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September 2, 2025 • 59 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Welcome every one, Welcome through another edition of the Court.
You went lock ba guess sure, Well it's another day.
I'm doing another podcast. It's another September. And this year
went flying past, be already into September. Wow, I'm just

(00:30):
hoping everybody have us happy Labor Day and happy September.
And we only got like, hm, three months September, October,
November before Christmas. Yeah, this year went fast. Three months.

(00:52):
You hear that, Mom and Dad's three months before Christmas,
and your kids is probably turning around and looking at
you right now. So mom and dad, y'all remember those
days when y'all usual to look at your mom and
dad when y'all used to go back to school in September.

(01:12):
We used to go back after Labor Day. Everybody remember
that we didn't go back before Labor day. When you
went back after Labor Day. And now they they just
got it all messed up. Gotta go back before Labor Day,
you know. I mean, they need to bring it back
to Afrid Labor Day. But I couldn't wait to get

(01:40):
back to school.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:42):
I used to love to go into the Chimes school
seeing my teachers again.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
See how old they got.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
And see how young I I got couldn't wait the
for the ski seas season cause Ms Miss Shaeffer used
to take us skiking and all. And but though those days,
those those years went so fast, man, they they did,
I was, they would just low down and all those

(02:16):
what are the days to lift for? You know, you
used to go come home on the street lightnse on
and all. And I got some stuff for you, wanna
on a couple episodes. There's this guy to do little
short story and little short podcasts, I mean little short

(02:36):
stories on YouTube. And he used to bring back the
days on the street lights was on and usual to
ride your bikes and everything, and you know when to
come home when the street lights come on. But those
days are gone. All you here about now is crazy

(03:01):
kids shooting each other, turning up stuff downtown and all
that stuff. And today's parents don't care, cause they do
the same or even in jail, and those days will
never come back. And all they do is play video

(03:22):
games and stuff now to I mean, sometimes I love
my video games, but I love doing my I love
doing my podcasts too, and do some of the things
I wish I would have had when I was growing up.
YouTube and all that and get to do podcasts and
stuff like that. You know, I probably ana never met

(03:45):
my wife. I probably never looked at her. Uh I
mean I would never. I I can't even call it
my wife. I'm just gonna say the person my my
day offall in life. Candy Clock can't even glock my downfall.
But we know about downfalls because we got one. We

(04:08):
got one in the White House, you know. So we
know about downfalls cause that's where he taken America on
a ride down. So what got this thing on YouTube?
I'm gonna play. It's about plute Do And I remember

(04:30):
talking about all the planets in school and plue Do
was part of that planet. And until they this dismissed
blue Do is not a planet. But I say blue
Dough is still a planet. But he has a little
story that you two got on the little video. I

(04:51):
don't know what it is, but let's talk about plute Do.
And Pluto is one of my favorite planets, and Venus
is my next favorite. I don't care about Mars like Jupiter.
Look a little bit Uranious. That's a cool name. Nettune.

(05:13):
It's a cool planet, but it's too don't want gold Saturn.
That's a beautiful planet, you know. I wish we can
go to space and just go to Satin. The rings
around Satin they're so beautiful, you know. And Mercury the

(05:36):
hottest planet, you know. But Venus and Blue Dough theyve
my tooth favorite, you know, and I will probably be
writing stories about them too, you know. But let's see
what they say about blue Dough. Then we won't get
to Donald Trump.

Speaker 4 (05:58):
I haven't been able to take my eye off my
husband's pants since he tried this morning trick.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
What happened afterward was unbelievable. I thought it would be just.

Speaker 5 (06:06):
Another quiki, but my husband went hard on me for
two straight.

Speaker 6 (06:09):
Hours, slowly transformed into a real world. With each passing week,
more details emerged In the last twenty four hours before
the flyby. The color images stunned even the experts. Pluto
was alive, geologically active, comple flex, and beautiful in ways

(06:30):
no one had dared to imagine. At its heart, quite literally,
was a vast, bright feature that captured the world's imagination,
a gigantic heart shaped region spanning nearly one thousand miles
across the dwarf planet's equator. This area was soon named
Tombaugh Reggio in honor of Clyde Tom Pluto's discovery. The

(06:51):
left lobe of the heart, called Sputnik Plenicia is a
massive plane of.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
We lurished upping. I didn't know his name was Tom Row. Wow,
that's the man that discovered Pluto Tarron ring ring laguer
I probably did know 'em, but I didn't. But anyway,
that that's that's pretty interesting. Now they're saying blue dough

(07:18):
got a big heart around it, and they named the
area toron re Ringlature after Pluto founder n That's pretty
cool they learned eze. I mean, astronomy is pretty cool.
I need people need to get in and on more
into it.

Speaker 6 (07:37):
You know, nitrogen ice stretching more than six hundred miles across.
At first glass, it seems smooth and featureless, but closer
inspection revealed something extraordinary, an intricate pattern of polygonal cells,
some as wide as thirty miles.

Speaker 3 (07:54):
These aren't cracks or impact scars.

Speaker 6 (07:56):
They're convection cells, evidence of an active process reached in
Pluto's surface. Even now, heat from Pluto's interior faint but
persistent causes the nitrogen ice to slowly churn like boiling water,
with warmer material rising in the center of each cell
and cooler ice sinking at the edges. The mere existence
of Sputanic Planiia challenges everything scientists once thought about such

(08:19):
distant worlds. At Pluto's frigid temperatures, averaging around negative three
hundred and seventy five degrees fahrenheit negative two hundred and
twenty five degrees celsius, one would expect geological processes to
grind to a halt, Yet here was proof of motion,
proof of energy.

Speaker 3 (08:36):
Beneath this icy plane.

Speaker 6 (08:38):
Models suggests a layer of liquid nitrogen, or perhaps even
an ocean of water mixed with liquid, a hidden reservoir
that has kept tramp years. The plane itself may have
formed when a massive impact blasted a basin early in
Pluto's history, later filled by nitrogen ice.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
From the thin atmosphere above.

Speaker 6 (09:00):
To the west and south of Sputnik Planitia rise towering
mountains of solid water ice, some reaching heights of eleven
thousand feet, comparable to the Rocky Mountains on Earth. Water
at these temperatures is as hard as granite, so these
mountains are likely ancient fragments of Pluto's crust pushed upward
by tectonic or cryovolcanic forces. Among the most striking peaks

(09:23):
is the feature known as Hilary Montes, alongside Tensing Montes,
named for the first climbers to summit Mount Everest.

Speaker 1 (09:31):
Their presence suggest antil.

Speaker 6 (09:37):
Capable of sustaining massive blocks of ice that float atop
a softer layer of nitrogen ice or a subsurface ocean.
Beyond the mountains lie vast networks of canyons and troughs,
some stretching for hundreds of miles in the region called
virgil Fossae. Channels appear to cut across ancient terrain, hinting
at episodes of cryovolcanism volcanic activity driven by molten rock,

(10:01):
but by slushy mixtures of water, ammonia, and other.

Speaker 3 (10:05):
Volatiles erupting from the depths.

Speaker 6 (10:07):
Elsewhere, glacial flows snake away from the edges of Sputnek Planitia,
creeping into adjacent.

Speaker 3 (10:13):
Valleys, just as glaciers do on Earth.

Speaker 6 (10:16):
These features speak to a world that has not been
dormant for billions of years, but one that continues to evolve,
driven by internal heat and complex chemistry.

Speaker 3 (10:26):
The surprises didn't.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
End at this, so you might wonder if the light
on plute do do be really no, or due to
aliens land on Pluteau they get that to make that
feal for that spaceship at My super mother said, with

(10:51):
the UFO supposed to be coming, it's moving in oracular
speed and everything, and they're supposed to be hidden towards Earth,
be supposed to be bine October, but I can't believe.
With one line gath In, some of the things you

(11:11):
see online you can't believe. But yeah, I've listened to
more death at the surface.

Speaker 6 (11:20):
New Horizons revealed that Pluto has a delicate, layered atmosphere
extending hundreds of miles into space. In silhouette during the
spacecraft's departure, the atmosphere appeared as a luminous halo, glowing
against the blackness of space, a deep blue color that
no one anticipated. That blue comes from sunlight scattering off

(11:40):
tiny haze particles formed when ultraviolet radiation from the Sun
breaks apart methane. In Pluto's atmosphere, These fragments recombine into
more complex molecules called tholins, which gradually settle onto the surface.
Giving Pluto its reddish brown tones. The haze isn't uniform.
It's stratified into at least distinct layers, each shaped by

(12:02):
temperature gradients and winds.

Speaker 3 (12:03):
We barely understand.

Speaker 6 (12:05):
This thin atmosphere, mostly nitrogen with traces of methane and
carbon monoxide, behaves in ways that are.

Speaker 3 (12:11):
Still puzzling scientists.

Speaker 6 (12:13):
Unlike the stable atmospheres of larger planets, plutos is transient.

Speaker 3 (12:18):
As Pluto moves along its.

Speaker 6 (12:19):
Two hundred forty eight year orbit, its distance from the
Sun changes dramatically, causing the surface to alternately warm and
cool by small amounts that nonetheless have enormous consequences. When
closer to the Sun, ices on the surface sublimate into gas,
thickening the atmosphere. As Pluto recedes into the darkness, the
gases freeze out and collapse back onto the surface in

(12:42):
a cycle that spans centuries. Some researchers predict that within
the next hundred years, Pluto's atmosphere may completely freeze out,
leaving a barren, airless world until the cycle begins again.
The interaction between this atmosphere and the surface creates.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
That's pretty instant interesting. Once in the time they said
they did. They they qualified Blue Door as a planet,
so I guess they're saying as the planet again. Science.
I don't believe what scientists said, and they don't. They
don't even know the back of their the ass. They

(13:23):
probably can't even tell you where shit comes from the
White House and how they would. So sometimes you gotta
just learn things when you're on you know, I mean,
don't dispute science, cause science is created. God gave us
that knowledge to to learn science, your body and all that.

(13:49):
But I don't know that. Then some people say we're
not supposed to look beyond the stars or something like that,
but I don't believe that if that was true, God wins,
it would have been the block was not to see
the stars and stuff like that. You know, he wouldn't
made the moon and all that stuff up there. So

(14:12):
I don't believe. I think I believe that we were
meant ton't look at the stars. I even think that
we were meant to explore, to spread out to the stars,
you know, just just like the white man who bent
terror to America. No Chlystopher Columbus, the man that post

(14:34):
to discover America, sposed to discover America. But he didn't. Again,
can't discover something that's already here. People was already here.
I can discover something. You know, you brought death, instruction
in chaosity to this country. The Indians was already here,

(14:59):
and even the Indians said it was strained stuff from
the skies. And all y'all remember the Vitings. Some say
the Vitings was the first discovery that came here before
Columbus did. But they they landed it up and near Canada,
right on in America, and America saw it in Canada, Canada,

(15:23):
sol I don't know where, and y'all, I ain't have
to look that up, but yeah, we'll we'll find out too.
But who's scuppering America? The Vitings or the the the
man of destruction Columbus. But this stuff is really inserted

(15:45):
and listening to some more guys. By the way, I
like to welcome all the people from Sweden and I
think it's sweetened and once again Germany to my part
being cast podcast. And I'm doing that at the same

(16:07):
time I'm doing this, but welcome everyone. Go to a
stripe if you haven't a striped to my part being podcast.
Go through Apple or subtifi any for mat. So I'm

(16:27):
I'm on all four mats. One not too I think
I think Apple Ambason music and I heart ready ever
gonna pick me up to one Part Being but yeah,
and I don't think I have the commercials on end
like I do want to speak, But yeah, you can

(16:51):
go same thing and you can listen to Part Being
or speak and my speaker is on Part Being as well,
so you can probably gonna have two episodes and I
just need 'em. I just gotta fix the episodes. No
right now, I just numble them. But don't pay attention

(17:14):
to the episodes, okay, cause they not right, they not
in order. I will fix 'em later, but just a
strong of me. Blue Dough supposed to be a none
planet again, and I don't know it's a anybody you

(17:38):
know it's a planet again that they said it's not
a planet anymore. I remember that they they discr disqualify
as a planet. It's crazy. As we listen to a
little bit more and then we get to Donald.

Speaker 6 (17:54):
Trump, it's active weather on a dwarf planet billions of
miles away. Nitrogen fraud form on mountaintops, while methane snows
may blanket certain regions in seasonal layers.

Speaker 3 (18:06):
Patrix twenty four is a free CRM system that allows
are to achieve five.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Be right back from.

Speaker 3 (18:22):
Subtly all appearance on scales we can observe from Earth.

Speaker 6 (18:27):
Even now, scientists are studying images for signs of dunes
and wat streaks, patterns that suggest Pluto has breezes strong
enough to shape the landscape despite its near vacuum environment.
Color data from new horizons added another dimension to Pluto's complexity.
Far from the dull gray many expected, Pluto's surface is

(18:48):
a patchwork of whites, browns, and striking reds. The bright
regions like Spotan Pleniitia consist of nitrogen, carbon, monoxide, and
methane ices, while the darker zones, such as the equatorial
belt known as Cuthulu Mocula, are coated with complex organic
molecules formed by sunlight driven chemistry.

Speaker 3 (19:10):
These tholins not only tint the.

Speaker 6 (19:12):
Landscape, but also provide a glimpse into the chemistry that
may have occurred on the early Earth. What astonished planetary
scientists most was the sheer diversity packed into a world
only about one thy four hundred and seventy five miles across,
barely eighteen percent the diameter of Earth. In that small space,
Pluto hosts towering mountains, deep canyons, glacial plans, and atmospheric

(19:36):
phenomena that rival those of planets thousands of times its
mass detail at heat to power such activity could it subservice.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
And will come back to the Pluto again one day?

Speaker 3 (19:51):
What does this mean for possible? But that changed for
the first time.

Speaker 7 (20:09):
Hey, everybody, that's Barack and.

Speaker 1 (20:13):
The greatest persident all the time.

Speaker 8 (20:16):
Because we're facing an existential threat or democracy.

Speaker 7 (20:20):
We need your health right now.

Speaker 9 (20:22):
These states across the country, like Texas and Florida, these
extreme conservative politicians are announcing and acting on plans to
slicing dize house.

Speaker 10 (20:30):
Districts with the goal of preserving their.

Speaker 9 (20:31):
Own power while diluting the voting power of communities of color.

Speaker 3 (20:35):
You're doing the same.

Speaker 2 (20:36):
Thing in Ohio, try to give one part.

Speaker 7 (20:38):
Of control over almost ninety percent of congressional seats.

Speaker 9 (20:41):
Rather than facing their voters at the polls next year,
they're trying to silence them instead.

Speaker 11 (20:47):
In a rare and pointed critique, former President Barack Obama
has publicly rebuked President Donald Trump again, this time taking
aim at Trump's policies that Obama believes undermines democratic norms.

Speaker 3 (20:59):
And it's as.

Speaker 11 (21:00):
This marks the third time in consecutive weeks the former
president had decided to speak out against the man that
succeeded him as president.

Speaker 10 (21:09):
First.

Speaker 11 (21:09):
During a recent event at Hamilton College, Obama addressed what
he described as quote unimaginable actions by the Trump administration.
He discussed the Trump administration's threats against universities and law
firms that he believes is contrary to the basic principles
of American democracy.

Speaker 7 (21:24):
Imagine if I had done any of this long you
just I just I just want to be clear about this.

Speaker 10 (21:34):
Imagine the.

Speaker 1 (21:38):
M H.

Speaker 2 (21:44):
Imagine if I had pulled Fox News's credentials from the
White House Press for.

Speaker 7 (21:49):
You're laughing, but that's what's happened.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
M H.

Speaker 2 (21:56):
Imagine if the law firms that were representing parties that
were upset with policies by administration and initiated that you
will not be allowed into government buildings.

Speaker 10 (22:16):
We will punish you.

Speaker 7 (22:17):
Economically for dissenting from the informal.

Speaker 3 (22:25):
Character or the Iron Deal.

Speaker 10 (22:33):
We will ferret out students.

Speaker 7 (22:38):
Who protest against.

Speaker 10 (22:41):
My policies.

Speaker 7 (22:47):
It's unimaginable.

Speaker 8 (22:52):
That the same parties that are silent now would have
tolerated behavior like that for me or a whole bunch
of my predecessors.

Speaker 10 (23:06):
So I had, I.

Speaker 1 (23:07):
Said, Republicans.

Speaker 7 (23:09):
I say this not on a partisan basis.

Speaker 3 (23:16):
This has to do with.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
Something we're precious, which is who are we as a country?

Speaker 3 (23:25):
And what values do we stand for?

Speaker 1 (23:27):
The full turnator's attention to the republic that's the same
thing I ask, y'all, who are we? How we get here? Yeah? Ah, guys,
how did we get here? And why we have to
go on podcasts and YouTube to make these videos about

(23:49):
the president and the Republicans? Why we could be talking
about some other stuff and we have to talk about
this this terrible things going on and everybody is just

(24:17):
in the days, you know, they they they don't know
what to do. I mean, d to me look like
and nobody know what to do? You know, do you
know what to do? And you gonna just let these
people get away with stuff? There's some more stuff. Let's

(24:46):
see what's going on here?

Speaker 12 (24:53):
Why an Amazon seventy twenty thousand dollars because I use
Amazon AI.

Speaker 3 (24:58):
I'm gonna show you a way.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
To the ten don't flop for that scam, and.

Speaker 13 (25:01):
We'll get back to the rest of Lake Line.

Speaker 7 (25:05):
At Chicago, Illinois, we're Governer J. B.

Speaker 8 (25:07):
Prisker is addressing the media about the potential of the
National Guard coming to his city.

Speaker 7 (25:11):
Let's take a listen, both.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Here in Illinois and everything in the country. The National Guard,
we learned from National God in American City a while now.

Speaker 5 (25:23):
To deploy armed military personnel to the streets Chicago the
type of overreach that our country's founders warned against. And
it's the reason that they established a federal system with
a separation of powers built on checks and balances.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Presidents see what's going on going on Germany and unwarranted,
see what's going on in America.

Speaker 10 (25:51):
It is unconstitutional, it is un American.

Speaker 5 (25:56):
No one from the White House or the Executive Ranch
has reached out to me or to the mayor.

Speaker 10 (26:03):
No one has reached out to our staffs.

Speaker 5 (26:06):
No effort has been made to coordinate or to ask
for our assistance in identifying any actions that might be
helpful to us. Local law enforcement has not been contacted.
We have made no requests for federal intervention. None we
found out what Donald Trump was planning the.

Speaker 10 (26:27):
Same way that all of you did. We read a
story in the Washington Post.

Speaker 5 (26:33):
If this was really about fighting crime and making the
streets safe, what possible justification could the White House have?

Speaker 1 (26:44):
None? This is about Donald Trump. This is about Donald
Trump getting power. This is about Donald Trump trying to
control every Dane and trying to scare people and all

(27:07):
that stuff and wearn that the slave hat. Make a
Meraca white again, you know? Yeah, this this is not
about the cities. And know all that. This is not
about crime. This is about tom This is about what
they what they got. The ladies called Trey Lilly try

(27:31):
Lillia something like that. If I keep forgetting them. But
the ladies gave 'em. They gave him some name the
person that k But this is about to Lida President
te Lidia. I I I'm not saying that right. The
ladies gave him some a name. I I I forgot

(27:54):
the name. It might have to go back to one
of the podcasts to find out the name. But I
will go back to the show. Maybe probably I'll find it. Yeah,
if I got enough time. But it's crazy because he's

(28:15):
sending armed troops to the American cities like Chicago, he's
not sending them to Texas. I'm not sending them to
Kansas City or where Memphis, Tennessee. He's not sending them

(28:37):
to Ioaho and Alora with that state name Alora. He's
not sending them to all the real estates. He's sending
them to the blue states. Like we're supposed to be scared.
We're not scared. Ter River, Okay, President Terriver, We're not.

(29:00):
Get Just tell you my dad, we're not sca it
no assay and listen to more.

Speaker 5 (29:10):
For planning such an exceptional action without any conversations or
consultations with the governor, the mayor, or the police.

Speaker 7 (29:20):
Let me answer that question.

Speaker 10 (29:23):
This is not about fighting crime.

Speaker 5 (29:25):
This is about Donald Trump searching for any justification to
deploy the military in a blue city, in a blue
state to try and intimidate his political rivals. This is
about the President of the United States and his complicit
Lackey Stephen Miller, searching for ways to lay the groundwork

(29:46):
to circumvent our democracy, militarize our cities, and end elections.
There is no emergency in Chicago that calls for armed
military intervention. There is no insurrection. There is no insurrection
like every major American city in both blue and red states.

(30:08):
We deal with crime in Chicago. Indeed, the violent crime
rate is worse in red states and red cities.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Did he go he knelt it, He knelt it. He said,
the crime rates is worse than Red states, and so
why he ain't sending them to red Skates and the
other guy he mentioned keep here in his name Miller Metal, Steve,

(30:42):
Steve Miller. What is they trying to do because they're
not going to achieve it. Steve Miller and your boyfriend,
tylarious President terre Terroris, you're not going to be successful. Okay,
you're not going to end election, and you're not going
to stop on democracy. It's been going on with two

(31:07):
hundred and fifty years, and it's going to go on
not for two hundred thousand years. Okay, you just need
to stop. Stop again. Step down, Tell your boyfriend to
step down, because he's the worst.

Speaker 5 (31:29):
Here in Chicago, our civilian police force and elected leaders
work every day to combat crime and to improve public safety,
and it's working.

Speaker 10 (31:41):
Not one person here today will claim we have.

Speaker 5 (31:44):
Solved all crime in Chicago, nor can that be said
of any major American metro area. But Calling the military
into a US city to invade our streets and neighborhoods,
to disrupt the lives of everyday people is an extraordinary action,
and it should require extraordinary justification.

Speaker 10 (32:07):
Look around you right now? Does this look like an emergency?
Look at this?

Speaker 5 (32:13):
Go talk to the people of Chicago who are enjoying
a gorgeous afternoon in this city. Ask the families buying
ice cream on the river Walk. Go see the students
who are at the beach after school.

Speaker 10 (32:26):
Talk to the workers that I just met taking the
water taxi to get here. Find a family who's enjoying today,
sitting on.

Speaker 5 (32:35):
Their front porch, and ask if they want their neighborhoods
turned into a war zone by a wannabe dictator. Ask
if they'd like to pass through a checkpoint with unidentified
officers in masks while taking their kids to school.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
Crime is a.

Speaker 5 (32:53):
Reality we all face in this country. Public safety has
been among our highest priorities. Since taking office. We have
hired more police and given them more funding. We banned
assault weapons, ghost guns, bump stocks, and high capacity magazines.
We invested historic amounts into community violence intervention programs.

Speaker 10 (33:17):
We listened to our local communities to the people who
live and.

Speaker 5 (33:21):
Work in the places that are most affected by crime
and asked them what they needed to help make their
neighborhoods safer.

Speaker 10 (33:30):
Those strategies have been working.

Speaker 7 (33:33):
Crime is dropping in Chicago.

Speaker 5 (33:36):
Murders are down thirty two percent compared to last year
and nearly cut in half since twenty twenty one. Shootings
are down thirty seven percent since last year and fifty seven.

Speaker 10 (33:47):
Percent from four years ago.

Speaker 5 (33:50):
Robberies are down thirty four percent year over year, burglaries
down twenty one percent, motor vehicle thefts down twenty six percent.

Speaker 10 (34:00):
So, in case there was any doubt as to the motivation.

Speaker 5 (34:03):
Behind Trump's military occupations, take note thirteen of the top
twenty cities in homicide rate have Republican governors.

Speaker 10 (34:14):
None of these cities is Chicago.

Speaker 5 (34:17):
Eight of the top ten states with the highest homicide
rates by Republicans, none of.

Speaker 10 (34:24):
Those states is Illinois.

Speaker 5 (34:27):
Memphis, Tennessee, Hattiesburg, Mississippi have higher crime rates than Chicago,
and yet Donald Trump is sending troops here and not there.

Speaker 10 (34:36):
Ask yourself why.

Speaker 5 (34:39):
If Donald Trump was actually serious about fighting crime in
cities like Chicago, he, along with his congressional Republicans would
not be cutting over eight hundred million dollars in public
safety and crime prevention grants nationally, including.

Speaker 10 (34:55):
Cutting one hundred and fifty eight million.

Speaker 5 (34:57):
Dollars in funding to Illinois for violent prevention programs that
deploy trained outreach workers to de escalate conflict on our streets,
Cutting seventy one million dollars in law enforcement grants.

Speaker 10 (35:12):
To Illinois direct money for police.

Speaker 5 (35:15):
Departments through programs like Project Safe Neighborhoods, the State and
Local Anti Terrorism Training Program, and the Rural Violent Crime
Reduction Initiative. Cutting one hundred and thirty seven million dollars
in child protection measures in Illinois that protect our kids
against abuse and neglect.

Speaker 10 (35:36):
Trump is defunding the police.

Speaker 5 (35:40):
To the members of the press who are assembled here
today and listening across the country, I am asking for
your courage to tell it like it is. This is
not a time to pretend here that there are two
sides to this story. This is not a time to
fall back into the reflective couch that I so often

(36:01):
see when the authoritarian creep by this administration is ignored
in favor of some horse race peace on who will
be helped politically by the president's actions. Donald Trump wants
to use the military to occupy a US city, punish
his dissidents, and score political points. If this were happening

(36:23):
in any other country, we would have no trouble calling
it what it is, a dangerous power graph. Look at
the people assembled before you today behind me. This is
a full cross section of Chicago's leaders from the business world,
the faith community, law enforcement.

Speaker 10 (36:42):
Education, community organizations, and more.

Speaker 5 (36:46):
We sometimes disagree on how to effectively solve the many
challenges that our state and our city.

Speaker 10 (36:53):
Face on a daily basis, But.

Speaker 1 (36:56):
So how do we poke in states with Republicans gun gunnements,
they not sending troops to them, and some of the
top ten thirteen top in the cities that they mentioned something,
some of 'em mission have a higher crime rate in Chicago,

(37:20):
Baltimore and Los Angeles and New York.

Speaker 2 (37:23):
And so on.

Speaker 1 (37:27):
Miami have a crime rate and it's running by a
Republican government. But he not sending troops to Miami and
not sending troops to Florida. Tennessee got a high crime rate.

(37:49):
Missrs Messrs Tennessee where the White King came from. Elvis
have a high crime crime rate. And he said he
asked the news and everything you to us podcasters, don't
take one side. Tell it like it is, and I'm

(38:10):
gonna tell it like it is. He's an he's a
wanna be dictator, and you see what's going on. Let's
go to this news team.

Speaker 10 (38:30):
Are you looking to start your own business? We'll look
no further than busy dot com right now.

Speaker 7 (38:34):
We'll complete your LLC filing free.

Speaker 3 (38:37):
You just cover the state.

Speaker 5 (38:39):
That's all.

Speaker 13 (38:39):
Administration is increasing press to the boy fella for sister Chicago,
the President said he wants a crackdown on crime there,
while the Democratic governor of Illinois, Jam Pristerer, is calling.

Speaker 7 (38:50):
It something else, a potential invasion.

Speaker 1 (38:53):
So far this way, well, we heard about him, man,
let's get this something others we heard that. Let's go
to this one.

Speaker 10 (39:00):
All right, Well, I'm gonna.

Speaker 4 (39:00):
Show y'all we got a lot to get to today.
So in just a second, is Trump having many strokes?
He's been gone, he's been hiding for a while. We
haven't seen him. He's not a press conference in quite
a while, longer than he's ever been since twenty fifteen.
And so the question arises, is he having many strokes?
You've got a lot of theories out there right now
about his health. Everybody sort of understands that they're hiding something.

Speaker 3 (39:25):
When it comes to his health.

Speaker 10 (39:26):
The question is what, and so it might be mini Strokes.
I'll break that down for you.

Speaker 4 (39:30):
Then we'll get to Trump plans a luxury resort in
Gaza after the genocide and the ethnic cleansing. This is
openly being discussed because we live in hell. Then we'll
get to Israel has done another terrorist murder spree, this
time in Yevin, and they've gone after the Houthi Prime
minister and his entire cabinet.

Speaker 10 (39:49):
We'll talk about that.

Speaker 4 (39:50):
We have an absolute revolt and rebellion happening at the
CDC right now, where it's r K Junior fishing off
everybody in sight, which is leading to the mass resignation.
It's important, experts. We'll get to some newst emails that
drops and that looks fun. And then later on Joe
Rogan is absolutely panicking because I think he realizes that
Mark Maren's crusade against him is working that Now, you

(40:14):
know his little crew over there in Austin, they're all
over the cool kids. In fact, they're pretty fucking lame.
So Mark Maron is having quite an impact here and
we love to see Rogan squirm. We love to see
him squirrem and that's exactly what happens.

Speaker 10 (40:26):
So we have all that and more.

Speaker 3 (40:27):
You guys know the jail.

Speaker 4 (40:28):
Everybody pleased me a big favor and subscribe to the
channel that helps out big time.

Speaker 10 (40:32):
That costs you nothing. Support the show on Patreon two
bucks a month, five bucks a months, even bucks a month.
It goes a long way. And thank for everybody who
does support.

Speaker 1 (40:39):
Unt oh, no one have to support this show. Okay,
I'm not on no paythonon, I'm not on no fight enough,
so you're gonna have to support this show. The only
thing you have to support this show with the quad
knock the podcast show. It say a prayer that this
show do well, more audience, more downloads. You tell your friends, family,

(41:03):
co workers, where ever you at, wherever you live at,
tell them where I have a statements, dam live at.
Promote this show. Do some pr for me, prayers, you know,
but all I ask for your prayers. And it's scared

(41:24):
to see what he got to say about Donald Trump
went on it on Patreon.

Speaker 10 (41:29):
It makes a world of difference.

Speaker 1 (41:30):
You have no idea.

Speaker 7 (41:31):
You just remember this real independent media.

Speaker 10 (41:32):
I never talked to an advertiser. I've never done an
ad read before, never talked to a billionaire, never talked
to a government, never talked to a pack, never talked
to a fake tank. There are none of that crap.

Speaker 4 (41:42):
It's all rassroots funded and the default ads on YouTube
and you guys make that possible.

Speaker 10 (41:46):
So thanks again for that.

Speaker 4 (41:47):
Also support Crystal Kyle friends on substack down links below
have a lot of great interviews that we've done recently
and coming up, and go subscribe to the Court World
YouTube channel as well. You don't want to miss that either.
We do live Kyland Corn episodes. We try to use
them every Monday at eight thirty pm Eastern Time when
the bas can come hang out with us live, so
don't miss those either. Korn's World the YouTube channel. All right, now,

(42:09):
let's go ahead and dive into it. We got a
lot to talk about here.

Speaker 10 (42:11):
So this guy named Adam Cochran.

Speaker 4 (42:13):
He describes himself as an independent investigative journalist and he
released a thread here which lays out why he paints
Trump He's dealing with strokes at the moment and that's
why he's been gone away from the cameras for longer
than he ever has been since twenty fifteen when he
came onto the political scene. That's a fucking decade ago, guys,

(42:34):
that's a decade ago. He's hiding from the cameras. No
press conferences, most importantly, no talking to the cameras. All
we get is these like photos from a distance, which
looks like those old pictures of life when you spot
a sasquatch in the woods. Some paranormal investigator as a
picture of a sasquatch from like three hundred yards away.
That's all we have now when it comes to Trump,
within the past week or so, so I forget, was

(42:56):
it Tuesday or Thursday? You guys, tell me put in
the comment section. Last time he's in front of the cameras, it.

Speaker 10 (43:00):
Was either Tuesday or Thursday. And since then he's been gonzo.

Speaker 4 (43:04):
He's been out of here, and everybody is sort of speculating,
and everybody's sort of acknowledges he has something's going on
with his health, and they're hiding it for a variety
of reasons, not just the.

Speaker 10 (43:12):
Fact that he's been gone. But now we have at
least one theory as to specifically what's happening. So he's
gonna lay it out of here for us.

Speaker 7 (43:19):
He says the following.

Speaker 4 (43:20):
I believe there's growing evidence that the White House is
covering up the fact that Donald Trump has been dealing
with TIA strokes, TA strokes, tia strokes, and that he
likely had a more significant schemic stroke this week.

Speaker 10 (43:32):
So let me just point out TIA strokes. Those are
mini strokes.

Speaker 4 (43:36):
So this guy's saying he's had a bunch of mini
strokes recently and now he just had a schemic stroke
this week.

Speaker 10 (43:43):
Okay, here we go.

Speaker 4 (43:44):
Let's start with the basics. TIA's are temporary blockages. You'll
see symptoms like leg dragging, I drooping, drooping, et cetera,
but they resolve within twenty four hours. The schemic strokes
leave a lasting impact but can range dramatically in scope
and severity. TIA's proceed in a schemic stroke and about
thirty percent of patients and often result in long lasting
interventions to try and prevent any risk of a larger stroke.

Speaker 10 (44:06):
Now let's get to what paints this picture with Trump.
So that's interesting.

Speaker 4 (44:10):
So, in other words, he's had many strokes, and so
there was a thirty percent chance he was gonna have
a bigger stroke. And this guy saying it looks like
he may have had a bigger stroke.

Speaker 10 (44:16):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (44:17):
In March twenty twenty four, Ron Philikowski notes that Trump
has been dragging his right leg for a while. It's
something we've seen him do on and off over the
past year, but not super notable on a jone. So
this video, I've seen this one before. This one doesn't
look that crazy at me, but I've seen other videos
of him dragging his leg more than this. So he
does his little dance and then he goes to a
walk and you'll see the right leg being dragged right there. Yeah,

(44:41):
And there are multiple videos of him doing this at
different times. This is one of the earlier ones from
twenty twenty four from Ron Philikowski. Then, in a Time
magazine interview from right after the election, we see the
first note of Trump's hand bruising. So this is right
after the election. We see the first handersing once again,
something people didn't think much of at the time.

Speaker 10 (44:58):
It comes up again during the Macron.

Speaker 4 (45:00):
Visit on February twenty fifth, twenty five, where Carolyn Levitt
repeats the lie about it being from shaking too many hands.

Speaker 3 (45:08):
This is what Jared looked like before Morty went from program.

Speaker 4 (45:33):
The next medical event we see is the president's annual
physical report, comparing the medication list to his old reports.

Speaker 10 (45:40):
We owned three new medications of rosuvas.

Speaker 1 (45:46):
Wow, guys, that's a lot he have. Minius Groves, he
drank his left leg. Cousin doll Minius Groves. And they
hide in all of this. Why if they continue to
letting him be president. It's it's crazy. It's it's it's

(46:13):
just crazy, you know. I I don't know what else
to say. People. I hope you enjoyed the day show.
Gave you a little YouTube, and I gave you a
little everything else and all. They had Batman up here

(46:34):
and a something about them. But yeah, you too, crazy too,
and they got a lot of crazy stuff up here.
It's not true. I wouldn't let you listen to Michael

(46:58):
Jackson's song, but copyrights can't do that. But oh, we
got some breaking news about Star Trek and skip into
this and then I'm gonna have to go cause it's
almost time. But hopefully you can enjoy the day show

(47:18):
time goes past, you know, and they got something about
the old days. You'll see this first.

Speaker 14 (47:29):
Star Trek boys are always deserve a movie, But the
show's premise, Man, it couldn't follow to us. In TG
on Star Trek Voyds Your premier in nineteen ninety five,
it promised audiences a bold, new twist on the formula.

Speaker 7 (47:42):
That it got in the franchise for decades.

Speaker 14 (47:44):
Instead of a starship safety telling to the Federation, Captain
Janeway and her crew were stranded seventy.

Speaker 7 (47:50):
Thousand life years away, cut off from starfe with no homble,
backup or re enforcements.

Speaker 14 (47:55):
This premise was daring as a bestial and while the
original series and the next generation both went on to
spawn theatrical films that expanded their legacies, Voyager never received
the same treatment. It wasn't because Boyger like characters strong
enough for the big screen. On the contrary, Captain Katherin
Janeway seven of nine and the Doctor remained some of
the most iconic figures in Trek history. Both was it

(48:18):
because fans were interested.

Speaker 10 (48:20):
The show maintained steady.

Speaker 14 (48:21):
Popularity and became a gateway for a generation of viewers
in the late nineties.

Speaker 7 (48:26):
The problem late in the very DNA of the series.

Speaker 14 (48:28):
Its core concept made translating Voyager into a standalone film
nearly impossible. YTOS and TNG could jump to movies. Theatrical
films for Star Trek had already set a clear pattern when.

Speaker 7 (48:41):
The motion picture launched in nineteen seventy nine.

Speaker 14 (48:43):
It built upon the nostalgia of the original series while
placing its crew into a new adventure that didn't demand
much prior knowledge. The Wrath of Khan the perfected the formula,
showing that movies could deepen the mythology while still working
as self contained stories. When the next generation transitioned into
film with generations in later First Contact, the groundwork was
already set. The Enterprise D and then the Enterprise E

(49:07):
could continue their adventures with Star Feet as a backdrop.

Speaker 7 (49:10):
Because the crew.

Speaker 14 (49:11):
Wasn't isolated, the films could choose from an infinite number
of mission of the weak stop plots. Both series had
freedom banked into their premise, allowing movie scripts to spin
off without disrupting the logic of their worlds. Voyager's premise
was its shackles. Voyager, however, was never designed to be flexible.
Its very premise, the struggle to get home from the

(49:32):
Delta quadri was serialized, even when episodes were self contained.
Every adventure, no matter how wild, circled back to the
fundamental problem. The crew was far away from Federation space,
with limited resources, and desperate to shake time off their
seventy year journey.

Speaker 7 (49:48):
For a feature film to.

Speaker 14 (49:49):
Work, Paramount would have had to either one paused the
journey for a self contained adventure that risked feeling like
just another episode stretched the two hours, two advanced the
premise by drastically changing the timeline, shortening the trip, or
jumping forward in ways.

Speaker 7 (50:05):
That would undercut the show's episodic tension.

Speaker 14 (50:07):
Neither option would work cleanly a standalone story with disappointed
fans who expected something bigger from a film, while accelerating
the journey at home risks stepping on the show's long
form art.

Speaker 7 (50:18):
What a Voyager movie could have looked like.

Speaker 14 (50:21):
Imagine if Paramount had greenlit a Voyager movie during the
show's run in the late nineties, it would likely have
been treated like a special two part episode where the
ship faces a massive threat in the Delta Quadrant.

Speaker 7 (50:32):
The challenge the series already produced many such stories.

Speaker 14 (50:36):
Species four hundred and seventy two, the Board, Herigon, and
countless others. A movie would have needed to either recycle
these ideas or introduce an enemy even more formidable.

Speaker 7 (50:48):
Without the ability to tie back.

Speaker 14 (50:49):
Into Federation space or galactic politics, the scope would always
feel smaller than a TNG or TOS film. Alternatively, a
post finale Voyager movie could have worked exploring the.

Speaker 7 (51:00):
Aftermath of their return to Earth.

Speaker 14 (51:02):
What happened to seven of nine when she re entered society,
How did Janeway's decisions during the journey get judged by
starfreet command.

Speaker 7 (51:10):
Did the Machi members finally find peace in the Alpha quater?

Speaker 14 (51:14):
These are compelling questions, but their character driven dramas, not
cinematic spectacles. Studios in the late nineties and early two
thousands won a Space Battles and Blockbuster Energy, not nuanced
political recordings. Voyager's characters deserve the spotlight. What makes the
lack of a Voyager movie sting most is how perfectly.

Speaker 1 (51:33):
Okay, that's enough, that's boring, you know, and then not
get over it. Okay. Voycher was okay. Captain Jane Waite
wasn't the best. Captain Michael Bernon was the best. Cisco
was the best captain, Michael, Michael Burning was the best

(51:55):
am all the captains, then Cisco, and in Arch and
then Janeway. Okay, and then the crew as well. All right,
and win your movie. Yeah they could have put it together. Yeah,
I'm sorry, fans. That's that's the way I look at it.

(52:16):
And every time y'all do a Star Trek thing, y'all
always pick the four captains in, but you never Pat
Michael Berriman, and y'all need to start recognizing her. She's
a start fully captain. Okay, she's the Captain of Discovery,
and you need to start putting her in Star Trek. Okay,

(52:38):
she's way better than Janeway. No, you can argue all
you want, you can make it mad or if you win,
turn the show off you want. But she's way better
than Janeway. And she's definitely better than Kirk. She definitely
better than Picard, you know, now, Arch and Cisco, She's right,

(53:05):
she's just a little lower and than them two cause
they don't play. And Captain Pike, I don't know when
you want to talk about him, and they made him
out of Punk. You know, he's the the weakest captain
of all the Star Treks Captains anyway, and I gotta

(53:28):
sit a head to watch it and then report what
I see, talk about what I see. But yeah, m
my opinion, I don't know. I would love to see
These Space nine movie. But Boycher movie. If they picked

(53:50):
they put all the characters together like These Space nine
Next Generation and Boycher, it would have worked. And they
would have put all the dues together just like they
did adventures. It would have worked, you know, the Barry
Martin CBS. So yeah, I think it could have been

(54:13):
a Witcher movie. Do do a number gen next Generation
movie and then the next movie spring it over to
These Space nine, let them carry it. And then third
movie Mt. Woycher continue the story, have three stories and
then let them all be in it. But Woycher would

(54:36):
carry the last story, you know, and let them battle
out against the board, the enemies and all. So it
could have been that, like something like that. But this
guy don't know what he's talking about. Well, guys, that's it.
I'm not gonna continue with this point. Could we had

(54:56):
a Star Trek movie Boitcher movie? And the Nine didn't
look on that good?

Speaker 3 (55:02):
Hm?

Speaker 1 (55:04):
Michael Berman no better than she did. And yeah, but yeah,
It could have been a Voiccher movie if they did
it all the characters together. Very started with like I said,
next Generation, then carried on over to the Space nine,
then carry it on on over to Voycher. I said,

(55:27):
one more dang, they said in the Risk a Rising
Civil War, Let's see what he's talking about.

Speaker 10 (55:42):
T Robotic developments are impressive.

Speaker 7 (55:44):
What Elon will unveil next will be the chaps be
team over before.

Speaker 10 (55:49):
If you're gonna come to make a.

Speaker 15 (55:52):
Prediction, and I bought the mah predictions because I'm never wrong,
you will have two things happen. You will have American
citizens shot, whether by accident accidental discharge. The M eighteen
seventeen pistol, which is the six P three twenty, has
been known now to have accidentally discharged by not even

(56:13):
handling it, but by bumping it.

Speaker 16 (56:16):
So we're gonna get a troop who shoots himself, has
a negligent discharge as he's trying to unload an him
four without a clearing barrel, or accidentally shoots the civilian
because he's ready to do it. He thinks that there's
a god and he's not a cop and it's against
the law. The other thing you're gonna have is rebellion.

(56:36):
You're gonna have heat, You're gonna have officers senior and
listened and listened, we're gonna go hey, move. This is
not us clearing out sandbags for a flood. This is
unlawful and I'm.

Speaker 10 (56:48):
Not going to take part in this.

Speaker 3 (56:53):
Hello and welcome to the Trump Reports.

Speaker 10 (56:55):
I'm Lenny Sykes.

Speaker 12 (56:56):
Today we're joined by Malcolm Matt's intelligence foreign policy analyst
AT four officer in the US Navy. It's experts in
national security are the veteran all the war in Ukraine.

Speaker 7 (57:06):
Malcolm, thank you very much for joining us today. Always
a pleasure.

Speaker 17 (57:11):
Well, Trump is looking to expand his use of national guards,
but uh in in law enforcement roles in the US cities,
really a justificat justification.

Speaker 3 (57:21):
For that moment to the US.

Speaker 1 (57:23):
Okay, we're gonna encourage this thing. Going to the next podcast. Okay,
this this this sound already as to this, but they
talking about a number of civil war and he talking
about one of the guns. If you bump it it
will automatically discharge. Wow, Okay, people, it's time to go.

(57:51):
Thank you for watch thankful, I'm almost a great say
watching you ain't watching it. Thank you for listening. Kk
each other, look out for each other cause we need it.
And in this world, in this country right now, it's
it's getting bad. It's it's it's terrible. We gotta get

(58:14):
this man out of the White House. Take care of
each other, look out for each other, matter what color,
all race, you all where, whether you're from, Let's stop
this madness. Okay, don't forget to go to Boss and
Nobles and everything to buy my book They of Blood.
It's one say now ten ninety eight, and you will

(58:38):
love it, I'm sure. And thank you for watching. All
the states and country like Si ser Sweden and Germany.
Thank you, and live long and prosper and make the
force of God be with you. Always love each other,
brothers and sisters. It's quay with line you night.
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