Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
You are listening to KLR and Radio where liberty and
reason still rain.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
My son was in the army back during desert storm,
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Speaker 6 (04:13):
Oh alright, this is Derek's a Riley Otto Parts story.
Speaker 7 (04:18):
After the third time jump starting my car, I finally
realized my battery was dying, so I stopped by O'Reilly
to have it checked. They tested it right there in
the parking lot. It was bad, for real bad, but
they helped me find the right battery for my car
and even installed it for free. Now my car starts
like new.
Speaker 8 (04:37):
Oh oh.
Speaker 9 (04:41):
Aut old Parts.
Speaker 10 (04:45):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.
Speaker 9 (05:02):
It's sad.
Speaker 11 (05:10):
What screesdays.
Speaker 12 (05:17):
WOS Radio, It's sack Snag, It's sad SATs, It's snack.
Speaker 11 (05:42):
Snag, It's sad.
Speaker 13 (05:47):
Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to a Monday edition
of You or Daily Dose. I met Robinson c Stacey
Atlantics work live on k l R in Radio America's
podcast network. Hope everybody had a great weekend. Hope everybody
had a wonderful Easter. Ours was a little different. We
went and hung out with the other.
Speaker 8 (06:03):
Side of the family for once instead of hanging out
with the excess family, which was kind of which was
a nice change for me. Of course, I've got all
though we missed you messages from everybody because it's where
we've been for the last twenty some years. But anyway,
sometimes sometimes anyways, So I'm here and I think Stacy's
making tea.
Speaker 14 (06:21):
I think, yes, Stacey is making tea. Because Stacy's a
little behind this morning. But that's just the way it's
gotta be.
Speaker 8 (06:28):
It's a Monday. We'll forgive you being behind. I actually
hit this newsbar one too any times. So I'm sleeping
on ice water because I haven't even made coffee yet,
So don't feel bad.
Speaker 14 (06:37):
Ah, this is the joys of the mobile earphones. I
highly recommend if you're going to do a morning podcast,
be able to move around.
Speaker 15 (06:49):
Yeah yeah, yeah.
Speaker 14 (06:50):
Unfortunately yeah yea, yeah, yea, yeah, you on board, so.
Speaker 8 (06:53):
I couldn't move around even if I wanted to do.
Speaker 14 (06:56):
Yeah. Well, anyway, we started a new tradition yes yesterday.
Speaker 8 (07:01):
What did you What did you start yesterday?
Speaker 14 (07:03):
Well, because the kids are grown and you know, family
spread all over, so we did our second year of
Easter brunch, which is always good like late morning brunch,
and then in the evening I will make what are
called Monte Cristo sandwiches because they are turkey and ham
(07:30):
and Swiss cheese made in French toasts like a grilled
cheese and then spread with raspberry jam. Don't knock it
until you've tried it. Seriously.
Speaker 8 (07:43):
Oh no, I love them because that's what I was
about to say. That's one of my favorite too, which.
Speaker 14 (07:47):
Is, yeah, we don't do the powdered sugar, but everything
else as it go. So yeah, it's just see, is
like a good little thing to do. You know.
Speaker 16 (08:03):
You go, you pay out for brunch, come home, take
a nap, and then later in the evening you make
these lovely little sandwiches because I don't have to do
Easter baskets anymore.
Speaker 14 (08:15):
Like my Easter is low maintenance.
Speaker 8 (08:20):
So yep, there's a restaurant around here that has actually
an interesting twist on a on a Monte Cristo. It's
actually they they take the bread and they put it
in like some seats. It's it's like it's not paying
cake batter, it's more like funnel.
Speaker 16 (08:42):
Ah.
Speaker 8 (08:43):
Then it's really.
Speaker 14 (08:44):
Really Oh yeah, I've seen the recipes for deep frying,
but I I don't have that kind of energy. Yeah,
like you may. I've seen the recipes for that. It's
like you still do the you still do the French ches,
grilled cheese part of it, then you cut it in half,
dip it and pancake batter and throw it in a
(09:06):
deep prior. Ye. I like yep, yep, yep.
Speaker 8 (09:10):
I like them both ways. But I have to admit
the first time I had a deep friend when I
was like, oh, but then again, I'm I'm yeah, I
love deep and everything. It's probably what I'm.
Speaker 14 (09:20):
Fat well again now the.
Speaker 8 (09:29):
Goodness, I'm still not as fat as I once was,
but I'm still fat.
Speaker 14 (09:35):
Eh. I Uh, I've decided I.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
Have to.
Speaker 14 (09:45):
Do what I can do and then be fine with it.
How's that I'm not as thin as I was, I'm
not as fat as I could be, and I'm doing
the best I can.
Speaker 8 (10:01):
That's just kind of where you've got to be at
some point. You just got to realize, you know what,
I'm doing everything I can to stay as healthy as
I can and not all yep.
Speaker 14 (10:14):
Yeah, So it's been a while since we've we've chatted.
Speaker 8 (10:18):
Yeah, well, it's been a while since I've done much
of anything because I want them getting super sick.
Speaker 14 (10:24):
Well, so you know, we're still at war with Eurasia.
H uh huh uh huh. Well we've always been at
war with your Asia, so you know, yeah, it's just no,
the most the most interesting thing in the world. Well
it wasn't really the most interesting thing in the world,
(10:44):
but it was super interesting from a historical perspective, because
I like to say that history doesn't repeat itself, but
it off in rhymes, right. I was rewatching the Apollo
eleven series with Bill Whittle. It's a funny guy, by
the way, and it's called What We Saw, And in
(11:08):
the the first session he talks about being a little kid,
and he talks about sitting there in nineteen fifty whatever
and feeling like you're on top of the world because
we've won World War Two. We'd stomped the Germans, you know,
Da da da, and all of a sudden, all of
a sudden, the Soviets had a little metal ball circling
(11:31):
the earth and flying over your house every ninety minutes,
and we didn't have one. So, in other words, the
Soviets had launched the first satellite. And I'm sitting there
going imagine being there, sitting in the country that had
won the Cold War, very safe, very secure, and all
of a sudden there's a war in your Craine and
the Russian dirty commed bastards set off a hypersonic missile
(11:56):
and we don't have one. Yeah, it's like this really
weird parallel and maybe it's just me. Maybe my brain
is the only one that thinks that way, which is fine,
but I was like, dang, no, we're living in.
Speaker 8 (12:16):
The same kind of time now, so it makes.
Speaker 14 (12:19):
Sense, but I don't want to be We're supposed to progress,
not regress. Did the Democrats not get the memo?
Speaker 8 (12:35):
Oh no, they got the memo, they just don't care.
Speaker 14 (12:39):
Well, I mean, then you got Chris Coon's out there,
the moron, the other moron from Delaware, Right, we most
defeat putin at all costs. No, no, really, not at
all costs, but phrasing no no, no, oh no, no sir.
(13:03):
All got to get you all, you guys. Some clips
of this guy that advises the World Economic Forum from Israel.
Holy cow, Holy cow. He sits there and talks about
transhumanism and what's gonna happen to all the people whose
(13:26):
countries can't can't make the leap, and how they're just
gonna have video games and drugs. Like I listened to
this guy and I'm like, oh my god, really, oh
(13:53):
my god, Like he is on record saying some of
the craziest thing. I mean, they're not even crazy at
this point. Like you listen and you're just like, yeah,
about part of the course. If you're a globalist. I guess,
like I don't even know what to say anymore when
I hear this stuff. It's like all you need is
(14:15):
a white cat and a monocle, Like, seriously, the arrogance,
And I don't know, maybe the really evil people of
the past would have said the same kinds of things
(14:37):
in their own technological bubble, if you will. But it's
just it's just wild, Like you literally just said that
out loud about other human beings. Are we there?
Speaker 8 (15:08):
Yeah, well, everybody's been saying weird quiet parts out loudlyly.
It's just all I don't even know where to start,
because there's been so long since we've done anything. I mean,
apparently now there's people that are officially saying that this
has become World War three. I guess some Ukrainian Neptune
missiles sank a really large Russian warship so now Russian
(15:33):
State TV is officially stating that this is basically escalated
into World War three because now Ukraine can hold their
own I guess I don't know. I just.
Speaker 14 (15:45):
Can can we hi hi vlad lad? When you invade
in other countries, sometimes they're stronger than you think, and
sometimes bad things happen.
Speaker 8 (16:00):
I just I don't know. I literally feel like I'm
living through the nineteen eighties as an adult again, and
not in a good way. I mean, the eighties was
like a great time for America.
Speaker 14 (16:12):
And we seem to be I think we're I think
I'm feeling more like the seventies.
Speaker 8 (16:17):
I was gonna say, man, yeah, maybe that's it. Maybe
it is more like the seventies. It just seems like
we have all the bad parts but none of the
good parts. I just I don't know. And then the
new Republican king Maker is out trying to be the
Republican king Maker again, and anybody he endorses it seems
(16:39):
to just die. So I'm not sure why everybody's trying
for his endorsements anymore.
Speaker 14 (16:46):
I mean, doctor Oz really well, and he's just screwing
up my state. I could not be any more furious
with him, We're gonna end up with Stacey Abramso's governor,
and it's going to be all Donald Trump's fault because
apparently he hates his voters. Here.
Speaker 8 (17:05):
Well, if Stacy Abrams becomes your governor, just remind her
that she can't hold two offices at once, so she
has to step down as president of the United Federation
of Planet Okay. I still couldn't believe seeing her starting Discovery.
Speaker 14 (17:21):
I was like, what are you doing, dude? The griff
is good, I'm telling you anyway, that's good. Ques.
Speaker 8 (17:37):
So one of the other interesting stories that I've seen
cropping up all over the place while we weren't doing
a morning show is they've finally figured out that there
were FBI agents planted inside all this January sixth bullshit.
Speaker 14 (17:48):
At least twenty Yeah.
Speaker 8 (17:51):
Well, what's up to twenty now? Last I heard it
was like.
Speaker 14 (17:53):
Ten no, no twenty or so was the headline I
read from Epic Times, who actually, I guess read the
filings and panted.
Speaker 8 (18:06):
And of course all the trespassing charges have been dropped
out because the testimoni has come out that they were
invited in and then trespassed.
Speaker 14 (18:15):
Well, I know one I know one guy was acquitted.
Did they drop all of the charges after that?
Speaker 8 (18:20):
Apparently it's a hang I just saw a story about it.
Then may go back and find it again. Where did
you go? Let's see? Oh wait, no, I guess I misreaded.
(18:44):
There was an apostrophe there. So one capitalism protesters trespassing
charges have been dropped, so I got by district judge.
But if one's being dropped and the testimony is coming
out that they were invited in before they were trespassed,
I'm sure they're all about the goalie anyway. I mean,
(19:05):
don't get me wrong. You can be invited into somewhere
in the national even if you refuse, you can still
be trespassed. But for everything to be coming out the
way it was for them to meet, well, they stormed
the capitol. How can you storm if you were invited in?
That's not how any of this works, is true? M m.
Speaker 14 (19:36):
Oh. I'm trying to find the amount of dollars inflation
is costing people.
Speaker 8 (19:41):
Too, damn Mini, because I'm living through it.
Speaker 14 (19:45):
Yeah, I know, but this this, like, here's a question
I have. Why is any Democrat stabs strategist still like employed?
Speaker 8 (20:00):
I don't know.
Speaker 14 (20:02):
But somebody actually told them to take power and do
the things they are doing, and none of them are working.
Speaker 8 (20:15):
I mean, at this point, everybody's trying to sound the alarm.
I mean you even have top Democrat, top Biden posters
that are like, we're gonna die. The thing about it is,
I don't want anybody on our side to believe that
shit either, because that's the last thing we need is
for us to start believing we're gonna be able to
walk this thing in because that never goes well. But
(20:36):
at the same time, when you have the same people
that were singing Biden's praises just a few months ago,
they're like, oh my god, we're all going to die.
Politically speaking, so everybody knows.
Speaker 14 (21:00):
I mean, the President's I don't know, President's.
Speaker 8 (21:02):
Underwater almost everywhere in Poland. The only two places that
he's still above water, and for some reason is white
college educated women and then the African American community as
a whole. But even the African American community as a
whole has the largest disapproval rating I've ever seen, sitting
at thirty six percent for them. That's a big disapproval rating.
(21:25):
How it's still that lowe is beyond me, but everywhere
else he's completely underwater. He's even losing the Hispanic vote.
Speaker 14 (21:35):
Oh, big time, big time. And I mean literally you
have Beato boy down in Texas. Same please don't come
down here to campaign from. Nicky Freid hasn't stopped running
for governor yet, like what Like Charlie Christ just still
(21:58):
says things in public. It's like, what are you doing?
The Sants has already won, Like, what are you doing?
Did you see the stats? Oh my god? It was something.
I think the Stances has like one hundred million dollars
on hand for his campaign and Chris has like seven million,
(22:19):
and Freed has like four for a state ride gubernatorial
race in Florida.
Speaker 8 (22:27):
Yeah, that's gonna suck.
Speaker 14 (22:30):
Which used to be which used to be considered a
twenty state. Meanwhile, Donald Trump is gonna turn Georgia blue.
Speaker 17 (22:42):
Oh god, right, Georgia the state most identified with the Confederacy.
Speaker 14 (22:54):
Seriously, I just I don't know, Like, when you think
deep South, you think Georgia and Alabama, Right, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi.
(23:15):
That's the deep South. Apparently not Georgia anymore. We're more
like New York. There's like a meme going around like
the New Confederacy and all the state's point in Georgia. Sorry,
you can't be here. I was told you. If Stacy
(23:36):
Abrams wins, I'm starting the petition to join Tennessee. There's
this nice little northwest northwest corner of Georgia that would
fit right in Tennessee and like make it a little
more square. I think we should do that. Yeah, I'm
(24:00):
all for moving the lines. This has been my this
has been my idea forever. There's literally a part of
Illinois that should just join Indiana because they think more
like the people in Indiana. And there's probably a part
of Crown Heights in the north that should join Illinois. Like,
if we could do that, we could probably just get
back to a whole lot more federalism, because nobody would
(24:22):
care about the federal government except for those things that
they're supposed to do, you know. I mean, I just
I didn't I didn't know that Joe Biden could out
Carter Carter while trying to out Wilson Wilson and beat
(24:45):
FDR Like, it's amazing. We should have Joseph back on
to explain what's going on in the Middle East, because
they all hate us now, every last one of them.
Did you see that? Did you did you see that
video of like Saudi Arabian State TV. They're like SAT
(25:10):
equivalent of Saturday Night Live making fun of Joe Biden
and Kamala Harris.
Speaker 8 (25:18):
Uh No, I did not. I'm just kind of sad.
Speaker 14 (25:21):
But oh my god. First of all, women can't really
be on TV in Saudi Arabia. Shood dude had Oh boy,
so there's a dude in a wig, and it would
have been okay except his hands were just huge.
Speaker 9 (25:46):
Oh.
Speaker 14 (25:49):
Anyway, they had Biden doing everything from saying the name
of the wrong country to falling asleep at the podium.
And I mean, the guy who was playing Kamala Harris
is fight his very meaty hands was doing like the
perfect stuff, like clasping the hands together and looking around
the room and grinning mind lesslie and then as Joe
(26:10):
said something wrong, leaning over and whispering to him, and
then when he fell asleep, just tapping him gently. I mean,
it was hysterical. I'm like, oh my god, the Kingdom
is mocking us, like straight up mocking us. That has
never happened before.
Speaker 8 (26:27):
But remember, this guy was gonna make us the the
envy of the world again instead of the laughing stock
of the world again.
Speaker 14 (26:35):
Yeah, he missed, he missed that, missed it, missed it.
I just oh this thing. It cracked me up, cracked
me up. Apparently ilhan Omar's trending. She got very she
(26:57):
got very upset that Christians were saying on a plane
on Easter Christians. Yes, he's very upset.
Speaker 8 (27:06):
Love Christians. Play.
Speaker 14 (27:09):
Mm hmm, don't here we go?
Speaker 8 (27:12):
Was she slaps?
Speaker 11 (27:17):
No?
Speaker 14 (27:17):
I don't. I don't think so. She was just she
was just being ill, Han, that's all. But apparently the
Twitter versus I dropped. I dropped that video for anyone
who in chat who wants to wants to watch it.
I cried laughing, because if you don't laugh, you're just
(27:41):
you're gonna lose your mind.
Speaker 8 (27:43):
I'm tired of having to deal with with these mother
loving Christians on this month.
Speaker 14 (27:46):
If your Friday playing, Yeah, what in the world's going
on with my Twitter? I don't know because people delete
things when they tweet them at me. I have no idea.
Speaker 8 (28:13):
People that have been doing no idea, like like even
like on other social media platforms, they like send me
a message and then delete it, and I'm like, why
did you do that? Because they had a type of
well why did you fix it? Oh no, that's annoying.
I gotta pop up this says I have a message
that I got to look for the message and the
message has been deleted. Like, go away anyway, believe it
(28:36):
or not. We're already at the bottom of the hour,
so we should probably take a break. This is the
Monday edition of Your Daily Dose where live on Klar
and Radio. I'm Rick, She's Stacey back after the break.
Don't go away or do you always listen to the
podcasts later? We prefer that you stay.
Speaker 11 (29:01):
Today.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
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That's one eight hundred five one six seventy six O
two again one eight hundred five one six seventy six
O two.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
You are listening to k l R and Radio where
liberty and reason still rain.
Speaker 9 (33:20):
Alright.
Speaker 6 (33:21):
This is Derek's the Riley Otto Parts story.
Speaker 7 (33:23):
After the third time jump starting my car, I finally
realized my battery was dying, so I stopped by O'Reilly
to have it checked. They tested it right there in
the parking lot. It was bad, for real bad, but
they helped me find the right battery for my car
and even installed it for free. Now my car starts
like new.
Speaker 9 (33:42):
Oh Auto parts.
Speaker 10 (33:49):
The following program contains course language and adult themes. Listener
and discretion is advised.
Speaker 18 (34:31):
Don't welcome back into the program, Ladies and Gentlemen, Hour one,
Segment two, coming at you.
Speaker 8 (34:41):
We're just back from the brainy Coup where everybody's happening.
A cooldy Monday morning, or as greet as you can
make a Monday morning anyway for this Monday. Also, if
you're a procrastinator, it's the last day to follow your taxes,
just the first time we've had a deadline on time
in like two years. So in case you forgot, today's
the day. If you haven't done so yet, if you
can't get it done before midnight tonight, you might want
to make sure you request an extension because yeah, it's
(35:04):
the first time in two years.
Speaker 14 (35:05):
Actually, the Biden manman really needs the money.
Speaker 8 (35:10):
Yeah, apparently they need something. I don't know what it
is they need, but they need something.
Speaker 14 (35:17):
Oh my god. Can I just say, like, remember those
old commercials for Doseci's the most Interesting man in the world. Yes,
they were totally wrong with who that person is. It's
totally Elon Musk. Like, I know there's things that Elon
Musk and I would disagree deeply on, like transhumanism and
(35:39):
even climate change. To some degree, except I don't think
he's in a pop apocalyptic Malthusian. I think he's just like, hey,
if we can do better, let's do better. Right. But yeah,
like that, dude, I'm telling you right now, very interesting.
He's tweeting, like somebody's tweeting pictures of him from the
(36:01):
early two thousands and other stuff, and he's like, look
at what a snappy dresser I want. And then somebody
tweets a picture from more recent interview. He's like, I
guess they should stop cutting my own hair. I'm like, oh,
this guy, like I would want to be his neighbor,
not because he has a lot of money, because I
(36:23):
think he's funny as fuck. Anyway, No, I mean, well.
Speaker 8 (36:28):
It's been interesting watching everybody fall over the'll fall all
over themselves. Once he started buying up the stock because
they're like, oh my god, if you buy his Twitter,
it's gonna be World War three.
Speaker 14 (36:37):
It was oh my god that people might be able
to talk. Oh god. And that's the thing I've ever
seen people so upset about people being able to talk.
Speaker 8 (36:47):
And well, that's the thing is the funny people that
are like, you know, because that's what Elon Musk's big
thing is he wants to bring free speech back to
Twitter or start a platform with his own where there's
actual free speech and then somebody tweets up. He knows
it free speeches. Just wants people to be able to
say whatever they want. Do you don't know what the
definition of free speeches because he just basically he just
(37:10):
basically gave the definition no free speech.
Speaker 14 (37:15):
Well, there's there's a couple of things about it that
that I think are emblematic. Right, So number one, the
left is learning and I think is shocked by the
fact that they actually can't win the war of ideas
(37:35):
because there is no market for their ideas. So probably
the best expression of this, or the best example of
this is CNN plus. So CNN just gets bundled into
every cable every cable package, right, it just does. So
(38:02):
you on some level end up paying for CNN as
part of your total cable package because the cable provider
pays CNN to be able to include CNN and they're
offering right when you actually have to choose to pay
for CNN in the new realm of digital streaming, right
(38:28):
where the Daily Wire is, where the Blaze is, where
locals is where all where Joe Rogan is right when
you actually have to lay down dollars for that additional
experience with CNN content, They're getting about ten thousand viewers
a day.
Speaker 8 (38:53):
That's great.
Speaker 14 (38:53):
Now Fox Nations. Fox Nations offering got more traction than that,
and Fox News is off hurt on cable, right, So
the people Fox News is featuring on the streaming app
have enough marketplace pull to pull people to pay for
the streaming app that already get Fox News for free.
Speaker 8 (39:20):
I mean, the thing about it is Fox Nation. I mean, granted,
I've had very little exposure with Seeing and Plus, but
from what I can gather, it's basically just an extension
of regular CNN. See. Fox Nation actually has all kinds
of programming on it that you're not gonna necessarily get
to see on Fox. It's gonna it has some of
the same hosts. But you know, one of the ones
that I love is the Tuckle Carls someone, because you know,
(39:42):
he usually gets about five minutes in between commercials, and
on the app he does like a whole thirty minute
segment with somebody, and I'm like, oh, this is awesome.
Speaker 14 (39:52):
Yeah, And I just love the fact, can I just
see Chris leaves Fox News because Tucker Carlston did Patriot
Purge on Fox Nation, the streaming service. So he leaves
Fox News Chaco, where Fox News Sunday got incredible ratings, right,
(40:14):
I mean it got very good ratings on Sunday mornings.
Speaker 4 (40:20):
Too.
Speaker 14 (40:20):
And so he goes to Lead because he's so mad
because Tucker dared to take a deeper dive into January
sixth and say things like we think there were some
FBI agents there, which we now know is true. And
he goes to CNN streaming CNN Plus and is like
having tantrums on a daily basis because nobody's watching. He's
(40:44):
blaming he's supposedly blaming it on poor marketing, but marketing,
I saw the numbers, uh uh huh. While the rumor
Meli is already saying when Discovery takes Older over, Steltz
is gone and all this other stuff like that that
place is about to get shook up.
Speaker 8 (41:09):
I just have one question if if you're if you're
throwing a fit daily but nobody's there to hear it
or see it, are you actually throw a fit?
Speaker 3 (41:17):
Right?
Speaker 14 (41:18):
But it's just like who who is gonna pay to
be lied to. I mean they just like that clip
of Brian Steltzer where that kid in Chicago stood up
and like, you know, you don't like to see her,
and you're talking about fake talks, news and disinformation. Here's
(41:38):
the ten things CNN got wrong. I think you're watching
a different station than I'm watching. No, dude, I'm watching
your channel. Like, no, you your channel did do all this.
Why are you not answering my question? Oh, you got
into a little tat, you know, tip for tat with
a Biden staffer. A don't care. You still pushed Russia collusion.
(42:02):
You still called their hunter Biden laptop disinformation. This is
a conference about disinformation, not your feels about how your
relationship is with the Biden people like your station pedal
dish information for a period of years with Russian collusion.
(42:23):
So could you talk to me a little about that
if we're gonna deal with disinformation. I think you people
have sold yourselves down the river. Ah. But it's like,
I think that's why they're actually freaking out about Elon
Musk because if you go back to the history of Twitter,
(42:44):
the people that built that built Twitter were the bright
Barts and the and the Eric Erickson's and the Dana
Lushes and the Blaze, and it was new media putting
their content out there using the platform, so the content
became the pull. Right. Yeah, so conservative content basically built Twitter,
(43:04):
and then you know, Twitter took a big stick and
poked it right in their eye. So on some level,
the liberals and the lefties who've been around on Twitter
no right, because they tried to do this whole new
media thing too. And you see Vox kind of falling apart.
You know, so many of them have closed recently, right,
(43:26):
because their message is so permeated through the mainstream outlets
that nobody's going to necessarily pay for or engage with
additional content with those ideas because they're so pervasive. Why
do they have to so for the traffic they do get.
(43:48):
And those who have found a business model if you
open it up and make it algorithm free and let
people's accounts grow as they would grow, and don't suppress
ideas or content. I mean, Daily Wire's gonna make money.
You know, town Hall is gonna make money. The outlets
they don't want to survive are going to thrive, especially
(44:12):
in the area of era of a disastrous Joe Biden
presidency because people who are not politically engaged become more
politically engaged to try to figure out what's going on.
And they know they don't like what's going on over here,
so they're gonna look over here to see what people
are gonna do to try to fix it. You know,
this is why conservative media grew like gangbusters during the
(44:36):
Obama administration, and we didn't necessarily lose traction when Trump
was in office.
Speaker 8 (44:46):
Nope.
Speaker 14 (44:49):
So they just don't. It is unfathomable to them that
people actually want to listen to another point of view.
And now now they're conflating like free speech with the
end of democracy. It's like they just used words wrong.
Speaker 8 (45:19):
Oh no, they well, they may be using their words wrong,
but they mean exactly what they say, because to them,
democracy is not what it means to you and I.
Speaker 14 (45:28):
You know, democracy is when they win and they're in
charge and everybody likes their ideas the best. But that
that's not reality. Well, the thing about it is it's
not reality.
Speaker 8 (45:38):
Well, I mean you said this earlier. They're now finally
finding out that their ideas don't win in the marketplace.
The problem is that up until the last few years.
Their ideas have always been wrapped in other things, so
we didn't So most of the people that were voting
for the people that they were voting for didn't really
actually get to see what they were voting for until
they were already in office, and then they would sneak
(46:00):
a couple of things through here and there. Over the
last year and a half, they've just tried to ram
it all through. It's like they think this is their
last shot or something because of the.
Speaker 14 (46:11):
Well, it's like they took the wrong lesson from the
first two years of the Obama administration.
Speaker 8 (46:17):
Yeah, they missed the part where even Obama started moderating.
At some point, they granted for Obama, it wasn't much
of a moderation, but he still tried.
Speaker 14 (46:26):
Well, it's like after he got silecked in twenty ten,
the rhetoric calmed down a little enough for him to
win in twenty twelve, and then it was fuck all
you white people. It was right back to bitter clingers
clinging to religion and guns and all of that shit.
(46:48):
You know, like he never needed to comment on Tray
the Trayvon Martin case. He never needed to comment on
the one where the professor, you know, got talked to
by the cops for skulking around his house, and people
called the cops like, you just you don't need to
comment on those kinds of things. And it was like
he went from being the post racial president to being
(47:11):
the most racially divisive president in the second term of
my entire lifetime. I think of my parents entire lifetime,
and they were they grew up, they lived through the
civil rights movements as young adults.
Speaker 8 (47:25):
You know, it was definitely weird. I mean, and I
remember during most of his second term, you couldn't turn
on the TV with us seeing a town on fire somewhere.
Speaker 14 (47:38):
Well, and it's like, well, I mean Ferguson, People forget
Ferguson happened during his watch. What was the other one
Baltimore room to destroy? That was what Obama was president.
People like, take those BLM rates and put them all
in the Trump era, and they were not.
Speaker 8 (48:02):
Most of the worst ones were actually during the Obama administration.
Speaker 14 (48:10):
Mean, but you know, I'm sorry, I just you know
that honestly, the how you put this the sheen on
the Obama presidency is one of the primary reasons I
think Michelle actually won't run, and she's probably the only
person in twenty twenty four that could run and win.
Speaker 8 (48:33):
Yeah, well, hopefully she doesn't.
Speaker 14 (48:35):
Well there's two things, right, So number one, if she
ran and lost, it would take the shine off her husband, right.
Speaker 8 (48:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (48:46):
Number two, if she ran and won and nothing got
better and people were still unhappy and she had a
terrible approval rating based on her policies, it would also
take the history a bubbly nature off of his presidency.
Speaker 8 (49:05):
Well, all I know is nobody needs magic might get
in the White House.
Speaker 14 (49:09):
Well it's just I am. I will just not forget that.
As racially divisive as Obama was, she was ten times worse.
So you know, if you want if you want unity
in the country, that's not who you need to be electing.
(49:30):
Oh saying it was racist for a short woman to
ask her help with getting something off at higher shelf
in a store. She's like my height, she's like five
to nine. People ask me to get reach them things
all the time. Like, that's not racist, that's highest. Get
(49:52):
over yourself, the highest, an actual thing? Why not? There's
there's baddest, there's there's like every identity is a thing. Now, Oh,
(50:15):
like you know, I don't think we've been on near
enough with this whole transit the kids thing either. My goodness, Yeah, no, I.
Speaker 8 (50:23):
Honestly thought we'd probably get into that a little bit
when we come back. I guess we kind of have
to as much as ever they don't want to.
Speaker 14 (50:33):
Oh no, this is this is this is a winning issue,
and I'm not gonna stop saying, Okay, groomer, I think
I think that is the best. That is the best,
and as long as we can articulate it to make
people in the middle understand that it is political grooming,
so that people will ultimately accept all kinds of deviant lifestyles,
(50:54):
all kinds of adomized individual individuality, and ultimately it's pedophilia.
It's political grooming. We don't think all teachers want to
have sex with their students. That's not what this is about.
It's much deeper than that. Oh but then then I'm
(51:15):
sitting there and I'm watching this guy like, well, when
I'm a teacher in my kindergarten classroom, it's about building community,
and I don't want to have to stop and think
about telling my students that I went paddleboarding with my partner.
First of all, if you're building community with five year olds,
you need to get alive, find some friends, and go
(51:37):
build a community. Your classroom is not your community. Your
classroom is full of children that need to learn their ABC's,
how to read, how to count to one hundred, and
how to tie their shoes, period, full stop, end of story.
And they're not asking you what you did on the weekend.
(51:59):
Questions in kind generally go from the teacher to the student,
not the other way around. Kids are very very kids
that age are very egotistical. They don't really care what
you did, so stop trying to tell them.
Speaker 8 (52:17):
Can we make kindergarten about the letter people? Again?
Speaker 14 (52:21):
Exactly my point, miss ah Shoo. That was forty five
years ago, mister h and his horrible hair. That's how
memorable that freaking phonics curriculum is. And they ditched it
because it had gender stereotypes. Yeah, well, because we can't
(52:44):
have gender stereotypes because there's four hundred and thirty seven genders.
Speaker 8 (52:48):
Now, Well, it's just like they put in the commercials.
They put the green eminem in sensible.
Speaker 14 (52:53):
Shoes, right, Like, what is that about? Fact the thigh boots?
Speaker 8 (53:00):
You know, you realize this, Like the most stereotypical thing
you could do to a woman anyways, put her in
sensible shoes.
Speaker 14 (53:09):
But I mean, just just like the messages are so
dementing when you stop and think about it. Right, So
gender doesn't matter. There is no difference between men and women. Right,
That's been the mantra, Like what was a woman needs
a woman needs a man like a I can't remember.
(53:33):
Some animal needs something they don't need. It was Betty
for Dan. I think I don't remember exactly what she said,
but it was just ridiculous. So anything boys can do,
girls can do better. Right, remember all that? Okay, So
no difference between men and women, narrowing the differences between
the sexes. Women can go to work, they can be CEOs,
(53:55):
I can bring up the bacon, fry it up in
a pan, the whole nine yards right, totally dementing messages
for young women, and my humble opinion because I grew
up in it. But anyway, we won't go there. Now
we're going to decide that a little boy actually needs
to be a little girl based on gender stereotypes. He
(54:19):
played with a doll, he likes pinkm Well, because a
child engages what you tell us is a gender cush
is a construct that means they have a deep seated
need to be the opposite sect. Like that is just demented.
Speaker 8 (54:48):
Yeah, you just you.
Speaker 14 (54:55):
Like there is no there, no, no discernible difference between men,
and then we should like stop all this toxic masculinity.
Da da da da da. But this little girl, because
she likes to wear jeans and cut her hair short,
she definitely needs to be a boy because she engages
(55:18):
with the trappings of being a male. Like, either these
things matter or they don't. Either expressing gender preferences is
a sign of other psychological, hormonal, and significant differences, or
it isn't. You can't have it both ways, but the
(55:43):
left always wants to have it both ways. And now
they're doing it with kids. And you know, I've really
just decided after reading some stuff that this is the
left's drive to make sure that people don't ever develop
(56:05):
a concrete identity. Everything is fluid. You can't grow up
under those circumstances.
Speaker 8 (56:17):
Well no, I mean, well, here's the thing. If everything
is fluid, then you have to turn to someone to
tell you what anything means. And who do you think
they want that someone to be? Because it's not going
to be your parents just the same.
Speaker 14 (56:34):
No, I know, but it's like they there. If you
can't like integrate into specific societal roles based on the
identity that you form as you grow, you can't accomplish anything.
Speaker 8 (56:53):
That's just it. They don't want they don't they don't
want us accomplishing anything. Most of what the most of
what they.
Speaker 19 (56:58):
Use this pandemic for was do I run to see
how receptive we would be a universal basic income.
Speaker 8 (57:04):
Unfortunately they found out a good bit of the population
wouldn't care. If you're on the government over your entire life.
You don't need to assembly because you can just rely
on the government to take care of you.
Speaker 14 (57:15):
No, no, no, get you get video games and.
Speaker 8 (57:18):
Drugs pretty much.
Speaker 14 (57:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (57:25):
Anyway, believe it or not, we're back around on the
top of the hour. Already seems like it's going by
quick today, maybe just because we haven't done one of
these in a while, but anyway, so we are back
around at the top of the hour. We're gonna take
a quick break, come back, get things reset our two
segment one coming at you on the other side of
the break. Probably will have to delve in a little
(57:45):
more specifically into this whole gender bending thing, because the
left doesn't like the fact that we're finally starting to
fight back about it either. And it's happening everywhere. So
there's some specific stuff I want to get into when
we get back, but we are gonna take a quick break.
We'll bear it back. Stay tuned, and then the ncan lot.
Speaker 15 (58:11):
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Disturb the sun.
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You are listening to k l R and radio where
liberty and reason still rain.
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This is Derek's the Rileotto Park story.
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Speaker 11 (01:08:31):
Stop what's way up?
Speaker 15 (01:08:43):
Reasons it's stand, and welcome back into the program.
Speaker 8 (01:08:58):
Sorry about that, folks, I only said them with them
trying to make coffee and I'll try a five because
I don't have potable headphone things like sixty. But anyway, yeah,
I think that's the sudden. That's my birthday present to myself,
new coffee Ninja, because this one sucks, but it's old.
I've had it for forever. It probably needs to be
your place. I'm debating on getting one of those or
(01:09:19):
if I'm just gonna go back to an old school
pot again. I'm kind of leaning towards old school pot again.
I don't know at least right.
Speaker 14 (01:09:27):
Yeah, I love the Ninja because it does coffee and take.
Speaker 8 (01:09:30):
Yeah, but I've been pricing those. The one that does
coffee Antea's like over two hundred dollars.
Speaker 14 (01:09:37):
The one that just does coffee. I don't even know.
Speaker 8 (01:09:39):
Yeah, yeah, that's what I have right now. It is
just the regular coffee one that it doesn't do to
But yeah, I mean I didn't I didn't even want
to pay one hundred dollars and we paid for the Ninja,
but the wife wanted it, and I was like, but
it's a coffee pot. I can get one of those
for twenty bucks.
Speaker 14 (01:09:55):
Yeah I know, but like, here's here's the thing for
me personally, Like I ours lastedly three years. We use
it every day. If you do, if you do the
ROI on that, it's like not even pennies, No, I
U is it every day, multiple times a day.
Speaker 8 (01:10:14):
But I get it. The problem is if I get
a twenty dollars coffee pot, even if I go through
three of those in three years, the return on investment
still pennies and I've only spent sixty bucks instead of
almost one hundred or two hundred.
Speaker 14 (01:10:29):
Anyway, Yeah, I guess I just I love my ninja.
I liked it with my tea. It can make me
a glass of iced tea. I like that it can
cold brew for me, like all the things.
Speaker 8 (01:10:40):
Oh yeah, I mean, don't get me wrong. I love
everything that the Ninja can do. I just now that
I'm contemplating having to buy another one, I'm debating what
if I'm just gonna go back to it.
Speaker 14 (01:10:49):
Oh You're gonna miss it. That twenty dollars coffee pot
will die and you'll.
Speaker 3 (01:10:53):
Be like, screw this.
Speaker 14 (01:10:54):
I want to nincha again.
Speaker 8 (01:10:56):
Yeah yeah, anyway, I don't know, Like I said, it
may want to be.
Speaker 14 (01:10:59):
My birthday, prin can I can? I tell? I don't
know why I just saw this. It came out on
the seventeenth What Durham Five witnesses connected to the Clinton
campaign refuse to testify because they might incriminate themselves. So
they've taken or said they're gonna take the fifth Oops,
(01:11:23):
whoopsie Daisy and do you know who, you know who
the whole feats are behind now my favorite Mark Elias
oops that pile of dog shit. I hope he goes
to jail. Oh, I hope he has to at least
(01:11:48):
get a plea deal and the Democrats like walk away
from him and he stops like being able to raise
money because he's sloppy, Like you can't like, not because
they don't, not because they particularly care if they deal
with felons, obviously, but because he's just so bad at
it and got caught, you know, like, you can't be
(01:12:12):
in on the plot if you can't keep it a secret,
your dumb ass. Yeah, anyway, anyway, Yes, I will be
super happy if mister Elias goes. So he screwed up
my state. He screwed up my state, and I don't
(01:12:37):
like him, so yeah, oh my god, Okay, can we
can we please? Can we please take a moment too
(01:13:00):
to ponder and and and bask in the glow of
what might be the dumbest tweet of the month, and
that that that takes a lot.
Speaker 8 (01:13:13):
Well, what did you see that I didn't? Because apparently
I missed something.
Speaker 14 (01:13:18):
Maddie Iglecias Medieval peasants had no student loan debt, no
medical bankruptcies, and never had to worry about high gas prices.
Is what went wrong? Capitalism?
Speaker 8 (01:13:32):
Oh good god, Oh I don't even know what to
say to that, because it's just dumb. It's just dumb.
(01:13:54):
I mean, I guess that's the thing that also scares
the crap out of me, though, is because the fall
and socialists have just taken the mask off and they're
like capital I mean, I like people that I know
that I used to work with. I see them putting
stuff on Facebook out all the time now about how
terrible capitalism is. I'm like, you know what, if not
for capitalism, you wouldn't be working in the job that
(01:14:15):
you are.
Speaker 14 (01:14:15):
Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. Yeah, but here's the other problem.
What we live in today is corporatism at best. You've
never you've never lived in a society and an economy
run on capitalism, and in an economy run on capitalism,
(01:14:40):
true free market capitalism. The two thousand and eight bailout
never could have happened. The government never would have even
contemplated it because there would have been no banks so
large and so integral to the corporatists state right that
(01:15:02):
they were too big to fail. They wouldn't have existed.
If the Republicans had stayed with Teddy Roosevelt's perspective and
thrown the chairs into the country club, right, we wouldn't
be where we are now. At some point the whole
my private company, My private company can do whatever it wants. No, no,
(01:15:25):
really it can't. Right, And no private company should be
so embedded in the government that a new private company
can't compete with them in any way, shape or form.
Hello Amazon, Hello Google.
Speaker 8 (01:15:41):
Hello you know.
Speaker 14 (01:15:45):
So, I mean, let's talk about capitalism, what capitalism would
actually look like as opposed to corporatism. But let's not
make the mistake of thinking I should aspire to be
a peasant.
Speaker 8 (01:16:02):
Well, you know, life as a peasant would be so
much simpler.
Speaker 14 (01:16:06):
Though, well, you know, like back in I forget the
year that they actually put out that video about what
life was going to be like in twenty thirty. I
want to say it was twenty fifteen when that creepy
World Economic Horum video came out, Yeah, with the eight
things that would be different, Because I think I thought,
(01:16:29):
I think then they really thought they could bring China
into the fold, and I think now they realize they can't.
But in that when that video was made, it was
based on an essay and if you've never read the essay,
you really should. It is the most soft like this
completely sophomore piece of shit okay turned into global strategy.
(01:16:57):
So it was all about owning nothing and being happy.
But the person talked about the people outside the system
which chose not to engage, and how he somehow felt
sorry for them. It sometimes felt sorry for them because
they didn't live in this, you know, completely controlled world
(01:17:18):
where you're monitored twenty four to seven by your smartphone.
And I've just always decided I'm going to be one
of those people outside the system. I'm going to choose
not to join if such a choice can be made,
and my goal is to set myself up to do
that now, because I do believe, like like you said,
(01:17:44):
there's a certain set of the population that would be
okay with UBI and just being in the portion of
the population that gets drugs and video games. Right, I'm
not in that portion of the population, and I want
to give my children, my nieces and nephews and grandchildren.
Should I have that the option not to be as well.
Speaker 8 (01:18:03):
No, I completely understand, because that's pretty much where I am.
But at the same time, I think the number I
think when a sound to me is the number of
people that actually that I heard start openly talking about
they should just do this stuff all the time, and
then we could do whatever we wanted to do from home.
Excuse me, you know that's not how any of this
(01:18:25):
would work, right. It's like in nineteen eighty four. It
was not supposed to be a destruction. Man, you will
quit cheering for it?
Speaker 14 (01:18:38):
Well, I mean, just again, tell me why I should
aspire to being a peasant. I don't know. Oh my god,
why is Michelle Obama trending?
Speaker 8 (01:18:50):
I don't know. I'll play your game, whise magic mine trending?
Speaker 14 (01:18:55):
Oh my god? We're making a Michelle Obama movie?
Speaker 9 (01:18:57):
We are?
Speaker 8 (01:19:00):
Is it pre or post off?
Speaker 16 (01:19:02):
Well?
Speaker 8 (01:19:02):
I'm sorry? Did I say that I.
Speaker 14 (01:19:03):
Loved Viola Davis's performance? Is Michelle Obama isn't getting the
greatest of reactions on Twitter?
Speaker 8 (01:19:12):
I didn't even know they made a Michelle Obama movie.
She's not trending for me.
Speaker 14 (01:19:28):
Cassandra Freeman of bell Air would have been a great
Michelle Obama loved Viola, but she overshot the first lip thing.
Sometimes the biggest names aren't the best picks to play
iconic roles. Oh, I don't know, I'm trying to see.
(01:20:04):
Oh my god. I love it when Michelle Obama trends
because she brings people joy and she's an inspiration to
women and young girls everywhere. You realize Ashley who loves democracy,
who used to be a dude. Apparently that Kamala Harris
(01:20:25):
is older than Michelle Obama. Right, Michelle Obama did not
inspire Kamala Harris to do anything, nor Katanji Brown Jackson.
Speaker 8 (01:20:39):
Yeah, in my feet see an n plus is trending,
but that's only because apparently they paid to get to
put there.
Speaker 14 (01:20:46):
Oh my god, mm hmm, now I get the purse
lip thing. H mhm, Oh my god. My cat is
(01:21:08):
trying to break down my door. This is insane. He
feels like he sounds like he's going to break right
through it. Can y'all hear this? No, oh man, you've
been quite loud enough. Son Row, Yeah, that that's that
(01:21:37):
cute little kitten that used to come plan my computer
a couple of years ago. Now tries to knock down
doors and demands to be said when then, and he
walks in the house. But our garage, our garage door
has like a little bit of give to it, so
he just sits there and pushes against it till somebody
comes opens it goes don't, don't, don't. Don't. Amazing what
(01:22:03):
animals can do or what they learned to do. I
guess I should say, yeah, I can't find this clip
of Viola Davis and whatever's going on with her in
the purse lip thing. I guess.
Speaker 8 (01:22:20):
I'm too busy watching all the little fluff pieces about
Seeing in Plus because I guess Seeing and Plus pay
themselves promoted into my trending fee because it shows it's trending,
but it says promoted by CNN Plus. So they did
it themselves.
Speaker 14 (01:22:37):
Anyway, Yes, yes, they did promote themselves to their ten
thousand viewers.
Speaker 8 (01:22:43):
So just just to give up it, because you know,
we told you guys that they spent a lot of
money in building the app and promoting the app and
everything else all in there, up to three hundred million
dollars they have only ten thousand users. You know, I'm
not a math guy, but that breaks down to basically
spending about thirty thousand dollars for each six dollars per
(01:23:03):
month subscription. I wish I had that kind of money
and you throw to throw into Kalur Radio for one,
because I guarantee you we'd be doing a lot better
than ten thousand listeners if we did.
Speaker 14 (01:23:20):
Because yeah, oh my god, they did not.
Speaker 8 (01:23:24):
They did not what.
Speaker 14 (01:23:31):
The series, which mirrored on Sunday, April seventeenth, So they
launched the Michelle Obama mini series on Easter.
Speaker 8 (01:23:38):
Oh good Lord, of course they did.
Speaker 14 (01:23:40):
It is being viewed by millions, and while no one
is complaining about Davis's known stellar acting skills, it's a
facial characteristic that has social media ablaze. The series, The
First Lady, chronicles Michelle's devotion and work behind the scenes
as her husband, Barack became the first black president in
US history. The ridicule due to an apparent character choice
(01:24:02):
of Davis, with many questioning why Davis purses her lips
on on several times in the debut episode. Michelle Obama
is known for doing such, but some find Davis is
doing so overkill.
Speaker 20 (01:24:17):
Mm hmmm.
Speaker 8 (01:24:21):
I don't know if that's your biggest take away from
from a mini series? Is really that good.
Speaker 14 (01:24:26):
No, she like, no, it actually looks like she's mocking
her a bit. Oh she might be, you never know,
but I mean somebody pulled up just dozens of pictures
of Michelle Obama doing it. So if if she does it,
just shut up people. I don't know. She's doing a
(01:24:48):
mini series of her as first lady. Like I guess,
I just I have a problem with any first lady
running for president.
Speaker 8 (01:25:01):
I don't know. I'm still I'm still, you know, only
for the comedic value. I'm kind of upset that Hillary
never won because I really wanted to spend four years
calling Bill Clinton the first man or but maybe it
was just me anyway.
Speaker 14 (01:25:25):
Oh my god, somebody replied to my peasant tweet and said,
flush toilet, sir for sacs.
Speaker 8 (01:25:34):
Uh No, flush toilets keep things, you know, like dysentering
from ampiting.
Speaker 14 (01:25:42):
Oh my goodness. Oh everything's crazy, Rick, Well.
Speaker 8 (01:25:49):
Yeah, we already knew this, but it's getting more crazy.
Speaker 14 (01:25:55):
Yeah. So I'm just wondering how many huh ah, you.
Speaker 8 (01:26:00):
Remember that Durham story that you brought up a minute ago.
Speaker 14 (01:26:04):
There's more to it.
Speaker 8 (01:26:05):
Apparently, show do tell.
Speaker 14 (01:26:10):
I just read I read Turley's right above it.
Speaker 8 (01:26:12):
Yeah, this is from our friends over at the Blaze.
The accusations of former President Donald Trump having a relationship
with Russia that was provided by a Hillary Clinton campaign
lawyer was not technically possible. Special Counsel John Durham wrote
to end a court piloting of court filing posted Friday,
less than two months before the twenty sixteen president general election,
Clinton lawyer Michael Susman presented purported data and white papers
(01:26:35):
that allegedly demonstrated a covert communication channel between the Trump
organization and the Kremlin tied Alpha Bank to then FBI
General Counsel James Baker. In February twenty seventeen, suspend reportedly
finished and updated set of allegations about Trump working with
Russia to the CIA. Durham outlined Susmen's involvement with the
(01:26:56):
discredited anti Trump dossier authored by expertist intelligence agent for Steele.
Sussmen allegedly met with Steele in the summer of twenty
sixteen at the law offices of Perkins Coal, where he
informed Steel about the Alpha Bank allegations. Durham noted that
the dossier's author was hired by Fusion GPS to dig
up dirt on Trump for an unnamed US client. The
(01:27:16):
Democratic National Committee and the campaign at a Clinton campaign
reportedly funded the anti Trump dossier through Perkins Coal. The
fact that the FBA headquarters received on the same date
both sets of information involving the same political campaign, the
Clinton campaign, and the same law firm Perkins Coal amid
the same investigations for Infusion GPS, makes Steele's involvement in
these matters relevant. Durham wrote, Sussman is accused of lying
(01:27:40):
to the FBI because he told the General Council that
he was not providing the allegations to the FBI on
byhalf of any client. According to indictment, Sussmen allegedly presented
the damaging accusations against Trump on behalf of the Hillary
Clinton campaign. Durham claimed that Sussman represented and worked for
the campaign in connection with its broader oppositioned research efforts,
(01:28:02):
and took steps to integrate their Russian bank allegations into
those opposition research experts or efforts by Fusion GPS. I'm
not gonna keep reading the whole thing, but anyway, there's
a whole spider web of intricacies here that were never
really brought out before, because you know, why would anybody
report anything when it mattered. But yeah, I think this
(01:28:24):
whole thing's a mess. So I'm gonna I'm gonna drop
the article in the chat so everybody else can just
kind of read through it when they want, because there's
a whole bunch of little bits and pieces in there
that are kind of important. It's just crazy.
Speaker 14 (01:28:40):
Well, yeah, it's crazy, and it will never be reported appropriately.
Speaker 8 (01:28:51):
The damage has already done. And honestly, on some level,
Donald Trump has gone a little more crazy than even
I thought possible. So I don't know.
Speaker 14 (01:29:02):
I so do not want him to run, and I
think I think it would it'll be it's not a
good idea for him. You have to look at it
this way. Right right now, there's an asterisk after the
twenty twenty election, there's an awful lot of people that
(01:29:24):
believe something funky happened, and an awful lot of people
and an increasing number who understand that Mark Zuckerberg threw
a lot of money into that election, into some pretty
shady election shenanigans. Right, so there's always going to be
a question in history's mind, did he really lose? Right?
(01:29:48):
Kind of like the Kennedy thing. I mean they tried
to They tried to cover that up as well for years, right,
But the doubts, the doubts outlived the cover up, if
you will, right, because the people that are interested in
making sure those things don't see the light of day
(01:30:09):
eventually die. And thank god, most of the people who
are really interested in that are really old. Right.
Speaker 8 (01:30:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:30:15):
So anyway, you know, historical memory in history to some
extent is written by the victors. But there's always an asterisk.
If he runs in twenty twenty four and loses, the
asterisks gone, Yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:30:30):
I mean, if he runs again and loses, the asterisk
goes away. Not only that, I mean, honestly, even if
he runs again and wins, he's not gonna be able
to do anything in four years because they know that
he's probably go to dos dig in for four years.
Speaker 14 (01:30:43):
Well, and he's gonna give us. He's gonna give us
a beta VP. I still do not believe. I've all
the Oh no, Dosantis will be his VP. No, he won't.
Dosantis is gonna win as governor of Florida. He's going
to continue doing a bang up job. He's got one
of the best press teams in the country, and I
(01:31:06):
believe he could remain relevant for another cycle.
Speaker 8 (01:31:09):
Oh no, he definitely will. I mean he's still standing
up to everybody. I mean, at this point now, he's
basically rejected like forty one percent of the textbooks trying
to come into Florida because they have CRT, common Core
and all the gender studies trapped in fucking math books.
He's like, yeah, no, get those out of my state.
Speaker 14 (01:31:29):
M hm. But anyway, well, the Department of Education actually
did that based on the standards passed by the legislature.
But he said he was going to get rid of
common Core. He said he was going to get rid
of CRT and this woke bullshit and get it out
of the classrooms. And he's doing it. So he does
what he says he's going to do.
Speaker 8 (01:31:49):
Selling somebody else.
Speaker 14 (01:31:50):
That's really like, even if you're going to just do
what you say you're going to do, because Republicans often
say they're going to do a lot of things and
then they don't do them. So unlike most Republicans, Ron
DeSantis said I'm going to do these things, and he
did them. I'm going to But that alone should be
a point in his favor. But he's not going to
(01:32:13):
be President Trump's vice president. That's just not going to
happen because President Trump does not put alpha males around him.
He puts very strong women around him. Like, if you're
a tough smoke show, you're gonna work in the Trump administration.
He likes tough, good looking women. Good looking tough men
not so much.
Speaker 8 (01:32:34):
Yeah, No, I kind of like the smoke show for
he had going on for that four years using office stuff. Anyway,
we should get the last break out of the way.
We're a little bit long. This is the Monday edition
of your Daily Notes. We'll be right back. Stay tuned.
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Speaker 6 (01:37:12):
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Speaker 8 (01:38:25):
Welcome back into the program, ladies. And you know one
of the things that I don't like now that I'm
wearing my forty Davis rotation around this crazy plan. Oh
it's not that I've gotten older. I could turn the
wrong way, like you know, reaching for a knob to
bring my mic pully back up, and suddenly my back says,
I hate you. I miss being a kids to be
(01:38:50):
able to like jump off of buildings and stuff. And
it was fine. Now I turned the wrong way in
my back, so I can't wait. Quit. Yeah, so I'm
sitting here having a backspathom as we come out of
r fun times. Ain't forgetting old anyway. Well, when I
get to the program, dadies and gentlemen, I'm Rick Robinson.
She Stacey Lennox. Final segment of the Monday edition. If
(01:39:10):
your Daily knows, I know, it's a small miracle. I mean,
the last time we did a Monday edition was when
Gene was on, and then before then, I don't even
remember last time. But I can't get sick, don't. I
don't know if it's because I have pine sized peech
editions or what's going on. But I've just gone back
to like taking every prophylactic thing possible known demand to
reboost my immune system because I just keep seeming like
I'm fighting off the same crap over and over and
(01:39:31):
over again. So I think I'm just gonna start taking
that shit daily till I stop feeling I'm gonna die
maybe and see how it goes anyway. So yeah, I
hope everybody else is having a great Monday. Hopefully none
of you feel half did I know I have for
quite some time. Actually am starting to feel better.
Speaker 14 (01:39:48):
I only feel twenty now.
Speaker 8 (01:39:50):
Yeah, well, show off. I still don't have much of
a voice to speak of. It's better than it was,
but I still I can still feel like the scratchiness
in the throat. I'm starting to think that might be
like a permanent thing now. I don't know if I'm
gonna like it or not if it becomes a permanent thing.
Speaker 14 (01:40:13):
I've been I got some off I got some off
air things you could try.
Speaker 8 (01:40:17):
Yeah, I've been doing a lot of I mean, I
was part of jazz choir and everything for forever, so
I've been doing a lot of the things that you
know that I was told to do when your voice
was funky, and it works for a little bit, and
that it seems like it comes right back. I think, honestly,
part of it's because on average I talked for anywhere
between eight to twelve hours a day. I think my
thing is just like, yeah, you're not.
Speaker 14 (01:40:38):
I just mean you're I just mean your overall punkiness.
Speaker 8 (01:40:41):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:40:42):
Well, no, I think you had the COVID.
Speaker 8 (01:40:47):
Oh yeah, I know. I'm starting to think I just
keep regetting it.
Speaker 14 (01:40:51):
No, No, I think for some people it hangs around.
And my sister has My sister has some some advice
about some supplements to try that aren't on the normal,
like vitamin C sort of thing. So I'll give those
to you offline. Yeah, I've noticed she had she had
long COVID symptoms and this is what one of her
(01:41:13):
providers told her to do, and it's worked very well.
Speaker 8 (01:41:16):
Yeah, I've noticed they have this new thing called long
COVID or long term COVID. I'm starting to think.
Speaker 14 (01:41:20):
That, well, let's see if anybody else thinks they might
be suffering from it. Whereas it's uh spike protein neutralizers
and the fetal systeine NAC NAC is one of the
(01:41:40):
supplements glued to thione funnel T, star n s T
pie nel T, Saint John's work come free leaf, and
vitamin C. So the only thing to be careful of,
she said, at Saint John's work because it does interact
with a lot of Western medications. So if you're on
any other medications, make sure you check for interactions. But
(01:42:01):
if you leave the Saint John's workout, it's not gonna
be a big problem. Ah. So yep, So I'm getting
some of those as well because I'm starting to wonder
if some of my issues are not tied to that.
So because I've had it twice.
Speaker 8 (01:42:31):
Yeah, I'm pretty sure I have two although this, like
I said, neither time, I mean, well, the first time
it was it was before anybody even really knew what
it was, and all they kept saying is we have
no idea what's wrong with you, So take this shit
hopefully you'll start to feel better than eventually I did.
And then this last time, I swear I think I
got tested three, four or five times. They kept coming
back negative. They're like, we don't think it's COVID, but
(01:42:53):
your symptoms kind of seem like it might be understand.
Speaker 14 (01:42:59):
There's and what's happening.
Speaker 8 (01:43:01):
Like anybody else gets false positives. I can't even get
a I can't even get a positive.
Speaker 14 (01:43:07):
Right anyway, But yeah, come of It depends on when
you get tested, too, because it's just and which kind
of test.
Speaker 22 (01:43:15):
So like if.
Speaker 14 (01:43:20):
If you're getting an anigen test that really needs to
be done within the first couple of days of symptoms,
if they keep doing that test, it's going to come back.
It's going to come back negative because it's testing for
something different than the PCR test. Whereas the PCR test,
they can test you three months after you had COVID
and it can still come back positive. So it just
(01:43:41):
it depends on which test they're doing.
Speaker 8 (01:43:43):
I didn't honestly think to ask them which test they
were doing.
Speaker 14 (01:43:48):
Yeah, Like the anagen test is usually the one that's rapid.
PCR takes a couple of days to come back.
Speaker 8 (01:43:57):
Yeah, I just know that. Normally, I felt like they
were trying to see if I had a brain or not.
Can you shove that thing up.
Speaker 5 (01:44:03):
Just a little farther?
Speaker 14 (01:44:05):
God, Yeah, but did you know the results before you left?
Speaker 8 (01:44:10):
The first time? Yeah? Second time, Noah, both were negative.
Speaker 14 (01:44:13):
Okay, then they sent a PCR test out.
Speaker 13 (01:44:19):
Uh, I don't know.
Speaker 14 (01:44:22):
If you didn't have it. This stuff can't hurt, so
most of it the neck and the glue if they're
just they're in your body anyway. There are things your
body already makes. This is just a boost.
Speaker 8 (01:44:39):
Yeah, well my body probably needs boost of most of
the things.
Speaker 14 (01:44:45):
You need boosting.
Speaker 1 (01:44:48):
Probably.
Speaker 14 (01:44:49):
Oh there's a couple of boosts I need. I tell you.
We're not going to talk about that on the airy. Hey,
now things are getting blue. Gonna say if any would
have never wanted so no, no, no, no, none of
this is true. In the last couple of minutes, so
you know, Elizabeth Warren is talking again.
Speaker 8 (01:45:13):
Oh god, smoke signals are actual talking.
Speaker 14 (01:45:18):
No, you know meta meta for business the space, but
needs to stop telling me to confirm my identity. They
literally have everything but my dental records, and I'm not
giving them anything else. We're gonna take your page down, really,
because you've been telling me that for a year and
a half.
Speaker 8 (01:45:35):
So you you've given them your genetic profile.
Speaker 14 (01:45:39):
No, but like to be able to I used to
like run ads for Michael's page, so they want to
know where you live. Like all this shit they've gotten
everything they're gonna get from me. Then at one point,
because he had political related content, they like wanted my
social Security number. I'm like, fuck you, that's just not
(01:46:04):
even happening.
Speaker 8 (01:46:06):
They were ready to come find you, Stacy. They were like,
we're gonna come down.
Speaker 14 (01:46:09):
Well yeah, yeah, we've determined, we've determined which FEMA camps
are going to. Well now we're just making we're making
your name tag.
Speaker 8 (01:46:20):
All I know is if they start doing FEMA camps,
we all gonna wind up in the same one.
Speaker 14 (01:46:26):
I think. I think I I think I looked at
a map and I might be wrong, but I think
I'm in region nine.
Speaker 8 (01:46:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:46:35):
I used to have it in my Twitter profile. I
thought it was funny. I had my FEMA camp designation.
Speaker 16 (01:46:46):
Hm.
Speaker 14 (01:46:47):
I don't care. I figure. I figure if enough people
from k l r N and the chat room entt up,
it'll be kind of like Cogan's heroes pretty much. Yeah,
Al smuggle in his hand radio, I'll grow the garden underground.
It'll be great. Somebody's got to bring to grow lights, though,
(01:47:10):
So if we have any pot smokers, that's their job.
I can't say that I actually have. I have my
mother's giving me a grow light for the basement to
keep my herbs over winter. It's it's my new joke.
I'm actually growing pot in my basement. Her m h,
it's for my herbs, my stage, my cilantro. Actually I
(01:47:34):
don't like weed, but I would. I'm not even lying.
If everything went to hell and the economy went really bad,
I would absolutely, absolut freaking lutely buy pot plants and
grow them in my basement and barter with them. There's
not a doubt in my fucking mind I would do that.
I quit smoking. I will buy cartons of cigarettes and
(01:47:55):
bribe people with those. I don't care. That's of Jack Daniels.
I'll buy a still. I'll buy a still and build
the Alki's I don't care. Like, if this stuff is
important to you, have at it. I want your chickens
(01:48:18):
like Stacy's gonna build her own bartering Fife. Don't be like,
why wouldn't you?
Speaker 8 (01:48:24):
It'll be like Queen of the South the Bartering Edition.
Speaker 14 (01:48:28):
Dude, I have the perfect place down behind my fence
to take down some trees and grow some grain. You
think I can't put that ship in a still?
Speaker 8 (01:48:38):
No, you probably could.
Speaker 14 (01:48:40):
There's cornfields around here. You think I'm not gonna go
and cut down some stocks and make some good grain alcohol.
My goodness, Hell, I bought elderberry bushes. I'll even make
you some elderberry wine. That'll make it so you don't
get a cold. I actually bought. I bought two elderberry
(01:49:04):
bushes because you have to have two of them so
that they pollen me and then you can make syrup
for you know, your normal supplementation. But you can also
make elderberry wine.
Speaker 8 (01:49:18):
Got father smells of elderberries. That's because he trades with Stacey.
Speaker 14 (01:49:25):
Hey, at least it has vitamin C in it.
Speaker 8 (01:49:27):
Oh, I know one of the supplements I take every
day now has elderberry in it, So I get it.
Speaker 14 (01:49:33):
Yeah, I know. I'm getting elderberry and gojiberries because gojiberries
are supposedly like better than a kaiberries. So I'm getting
a gojiberry bush, two elderberry bushes. I've got two peach trees,
an apple tree, a couple. I've got like twenty five
stevia plant seeds, so I can make sweet stuff even
(01:49:55):
when we can't buy sugar. See. So I got like
bags and bags and bags of flour. I can make
cookies and barter with those nice I'll make. I'll make
them on the fucking green egg because I have a
barrel to make charcoal. And see, you people do not
understand how far I have gone.
Speaker 8 (01:50:17):
Oh no, we understand.
Speaker 14 (01:50:22):
I kind of have the kail or an island here.
It's just not really an island. So when things go
to hell, I have three open rooms and technically somebody
could live in the living room and somebody could live
in the dining room, but you'd have to like each other.
(01:50:49):
Bron wants to be frenchy, we can do that. I
want to be Hogan.
Speaker 8 (01:50:56):
Uh, you're trying to do the gender swap thing, but
I guess.
Speaker 14 (01:51:00):
I just want to be the Hogan character.
Speaker 8 (01:51:03):
I guess it doesn't matter. Genders are relevant now, ginger
doesn't matter.
Speaker 14 (01:51:14):
My goodness. Yeah, I don't know about Ron, because I
never want to be French, even in my name. Well,
you know, I don't know. France is looking pretty freaking
tough now. The Crohn's out there talking to Putin and
taking control of the situation. When and I love this.
(01:51:36):
I love this.
Speaker 22 (01:51:38):
I love this.
Speaker 14 (01:51:41):
CNN dot Com Biden confronts a host of problems he
can't do much to solve. Let's see what Biden can't solve,
My goodness, there's just not much. Oh my god, talking,
(01:52:01):
could you carry the water any harder? Oh my god,
There's just not much President Joe Biden can do about it.
That's the first line of this CNN article. There's not
much he can do to curb inflation. Oh yeah, there is.
Your FED share could jack up rates to late nineteen
eighty levels. That incurre it problem, as it would cause
(01:52:22):
a recession. But in reality, there's so many people not
participating in the workforce that the unemployment rate would probably
not be affected anyway. There's not much he can do
to stop migrants from reaching American southern border, really, because
I believe we used to have a remain in Mexico
policy and we put the screws to the Mexican president
(01:52:44):
regarding tariffs, so he started stopping people at his southern border.
So yeah, I think there is something you can do
about people reaching our border. I think that's possible, My goodness.
He also can't too much to red use crime or
to make vaccine. Her sisters get shot. That would hasten
the end of the coronavirus pandemic. John, John, Can you
(01:53:07):
hear me, John? This is John Harwood. John. The pandemic
is over in like ninety percent of a country. I
don't even know who you're talking to.
Speaker 23 (01:53:14):
With that, there's not much he can do to compel
cooperation from the vectors within his then Democratic congressional majority.
There's nothing at all he can do to compel it
from Republican, an adversary who would rather aggregate than alleviate
his burdens. In other words, there's not much Biden can
do about the heaviest weights, depressing his political standing, which
(01:53:37):
has remained stuck in an avalanche warning zone for months yet.
Speaker 14 (01:53:40):
John, do you remember we started the avalanche? It was
the horrific withdrawal from Afghanistan and handing it over to
the Taliban. That's what started the nosedive and it's only
gotten worse. Blake, Do you want to know why Indy
has given you the middle finger? Because when you left
that under Staniel bolded their they're mortal enemy Pakistan.
Speaker 4 (01:54:05):
Issues with your applications?
Speaker 8 (01:54:07):
Is it the code, the network?
Speaker 14 (01:54:10):
What in the world?
Speaker 8 (01:54:11):
Sorry, all of a sudden, I wanted to start playing
an ad even though the site was anyway.
Speaker 14 (01:54:18):
All right, break breakthrough AutoPlay. But like, you want to
know why Saudi Arabia is making fun of you because
you're bolding their existential threat. I ran, wait, there is
somebody in this administration who believes it is a good
idea to remove the Revolutionary freaking Guard from the terrorist watchlist.
(01:54:44):
This is after we get a story about two dudes
giving secret service people a bunch of presents, and when
they get busted, they have passports that have a stamp
from from the Iranian airport, right, and they've got Rome's
and a whole bunch of other equipment in their apartment.
But they just wanted to make friends. They were talking
(01:55:05):
to Jill Biden's team. But you're gonna you're gonna let
the Iyer whatever whatever, And then you have the gall
to go over and try to pressure the Saudis to
give you more oil when the Saudis are sitting there
(01:55:29):
going you know, we've talked to the Iranians and they've
told us that all their missiles are pointed at us,
not as at Israel. So yeah, they're not gonna give
you anything. Israel is not gonna give you anything, like
we literally made treaties in the Middle East because everybody
(01:55:50):
understands that Iran is a big threat. And oh, by
the way, if not for Joe Biden being elected, the
Saudis would be in the Abraham Accords. At this point,
there's all that. I've not heard anyone who disagrees with that,
except maybe John Kerry, but he's an idiot.
Speaker 8 (01:56:10):
Yeah.
Speaker 14 (01:56:10):
Well, I swear John Kerry is still doing shadow diplomacy
and his ribates are role I swear to God he is.
And I mean Anthony Blincoln could not be a minime
of John carry anymore if he tried, honestly, I mean he.
Speaker 8 (01:56:38):
Could, but not by much. Then he would actually have
to be trying though.
Speaker 14 (01:56:44):
I know. But it's just like wow, wow, all right, well.
Speaker 8 (01:56:52):
Believe it or not, that's pretty much it. I just
looked at the clock realized it's like two minutes time. Wow,
seems like that was a really fast two hours today.
So what else you got going on for today?
Speaker 14 (01:57:10):
Oh? I don't know. I'm trying to figure out if
it's gonna rain or not.
Speaker 8 (01:57:14):
It's actually sunny here for the first time in a while.
But of course I'll be stuck inside most of the day,
so it doesn't really matter.
Speaker 14 (01:57:22):
I don't know. I don't know. I just I still
can't get over CNN saying Fox carries water for Republicans.
After that article from CNN, there's nothing joking too.
Speaker 8 (01:57:35):
Well, you know, the thing about it is Fox make
carry water for Republicans, but CNN carries water for Democrats.
The difference is nobody's watching them carry the water no
matter which platform. Anyway, we're gonna have to get out
of here, ladies, and said, I'm I only got like
thirty minutes to left to start doing work reallyd wrap,
and there's a few things I gotta get taken care
(01:57:55):
of before I can do that. So I think, as
far as I know, I think Ordi's back on tonight
with Cyber Chill. Other than that, I don't I know.
I'll be back tomorrow night with The Rick Robinson Show,
and then Jen and I. I believe we're all relaunching
Jenna and Rick on this coming Thursday. So you guys
may actually be hearing more of me this week, some
(01:58:18):
of you more than you want to hear. But that's
okay too. Anyway, So we're gonna get out of here
and the words a bill as president. That's choir and
tent theod or logan.
Speaker 19 (01:58:25):
Be excellent to each other and enjoy the rest of
your Monday trying to make it the best you can.
And don't forget, it's tax filing day, so if you
can't get him done before midnight, request and extension. You
don't want to give the government any more of your
money than they are in your entitled to, which is
none of it in my.
Speaker 8 (01:58:41):
Opinion, but that's a different story for another day. Bye guys,