 14 (02:02:34):
Sir?

Speaker 12 (02:02:37):
My show is every Tuesday and Thursday at eleven am Central,
and I am thinking about I'm contemplating, praying about extending
the Showa ninety minutes. I tend to go over and
and I always have stuff prepared that I don't get

(02:02:59):
to and then by the time the next show rolls around,
it's kind of outdated. So I'm thinking about doing a
ninety minute show. We'll see how We'll see what happens
with that. But like I said, every Tuesday and Thursday
at eleven and I'm going to try and make some
more appearances on you guys shows. I have a full
time job unfortunately at the moment, so that sheets into

(02:03:20):
some time whining. I'm not an overachiever like Rick.

Speaker 14 (02:03:27):
So yere you go. None of us are.

Speaker 1 (02:03:32):
So we'll see you next Tuesday. And thank you for
being here tonight, sir, And thank you for staying up
so late.

Speaker 12 (02:03:36):
Absolutely, it's been a pleasure.

Speaker 1 (02:03:38):
Have a good one, ear And then of course, then
there were two people left and it would be something
similar to Okay, now I think this is important. Tell
folks who you're going to be speaking to tomorrow. You
will not be creating and sending that show off into

(02:03:58):
the ozone tomorrow, but you will be interviewing somebody.

Speaker 14 (02:04:02):
Well, I will be staying in the ozone tomorrow night. Okay,
So I'm gonna do and I'll play it on my
show Monday night too. But I think this interview. It's
Anna Giarra Telly. She's a reporter for the Washington Examiner.
She's their homeland security reporter. But on top of that,
this is not going to have anything to do with
her reporting. This is her story as a victim. She

(02:04:24):
was a victim of the sexual assault in DC. She
just came out with it today on her social media.
She has never told the story before. She's done interviews today,
but I'm gonna have her tomorrow. I'm going to let
her tell her story. It's hopefully one of those interviews
that I'm seriously just going to say, the floor is yours.

(02:04:45):
Tell us your story, and then tell us what you
think about the current the current state of DC and
what Trump is doing. I don't need to ask any
more questions to that it's her story to tell. I'm
just a conduit and that's I plan on being for
this interview. I will post it probably tomorrow night at
six o'clock East Coast time, because I don't want to

(02:05:08):
sit on it for the weekend. I want her story
to get out. I think it's important. I read her
thread today on X and I was angry for her
and how she was treated, and it's just it needs
to be out there in full. So I'm I'm glad
to be able to give her that opportunity.

Speaker 1 (02:05:25):
Okay, and again tell people what time and where they
can watch. The reason I want to do last is
because I think it's important. The more people that we
can generate to get to go to that show and
watch and listen to her story, it's critical, it's imperative.

Speaker 14 (02:05:43):
I'm going to release it to YouTube first, and I'm
going to let it probably sit on YouTube for the weekend,
and then when I replay my show, obviously it'll be
on all the outlets, and that's for her.

Speaker 6 (02:05:55):
I don't want.

Speaker 14 (02:05:57):
I want to get it out quick. I want to
give it out and it's entirety. I don't really care
about the publicity aspect of it for us. I just
think this is a chance for somebody who is a
victim of a horrific crime to tell their story, and
I think it's important for it to be heard so
people see through the politics that's going on with everything
that's happening in DC and actually hear from a victim

(02:06:20):
themselves about what happens in DC. So that's going to
be my my my approach with this interview. I think
it's special honored that she would allow me to interview
her and spend time with me to tell her story.

Speaker 1 (02:06:33):
You're right, I think it is an honor, a wonderful honor.
So folks tomorrow night, wait wrong, bad guy right here? Ways,
if you would.

Speaker 14 (02:06:52):
Right there?

Speaker 1 (02:06:53):
Okay, So Sean, thank you sir. When you put out
the social media if you don't know where Sean is,
oh well, first.

Speaker 14 (02:07:01):
Shit at the number two against Tyranny on X the Obvious,
Yeah yeah, two against Tyranny, Play and Simple and then
Monday and Wednesday nights APM Pacific eleven on the East
Coast on the Edge of Liberty, which is my show. Okay, excellent,
Thank you for having me, as always.

Speaker 1 (02:07:16):
Thank you, sir. I'll be there uh and appreciated folks.
It's about that time, this time, what time?

Speaker 14 (02:07:25):
That time?

Speaker 1 (02:07:38):
So, ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, children of all ages,
thanks for listening to Beaz's Berserk Bobcat Saloon radio show
live and direct right here on the SHR Media Network.
It was a pleasure to be able to come to you.
I always I don't know some people don't like getting
a bunch of people together. I do well, number one,

(02:07:58):
because I'm a lazy and I don't have to talk
as much. I mean, that's obvious. But number two, the
people that I get on the show when I have
a big roundtable like this are some of the finest
people that you're gonna you're gonna discover Sack d Sean
and Big e, Earl Jackson and Rick Robinson from KLRN.
All fabulous individuals. And thanks to everybody for being here,

(02:08:26):
great people, great time. Thanks to you for watching live
and also listening and being in the podcast as per normal.
Promotional consideration is by lackeyed Martin, Skunkworks, these microphones, this board,
this engine company, and also thanks to my case one

(02:08:48):
threety five Kittle one refueling team with whom I will
be concerting in about five or ten minutes. This is
my Tiara tonight, Hey look B fifty two's m.

Speaker 14 (02:09:04):
Everybody quiet down, now get some sleep, everybody, my mama
not fam good that everyone.

Speaker 2 (02:09:11):
Good night Mama, gon daddy, good night show, then good
night that good night, Elizabeth.

Speaker 8 (02:09:16):
Nightgown boy, good night, came up, night, came up, good night,
came up, push going on. I was a sleep what's
everybody doing?

Speaker 13 (02:09:28):
Good night?

Speaker 12 (02:09:37):
Good night and good luck?

Speaker 1 (02:09:45):
But wait, isn't a busy show kind of like a
Marvel movie? Shouldn't you wait a moment or two before
for you get up? Because sometimes you miss the last scene.

(02:10:09):
Seems to me that I need to clear the comments baffles,
and that's what I'm going to do. I think that's
going to be a great show tomorrow that Seawan is
going to have and bring the ring Bring the Ring.
Master is a kick ass game. I'm not I'm not

(02:10:32):
sure I know what that game is. Phantom gets to
go to sleep, whiskey deal, good night, john boy, good night,
ed good night from Phantom, get out of my head.
Never and of course Sean says last comment everyone, Oh wait, wait,

(02:10:55):
Cosmic Bard just came in with this oh wait wait, no,
I'm the last comment. No, I'm the last comment. Mission
ready men? Yep, Sean says last comment again. Is it

(02:11:23):
a comment war? It appears, folks. We appear to have
a comment war in progress right now. Who will be last? Stop? Stop,

(02:11:43):
mission ready men?

Speaker 20 (02:11:46):
No?

Speaker 1 (02:11:46):
I win last comment?

Speaker 14 (02:11:50):
Me me

Speaker 28 (02:12:02):
The mom
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