All Episodes

June 13, 2025 • 134 mins
Chip and Bryan talk to Nikki and Miko from Boots2Heels_Podcast about their show helping service members transfer to civilian life. Plus breaking news all through the show, the protests in LA draw Trump into a military crackdown. The courts ruled against him, and now stayed that. Israel bombed Iran while we were on air. Plus headlines, and the most amazing animal stories you can imagine.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
It is nine thirty on a Thursday night, and you
were tuned into Beltweit Radio and beyond, which ken mean
one an only thing. If this is chip Chat, Welcome
to chip Chat, everybody. I'm chip Now. Normally this is
where I say who are you?

Speaker 2 (01:14):
Tz?

Speaker 1 (01:15):
But Tes is not here. Fortunately he's also not the
senator from California, so he's fine. She's not feeling well,
which is okay. We sent him on an assignment and
we'll find out what he comes from.

Speaker 2 (01:33):
Now.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
He's not feeling well, so you send him on an assignment.

Speaker 1 (01:35):
Yeah, that's punishment. So that's for calling in sick around here.
That voice, of course, is our current favorite producer, Brian Hey,
Brian hello, current for Yeah, current favorite producer. Well, you
know you could be worse, that could be yeah, So

(01:58):
we have a okay, look, this show is like a
lot of things, but we are I think it's safe
to say, like officially the resistance now and yeah, all
the things that I've been saying for months now are happening.

(02:22):
And all of the people, specifically Tez, who told me
that I was being an alarmist or I should not
say those things, and that the American people are better
than that he's wrong. And yeah, so this is one
of the few times I don't want to be right,
but I am as usual. So anyway, with that all

(02:49):
out of the way, we have special guests tonight. Nicky
and Miko from Boots to Heels Podcasts are going to
be joining us for a little bit. Their show is
about transitioning from thelitary life to civilian life or in
this case, civilian government to make military dictatorship. And yeah,
so we're gonna find out from them what we should do. Well, yeah,

(03:15):
we'll have the latest from l A. We'll have headlines.
The MAGA folks are out here injecting bleach again. Great, Yeah,
it's gonna be wild. There's even stuff in here I
don't even know about.

Speaker 3 (03:33):
So and we may have a breaking news story.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
Oh and breaking news. Well, there could always be breaking news.
You never know right here. So, Brian, do you have
a word, Uh yes, okay, let me think if I
have a word. Mmmm, yes, okay, So sit.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
Back, grab some fliphanger.

Speaker 1 (03:58):
It's press conference time. You're listening to the best show,
the only show, tip Chat on belt Wait Radio and beyond.

Speaker 2 (04:08):
Oh yeah, all.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
Right, welcome back to chip Chat here on beltwegh Radio
and beyond. I'm your chip. With me filling in for
TZ is Brian and we have special guests. We're gonna
help us with some headlines. Let's see if we can
make that work. I'm not the technical genius around here.

(05:07):
Nikki and Miko, are you there?

Speaker 4 (05:10):
We are here. Yes, Hey guys, Hey j Ship, thank
you for inviting us.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
We are very excited to have you.

Speaker 5 (05:20):
Know.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
We're gonna get to the bit where we interview you
and ask you all the stuff about your show. But
first we need you to help us out a little
bit with our show, which is you're gonna help us
with the headlines.

Speaker 4 (05:30):
Okay, okay, okay.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
So the way this works is, well, each take turns
reading a headline, and you have the honor of going first,
if you'd like.

Speaker 4 (05:40):
Okay, yeah, so it's headlines. This week, Trump federalized the
California National Guard and called them out to LA to
protect the valuable national interest against graffiti.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
That's true. Yes. Based on his success in taking control
of the California Guard, Trump ordered federal control of the
Kentucky only to find out that's not who makes the chicken.

Speaker 4 (06:04):
Okay. Trump's move to take control of events in California
was swiftly swiftly challenged in court. Writing for the state,
Governor Gavin Newsom reminded the Trump regime that California knows
how to party.

Speaker 1 (06:20):
There you go. Jadie Lance got in on the action,
sending a unit of Guard troops to Ikea and declaring
himself the sofa.

Speaker 4 (06:28):
King I'm done. In Texas, Governor Greg Abbot rolled out
the National Guard to ramp the pressure on protesters who
had taken steps to embarrass him. Governor Abbott said he
has no intention of walking back his response, adding that
his wheels are always turning as he thinks of new
ways to disable immigrants rights groups.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
That's right now. Just to be very clear why that's funny.
If you don't know, it's because Greg Abbott is in
a wheelchair, and it's because Greg Abbott is a reprehensible
shit bag that it's okay to make fun of him
for being in a wheelchair.

Speaker 4 (07:03):
We love it, okay, Just to be.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
Careful about that. Back in California, Senator Alex Padia tried
to ask U Secretary of DHS Christyme a question at
a press conference and was instead detained by herdons but
while that's pretty bad, at least he wasn't a puppy.

Speaker 4 (07:23):
Also this week, Trump fell up the stairs on his
way to board Air Force One. I saw that I
didn't be king to reporters. Later, he claimed that Obamas
tank so wait, Obama's Tan's type tan suit caused him
to lose focus, but that he would be sending the
National Guard to Northstrom to make sure nobody else buys

(07:44):
a tan suit.

Speaker 1 (07:46):
Remember when they thought that suit was gonna unmake the country.

Speaker 4 (07:51):
Yeah, it was so an American. Oh my god.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
Yeah, how dairy mikey Chero won the Democratic primary for
New Jersey governor. If she wins the main event, she
will have the second largest set of boobs in New
Jersey governor history, coming a few cup sizes short of
a Chris Christie.

Speaker 4 (08:10):
Chris Christy got something big ones he does. Elon Musk
has left his job Adulge and has been heavily investing
in personal care products. As for a quote as to
where he was investing must set deepens.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
A person climbed up the broadcast tower of the local
DC and PR station. Police responded with tote bag launchers
to knock him back to the ground.

Speaker 4 (08:40):
The tower climber was welcome as a hero when it
was revealed he was on his way to disabled pledge drive.

Speaker 1 (08:46):
That's right. Trade representatives from the US and China met
in London to hammer out what they are calling a framework.
No word on what's in the deal. But the lucky
numbers and the fortune cookies were eight, six for seven.

Speaker 4 (09:00):
I'm going to play that snaight lot.

Speaker 1 (09:03):
She is.

Speaker 4 (09:04):
Three Florida men assaulted several Canadians on a visit to
Sunrise this week. All three were thrown in the box
and the Panthers won six to one.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
Yeah, they're up three nothing. I think the last I
looked right now? All right? The BET Awards were held
and included some political theatrics from some of the winners.
Also honored at the event was Mariah Carey, well half
of her.

Speaker 4 (09:31):
Notably absent from the bed honors was the Dittler Diddy,
but the baby oil residue was still was still deemed
a slipping hazard.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
That's right. And finally, despite being fiercely neutral in all
facets of life, the Swiss beat the snot out of
the US men's national team, prompting the last four supporters
of the team to apply for asylum in Mexico. We're bad.
We I don't understand how a country of three hundred
and fifty million can't find a eleven dudes that can

(10:01):
play soccer.

Speaker 4 (10:02):
Yeah, we suck well. I love the head aching headlines.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
I absolutely for helping. Okay, so this is where we're
gonna play. We're gonna take a break now. In the
last few weeks, Brian has been using this opportunity to
throw something completely inappropriate at us in the break, which
I'm guessing he's gonna do that again, So just heads
up appropriate, Yes, Brian, are you ready to break this?

(10:37):
Oh lord, Okay, we're gonna take a break. We'll be
right back. You're listening to Chipchat on Beltway Radio and beyond.

Speaker 6 (10:48):
At the border.

Speaker 7 (10:50):
He puffed his chest.

Speaker 1 (10:52):
I'll build that.

Speaker 7 (10:53):
Wall ten feet, no less. But when the costs came long,
he ducks. Then blamed the press.

Speaker 5 (11:03):
He said, I never back down.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
No one tells me what to do.

Speaker 6 (11:11):
But throw him in a real debate, and he's crying
fake noble taco Trump.

Speaker 8 (11:21):
His attack, Oh Trump always chickens out, runs faster than
a shadow, heat UKs tough, then retreats like a taco
made of.

Speaker 5 (11:32):
Fluff, no beans, no meat, but just bluff. He said
he'd crush the Chinese trade tariffs will make us rich today,
but when markets dropped a single point, he panicked and

(11:52):
backed away.

Speaker 6 (11:55):
NAFTA's dead, he claimed, with pride American first, we won't.

Speaker 5 (12:02):
Then then signed a deal that looked the same and
called himself a genius again. Tack Oh Trump is a
tack old Trump, all his chickens out.

Speaker 9 (12:16):
He's obark and bravado, starts o war.

Speaker 1 (12:20):
Then calls it off like.

Speaker 7 (12:22):
A taco made of mist.

Speaker 6 (12:24):
You bite down, no things.

Speaker 3 (12:32):
He folds like laundry.

Speaker 10 (12:34):
He threatened Europe with new steel tax, pay up or
face the pain, but once the lobbyists came to lunch,
he dropped it. It's not the same.

Speaker 6 (12:50):
He talks like he's a cowboy with the hat that's
ten feet wide, but the moment pressure hits him, he's
already slipped outside.

Speaker 4 (13:06):
Taco Trump is.

Speaker 8 (13:07):
A taco always chickens out, throws tantrums, then goes big
some arrow, empty plate, no heating that FATA shouts and
yours he just checking out me, tackle me tackle Trump

(13:28):
always chickens.

Speaker 5 (13:33):
And that's no case, amiagles.

Speaker 4 (13:41):
I'm wondering is there any dance classes for those dances
that he's.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
Shoulders?

Speaker 4 (13:48):
Yeah? Do that?

Speaker 1 (13:53):
Oh god. So this is where tes would say Ai
and Brian must be stopped. I agree, Ai and Brian
must stop, but I think, yeah.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
I have become a best friends here. It's it's it's
like I said, I've been I've been joining the dark
side for a very long time. So this is this,
We're a good match.

Speaker 4 (14:15):
Dance moves.

Speaker 3 (14:16):
I'm still trying to wonder how he did that oul
body move.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
This is Yeah. My favorite part of the video is
how he like flips his fat body all the way
around and then and also his arms and legs are
disproportionate from each other. YEA way to go, Ai, y close,
I'm so close? All right? So yeah, that's that was fantastic. Okay,

(14:43):
now let's do the real interview part of the show.
Uh So, Army Vets and b ffs Nikki and Miko
bring all of us funny and inspiring conversations about pre
and post military life their show. They cover all kinds
of topics and especially the transition to civilian life. Can't

(15:05):
say transition to out anymore. We have them here to
talk about their show, but also to ask them some
of the important questions about the military, because that's really
important right now. So Nicki and Miko officially welcome to
chip Chat.

Speaker 4 (15:19):
Thank you for having us. Thank you.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
Okay, so before we get into asking all these questions,
we do need to get out of the way the
conflict of interest aspect of this. Miko is here. You
have a connection to this show already, So if you
would like to explain why you think you're a better
post than Patrick, now it's your time.

Speaker 4 (15:45):
Well. I think that if I was running for a
co host, I think that people would enjoy my smile
more than they enjoy Patrick's. Although I do enjoy his smile.
I'm just saying he does. He has a great hearty laugh.
But also he doesn't have this hair to do this

(16:07):
too when we're thinking conversation, yep, give me one, give
me one. He doesn't have Nikki with that far yes, yes,
a friend three to zero babe, sorry. And most importantly,
he doesn't have all right right he probably has and
yeah yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Standard standard Patrick kitt is gen and tonic with lines. Yep,
you know what a well, very convincing campaign, uh speech there.
I think we'll have to stage a debate maybe at
some point to see this is this will be very funny.
This is what Tess calls us DJing to ourselves. This

(16:49):
is funny to us and probably all six of our listeners.
But that's right, okay, So tell us about about your
show and how you just to start doing a show.

Speaker 4 (17:04):
Nikki, I'm the oldest, so I will start. Well, we
both we met in twenty eleven while we were both
still in the military. I was transitioning out of it
at the time. I think in best friend you had
about five more years ago, like nine or eight a
while ago. But we met. Our kids were out like

(17:24):
a chillier camp, so we got to know each other
and we just became best friends. Like we tried so
many different avenues to be entrepreneurs. We dis the champagne knnoisseurs.
We had a book club for little girls, yeah, and
was bringing book club for boys on and were just like,
you know what. She went out on her own. I
went out on my own, and we were doing it.

(17:46):
But I think we decided to come together and we
decided that you know, we're probably better together, and we
talked about, you know, doing a podcast. It transition military
to civilian life, because frankly, when we both got the military,
it was very hard transition because we're used to going
in and say I need to do this, this, this, this, this. Yeah,

(18:06):
they weren't listening.

Speaker 1 (18:09):
Yeah, I mean, it is a thing that I know.
There's a lot of support programs that kind of pop
up around because it is not an easy transition, right
if you go from in the military. I had this
weird idea when I was in high school. I was like, Oh,
I'm going to join the Navy and be a cook
on a summary. That was like my goal in life.

(18:32):
And I here's how old I am. I sent away
for the VHS tape that they would send for the recruiting.

Speaker 4 (18:40):
Oh oh, you put that in a little thing and
then you push play. Okay, yeah yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
And so I got it. You know. It was cool
as like submarines going fast in the water and all that.
And then then I was like, hey, Mama, I found
thinking about this, and she goes, you know, in the
Navy they tell you what to do all the time,
and I was like yeah, and she goes, you don't
do what I tell you to do all the time,
And it's like, oh, good point. So like when you're
in like a lot of stuff is kind of like

(19:10):
figured out for you. Is that kind of the thing.

Speaker 4 (19:13):
Yeah, they do tell you what to do. I had
a hard time listening in the beginning. Yeah, I probably
didn't listen to my mom either, so why did I join?

Speaker 1 (19:24):
Right?

Speaker 4 (19:25):
But they do tell you. They give you like specific
what your routines are going to be, and you just
have to follow them and then and then you can
think on your own after after like the first two
years or something. Yeah, I'm being facetious with that, but
but you really are encouraged to follow the rules. Will
also take the initiative. In the military, Yeah, it was

(19:47):
a lot of structure, but they did a lot of
teaching you how to be a leader, how to work well, teamwork.
You know. It was structure, which is why I think
a lot of people prefer to have military people because
you know, they're to be dedicated. They have the structure,
they're gonna, you know, finish the job when the job
is done, not when it's time to get off works.

Speaker 11 (20:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
Yeah, I just I wonder then, like when you're out right,
do a lot of people maintain their sort of military
routine just out of habit, or just because it feels
safe or something, or or is it is it like
having the safety blanket ripped off and you're just like,
oh shit, I gotta figure out what to do now.

Speaker 4 (20:28):
I think for me it was just it's ingrained in me.
It's like I've been out now for thirteen years and
I am still wake up at six ready to work out.
Just still structure with a lot of military things. You
got your best friend, Nah, I don't think they can't

(20:48):
do that big one with me, baby. I was like, no, deusus.
I have always you know, if you watch anything on
my show, like I've had ADHD my entire life, so
to focus while I was in there was a lot.
So now that I don't have that regime hanging over me,
I'm just wow, you know what I mean. Instead of

(21:10):
getting up at six, I'll get up at like seven fifteen.
No wow, yeah, yeah, yeah, both of us. Is still
instilled in us because I can see it with her
a lot. Even the way that we manage our kids
or tell our kids things to do is from a
military standpoint, and I think we give advice from a

(21:31):
military stand we do, even if we don't want to.
It's just naturally ingrained in us and even if we're sick,
we don't quit Like that is that's total military. Like
one time we were recording and I was like, you
guys were sick. I was sick as a dog chip.
I mean, like the worst type of sickness I was.
It was terrible. But she's like, so let's go get

(21:55):
yourself together. Patrick was so upset. I didn't tell you that.
He was like, maybe no, you're you're too sick. I'm like, no,
I gotta do this. So that part is military that's
not with us.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
Yeah. Do you think that you joined because you, like
I get I think I don't know, But I think
that maybe some of the people who joined the military
are already kind of like not quitters in the first place.
Or were you like somebody who would have quit before
and then they taught you not to quit? Or were

(22:29):
you always kind of a tough cookie?

Speaker 4 (22:31):
That a good question, very good question. I think that
some people come in ask tough cookies, and some people
are taught to be tough cookies. I don't think you
just go in because you already have naturally that skill
setting you. I think it's something that is definitely taught
and even if you had a little if I had
a little bit of it, they were able to completely

(22:51):
pull it out of me. Yea, she's the toughest cookie
in the bunch. Let me tell you. Yeah, I was
like a jelly roll. And then I became like you know, Flawn,
so like just a little tough, graduated to flund.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
There but more stable. Yeah, okay, not mine.

Speaker 3 (23:12):
I have a question, go ahead, Brian, since I feel
like with two lovely military ladies here, what was did
you have any other military women that inspire you to join?
In addition to uh you all just maintaining your your
status while you were in service?

Speaker 1 (23:33):
Great question?

Speaker 4 (23:35):
Did it inspired us to join?

Speaker 2 (23:37):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (23:37):
Like did you did you see you know some uh
general or colonel and be like, I want to be
like her, and then so you signed up?

Speaker 4 (23:47):
No, I didn't. I joined because I needed money for college.
And I remember I was in my first year and
I called my recruiter because I was like, dang, I
don't I can't to go back. And so that's why
I joined. But if I could pivot a smidge with
the question, there were a lot of military women in

(24:09):
there that encouraged me to continue because I wanted to
stop after the first iteration the first six years, but
there were some amazing military women that were like, no,
like keep going, finish your twenty Yeah. I enjoyed because
I quit college, was drinking every day. My mom was like,
you're getting out of this house. You got to figure

(24:30):
something out. So I was just like, you know what,
let me just go to the military. So it was
nobody in my family. My father had went in for
a few years, but no females in my family had
went in the military. I was the first one. But
now I'm happy to say that I have a niece
that joined as well. So's she's doing well.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
Do you feel like now you both get to be
examples for young women who are interested in servants.

Speaker 4 (24:54):
Oh yeah yeah, especially with booster Heels. I think it's
like it's always been Miko's passion. Yeah's to help little
young girls. Yeah, And I think she just rupped it
off on me. We've been frayings so long, so I'm
just like picking up her. He's got to give back, Okay,
we've got to fortify, we've got to pull from the
marginalized communities and elevate. She's like, okay, so.

Speaker 1 (25:16):
That kind of brings me to a question that I
hadn't written down, but I was thinking about it all day, like,
especially with what's going on in the turmoil and all this,
which maybe it's better to get to that after we
ask you about what's going on. So just remind me
that I have this great idea for a question. I

(25:38):
know that speaking about transitioning out, we talked about getting in.
You know, that's need a lot of support with coming
out of the military or in years, years and years
and years afterwards. There's ongoing cuts at VA. You know,
they're firing people left and right, and so are there
independent veterans organizations that are stepping in to fill the

(26:00):
those gaps? Are they able to fill those gaps in support?

Speaker 4 (26:06):
I think I think they are out there and they're
doing what they can do. You know, if you if
you need some assistance there the DAVWW, it's organizations like
that that really are trying to support veterans as much
as they possibly can. And and you've got to think
that some of their resources have been cut as well,
so they can't do as much as they need to

(26:27):
be able to do so as much as they can,
they are They're still like they're trying to support. Yeah,
we had.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
Back I don't know, a couple of years ago on
on the network, we had a show hosted by her
name is Ebony. She just finished her PhD actually, and
she was also a veteran and she was working on
like people transitioning out of the military who were needing

(26:58):
like mental health and sort of focused on like how
people can connect to those kind of resources. Do you
ever feature that kind of stuff on the show and
do you do you sort of talk to those organizations?

Speaker 4 (27:14):
Yeah, that is so interesting our I think that comes
out the end of this month, but probably every I
want to say almost every show we we give information on,
you know, resources to help. This particular show because it
is Men's Mental Health Month, we interviewed a veteran who

(27:37):
gave a deep, just introspective look at his time and
his story and we have a lot of resources that
this is. This was our second guest on a show,
and it was amazing and it was harrowing, and it
was it really highlighted, you know, the trauma and the

(27:57):
PTSD that a lot of sold just go through or
airmen or you know, marines or whatever branch you're in
and so we absolutely give those resources. We My son
is in the Young Marines, so we volunteer at a
lot of you know, say, homeless shelters for events or
anything that we can do. And they have a plethora

(28:19):
of resources that I then take back after communicating with them,
and then I'll drop it in our chats or we
might do a reel on it, or you know, which
we need to do is start putting it on our website.
But yeah, absolutely, that's that's top tier in our wheelhouse
of what we need to continue to do.

Speaker 12 (28:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (28:37):
I think we just recently did the commercial about it,
and in that commercial, we just tell them resources where
you can find support if you need support, and basically
men don't open up like they should. So our message
was like, you know, talk to somebody. It's okay to
speak out and say something.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
Yeah, you want to give that information now in case
anybody's listening.

Speaker 4 (28:58):
Really, sure they can. I know ours was VA dot gov.
But there is more information than that. We don't have
because we normally have on no car and so we're
not we're not we're not as professional as chip check
and it's crazious, man, but but we can.

Speaker 3 (29:15):
Call us professionals.

Speaker 1 (29:16):
Chip, I don't know about that. Be careful with that word.

Speaker 4 (29:20):
Yeah, we can share the commercial, but it's it's on
Boost to Heels on our website, on our Instagram, and
our YouTube. But you can start at v A dot
gov and then you'll see all the dropdowns for you know,
especially since we're talking about mental health mental health assistance.

Speaker 3 (29:40):
I want to ask website, all right, I felt like
where you mentioned the fact that like, you know, mind
you that, yeah, this month is men's Mental Awareness mental
health awareness.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
But.

Speaker 3 (29:56):
Do you feel like in the military there is is
maybe a slight difference of the mentality with women and men.
Did you ever notice that, especially someone who's you know,
post traumatic or anything of that.

Speaker 4 (30:10):
Nature, Like in what way.

Speaker 3 (30:13):
In any way dealing with like I said, dealing from
post traumatic or just the ordeal of being in the military,
handling the stress of you know, boot camp and all
that stuff. Have you seen or been aware of the
differences between a man and a woman in the military in.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
That aspect, like the way they're treated or just.

Speaker 3 (30:35):
Yeah that, or how they've handled handled the life of
a military person.

Speaker 4 (30:41):
I don't. I don't know if I kind of noticed that.
It's probably a lot different now. I went back in
the day, in the nineteen.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
Laundreds. Yeah, I had like twenty three year old coworker
keeps calling it that I keep.

Speaker 4 (30:58):
Not so so disappointing. But when I went on basic training,
it was it wasn't spoke about as much as it
is now, So it wasn't a separation of you know,
females and males. Of course, there's more males in the
military than it is female, so you know, they are
a little tougher on males than they are females. But

(31:20):
I think it, you know, they force females to be
just as tough and just as strong as they be
it males, just on a female level versus a male's level.
But now that you know mental health and everything, anxiety,
everything is so prevalent now I think they do a
lot more. I don't want to say catering, but they
give them an opportunity to raise my hand, you say, hey,

(31:43):
I'm having a rough day, and they don't go as
hard on those personnel as they would. They didn't care
back then when we were going through, like you having
a rough day, suck it up, let's go, let's keep moving.
But yeah, I agree with that. I also think that
if you have sergeants that are in art or commanders
that were in the late nineteen hundreds, I think that

(32:06):
there they have to perform to a new normal. But honestly,
the the intrinsic, the attitude is still like this.

Speaker 1 (32:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
I don't want to say they we're like, suck it,
just suck it up. But they can't say that, you know.
But I know sometimes because I even think like, oh,
oh my god, suck it up. But I'm like, oh god, no,
I can't get canceled from saying that. So let me
call him down. Because it's a new normal. You know,
we have to we have to understand that mental health
is it is real. But I think because we just
have to suck it up so much, it's sometimes it's

(32:37):
hard for us to to lean into that the way
we should.

Speaker 1 (32:41):
Yeah, so girls can't do things, so you know, maybe
you won't have to suck it up anymore. No, maybe
he says you do have to suck more. I don't know,
seem to like women being in the military, right what
you know, so like there is thank you, Brian. There

(33:04):
are so many brave women who served in combat who
clearly are capable, And then here you have a Secretary
of Defense who says that women can't serve in combat.
That doesn't make sense to me because obviously there have
been thousands and thousands. Do you what do you what
do you make of of somebody who really doesn't seem

(33:28):
too interested in half the population being part of the military.

Speaker 4 (33:33):
I mean, I think it's I think it's sad that
it would think that way, because you know, women make
the world go around. Without us, where would you be?
And And although I'm not so, I'm not necessarily for
us being on the very front line where we're out
there with the weapons and doing all the firefar, but
there is my far. There is opportunities in the back

(33:54):
for women to do things that we do every day
and to serve and defend our country without well, him
thinking that we need to be barefoot and pregnant.

Speaker 13 (34:03):
So I'm not sure you'd even let you be barefoot, right, Yeah,
something like that.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
He you know, you have to look good whatever that,
guys said, dummy. So let's talk about what's going on
right now that the military's in the news. Right, So
Trump deployed the federalized four thousand guards men whatever they're
called guard called guardsmen. I think they're members of the

(34:38):
National Guard in California.

Speaker 3 (34:43):
The President, yes, bringing news just in time. Just an
hour ago, federal judge has suspended that everything's going back
to Governor Newsom.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
Was in court today, so we're that that sounds I
had figured that was going to be the case. One
of the nice things about being a Washingtonian is that
we're all kind of lawyers, even if we're not really,
so we all have to know. You know, where we
get it is from the no parking signs. You have

(35:21):
to have a law degree from Georgetown to figure out
where you can party in the city. But anyway, so
you know, Trump federalized four thousand troops in the California
National Guard. Now that's been struck down in court. He
also said he was deploying seven hundred Marines from Pendleton

(35:42):
to Los Angeles. I know that there's like a big
thing about you can't you know, deploy the active duty
military inside the country, so much so that I think
I was told one time that like you can't wear
your uniform except if you're like going to work or

(36:02):
on your way home from work, and that's like the
only time you'll see people in their fatigues, like stopping
at the grocery store and then like then they come home.
What are the rules about active duty, deployed or being
in the continental US.

Speaker 4 (36:21):
That's definitely a policy for your uniform. You're supposed to
wear your uniform to work, and if you need to
stop by the grocery store but you can't. You're not
supposed to be in bars and everything. You're doing that
those type of things. But here is where it's kind
of sticky because President Trump is the commanding chief of
the military, and when he passed out those orders, no

(36:42):
matter if we like it or not, you know, you're
supposed to just follow your orders and do what you
tell you the general orders that you have to follow.
And unfortunately, this is the type of president. If you're
not doing what I'm saying, if you're not on my side,
then you're against me. So I'm ready to get rid
of you. I am so not for him sending the
marine troops out there. It's supposed to be when it's

(37:03):
in a California, it's supposed to be the National Guard.
It is supposed to do that. Yeah, the so guardsman,
it's these things called titles, right, So guardsmen fall under
Title thirty two. When they're activated, they fall under Title ten.
So he literally activated all of these guardsmens to make

(37:26):
them active duty. Are we frozen to make to uh,
you know, to make them active duty? When that means
he took the power out of the commander's hands, meaning
the state commanders California commander wasn't necessary, Absolutely not in
my opinion. So the rule on that is can he

(37:47):
do it? He can because he did. And they're you know,
it's only illegal if they find it illegal.

Speaker 1 (37:55):
Well they apparently did.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
Yep.

Speaker 4 (37:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
So, in my capacity as a fake lawyer, I had
a conversation with somebody who I think might be a
real lawyer about like, under what grounds this would be,
you know.

Speaker 14 (38:13):
Unconstitutional, And I said that it might really have to
do with like a Tenth Amendment argument. The Tenth Amendment
says that all of the powers not specifically enumerated in
the Constitution revert to the States, which would include the militias,
the controls, and all of that. So, again, I'm not

(38:36):
a real lawyer. US District Judge Charles R. Bryer ruled
that Donald Trump acted improperly, quote both exceeding the scope
of his statutory authority and violating.

Speaker 1 (38:49):
The Tenth Amendment to the US Constitution. He must therefore
return control of the California National Guard to the Governor
of the State of California. Forthwith. You gotta love it
when you get forth with. So again, not a real lawyer,
didn't get that right though, ha ha. So Also, he

(39:12):
like pulled up, you know, he federalized like four thousand troops,
but only like three hundred of them had like any
real orders of like to do anything, and the rest
were like sleeping on the floor in a building someplace.

Speaker 4 (39:21):
Well that's kind of the case. I mean, that's the case.

Speaker 2 (39:25):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (39:25):
It's the hurry up and wait technique at the army
or the military has.

Speaker 1 (39:29):
Yeah. Yeah, So what were they doing over there.

Speaker 4 (39:35):
They were waiting, they were preparing. He put the order out,
so they were following his orders, like it's what they're
just taught to do in the military. You give us
the order, we're going to follow your orders until we're
told to go back.

Speaker 1 (39:49):
But it appears that the order was like go to
this building and wait for me to tell you something else.

Speaker 4 (39:55):
Yeah, And unfortunately military people there are no strangers to that.
That's what we do all the time. So it's not
like that, right, it really is. If you're gonna have
an event that starts at just like the Army's two
hundred and fifty birthday that's coming up. It's also happened
to be.

Speaker 1 (40:14):
Talked about that.

Speaker 4 (40:16):
Yeah, it's happening this weekend. But I are all waiting
in the building. Yes, that's exactly what I was gonna say.
I'm sure there's somewhere waiting to the ceremony. Thing starts
at eight am. They're probably going to be there at
four am, waiting to go out there and do whatever
they need to do to support it.

Speaker 1 (40:34):
Okay, great, you've done You've.

Speaker 4 (40:37):
Done that so many times, especially like the State of
the Union, we camp out in the stadium armory.

Speaker 1 (40:43):
Yeah, yeah, that sounds awful. I don't I don't think
I really want to do that, which is probably also
a good reason why I'd enjoined the Navy.

Speaker 4 (40:54):
But it sounds like what you just read is saying
that Trump was trying to deploy them as if it
was a they're going to be deployed, but was he
did not actually have anywhere to deploy them for any issue,
so he just had to pull it back and leave
it to the state to do the National Guard and

(41:15):
he didn't even have the authority to do that, like
he shouldn't.

Speaker 1 (41:19):
Yeah, there's two there's kind of two parts to it apparently,
so you know, there are extraordinary circumstances under which the
president can federalize the Guard, but generally a good case,
yeah the Guard, when the Guard falls under federal control,

(41:40):
it almost always is because the state has asked for
that to happen.

Speaker 4 (41:47):
Often it's like.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
In cases where there's some sort of major emergency like
a flood or a disaster or a hurricane, the state
calls out the Guard, but they need them to be
working with the federal capacity like FEMA or somebody else,
so they'll they'll nominally grant control to the Feds to
sort of use the Guard as they need it. And

(42:11):
the last time at least that I could recall that
the Guard was federalized by the President in objection to
the governor of the state was in Arkansas when the
governor was like, I'm not letting black kids go to
high school, and Ike was like, the hell you're not,

(42:36):
and he sent the Guard to like go to high
school with the kids to make sure that they could
go to school and no Ike like Eisenhower a little
rock nine. This was this was as far as I
can recall, like the last time the president took control

(43:00):
of the Guard away from a governor was in enforcement
of civil rights. And here we have an instance where
the president hates civil rights and the control of the
government the Guard away from the governor because he wants
to chase brown people.

Speaker 4 (43:22):
Angelus. Yeah, it's not.

Speaker 1 (43:26):
The angel Is. It's Los Angelous like it is. Yeah,
they're Angelino's. They're not They're not my god, dude, come on.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (43:41):
So anyway, like the ruling here apparently has to do
with that he was legally meritless that the law that
he tried to use that said that there was some
sort of an emergency, the conditions were not met. There
was no emergency that that would have enabled him to
do this, So he's in violation of the statute there,

(44:01):
and then in terms of the constitutional argument of the
Tenth Amendment, saying that because the Constitution doesn't grant the
power to like snatch the Guard into the federal control,
it therefore only belongs to the states unless this threshold
has been meant for the statute. So I mean, this
seemed obvious to me. I'm sure it was obvious to

(44:23):
them too, but like one, they don't have real lawyers,
and two they probably were like, well, we're gonna do
it anyway and see if the courts can stop us.
My question, are they going to comply? Because the court
can't really stop them? The court doesn't have an army
and Trump does. So what I feel like to you?

(44:44):
And here's where I was going to get to my
big question. Do you think stuff like this, with Trump
politicizing the military and specifically politicizing the military to enforce
what look like racist policies, does this maybe make it

(45:06):
less likely for black and brown participation in military service.

Speaker 4 (45:11):
Oh yeah, I've yeah, because I still have a lot
of friends that are in and I have a lot
that you know, a lot of them are recruiters, and
they've mentioned that it's very difficult for them to even
meet a quota of black and brown to enter the

(45:34):
military because of the psychotic, obese douchebag that's running the
country right now. So I mean, yeah, I agree with that,
because when you don't see that you're being represented, or
that you're even being taken care of from someone who
is literally your commander in chief. You know, it puts

(45:56):
you at ease and you feel like you're going to
be the first one that they're going to force into
harm's way because they have no concern for you. And
you know, it's kind of sad because a lot of
people decide to go into the military to make a
better life for themselves, you know, help their parents out,
they have their kids, if they have any, and here
it is they're not wanting to go, or they're kind

(46:17):
of scared to go because they're not sure what the
command and chief, the president will do. If he's going
to force them to they kid on the front line
and you'll be the punching bag, or they're just unsure
of what because one day, you know, you never know
what's gonna happen with him. You never know what you're
gonna get.

Speaker 1 (46:33):
I think it was maybe in the South Park movie
where they they kind of like played on that idea
of sending the all black squad in first. Chef was like, hey,
why are.

Speaker 4 (46:48):
We going in first right? You know, And that's probably
why they're not signing up right now because they're not
sure what he will do because everything that he's doing
now is clear that we're not his favorite and if
he's like freaking deployed, h I like ice for the
people that voted for him. I mean, come on, come on, right, do.

Speaker 1 (47:14):
You think like I mean, as it stands, he's clearly
interested in using the military to manage the country. What
if you're put in a situation where you're told to
shoot at other Americans? Like that feels bad?

Speaker 4 (47:34):
That's been happening. I mean, granted they're using like pellets
or whatever, right, but you think it's still heard that
that happened in LA recently?

Speaker 15 (47:44):
Right?

Speaker 1 (47:44):
You know, Well, the cops are used to shooting at
other Americans. I believe that's like the first thing that
they teach them, Like, I would you like to shoot
another American?

Speaker 2 (47:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (48:00):
How do you know which ones to shoot at? You'll know? Yeah,
But like the military is supposed to defend of all
of the Americans. I'm one of the Americans. I would
like to be defended, not shot at five. So is
that did they tell you anything about that? Do they say, like, hey,

(48:21):
there may be a time when you might have to
like shoot at other Americans.

Speaker 4 (48:27):
The revolution will not be televised, so we don't know.
I mean, there's there's theories out there, right, There's there's
definitely theories, and there's conspiracists who believed that to be
the case. I'm not shy of that thought.

Speaker 1 (48:45):
Now.

Speaker 4 (48:46):
The way the world is going is kind of scary,
but I don't have any true knowledge of if that well, I.

Speaker 1 (48:52):
Am beyond not shy about it. I'm gonna take this
opportunity to say the thing that I have been saying
on this show, uh that I will continue to say
on this show, is that this is not a parade
that is gonna happen on Saturday. This is the beginning
of an occupation. They are gonna move They're not spending
forty million dollars to move a bunch of stuff around

(49:13):
to have a god damn party. They're gonna bring all
that stuff here and it ain't leaving, and the people
ain't leaving neither. They're gonna put them in the empty
federal buildings. They're gonna establish some sort of active duty
garrison here in the district, and they're going to stick around.
And what they're gonna do with it, I haven't quite

(49:34):
figured that out yet, but I did predict the violence
around ice raids, and I predicted all of these other
things about this guy. So I think that's the next move.
I don't quite know what comes right after that. Stay
tuned next week and we'll let you know.

Speaker 4 (49:51):
But yeah, let us know we're gonna Yeah.

Speaker 1 (49:55):
So I don't I don't see this getting better, but
I do see this getting vastly worse, very quickly. Which
brings me to my next question. How can people tune
into your show because they're gonna need to, like, you know,
get some tips on some of this stuff.

Speaker 4 (50:16):
Before before we move on to our show, I would
like to say that Trump did not sign my retirement papers.
Thank god, I got all time. But wait, who signed on?
Did Trump? No? No? No, no, no, twenty nineteen?

Speaker 1 (50:37):
Yeah he was president then.

Speaker 4 (50:39):
No, I don't have I don't have any retirement papers.
I know that's true because you you're no, I do you?
Did he sign it?

Speaker 6 (50:48):
No?

Speaker 4 (50:49):
So you can find us on You can certainly find
us on Boots the Heels, Underscore podcasts on all platforms,
all platforms, and.

Speaker 1 (51:03):
And you've got new episodes come out when.

Speaker 4 (51:07):
Every Wednesday and noon? Wo right there?

Speaker 1 (51:14):
And do you have any other projects things that are
going on? Poetry stuff? You want to tell people to
pay attention.

Speaker 4 (51:21):
To you know, I I am a poet and I
do host every third Wednesday, every third Monday, excuse me.
At Willie Mammoth in DC, I co host there and
I am just consistently writing. But at Miss Miko read

(51:44):
on Instagram is where you can find where I post
like new stuff, new poems and everything. Yeah, and then
I'm gonna throw it to you for your fitness life,
Well I am. I am into fitness due to the military,
but I don't want to talk about that. I want
to go back to our boots to heal because I
didn't mention the fact that one of the things that

(52:05):
we realized is that when we was doing our transition
to get out, we didn't have a lot of support
on exactly what to do. You know, they throw you
in these training for two weeks and it's just throwing
so much knowledge at you and so much information that
you're trying to catch it, but you just can't. So
what we decided to do is create an ebook for yeah,

(52:29):
retiring transitioning Army, veteran, Army, Marines, military folk like, we
have an ebook and we are debating on if it's
going to come out in July or August, but it
will be out this summer. And it's really a boots
to heels from obviously military, boots to corporate or whatever

(52:55):
your entrepreneurial dreams are. If you want to be a
content creator, whatever it is, how do you transition right?
And what resources do you have? And so that this
ebook is going to give you step by step guidelines
on the perfect way to transition and all the resources
that you know this good old America has for you.

Speaker 1 (53:17):
Well, if this country is still functioning when that happens,
absolute when it comes out, will you come back on
the show to tell everybody about it?

Speaker 4 (53:26):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Yes, okay, that's cool. Do I have to read if
I get an ebook? Or can I get it to
like talk to me? I don't know how ebooks work.

Speaker 4 (53:37):
You might have to read, all right, just tell to
read it to you.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
Yeah, I don't read. That's for nerds, but tes does
that so he can do the reading and then it'll
tell us about it.

Speaker 4 (53:55):
Because yes, yes, well we'll read it to you.

Speaker 1 (53:59):
Yes, okay, there you go. See you got to record
an audio book?

Speaker 4 (54:02):
Yep, I love you reading.

Speaker 1 (54:05):
Weird military transition rules like.

Speaker 4 (54:09):
You know it sounds weird. But we used uniforms for
twenty two years for me and that's friend twenty five years.
So when we got out of the military, it's like,
what do I wear? Oh my gosh, ship all we
had was like brown sock, brown socks and whuchi outfits. No,
I'm kidding. We had like army and club like there

(54:31):
was no in between. Like I went to my kids
parents conference and uniforms.

Speaker 6 (54:37):
Right.

Speaker 1 (54:38):
You might be surprised to know this, but I also
only have my unifies. So like I I've been air conditioning,
professional training and now in management, which I don't particularly like,
but you know, and I had like a uniform my
whole life. I never had to think about what I
wore ever and then yeah, and then when I got

(55:01):
to be management, They're like, you can't wear the uniform
or I was like, what this sucks? Now I got
to figure out what to wear. So I got I'll
never forget it. Back when this show started ten years ago,
my original co host was Larry King without suspenders. And
Larry's my HEATERO life mate, and he is much more

(55:22):
fashioned conscious than I am. And I said, Larry, I
have to wear grown up clothes and he goes, that's
not going to go well for you, and I said,
that's that's right. So he took me to Poles or
someplace and picked me out shirts that would all go
with the pants, that would all go with each other,

(55:42):
and like you know, maybe jackets or something, and he's like,
this is your new uniform. Just pick one of these
every day and it will work. And now it's been
fifteen years since that and it's working. So you can
make a uniform even if you don't have a uniform.
The uh and then these are my you know, you.

Speaker 4 (56:05):
Need to put that in your book.

Speaker 1 (56:09):
Because how to make your own uniform and wear uh
football T shirts as your club gear?

Speaker 4 (56:18):
Yes, and in black ass which I want that helpt.

Speaker 1 (56:25):
You have to love it for you have to love
America to get the hat and uh so that's how
I got it. I don't I'm not in case anybody's
watching is like, why is he wearing the hat?

Speaker 2 (56:37):
You know?

Speaker 1 (56:37):
I love this hat. But also because like I don't
think that the trump Pistas get to be the ones
who have the flag that's ours. You know, we love America,
we get our own flag, like stop Nazis anyway, Yeah, okay,
So here's what we're going to do. We're going to

(56:59):
take a break. Now, do you do you want to
stay on as guest co hosts and make Patrick look
not adequate? Or do you want to go home because
it's a school night. It's totally up to you.

Speaker 4 (57:13):
It's I know, well, I mean it is a school night.
But I'm all for sticking it to the man. But
he's not the man, So I don't know.

Speaker 1 (57:20):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (57:21):
I think I'm gonna I think we're going to exit.

Speaker 1 (57:26):
Okay, that sounds fine. That's what we had planned anyway,
and so we are prepared for that to see, just
like the military, we're always prepared. We're trying our best
yis yes, yeah, yeah, we'll just sleep there on the floor.
That looks really bad for their backs, but you know
who cares. Trump doesn't care.

Speaker 4 (57:47):
It is we lay on your bruck sack and you
are right?

Speaker 1 (57:51):
Yeah? Are you?

Speaker 4 (57:52):
Though?

Speaker 3 (57:53):
I had?

Speaker 4 (57:56):
Yeah? No, you're not all right.

Speaker 1 (57:58):
No, you're not alright. Okay, good, well, go stretch your
backs and get some rest. We're going to take a break.
If you want to tell everybody one more time where
they can follow the show and all that stuff. Uh oh,
we broke their internet. Brian, fix it quick.

Speaker 3 (58:19):
I can't fix it. They got to pop in and out.

Speaker 1 (58:23):
If they're still there, pop in, pop out, But go
to Boots two Heels and it's a Boots and then
a two and then heels. Uh not, he'll like get healthy,
but he'll a g E L s Underscore podcast, Boots
two Heels Podcasts, and then you can find all their

(58:44):
stuff and you can watch their show and you can
have a great time and and do all of that. Okay,
well that was a cool transition. Literally, did they pop backpe? Okay?
All right, Well we will. We'll check in with them
in in a while. I guess when the ebook comes out.

(59:06):
We're gonna take a break. When we come back. We've
got some updates of what's going on in the world. Actually,
a lot of ship has happened in the last couple
of minutes, which we're gonna need to tell everybody about.
So stay tuned. You're listening to Chipchat on Beltway Radio
and beyond.

Speaker 3 (59:20):
Street Bowls street Ball, we're in the middle of a
hostile of im in Tagoberts.

Speaker 16 (59:30):
I want to talk about it, but I'm eid more
works And if you say.

Speaker 3 (59:35):
You wait a minute, do.

Speaker 2 (59:37):
We have stop this?

Speaker 16 (59:38):
We have one, but she did him once and lady
in office.

Speaker 12 (59:58):
Then we're part Nigerian prince still surprise, surprising, end up
being a white man.

Speaker 1 (01:00:07):
I just want to know what the hell.

Speaker 6 (01:00:09):
Do I do?

Speaker 16 (01:00:13):
And if you say you wait a minute, movie have
stop this?

Speaker 1 (01:00:17):
Weet have one, but she didn't.

Speaker 16 (01:00:19):
Was a hostile cover.

Speaker 1 (01:00:28):
J go hostile govern.

Speaker 17 (01:00:35):
Say forward.

Speaker 1 (01:00:39):
Hostile cover.

Speaker 9 (01:00:43):
Jamy hostile cover, hostile government.

Speaker 1 (01:01:00):
This about left the right.

Speaker 9 (01:01:02):
You know that's how messing around me?

Speaker 12 (01:01:04):
This aint bout left the right. You don't worry about
nothing down this eat bel left the right. Given us
our messing around this eat out left the right, you
don't worry about up and down, don't if you.

Speaker 3 (01:01:15):
Say you wait a minute or two, we have to
stop this.

Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
We had one, but you didn't want the lady and no.

Speaker 9 (01:01:25):
Hostile the.

Speaker 17 (01:01:30):
Day, go.

Speaker 1 (01:01:48):
Hostile stop dream all right, Welcome back to chip Chat

(01:02:08):
here on BELTWEGH Radio and beyond. I am Hero's chip
with me is Brian.

Speaker 3 (01:02:14):
Hello, Hello, Okay, So.

Speaker 1 (01:02:23):
This segments called What's going On in La So? Los
Angeles is a city. It's the second largest city in
the United States. It's in California. It's on the coast.
It's huge, not just in total number of people, but
also like spread out. It's like twice the size of
Rhode Island or something. And yeah, I've been to LA.

(01:02:48):
It's a lot of times actually, And and like also
another thing to know about LA is that that La County,
which is geographically large, also has something like ninety individual
cities inside of it because they threw these like borders
and cities, and some of the cities are like surrounded
by other cities, or they have these weird like this
street is in the city, but that street's not in

(01:03:09):
the city, and it's totally nuts.

Speaker 3 (01:03:13):
And they still call it Los Angeles.

Speaker 1 (01:03:15):
Yeah, it's all LA, but like the the but like Compton,
for example, a place people know is its own city,
it's not in it's in Los Angeles County, but it
is its own city in Los Angeles County. And what
is its own city in Los Angeles County, And like
Culver City is its own city inside Los Angeles County.

(01:03:39):
It is crazy how this looks. If you look at
it on a map, you'd lose your mind. I mean,
it's just it's crazy. That's not really what we're here
to talk about. So here's what's been going on in LA.
The Trump administration basically had been sending ice to just

(01:04:00):
the shit out of everywhere. They were grabbing people out
of restaurants, they were grabbing people from home depot, they
were grabbing people out on the street. They're just like
anybody who looked a little bit Mexican. They were just
running up on them, throwing them in an unmarked van.
All the agents were not badged, they weren't like identified,
they were wearing masks. It was very terrifying because nobody

(01:04:22):
knew if these were like legitimate or if they were
you know, gangs or what. A bunch of the people
who got snatched up by these guys are citizens, have
status of various kinds. That didn't seem to matter. There
was no due process going on. The Trump administration like

(01:04:42):
hastily deported several dozen of these people before they had
a chance to even go talk to lawyers. They were
being prohibited from talking to their lawyers. All of this
is like violently illegal. None of that is legal. There
is a whole process for a deportation you had to have,
but weren't yet to have a final order deprecation camp
to all this stuff. They weren't doing any of that.

(01:05:04):
So the people of LA were like, nah, man, we're
not doing that, and they came out to protest. Now
here's the thing you need to know about Los Angeles.
They have a way of doing things. Okay, when the
Dodgers win, they spray paint things and kind of riote

(01:05:27):
a little bit. When the Dodgers lose, they spray paint
things and kind of rite a little bit. When the
Lakers lose, they spray paint things and kind of ride
a little bit. When the Clippers lose, nobody notices. But like,
they're just kind of wired to do this thing, and
they protest a lot, and they're good at it. They're organized,

(01:05:50):
they know what they're doing. And also the police in
LA are used to it. They're not to handle it.
It's it's a pretty common occurrence for them, in the
same way that like DC police know how to handle
a protest. Right. It happens here near constantly, right, and

(01:06:11):
they just they're like, all right, we'll put a little
like perimeter around these guys. We'll let them do their thing.
You know, they got a First Amendment, right, We're gonna
let them chant. They'll let them sing, We're gonna let
them do whatever they want and want to march around,
as long as the don't smash too much stuff or
they don't like do anything serious. You know, we might
arrest a couple dozen of them, but like you know,

(01:06:33):
standard operating procedure. Well, Trump saw that there were people protesting,
and then he certain people, say certain people, and they
were some of them waving Mexican flags. They're in a
part of the world that was Mexico until like five

(01:06:55):
minutes ago, and anyway, they he kind of he didn't
like that, and so he was like, oh, no, this
is an invasion. All people who were born here in
California are invading the United States, which definitely includes California.
And so he was like, this is an invasion. I'm
calling out the guard to go attack them. This is

(01:07:17):
an insurrection, this is a rebellion. He used all of
those words, and that's not what it was at all.
They also, like on Fox News, were describing this as
the city was burning down, that it was under attack,
that it was some sort of wawless hellscape. They were

(01:07:38):
playing videos from games and movies that they claimed were
happening in La that were not happened. They never know
at all.

Speaker 4 (01:07:47):
And and like.

Speaker 1 (01:07:49):
There were protests. There were a few cars that got
set on fire. They were way moos that the protesters
ordered to where they were protesting to then set on fire,
I think to create barricades or something.

Speaker 4 (01:08:03):
But like.

Speaker 1 (01:08:05):
That was it. And it was all within like a
one square mile area. Yeah, very small situation.

Speaker 3 (01:08:12):
Yeah. I mean you you can tell by a lot
of the news reporting that this is a well organized
protests march pretty much. It's like again, like you said,
it's standardized, it's you know, California. Is it has been
used been used to this for years or betty, and
you can say centuries if you want to.

Speaker 1 (01:08:34):
They know how to handle it.

Speaker 3 (01:08:35):
Yeah, they know how to handle it. I think again,
you're talking about a eighty year old man who who
if he saw something going crazy again, certain people going nuts,
it's like, oh my god, it's the LA riots again,
send in the National Guard or you know again, and
you know again.

Speaker 4 (01:08:53):
He is.

Speaker 3 (01:08:55):
The way I think a lot of people have been
saying is is like you are, He's just portraying a
person who's trying to be a man of action by
deploying a certain amount of people especially the military. May
you're sending in the National Guard to stop something that
really it wasn't that highly aggressive. You just intensify the

(01:09:15):
aggressiveness by deploying the National Guard.

Speaker 1 (01:09:19):
Yeah, he was looking for an excuse to do this.
No matter what he would have he would have seen
the puppy ball on TV and caught out the guard
like this is this is not a legitimate response to
the stimulus that that he saw. He is he had
this plan. He was meaning to do this from the
very get go, and so he and and it inflamed

(01:09:41):
the situation. And Governor Knewsom said, and and Mayor Bass said,
this is inflaming the U situation. If you bring out
a bunch of military to come, even if they're just
standing around, scanning around with their vehicles and their guns
and looking kind of imposing and stuff, these people who
are already pissed off, are gonna get more pissed off.

Speaker 3 (01:10:01):
And and you can add it, you can even add
into the police chief he literally says, we can handle this. Yeah,
they've done this before. We're used to this. It's you know,
as long as you know, we can maintain the fire,
so to speak. And but all you've done. Is is
just add more fuel to this.

Speaker 1 (01:10:19):
That federalizing the Guard when the city actually was on
fire a few months ago in Pasadena and out the data,
you know, where was the Federal Guard response there to
help these and they were ready to go they needed it.

Speaker 3 (01:10:35):
And I think again, it's like I think one news
reporter organization, whatever they say to the fact, like Trump
is very selective of certain instances that needs to be
taken care of.

Speaker 1 (01:10:51):
Well, let's be honest with what he's doing here. This
is standard fascists playbook, right. You create an emergency and
then you respond, usually with the milli terror or some
sort of security force to that emergency that you created,
and you tell everybody that the situation is so dangerous,
so dangerous that certain things that are normal, like civil

(01:11:11):
liberties or elections have to be paused or suspended because
it's just too dangerous right now. But don't worry. I
can fix it. And yet to mean you can't, well, no,
of course not. But that's how fascism works. That's what
authoritarian states do, and they maintain that constant state of

(01:11:31):
emergency so that they can then continue to take away
people's constitutional civil rights. So he tried that here, and
then he also was trying to deploy the Marines somehow,
whose main job is to shoot at people into do what.
It's not clear. They never showed up yet, and except

(01:11:56):
doesn't know how that works either. So so all of
that is to say, we knew that this was going
to go to court. We knew that that Newsom was
going to challenge it in court. He said as much.
The hearing was today. Here's what we know about that.
Federal judge on Thursday agreed to block the Trump administration

(01:12:16):
from deploying the California National Guard, granting a request by
Governor Davin Newsom and saying that the President acted illegally
in dispatching the troops amid immigration protests that have spread
from Los Angeles to other cities in the state. Here's
the quote from the judge that Trump quote, both exceeded

(01:12:36):
the scope of his statutory authority and violated the Tenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution. He must therefore return
control of the California Guard to the governor of the
state of California. Fourthwith that's where we got the fourthwith, right, Well,
there's a little more here. So Newsom went to court

(01:12:58):
asked for a restraining order, saying that you know they
need to give the control of the Guard back. The
Trump administration called his request legally meritless and said that
it would jeopardize the safety of the Department of Homeland
Security personnel and interfere with the federal government's ability to
carry out operations. The judge, yeah, I know. The judge

(01:13:20):
had an answer for that, let's see. Briar opened the
hour long hearing with forty five minutes of questions about
Trump's decision to order the Guard into Los Angeles. He
questioned whether the president followed the appropriate statute, including whether
he had appropriately made the order through Newsom rather than

(01:13:40):
acting unilaterally. At one point, Briar brandished a paper copy
of the US Constitution, reading aloud Article two, which describes
the powers of the executive branch. Brett Schuemate, a lawyer
for the US Attorney's Office, defended Trump's actions, arguing that
the governor the governor knew some quote was merely a

(01:14:01):
conduit for the president's orders. The president doesn't have to
call up the governor and invite him to Camp David
and have a summit to negotiate for a week. On
what are the terms that we're going to call up
the guard in your state, and what are the terms
for deployment. No, there's one commander in chief and the
states are subservient to the president. That was his argument.
He later argued that the demand for the training order

(01:14:23):
was inappropriate because federal troops in Los Angeles were only
protecting federal personnel and property and they weren't engaged in
law enforcement. The judge, however, was not having that.

Speaker 2 (01:14:35):
Quote.

Speaker 1 (01:14:35):
We're talking about the president exercising his authority, and the
president is of course limited in that authority. That's the
difference between a constitutional government and king George, said Brier,
who incidentally was a former Watergate prosecutor. And you may
say that, ay, that name sounds a little familiar. It's
because his older brother is Supreme Court Justice Stephen Bryer,

(01:14:58):
who just retired. Quote. It's not that a leader can
simply say something and it becomes It is a question
of a leader or president or governor following the law
as set forth in both the Constitution and the States.
The State Attorney General's office concurred with lawyer Nicholas Green,
calling Trump's attempt to expand his Power's court breathtaking in scope.

(01:15:21):
They are saying that the president can federalize the National
Guard and deployed to the streets of a civilian city
whenever he perceives that they are that there is disobedience
to an order. This is an expansive and dangerous conception
of the federal executive power. So the Trump people have
appealed this to the Ninth Circuit. I think it's very obvious,

(01:15:46):
like what the statute here says. I think it's also
very obvious what the constitutional argument is. I think it
would be shocking to see a court find anything other
than this. So I guess we'll okay. However, not to

(01:16:06):
be outdone, in Texas, Greg Abbott also deployed his National
Guard to several states. I like to he as a
clip on podium for his wheelchair. What a what a
what a stand up guy. So he deployed the Guard
to several cities, including Dallas, I think, and a few

(01:16:27):
other places. Cool.

Speaker 3 (01:16:32):
I guess I again, why, I don't know, because it's like, okay,
there's nothing I mean, mind you again, there there have
been throughout the country, various parts of the country that
you know, there have been you know, protests, protest marches
against what's been happening, and of course in Los Angeles.

(01:16:54):
But again, I I think abbot is Is has is
kind of like, you know, trying to be like you know,
the actual Trump junior and following in his footsteps to
do something reactionary to something that doesn't need any reaction to.

Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
Yeah, and it's very very clear that he is following
that same playbook of just to militarize the situation as
much as possible, to create a dangerous emergency. You know,
somebody makes a mistake and it turns into a catastrophe
or you know, you get just having the presence of

(01:17:35):
it is sort of meant to inflame the situation. I
can't see what else it could possibly do.

Speaker 3 (01:17:41):
Well, let me point this out for everybody who probably
you've seen us on social media or you haven't, but
there have been two instances where the police has fired
upon Mind you they use rubber bullets, but still fired
upon citizens with no profligate. You know, no, they were

(01:18:03):
never a provoked whatsoever. One incident where one incident is
where a young woman was returning home from you know, wherever,
she wanted to get to her home, which the police
has blocked off. She's trying to explain to him and everything,
and they were not having it and they weren't listening,
and he shot her in her stomach and this was

(01:18:26):
fully fully recorded. The second incident was an Australian reporter.
She got shot in the leg and everyone's probably seen that,
and again trying to report the story of what's been
going on. And pretty much, you know, the officer who
shot allegedly where I'm putting air quotes here was whatever reason,

(01:18:49):
just shot her at her leg for no reason, just
even having her having their weapon winning at her for
no reason. She is just reporting what's going on.

Speaker 1 (01:18:58):
Well, it was obvious that she was a reporter because
you had the camera pointed at her and she had.

Speaker 3 (01:19:03):
So for all this thing is, it's like, in addition
to adding in the National Guard, and keep in mind,
the National Guard is supposed to guard something and pretty
much if you know these are they're here to protect.
And you know, the American citizens when they're deployed by
what's supposed to be by the governor of the.

Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
State and they're citizens soldiers, you know, these are people.

Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
They're not even fully you know, fully active. Some of
these are part timers and they're and they're and to me,
it's like again putting more fuel to this thing to
where it's it's just it's it's mind boggling. It's you know,
we keep saying, what the hell are you guys doing.

(01:19:50):
It's like you're just bitter old men, angry about something
that only you know and won't tell us why except
for the fact that it is like you just don't
like people.

Speaker 1 (01:20:00):
This is an attempt to seize power away from the
US Constitution and from American That's that's.

Speaker 3 (01:20:06):
Where I want to get to. It is to me,
it's like we've been under this second regime of Trump
for almost five months and for whatever reason, it's like, look,
he last I checked, you put your hand on the
Bible and literally said you will protect all articles of
the Constitution. You said yes for a second time, and

(01:20:28):
you have broken so many of them.

Speaker 1 (01:20:31):
Why, Brian, Donald Trump is a goddamn liar.

Speaker 3 (01:20:37):
I know that, I know, except for certain other people,
especially those who live in Gotham.

Speaker 1 (01:20:44):
The issue. The issue here is when will a Republican
say so, that's where's power.

Speaker 3 (01:20:51):
And that someone you know, again, we saw the Red
States that that voted for him and gave them this stuff.
But mind you, there is you know, if you see
other tibets online, you'll see how this is. You know,
Kamala won this by landslide. But to me, it's like, yeah,

(01:21:11):
there's no Republican there's maybe a few, a small few,
but they're keeping a mouth shut and and that. And
that's the thing where it's like, it's like unless they,
you know, have the balls, the kahonas and you know,
stand up and say, Okay, enough's enough, we can't do this.
And unfortunately is there are certain Republicans that we known

(01:21:33):
either have died or have left office and and you know,
really have no voice there and and pretty much we're
run by a bunch of knuckleheads up in there.

Speaker 1 (01:21:43):
Well they're not just knuckleheads. They're complicit in in this
uh destruction of the United States. And that's the thing
to think about this. You know, the specifics of it
are almost kind of irrelevant because what they're doing is
on making the country some point is Today a sitting
Senator Alex Padia, who is the senator senior Senator of

(01:22:06):
the Great State of California, attended a press conference where
Christy Nome, who is the Secretary of Department of Homeland
Security was telling people about the you know, ice stuff
that's going on there, and he stood up and approached
the microphone to ask her a question at a press

(01:22:26):
conference where people ask questions, and she did not handle
that well at all. Her goons, her security, DHS security,
grabbed Senator Padilla, who holed them. I am Senator Alex
Padia of California, and they hustled him out of the room,

(01:22:48):
threw him on the ground, put his hands behind his back,
cuffed him, and like whisked him out of the building.
We know this because it was a press conference in
every money out of goddamn camera pointed at them, so
it was recorded from like eight different angles. Padilla's steph
was there recording it because they figured that like something

(01:23:11):
was gonna happen and they better be ready just in case,
or at the very least they were gonna get good
footage of him asking a question. Attacking the senators is
an example of fascism. Yeah, So what happened after that
is that Adam Schiff, who's the junior Senator from California,

(01:23:32):
and current Speaker Jeffries went to the floor to the
to the Capitol steps. They had a press conference. Guess
what they did. They let people ask some questions. They
stood there and they said, this is a disgrace, this
is a shame, this is this is an American this
is unpatriotic. It's blah blah blah blah blah. Cool. Great,
we get that. Senators went to the floor. Democratic senators

(01:23:56):
went to the floor, called this all kinds of things.
Chuck Schimmers said, we wanted an investigation in this. But
you know what, not a single Republican said anything along
those lines, none of them. And it is going to
be the Republicans who are going to have to save
the Republic. They are going to have to break with this.
But they didn't do that. Instead, Mike Johnson went out

(01:24:18):
and told everybody that Padilla should be censured for charging
at the Secretary of Homeland Security. He had to his
exact words. He said that he charged at a cabinet member.
That's not what happened. Mike Johnson didn't see the video,
or if he did, he's lying about it. He's lying.
They know better and they're lying about it. Look y'all,

(01:24:40):
Republicans think you're good and well like in because you're
on the side with the guy right now, you are
right up until you're not. And Congressman Walsh figured that
out beforehand. And now he's a Democrat. And you know
why because he came on our show and began his
transition to the like literate side of the world. We

(01:25:02):
get credit for that, by the way, he scored one. Yeah, right,
But we've really crossed several lines. Just this week that
the President caught out the guard in controversion of the
governor of that state. He deployed active duty marines inside

(01:25:23):
the borders of the United States in violation of the
Posse Comitatus Act. He is now acting illegally after having
beaten court, being beaten court for doing those things. He
had his goon squad attack a US Senator.

Speaker 4 (01:25:41):
What's next?

Speaker 1 (01:25:42):
What's next? He's got an occupation force ready to go
to occupy the district of Columbia. If you can imagine
what they did to Padea with a few security and
cops there in DHS building in Los Angeles, What will
they do to the US Senate With all of these
soldiers at his disposal? Will they arrest the Democratic members

(01:26:06):
of the US Senate and hold them hostage? Of some kind.
I don't know. It is within the realm of possibility
that if see.

Speaker 3 (01:26:15):
That's where one of the I felt like one of
the questions I wish was asked to these ladies, when
is the time to where you do not listen to
your commander in ge Well.

Speaker 1 (01:26:27):
That's a good question to ask, Brian, because fortunately I
have asked some people about do you want to know?

Speaker 18 (01:26:35):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (01:26:35):
Okay, I've talked to several people who are like colonels
and above about this question. What do you do when
the president gives you an illegal order? Every man I
talked to within the ranks said the president. They don't
want to talk about hypotheticals. The President hasn't given any
illegal orders and they don't think he will. Well, he's

(01:26:58):
already given an illegal order now, so I guess you're
wrong about that. But basically I asked them like, hey,
orders are you know they have to be legal in
order to be followed, right? And they said yes? And
I said who decides that? Is that a jag thing
or what? And they said yeah. The Jags basically review
an order and determine its legality. If it's legal, then

(01:27:21):
they let it go down from the command to you know,
whoever has to implement the order if it's not legal,
I said, what do they do? They usually recommend the
changes that the command would need to make in order
to make it legal, Like instead of using you know,
such and such set of rules, you have to use
these other set of rules or.

Speaker 3 (01:27:41):
So okay, so let's simplify, is like this, you did
your homework wrong. You were given the answers, so you
raised all the wrong answers and you put in the
correct ones.

Speaker 1 (01:27:53):
Actualy yeah. And usually the like question of legality is
kind of around on the edges that the fundamental basic
concept of the order is still implementable, but there might
be like some fuzzy bits around the edge, like you
can't use these kinds of uh, you can't have this

(01:28:14):
set of rules of engagement in this condition, you have
to use these other set of rules of engaging. But
the overall mission is still executable. So it's like very
rarely you know that it's like a wholesale this is
not legal. But if the command gave an order that
was illegal and the Jags looked at it and go, oh, yeah,

(01:28:37):
this is illegal, the command can basically say, well, you're fired.
We're overruling.

Speaker 2 (01:28:44):
You.

Speaker 1 (01:28:44):
We're telling the whoever has to implement it to go
ahead and do it anyway, and then it falls to
the company level or to the whoever it is it
has to actually implement the order. Are they willing to
do something that the jags have ruled are not is
not legal because they've been ordered to do so by

(01:29:06):
their commanders. You could see this as like, you know,
if you had a general that went rogue and he
told his companies to go do something that you know
that could happen, right, and so there, you know, there's
movies about that. You could have this where you have
like a field captain who's gone crazy and decided he's
off some personal vendett I mean, there's movies upon movies

(01:29:27):
upon movies about this kind of thing.

Speaker 3 (01:29:29):
But I think listen, is I mind you? Yeah, we've
seen a lot of movie aspects where it's someone within
the military itself.

Speaker 1 (01:29:39):
Right.

Speaker 3 (01:29:40):
The only time, let's say for it, let's say again
in fiction, you know where we see somewhat of the
commander in chief level has done it very rarely because
we keep giving this image that the fact that the
president is has some moral ideology to to sort of

(01:30:00):
restrain himself from doing something chaotic. And I think a
lot of people forget now even with the first his
first term to now it's like this man has no morals,
that's right. And fortunately it's like he has completely burned
the checks and balances of everything. And I think that,

(01:30:21):
you know, as much as we say this fact, it's like, oh,
Trump is taking us into a new president of how
to deal with you know, deal with how to handle
the country and this searching situations. And it's like, look, yeah,
he's because we would never expect someone like this to happen.
And unfortunately, it's like we saw it the first time.

(01:30:42):
We figured it's like, okay, maybe we learned our lessons.
Maybe we can quote unquote protect ourselves and prevent this
shit happen again. No, because we allowed him to stick
around for those extra months. You know, we had a
chance to put him in jail, but no, he throws
in a whole bunch of bullshit to block you know,
his trials in New York, and we couldn't give him.

(01:31:04):
We got him convicted, but we couldn't put him in
jail because why he was running for election. And it's
like to this day, we're still trying to wonder. It's like,
how you allow president running for president's going who was
dealing with a trial, he's.

Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
A convicted criminal. They again, this is where it's going
to have to come from Republicans. They're going to have
to see this as out so far out of bounds.
When he sent a violent mob to kill Mike Pence,
they briefly, briefly we're like, oh, this is this is
not okay. But they all basically got over that and

(01:31:40):
decided to forgive all those people that tried to kill them.

Speaker 3 (01:31:43):
So but I think now it's it's like mind you.
And this was highly pointed out when you know a
lot of the you know, Republican centers and congressmans were
doing their whatever press tours to their public you know,
talk to their residence and stuff like that, and they
were too in them out. It was just like, what
the hell you're doing what you supposed to represent us,

(01:32:04):
and it seems like you're representing yourself to try to
sick in a stay in that seat as long as
possible to cover up to this nut job. We didn't
want this. We want to and un fortunately it's like
I really like the fact that it's like they're there.
There's this one person from Arizona. She's she's represent you know,
she's trying to get into be a representative. And I've

(01:32:28):
been following her of late and I did donate to
her campaign, and she's she's young, she's vibrant, she's everyone
thinking to her as like the you know, the next
AOC and all stuff. But the thing I'm trying to
point out is is like, like you need that young
voice out there. You're staying It's like this is wrong.
And if the people are staying in that and the

(01:32:51):
older people aren't because they're so old and want to
say I want to stay in my job for so
long as possible, but it's like, look, you've been erupted
literally in that seat, and now that the fact is
like you you want to stay there as long as possible,
especially if you're not going to move up, because it's like, look,
you're not gonna be a if you're a representative, you

(01:33:13):
know full well you're not going to be a darn senator.
And if you're a senator, you don't want to fear
the fact and get blown out trying to run for president.
So you want to stay in those seats for as
long as possible. But damn it, you're not representing You're
not That means you're not representing the people anymore. You're
just representing yourself and just staying there. And it's unfortunate
that it's like the people that constantly vote them in

(01:33:37):
over and over again. Figuring is like either eight are
going to change, you know, to help benefit them, but
at the same time they really don't the voters.

Speaker 1 (01:33:47):
The voters are voting for these people without really thinking
about who they are. But right, you know, youth is
one thing. You know, Dave Hogg uh recently, you know,
gave up his campaign to take over the DNC or
be you know, vice chair of the DNC because it's
clear that the party establishment's not ready for the youth

(01:34:08):
to take control of that. But all that does not matter.
I want to be very clear, people like us deriding
Trump as being a lawless, authoritarian fascist does not matter
because we already knew that, We already thought that, we
already believed that. What matters is when Republicans are willing

(01:34:29):
to say that too. And where will that line be?
We don't know. We have crossed line after line after line,
and the people who tried to kill Mike Pence received
a pardon from Trump, and the people who danced and
sang in the streets of Los Angeles had the guard
called out on them by Trump, and the Republicans sat

(01:34:53):
there and cheered the guard and threatened the US senator
for charging at a cabinet secretary that didn't actually happen.
Where is the line? Well, have you know? Shame is
the question? Where is the line? Where?

Speaker 2 (01:35:09):
When?

Speaker 1 (01:35:10):
What will need to happen for Mike Johnson or Mitch
McConnell or any of these guys to say, you know what,
that's it. I'm fucking done with this. I would have
thought January sixth, was it? What will make Ted Cruz

(01:35:30):
break Trump? Calling his wife ugly, saying that his dad
killed people, calling him the Zodiac Killer. None of that,
none of that, none of that personal shit phased all
Raphael attacking him with his paramilitary proxies on January sixth?

(01:35:52):
Did that phase Old Raphael? It did not. Josh Holly
ran in terror, ran in terror from these guys with
their buffalo horns and their sharpened, pointy flags, and did
it phase him Not one fucking iota. So what what
will need to happen here. He's gonna break every law,

(01:36:13):
he's gonna break every every convention, he's gonna break every
promise that he's ever made. If these guys aren't ready
to understand that, then we need to make some other
preparations about what's gonna happen next. I I know that
these guys are coming here to occupy the city. What
they're gonna do, I don't know, but to round up,

(01:36:34):
or imprison or otherwise contain democratic members of Congress I
think is well within the balands of what they're planning
to do. What will happen then? Will Ted Cruz and
Josh Holly say, yeah, those guys are a bunch of assholes,
detain them without thinking for a moment that they could

(01:36:54):
be the next ones detained. I don't know, but we
should be ready for it. You should all have ready
for it. Because everything I keep saying on the show
comes fucking true. Maybe I should stop saying stuff. Yeah,
moving on from that. While we've been on the air,
Israel bombed Iran. Yeah, they attacked something like a couple

(01:37:16):
dozen sights that killed the general Hossein Salami. What a
great name, Hosein Salami of he's the head of Iran's
Revolutionary Guard Corps. They're trying to kill all their nuclear scientists.
Israel sees Iran having a nuclear bomb is in next

(01:37:37):
essential threat. I think that's fairly decent way to look
at it. The rest of the world doesn't seem to
be able to stop Iran from getting a nuclear bomb,
partly because Trump tore up the deal in his first term.
There was a method to keep these guys contained where
the whole world, including China and Russia, agreed to it,

(01:37:58):
and Trump fucking obliterated that. So the Iranians are like, well, fuck,
I guess there's no reason to make a deal with
these Americans are all just going to go back on
it anyway, and so they're they're just doing whatever the
hell they want to do. The Israelis aren't going to
stand for that, so they're doing whatever the hell they
want to do while still maintaining a genocide at Gaza.
So hooray. Fucking what's the point of doing the rest

(01:38:25):
of the show?

Speaker 3 (01:38:25):
I don't know, sure, well, I know, yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:38:31):
Here you want some uh, you want to take a break,
or you want to go to a piece of good news.

Speaker 3 (01:38:35):
There's some good news. Let's get some good news. We
can't leave on take a break on some bad crap.

Speaker 1 (01:38:43):
Here's here's a good story, and then we can take
a break.

Speaker 17 (01:38:46):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:38:47):
The federal judge presiding over makmuk Khalil's case on Wednesday
ruled that the Trump administration for now cannot deport or
detain the Columbia University activists, based on a determination by
Little Markup. The judge's preliminary injunction will not take effect
until Friday, that's tomorrow, allowing the government time to appeal.

(01:39:07):
He said that the preliminary injunction will start at nine
thirty am on Friday, so you know when everybody gets
to work. So basically, the judge said that Rubio was
out of bounds when he used an obscure provision of
the Immigration Nationality Act of nineteen fifty two to justify

(01:39:30):
the removal. He said that the judge said the provision, well,
I'm sorry. Rubio had argued that the provision allowed the
Secretary of State to quote personally determined whether Khalil should
remain in the country. The judge, Michael fair bears that's
another great name. Far bears, I don't know far bi

(01:39:51):
Aarz fair Bears tear bears. There you go. Judge Michael
Tarebears determined that Khalil could not be removed or detained
based on Rubio's determination because you know yet in due process. Man,
that's how the walls are written, that the amendment fourteenth Amendment.

(01:40:12):
I mean whatever, Maybe I should be a fake lawyer.
I'm better out than the Trump lawyers, that's for sure.
A spokesman for DHS has allegedly said that Khalil quote
acted to glorify and support terrorists. Doesn't seem that that's
the case. I hasn't been charged with anything except you know,
going to Columbia, which I guess is a thing. He's

(01:40:37):
married to an American citizen. She's a doctor. By the way.
They have a newborn baby that he wasn't there for
the birth of because he was detained by the ice cubes.
So great, hooray, it's good that. Okay, So Khalil's going
to be out at nine thirty in the morning and

(01:41:00):
we all get to share a sandwich with them. I
don't know what we're gonna do to celebrate, better not
protest or like march around while we're celebrating or get
the goddamn guard called outlands. This is a parallel situation, guys.
I don't know, like who needs to hear it. But
if you're Jewish in America, things are not safe. Everybody

(01:41:22):
thinks that we're out here, you know, bombing everybody. We
are not, and Yahoo is we are not the same person.
If you're an American who loves democracy or the US Constitution,
this is not a safe place for you because the
Trump administration, the Trump regime is no longer operating within
the bounds of the Constitution. They are doing what the
fuck else they want, whenever the fuck they want it.

(01:41:45):
If you are a service member, you're being asked to
do things that you know are illegal, that are putting
yourselves in legal jeopardy when all of this gets sorted out.
You're being asked to do things that are An American
to attack fellow Americans, has to do things that are immoral.
If you're a member of the ice cubes of any flavor,

(01:42:07):
whether it's customs and Border see or ice or DHS
of any other kind, you're being asked to do something
that you know is morally reprehensible. And somewhere there's gonna
have to be a lot of Americans who have to
make a lot of decisions individually and then collectively once

(01:42:28):
they've made that decision individually. We're close to it. I
don't think we make it through the summer. So do
without what you will, but build up your capacity as
best as you can. Mm. Okay, speaking of witch, I'm
gonna go build up some capacity while we take a break. Brian,

(01:42:51):
do you have something terrible lined up?

Speaker 3 (01:42:53):
Or you've already of course? Of course, of course you've.

Speaker 1 (01:42:56):
Already committed that felony. Know you're gonna do it again. Okay,
we're gonna take a break. We'll be right back. You
listen to chip Chat on Beltway Radio.

Speaker 3 (01:43:03):
N bon sweeps.

Speaker 19 (01:43:06):
Nice stuff, owld stupid horse hole stuff down, stupid house
hold stuff, old stupid stuff, owls, stupid old stupid old
stupid old stupid old stupid old stupid old stuff. Thos
hold stop old stupid olds, Hey, hole stupid stupid host Hey.

Speaker 1 (01:43:31):
Listen, cum it on on here?

Speaker 20 (01:43:32):
Thinking out lie from a second, I guess the worst
you could do is when I get up set, So
here we go?

Speaker 1 (01:43:37):
When did everybody get to go?

Speaker 2 (01:43:38):
Not?

Speaker 7 (01:43:38):
So?

Speaker 20 (01:43:39):
I thought the whole goal was to get not so
like a nine sea, not so right on the right
side of history. I guess you could wish for a
bright side, but that would be stupid, like making the
same mistakes like can it brain cells just to save
some space.

Speaker 11 (01:43:52):
Stupid stupid old stupid old stupid old stupid old stupid
old stupid old stuff those stupid hold stop stupid stupid
old stupid old stupid old stupid old stupid.

Speaker 3 (01:44:03):
They say that stupid as a stupid does What does
that mean?

Speaker 20 (01:44:06):
If you do something stupid, then stupid You was getting
a bug.

Speaker 1 (01:44:09):
So having a bad wee b the time to recharge
the battery, which.

Speaker 20 (01:44:12):
Usually means more stupid decisions, but great stories, great time
and great fun, new traditions, More bad decisions. Better stop
before you see the prison, stupid. If you lovely, maybe
stupid pay you were visiting, you could be stupid and love.

Speaker 11 (01:44:24):
Stupid stupid those stupid old stupid old stupid old stupid
old stupid old stuff old stupid old stupid old stupid
old stupid old stupid old stupid old stupid old.

Speaker 1 (01:44:37):
H speak ba.

Speaker 18 (01:45:24):
But then again speak ba.

Speaker 2 (01:45:34):
But b.

Speaker 18 (01:45:37):
Befa fare what bye, mommy, Yeah, I'm not hurt you

(01:46:08):
cross the line. You're big back? Why you big no?

Speaker 6 (01:46:14):
I this day, I.

Speaker 21 (01:46:17):
Don't want you, don't don't play with me? Said again
one more time for people in the back.

Speaker 1 (01:46:52):
All right, welcome back to Chip Chat here on Betwave
Radio and beyond. I am yours Chip with me is Brian. Brian.
That was Uh, that was that's old school AI now
at this.

Speaker 3 (01:47:05):
Point, yeah, so I think that modern day AI. Now
have you know they expanded the lyrics instead of just
giving us the chorus.

Speaker 1 (01:47:17):
It's pretty good. Uh all right, So here we've got
a few run down stories. This is the part of
the show where I tell you about some stuff that's
going out in the news. If I was a real newsman,
it would sound a little something like this. Oh, these

(01:47:37):
rallies are here.

Speaker 15 (01:47:39):
From Beltway Radio and Beyond in Washington, d C. I'm
emmy nominated TV news man and just bona fide sexual
beast Chase Scott Smith. And this is the part of
the show where I tell some stuff about the world.
Maybe not me, but somebody else is gonna tell some
stuff about what's happening in the news. So what's going
on in the news?

Speaker 1 (01:47:56):
Banks, Jay, We already covered some of the stuff that's
going on news. Guess what, there's more hooray.

Speaker 2 (01:48:04):
All right.

Speaker 1 (01:48:06):
What we didn't talk about yet, but just Bear's mansioning,
is that there was a plane crash this morning in
India and India Dreamliner seven eighty seven their first crash.
The seven eighty seven Boeing Dreamliner has been flying with

(01:48:26):
a stellar service record for thirteen years now, and now
there's been a crash. No word yet on what caused it.
They're still waiting, you know, the authorities are sifting through it.
It crashed shortly after to take off. From looking at
the charts, I'm gonna go out on a limb and say,
I think it's a burden strike something like that, some

(01:48:48):
sort of catastrophic external factor. I don't think it's an
engine failure or some sort of pilot error. It'd be unlikely.
Let's say that I think it's I think it's something external,
but I could be wrong. It happens every now and then. Okay,
speaking of airplanes. Since May seventh of this year, finally,

(01:49:12):
travelers have needed to have the real ID compliant driver's license.
You may remember this from back in the Bush administration
W administration, where they're after nine to eleven, They're like, oh, yeah,
these guys had fake IDs that like anybody could have gotten.
And they wanted to tighten up the rules about how
states could issue driver's licenses. And the federal government can't

(01:49:33):
really tell states how to issue driver's licenses, but they
can say what is acceptable identification for boarding an airplane.
So they said, if you're going to get on a plane,
you got to have this what they called it a
real idea in which your identification information was checked a
little more thoroughly. In my case, I think TA geting

(01:49:54):
up mine.

Speaker 22 (01:49:55):
I had to show them a passport or a Burth
certificate or something like that to say that I was
who I said I was, which is funny because you
need your driver's license to have gotten your passport in
the first place.

Speaker 1 (01:50:06):
But you know, it's cool anyway. The federal government passes
rule about real ide way back when, and then they
didn't give the states any money with which to execute
on it. And so the states were like, hey, look,
we need a little money to like revamp our whole DMVs.
And over the years, Congress has done two things. They've
kicked a little bit of money into the states and

(01:50:28):
they've extended the deadline for when they had to finally
be compliant. Well two dead needs later, we are now
finally at that deadline, and so the real ID stuff
is out. Most of the real IDs. You know, you're
looking at one because it has a little star up

(01:50:51):
in the corner or on the middle or in the side,
and you know the start, like some of them are
just like a star in a circle. That Virginia ones
were just a star.

Speaker 3 (01:51:00):
Same with Maryland.

Speaker 1 (01:51:02):
Yeah, and like California they put the star on the bear,
you know, because it's California. They gotta do that. But
like it was, you know, it's cool. Well, it turns
out people having a hard time figuring out what's a
real idea and what is their Costco card because the
Costco card also apparently features a little staring and so

(01:51:24):
everybody was like, hey, is this a real ID, And no,
no it's not.

Speaker 3 (01:51:32):
Nope, nope, nope.

Speaker 1 (01:51:37):
So now the the government folks, you know, they caught
wind of this. They had a little fun about it.
They said that, you know, they're all in favor of
the hot dog and a coke deal and the rotiserie chicken,
but that's not good enough. Get on an airplane. But yeah,
it's been twenty years since real idea was passed and

(01:52:03):
it took forever. It's not good. It's not an example
of efficiency. Where's Elon?

Speaker 2 (01:52:12):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:52:12):
Here's some other stuff though, Uh okay. Apart from this
being like one of the most terrifying timelines you could
possibly imagine, with you know, authoritarian trump vistas trying to
take over and unmake the government. Airplane's falling out of
the sky, the Israelis bombing basically everybody around them, it's

(01:52:38):
also the dumbest fucking timeline you could imagine because it
features people like RFK the eighth or whatever number.

Speaker 2 (01:52:47):
He is.

Speaker 1 (01:52:50):
Not content to obliterate HIV research or you know, basic
vaccine health or like I don't know a CBC that functions,
or the people who track down flew outbreaks. No, it
wasn't good enough with destroying public health that way, He's

(01:53:10):
also opening up space for these bleach idiots. This is
hard to explain. There is a compound a chemical called
chlorine dioxide. Now, anybody who is paying attention, here's the

(01:53:35):
word chlorine and goes, hey, that's not safe. Chlorine dioxide
is bleach in very tiny, tiny amounts. It's used to
do important things like disinfecting things. In fact, most of
the municipal water systems in the country. When you say like, oh,

(01:53:58):
the water has chlorine in it to like make it
safe to drink, that's what they're using, is chlorine dioxide.
But they're using a very very tiny, tiny, tiny, tiny
tiny amount. And sometimes they're exposing the water to the
chlorine dioxide as a disinfectant and then exposing it to
something else that neutralizes it to make it go away.

(01:54:20):
And you see it in other places like in you know,
water purification systems, sewage systems. You see it sometimes used
as like a cleaner, all kinds of stuff like that,
you know, where you don't see it consumable products because

(01:54:42):
it's toxic. However, over there in Fox News the stand,
there is a bunch of people who sell this stuff.
They sell it under the name the Miracle Mineral Solution,
Chlorine dioxide Solution, water Purification, God Detox, that's one of
the things. And they think everybody should drink it. They

(01:55:06):
want people to drink it or inject it or like
sprinkle it on their kids or something. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:55:14):
This is the new kool Aid.

Speaker 1 (01:55:16):
Yeah, yeah, there's one guy sells it as a nasal spray. Great.
So here's the thing. Please don't drink bleach or inject
it into yourself or spray it up your nose or

(01:55:37):
sprinkle it on anything. Please just use it to keep
your shirts white or something.

Speaker 3 (01:55:44):
Or you can watch bleach. It's a great anime.

Speaker 1 (01:55:46):
There you go. You can watch bleach. You can use
it to make your hair blod Brian did that once
and now I don't have any hair, you know. But like,
here's what you shouldn't do. Please don't ingest it at all.

Speaker 3 (01:56:03):
There is an actual warning size to tell you not to.

Speaker 1 (01:56:07):
However, if you are somebody like say or anybody who
voted for Donald Trump, those rules do not fight a
lot the flag. No, no, he's not here.

Speaker 15 (01:56:26):
He can't stop.

Speaker 1 (01:56:27):
If you voted for Trump, it is safe for you,
but only for you to ingest as much bleach as
you want. And as a matter of fact, it might
cure various things that are wrong with you, like club
feet or you know, akey elbow. Right, you'd be like, hey,
my elbow hurts. Uh, And then like I'll say, did

(01:56:49):
you vote for Trump? And you'll see yeah, and I'll
be like, oh well, then try this bleach thank me
in the morning. Hurry up and wait. Okay, let's talk
about the phone. You know what the phone is, you
know as numbers he die on call somebody.

Speaker 3 (01:57:10):
I used to do the rotary Yeah, we had rotary.

Speaker 1 (01:57:13):
Phones back in the nineteen hundreds, before the turn of
the century, back when Brian was a young man. Believe
it or not, Brian was a young man. Here's a
phone number, eight six six DHS two ICE. Now, this

(01:57:37):
phone number was published by the Department of Homeland Security
with this really not at all sinister looking poster that
says report all foreign invaders, and it gives us this
phone number. You could call the number if you wanted to.

(01:58:01):
You could do anything you want with that phone number.
I'm not telling you to call it. I'm saying you
could call it. You could like use it to just
you know, do whatever you wanted to. You might jam
up their lines with a bunch of spam calls, or
you might like you know, hand it out to the
home warranty spammers or something like that. You can do

(01:58:26):
whatever you want with that number. Here's another number you
could do something with if you wanted to. It's two
O two eight eight one six zero seven zero. You
could call that number if you want. I'm not sure
if it still goes to Jared Kushner. It might, And

(01:58:49):
if it does, you know you want to talk to him,
find out what the Saudi investments are up to these days.
I'm sure he'd love to chat. I mean, he's not
working for the president currently. I think he's what's the word,
taking bribes. Yes, I think that's his full time job now,

(01:59:09):
it's taking bribes. But you know, if you feel like
you want to chat with Jared Kushner again, that's your choice.
He can be reached at two oh two eight eight
one six zero seven zero. Have a good time. Don't

(01:59:33):
tell him I said, Hi, I don't want to talk
to that guy. That's why I'm not calling you. But
you know, you can call it if you want. That's cool.
I want to do some animal news, Brian.

Speaker 3 (01:59:45):
I like animals, like animals everywhere.

Speaker 1 (01:59:48):
Yeah. Are you familiar with the disc golf?

Speaker 7 (01:59:53):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:59:53):
Yeah, there's actually a nice of course, not far from
my area.

Speaker 1 (02:00:00):
There you go, there's quite a lot of them around here.
My brother is a professional disc golfer. He's made the
pro tour. Hey, he loves it. So you know, disc
golf is mostly played by like crunchy hippies in the
woods with their discs and their backpacks. And I mean

(02:00:22):
there's other kinds of people who play it, but you know,
it's a thing you play on land, right, What's something
you would not expect to find while you're out walking
around throwing discs into baskets?

Speaker 3 (02:00:45):
A landmine?

Speaker 1 (02:00:46):
Well, you would hope you don't find one of those.
I don't know. You're on land. What's the chances you're
gonna run into, let's say, a hammerhead shark? Say what, Yes,
I'm gonna read this story straight up to you, because

(02:01:07):
that's what you're gonna find. This guy, Jonathan was out
on the links with some friends at Splinter City Disc
Golf Course in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, earlier this month
when he looked up and he saw an osprey cruising
above the courses eleventh hole. It's not uncommon to see

(02:01:30):
an osprey carrying something, but you take note because it's
still really cool to see, said the guy, Jonathan Marlowe.
Osprey's have you know, been known for snagging fish out
of bodies of water with their talons. That's pretty much
what they do, right, their ospreys. This one was no different. However,

(02:01:51):
as it was flying over, the bird dropped the fish
that it was carrying, and that's when Marlowe realized that
the fishing question was actually a small hammerhead shark. There
aren't too many scenarios in which having a hammerhead shark
dropped on the ground near you wouldn't be weird, but

(02:02:13):
disc golf could be towards the top, especially if it
happened to the wrong group of golfers. Yeah, so, like
what a headline? Disc golfer finds baby hammerhead that was
dropped by an osprey. Apparently the osprey collected the hammerhead

(02:02:36):
and then was flying over the disc golf course and
got harassed by a couple of crows, and then it
dropped the hammerhead on Jonathan Marlowe. What a story.

Speaker 3 (02:02:51):
Yah, that's a Now technically is it a fifth story
or is it a depends.

Speaker 1 (02:02:57):
How big you tell it. Yeah, the hammerhead was this big.
The ospreys wingspan was this big, all right. And our
final story tonight, I don't know what else to do
but to tell you this one here. I'm just gonna

(02:03:18):
read it straight up, because each sentence here gets weirder
and weirder. A Kentucky man known as Cowboy Cody let
loose a terrified raccoon in a bar out of revenge
for being turned away from the establishment Friday night, according
to police and a bartender who witnessed the incident, that

(02:03:39):
is a hell of a way to start a story.
Police arrested Jonathan Another Jonathan Jonathan Mason forty.

Speaker 4 (02:03:48):
Does he look forty in this picture?

Speaker 3 (02:03:50):
He looks more than forty. Yeah, you could tell he's
been taking some stuff.

Speaker 1 (02:03:54):
Yeah, on a slew charges, including assault, after he released
a raccoon in the Big Apple Grill and Bar in
the city of Murray, Kentucky. I don't know why it's
called the Big Apple quote. Apparently he had trapped a
raccoon earlier in the day on his farm and he'd
been carrying it around with him, said the bartender, Mary Haffner.

(02:04:19):
I'm a bartender, so you know, I've seen some crazy
stuff in my time, but nothing like this. Mason, who
is called Cowboy Cody by locals, lives alone on a
nearby farm and has caused trouble in the pass at
local bars. The employees told the newspaper shocking the guy
who lives alone and it's called cowboy. Cody Hafner, who's

(02:04:43):
thirty seven has worked at the Big Apple for five years,
said that Mason was already drinking when she encountered in
Friday night. The bar had previously banned him over a
drunken mule incident. Not a moscow mule, just du mule incident.
Don't worry, we'll find out what that is. Mason always

(02:05:04):
liked her, Halfner said, and she thought that she could
convince him to leave without causing a scene. I came
out from around the bar and asked him to leave nicely,
she said. He said to me, oh, I see how
it is. They sent a pretty face out here to
distract me. Initially, Mason complied without complaint. At first, I
was like, who I diffused? A big issue, said Hafner.

(02:05:26):
But moments later, Mason returned armed with the raccoon. She said.
The raccoon waddled into the crowded restaurant as customers looked
on in confusion. This is getting great. It was more
scared than anything, she said of the raccoon. It was
pretty upsetting for him. I imagine poor little raccoon. After

(02:05:51):
told her fellow employees to let her handle the raccoon,
but another employee didn't listen and tried to snatch the
furry fiend by his tail. It bit him, and then
he had to get a ravy shot. A video shows
the employee crawling on the floor, chasing after the raccoon
as he weaves his way through the tables and chairs.

(02:06:12):
The raccoon then bites the worker on his hand as
the wild animal makes a shrieking growl. But Halfner was
able to lure the critter onto a chair, where she
casually wraps him in a towel and heads for the exit.
I am no city slicker, she said, I'm a Kentucky girl.

(02:06:32):
I got no problem tentioning it. Side note, if you
meet a girl who can just catch raccoons with a towel,
you should either marry her or get as far away
from her as possible. The worker who was bitten got
the ravy shot. It's not the first time that Mason

(02:06:52):
has been involved in an animal related crime. Remember the
mule incident here it is. Last winter, Mason was arrested
twice for leading cops drunken chase through the streets on
a mule. The Gapple employees had to call the police
on Mason when he allegedly beat the animal with the
whip in the parking lot. Bason led police on a
drunken chase on the mule on the night of December seventh,

(02:07:15):
and then did it again on December ninth.

Speaker 3 (02:07:21):
Okay, I'm the picture again, and.

Speaker 1 (02:07:23):
I didn't wait to go to this place. Yes, a county, Kentucky.
Where where in Kentucky is this?

Speaker 3 (02:07:33):
It's gotta be somewhere deep Murray, Kentucky. Yeah, it's I
think it's nowhere near Louisville or it's gotta be somewhere deep.

Speaker 1 (02:07:44):
I'm about to find out. Let's sity here.

Speaker 20 (02:07:51):
Like that.

Speaker 3 (02:07:51):
There's like, yo, if you remember the show like Dukes
of Hazzard, and he's like that guy who creates that
moonshine out of their own uh while they're sitting in it,
and it's it's like that's what he reminds me of.

Speaker 1 (02:08:08):
He does look like that. Okay for reference Jesus, I'm
having a zoom way out to like find anything anybody's
heard of.

Speaker 3 (02:08:16):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 1 (02:08:17):
It's a it's south and east of Paducah. If you
know where that is. It's substantially south and east of
Saint Louis. That's so it's it's like.

Speaker 4 (02:08:32):
Kentucky.

Speaker 1 (02:08:35):
It's close closest to where Kentucky touches Missouri. Yeah, and
just north of the Tennessee line. Oh, it's just it's
far western Kentucky. Yeah, yeah, it's that's that's really something.

(02:08:56):
I mean, you know, if you live out there, maybe
riding a mule on the police chase, it sounds like
an attractive way to write.

Speaker 4 (02:09:06):
Uh bottom on.

Speaker 1 (02:09:12):
Later that night, after he wouldn't roll down the windows
so the officers could question him. Eventually the cops placed
him under arrest. He was booked in the county jail,
and it's facing charges of third degree criminal trespassed, second
degree assault, resisting arrest, and failure to maintain insurance. Where

(02:09:34):
the raccoon falls in those charges though, Is there accoon
charge with anything?

Speaker 3 (02:09:39):
I guess not unless he had a you know, crack
pipe somewhere hidden right that pipe bright?

Speaker 2 (02:09:46):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:09:46):
Two, that's two raccoon stories in two weeks.

Speaker 11 (02:09:51):
Here.

Speaker 1 (02:09:51):
By the way, we're developing a trend, all right. You
hear that music, which means we've come to the end
of the show. We want to say thank you to
Nikki and Miko for being so cool and spending all
that time with us. Go check out their show Boots
two Heels Underscore Podcasts Boots with It and then two
is the number two Heels Underscore Podcasts where you can

(02:10:13):
find out all their stuff. They drop new episodes every Wednesday.
It's very compelling, it's fun, and it's charming, and it's
not as heavy and terrifying as this show, so it
definitely recommended as a way to take a little break.
Thanks to our radio partners CB Radio, FRS Radio, and
HAM Radio That's the Delicious One. Thanks to NTN for

(02:10:34):
keeping us on for another week maybe don't know. Thanks
to our home on the interwex Cochleaymedia dot com. And
thanks as always to our family here at Beltwigh Radio
for making us sound as smooth as the currently quiet
streets of Los Angeles. All right, Brian, where can everybody
find you and catch some no filter sports? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (02:10:56):
With no filter Sports, we're taking a hiatus. We're waiting
for a miskiki to get back into the groove. And
basically that minds you. We always feel like you know,
during the summer things are calm, but I'm a baseball guy.
I want to talk about baseball, but we'll wait until
the fall for that. But you can still check out

(02:11:17):
our some interesting facts about sports on no Underscore Filter
Underscore Sports Underscore two point five. So where we I
still post up some interesting things, you know, highlights of
certain games and stuff like that from other people. So
so at least keep the keep sports in the air

(02:11:38):
here on Bellerie Radio and beyond there you go.

Speaker 1 (02:11:41):
All right, and you can find uh Tes somewhere on
the Blue Sky at DC Cortes. You can find me
and the show on the Twitter at chipchat. R R
can find us on Facebook or Instagram at rip chipchat,
and you can of course find us every Thursday night
at nine thirty, except not next Thursday night because we

(02:12:03):
have a juneteenth special that is going to be airing,
right and.

Speaker 3 (02:12:09):
Yes, featuring Test Test Test Solo, as he says, or
I say, uh, we'll be featuring missus. Darryl Fairweather. She's
an author at doctor Darryl Fairweather. She's an author a
very excellent book called Hate the Game. So it's it
was an interesting interview, so I think and Tess did

(02:12:31):
a very good job, so I.

Speaker 1 (02:12:33):
Haven't heard her seen it. I want to see it,
and Brian told me I had to wait until it aired.

Speaker 3 (02:12:38):
Yes, so wait until next week following uh A Man
in the Mirror show, which will air from seven to nine.
But this the next the special episode of Chip Chap
will be had at its regular time for at nine thirty.

Speaker 1 (02:12:53):
All right, and you can check that out. It's going
to be all over everywhere, all of our regular channels.
I can't wait to see it. And Happy Juneteenth to everybody,
or I won't get to see you on that on
that day. It's still a holiday for now. Anyway, catch
us every Thursday night, except not next Thursday night. Will
you not catch me next Thursday night? Because we're gonna

(02:13:14):
have a special next Thursday night. But then we'll be back.
We've got all kinds of stuff lined up all through
the summer. I'm Chip, that's Brian.

Speaker 4 (02:13:23):
This is somewhere.

Speaker 1 (02:13:24):
You've been listening to chip Chat on Beltway Radio and beyond.

Speaker 4 (02:13:29):
What list all the.

Speaker 18 (02:13:38):
Ship Chat ladio.

Speaker 8 (02:13:44):
Stop enjoy hold

Speaker 14 (02:13:49):
M HM
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