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October 28, 2025 • 90 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Enjoy this episode of Day zero. You can get access
to every episode on all podcast platforms and our website
Forbidden Knowledge dot News.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
What's going on, guys, you will ask you for twenty here.
Welcome y'all back another episode Day zero. I've got Corey
Munich because he's extra powerful. Right now, he's coughing his
brains out. I asked him if he's gonna be able
to make it after his pre ceremonial dad, and he said, yes, Cube,

(00:34):
I've got this, and he proceeded to start coughing his
ass off. Powerful one with us in bacculate. Charlie Robinson,
Spiritual One is hanging out of Saint Petersburg getting that sun.
So uh, we've got the We've got the three Stooges
here today, three amigos, three set, three musketine, all the above,

(00:54):
all the above. This week, have y'all been well? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:04):
I guess. I mean, you know, the government is shut down,
right and I haven't noticed the damn thing.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
We may not have, you may not have, but doomsday
is upon us in about seven days November. First, people
are and women are losing in their minds. Yeah about
the snap benefits, they're they're having some issues. It's a

(01:41):
little bit of a breakdown right now. I'm seeing videos
all over the place of women saying I'm gonna go
right to Walmart and just steal the ship. That's what
I'm doing. I'm like the easy now, because you implicate
yourself right out the gate. That's probably not a good
idea right up front, isn't.

Speaker 3 (02:02):
We're not talking about criminal masterminds here playing there their
shoplifting spreeze on TikTok is uh uh. It's kind of
perfectly on brand. Wonder why you don't have a job.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
Yeah, it's like, hey, but I've seen some failures out
there and say, hey, guys, they just hold out because
coachy about to be on the cheap again, that's what
they were saying.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
Yeah, yeah, I would. Yeah, you're about to learn. You're
you're about to learn a valuable Listen, the government might
be shut down, but that doesn't mean you can't learn
a valuable lesson about economics when you have an oversupply
of pussy and yes, because everybody's trying to earn and

(02:57):
and and demand, but no velocity of money. So you
have to look at M two money supply and the
velocity of money flows through the system, and if you
have no velocity, that horror business isn't gonna work. You know,
So you get yourself a PhD in economics just by
trying to figure this shit out.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
Yes, that's gonna be pretty damn wow. I've heard some
rumors that I don't know if this is true, and
I don't know if I've heard this, but I've heard
because if I'm correct, I think Walmart is the biggest
actually the biggest grocery store in America. Uh, if I'm correct,
I think that's what I heard, that like twenty five
percent of grocery sales come via Walmart. Is that is

(03:41):
that sound about right, Charlie? That might be right. Yeah,
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
I haven't hooked at it. I know Kroger is huge,
you know, it's very regional. What you'll find is that
groceries are very dominant. They'll dominate like HB in Texas
just has a stranglehold on it, but they don't really
exist outside it Texas.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
So they're not why like Walmart, like Walmart here?

Speaker 3 (04:03):
Yeah, and grocery stores are notoriously hard businesses to run,
and the profit margins are like one or two percent,
you just have to do a ton of volumes. So
it's like it's a so you that's why you get conglomerates.
That's why you don't get a whole lot of mom
and pop grocery stores, because it's just hard to make
money on one store. You've got to have like a

(04:25):
music scale. You got to have like one hundred stores.
Making one percent on one hundred stores and doing a
shit ton of volume. The numbers work if you've got
one little store, Like there was a cool little place
right down the street from us in Hermosa Beach where
I lived, and you knew you were going to pay
more money, but because it was because you could just

(04:49):
walk there and and there are no such thing as
big grocery stores there, you knew you were gonna pay more,
but the quality was good and you could kind of
deal with it. You kind of ration. They didn't have
ten is a catchup they had won, you know, But
you're just like whatever, I'm going down there to get
emergency catch up, you know what I mean, So like
I'll take what they got, so.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
Right, right right. So the so what I was hearing
is that a lot of the Walmarts are having are
going to be putting security at their places, like police
officers and stuff, because they've heard so many rumblings about
people coming in and writing on November first.

Speaker 3 (05:36):
Yeah, I'd be more concerned at this at the local
level though, right at the small ones, the small local levels,
the I mean depending on where you are geographically, Like
if you're in New York you have like bandego's and
things like that, your ebt is not working. Fuck that guy,
you know, go down to the problem is if you're

(05:56):
a regular, you've been in there before and you're probably
gonna need to go in there in the future. So
how much do you steal from the guy down the
street when you know you he's the corner guy, he's
the corner market in your neighborhood and you're going to
go in there. So do you want to do you
want to be a dick and do that?

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (06:15):
This is this is embarrassing behavior, Like talk about proud
of your ignorance, Like if we don't get our way
with our free food, we're just gonna steal everything. It's like, oh, oh,
that's that's great and now and everyone will be super
sympathetic to you too. As you sit on your ass

(06:37):
and do nothing, and then when you get one fucking obstacle,
what do you do? Burn the place to the ground. Congratulations, Great?
Why should there's forty two million people on food stamps?
Why you should be like four?

Speaker 2 (06:56):
Wow? What's the demographics that? If I'm great, I think
it's mostly white people.

Speaker 3 (07:01):
It's mostly I mean, I think it's mostly I think
it's I think it's about fifty to fifty if I
had to guess. But there's a significant number of po
white trash who have been doing this for generations. It's
like it's not even it's one thing. If it's like
I lost my job, I'm down on my luck, I'm

(07:21):
on food stamps and everything, like that's what it's designed for,
or like I was born with cerebral palsy and I
can't work, or like I'm sympathetic to people in that situation,
you know, like that's that we need a safety net
for those people. But then there's a segment of society
and they're stupid and they're poor also, so they're getting

(07:47):
food stamps, but they're also poor because they're stupid, and
they make bad decisions over and over and over and
over again, and they can't envision making long term decisions,
and so like, at some point you have to just
go like, what are we doing? Like, I honestly think
that the reason why they will continue to pay this

(08:09):
is because it is a bribe to the lower twenty
percent to not destroy the place. I think that come
November first, we we'll find a way to find money
for food stamps because they know what will happen.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
Well, the okay, so we talked about the yeah, yeah,
we talked about the regime stuff and how it almost
feels like a Trump feels like a separate faction as
opposed to the status quo faction. And we've also got
a different faction within the Democratic Party from what it

(08:51):
used to be. This is a little bit more of
an extreme far far left. So could we see them
just say, you know what, we just gonna hold out
so we can see the catastrophe.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Uh huh, order out of chaos if you want to see.
I don't know if you want if you want chaos.
You know it's so funny about well it's not funny,
but it's it's just it wasn't even really like a
big reach.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
But in.

Speaker 3 (09:26):
I don't know, February or March, I did a episode
where I said, like, if you want to kick shit off,
you uh cancel the EBT cards, and that if if
there is or in that if there becomes a scenario
in which there's a justification to turn the EBT cards off,

(09:49):
that they'll do it because if if they want, if
the if what they want is chaos, they'll invent a
reason to turn them off. And I said that like
eight months ago, and and I didn't think it would

(10:10):
be a government shutdown, but it is an invented reason.
And I'm not saying it's the only reason, but I
mean it's a it's a good enough reason, right. And
so if they don't turn the government back on, which
would be fine with me, but if they if they
don't fund the EBT cards come November first, then my

(10:32):
assumption would be that not that there was like gridlock
in Washington, because it's all theater, but my assumption is
that it's intentional to create chaos because they intend to
crack down in the aftermath in some reason like Trump
is walking them into a trap of getting them all

(10:56):
crazy and then bringing in the National Guard or bringing
in the military or doing something with drones or whatever.
Bringing in ice, bringing in so weird, somebody.

Speaker 4 (11:05):
I got a prediction to make that all these motherfuckers
on EBT. Somehow, miraculously, all these ninjas are gonna be
eaten in the next couple of days. They ain't gonna
starve to death. We ain't gonna see bodies in the street.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
Got shut off.

Speaker 4 (11:21):
Okay, So what does that tell you? It probably should
have been shut off a long fucking time ago, because
these MOTHERFUCKERSI figure something out. Period. They ain't gonna just
sit there and go, oh, my ABT is off, let
me just die. No, we should all be so lucky. No,
these motherfuckers are gonna go find something to eat.

Speaker 3 (11:41):
Or or somebody who's got food.

Speaker 2 (11:46):
Right right, right, Well, they say, okay, so right here.
Uh this is the statistics PEE Research, July nineteenth and
twenty twenty three. Non Hispanic white people. I like how
they say that because I've seen a lot of white
white Hispanics like like straight like They're like, I'm like
that motherfucker white. It's all know, ain't mexkin. I said
my ass nigga, that nigga's white, but not his Not

(12:10):
Hispanic white people accounted for forty four point six of
adult SNAP recipient recipients. Okay, four nine not bad. Yeah yeah,
So white white white floaks out there getting that SNAP.

Speaker 4 (12:24):
Moving forward, like black people should be the arbiters of
who's white and who's not, because they'll cut right through the.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
Bullshit shit niggas white as hell. Man. I said. There
was this chick doing an interview and it was like, uh,
she was talking about being in I think somewhere in
Asia and how like Asian guys or whatever, like they're

(12:49):
like falling over white girls because you know, if if
you look at the anime, all the folks that they
make are white. Ain't none of them to make a
bunch of white folks, that's what they make. Uh. So
she was like, oh so they found The guy was like, oh,
it's because you're white. She was like, well, I don't
identify as white. I'm like, bitch, you white as fun.
I mean, I mean, Charlie, she was your complexion identify

(13:15):
She didn't say, she said she didn't identify. I'm a
non white. I'm like, okay, I got you.

Speaker 3 (13:23):
I'm yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
Yeah. So that that messed me up right there. I'm like,
hold on, so you can not you can be white
and say I don't identify as white like Jeeves, you can,
I see your white ass? All right? That about it? Uh? Now,
I was going through this to seeing the eligibility of

(13:52):
of who gets the food stamps because I haven't really
deep dived into how far below the line you need
to be. But this is what it says right here
said a household qualifies for the program if it has
a gross monthly income at or below one hundred and
thirty percent of the federal poverty level, as well as

(14:15):
a net monthly income at or below one hundred percent
of the federal poverty level. So this is an example
for a family of four in twenty twenty three, this
works out to three thousand and seven dollars in gross
month of income and twenty three hundred and thirteen dollars
in net month of income. And those limits are a

(14:35):
little bit higher in Alaska Hawaii. So for a family
of four, you have to be making two thousand, three
hundred and thirteen dollars take home per month to be
eligible for the SNAP benefits.

Speaker 3 (14:49):
So if you work a minimum wage job, you're automatically eligible.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
Automatically yes, automatically yep, But you use.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
In fact, they do that during the orientation program at Walmart.
I believe right that they show them how to sign
up for food stamps as well, because you're not gonna make.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
Enough to that's try.

Speaker 3 (15:16):
To uh be you know at the entry level maybe
in management whatever, but at the entry level that that's
what And I might have gotten it might have been Target,
but I don't know it was one of them that was.
I think it was Walmart though that was I don't
think it was like official company policy, but it was like, yo, hey,

(15:36):
by the way, sign up here for food stamps because
you're gonna qualify and then just get that and so
you don't have to you have your groceries covered and
then you can come here and spend it, you know,
because you work here. Pretty pretty like the problem is
like if you use this as helping hand when you

(16:02):
need it, it's great. It's when you make some sort
of mental calculation that like I'm good, I don't need
to do anything else, or you like learn to live
within the boundaries, or you get good at at the
scam and you've got multiple people doing it in a
household or whatever you like, you turn it into like
a like a business. You know, like, if I'm gonna,

(16:25):
you know, leech off the government, I'm gonna figure out
every single program, be amazing at it, you know.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
Yeah, it's like it's like I've seen this. There was
somebody in the household that was a woman. Her son
was about to get a well paying job. She was like,
you can't take that job. It's like why. It's like,
because you still stay here and won't be off the
benefits if you take the job, So you can't take it,
Like what.

Speaker 3 (16:55):
You gotta go live somewhere else then, man, you're gonna
screw up the gig. Yeah, but that's fucking slave mentality
on the plantation mentality, and that doesn't I don't give
a shit what color you are. That is some mentality.
Throw your bone everyone, thank you. I better not do

(17:17):
too good or else they will fuck me up. That's
some bullshit. That's some that's a real embarrassing mentality. And like,
if your entire existence is to game the state and
and live off of them in some sort of mutually
parasitic relationship, I have zero respect for you, you know
what I mean, Like it's dog shit. If you're genuinely

(17:40):
a handicapped person or somebody in need, you know, then
hopefully you're it's taken care of. But like, what would
be a real shame is the people who actually needed
it not getting it, and then all these grifting assholes
who figured out how to gain the system or getting

(18:00):
it all. That would be a disgrace. I don't have
a problem with people stealing from the government. Just to
be clear, I just I don't have a problem with
that component of it. I'm not a do gooder in
that regard. Fuck the state, but my response is fuck
you for being dependent on the state. Like I have
no respect for you for doing that. I do whatever

(18:23):
you're gonna do. You're gonna leach off the state like
the state deserves. It's a parasite itself. If you're leaching
off of the parasite, I guess you guys have found
a perfect match. But I'll have no respect for either
one of the parties involved, the state or the scumbags
who leach off of the state.

Speaker 5 (18:41):
The government conference in Porto Vararta this yearbruarre.

Speaker 2 (18:56):
Hey, gay Now they have a peer. In addition householes,
even other types of age such as the Temporary Assistant
for Needy Families tan if or Supplemental Security Income SSI
may be amiable for snap automatically. I haven't heard of
the tanna for the SSI. Yo, you got you know

(19:17):
anything about.

Speaker 3 (19:18):
I've heard of that's that's like your Social Security. Yeah,
that's like you've gotta you've Yeah, you've got a situation
going You're getting money from from the government because you
had some sort of fucked up situation going on. You're
getting money.

Speaker 4 (19:35):
You know what the Nazis did for the poor. They
brought them food, and they brought them clothing, and if
they had babies, they brought them children supplies, and they
brought them all the ship they needed so that the
head of the household could get back on their goddamn feet.
And they even provided nannies and ship like that. So

(19:56):
the Nazis can fuck it be done. The fuck is
going on here in America? Just here taking some money
and I swear you're gonna buy some good shit with it.
It's like not working and it hasn't been working for
a long time. We need to bring back government cheese.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
Okay, Well, was it that there was a guy who
did a video and I thought it was pretty good.
He's like he's like with all the people I've seen
up here, or pretty much all the women, because that's
the majority of two you see on these benefits. So
with all the women that I see up here talking
about the stamp benefits and all that, that lets me
know that the majority of people would not survive in

(20:32):
a natural selection society.

Speaker 3 (20:36):
He's right, Oh, I'll take it down to a more
reasonable level. They wouldn't survive in a power outage longer
than thirty days, right, I mean, that's like a that's
a nine point three earthquake away from happening in southern

(20:59):
calif locking in ten million people, making it so that
nobody can get in or out, nobody can get food
for thirty days, you would lose half the half the
people would starve to death and die.

Speaker 5 (21:11):
I think.

Speaker 3 (21:13):
I remember when I was younger, git zombie pockalyps.

Speaker 2 (21:18):
It'd be similar to one. When I was younger, we
had a terrible snowstorm and I was in a rural
area and we were out of school for like three weeks,
and when the snowstorm came, it actually knocked one of
the trees down, tore the power line down to our house,
and ripped the box off the side of the house.

(21:38):
So we were without power for over a month.

Speaker 3 (21:42):
Oh that's real.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Yeah, yeah, it was real life, like wood heater, pro
paying cookie shit on the wood heater state like like
it was like real in the middle of winter. But
j it. So I've had a little bit of experience
with that, you know, lighting candles at night and ship
like that, you know, going and shipping outside and you know,

(22:06):
I mean all that stuff, but like it's it's real life.
And yeah, most most people don't, especially if you were
born guy, they probably after the year two thousand, you
can't even fathom that. You know. Come, I talk about
a wood heater, a wood heater, what does that mean.

Speaker 3 (22:29):
As well? Beauty that is?

Speaker 2 (22:33):
Yeah, yeah, but that'd be like do I go out there?
Do I where do I get the wood from? Burn? Yeah? Yeah,
So I mean that's I mean, that's the real ship
right there. I mean, so it's like it's it's gonna

(22:57):
be interesting to see how this plays out.

Speaker 4 (23:01):
And I'm dead in thirty days too, man, I'm just
telling Oh, I'm.

Speaker 3 (23:04):
Not trying to say that I'm going to make it
any longer. I mean, you know, I mean I need
to go for dinner.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Yeah, I'd be fucked right now because I don't I
don't have I don't have access to Like I live
in an apartment, so like I don't have a wood
heater like this. It's not like when I was back home.
There's like there's wood everywhere because he in the fucking woods.
That's what's where we leaving me.

Speaker 3 (23:30):
You would live, we would live stream us slowly starving
to death. Every week. It would be like and then
at one point, like one person just wouldn't show up anymore. Ever, Yeah,
you know.

Speaker 4 (23:52):
You were in a hoodie. Man, is it cold there
or what?

Speaker 2 (23:55):
Oh? No, no, this is just one of my favorite shirts.
It's not a video.

Speaker 4 (24:01):
It's fucking cold as fucking balls here in northern Colorado.

Speaker 2 (24:07):
Holy shit, Oh is it it's not?

Speaker 4 (24:09):
It's bro in my house like forty degrees.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
Oh my god. No, it's been nice out here. I've been.
I've been on some wonky schedule where I'm getting up
super early and going to the gym, and I can
walk to the gym from my house and I have
getting up like before the sun is coming up and ship.

Speaker 4 (24:31):
So it was thirty the Global Warming, it was thirty
eight overnight, and then it was fifty three at eight am,
and then it peaked today at sixty six at eleven am.

Speaker 3 (24:42):
That's cold for me. It's cold from the from the desert.
But that's I'm now Corey. I'm hitting my ten year
anniversary of being in Colorado.

Speaker 4 (24:56):
I like it, but I'm just bored as fuck. I
want to back to fucking Vegas.

Speaker 2 (25:05):
Vegas is.

Speaker 3 (25:08):
Overrun with Californians.

Speaker 4 (25:11):
Well, hopefully this mountain to wash them out.

Speaker 3 (25:15):
Too, because I came before it was cool.

Speaker 4 (25:19):
This fucking uh, this, this abandonment of tourism in America
is the signal. Well number one, the Europeans that want
to come here, which is good, fuck them, but we
kind of need their money and so Vega Canadians.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
Canadians would normally come and they're a huge component. They're
not just for gaming, but also for housing. They buy
a lot of houses. They loant that because they want
to get their money out of Canada when they can,
and they want to put it in assets that they
think are better, and so they'll buy uh, Vegas real estate.
I sold a ship ton of real estate to Canadians.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
So it looks like this is the weird thing because
that all the traffic is down the tourism is down,
the numbers are down. Overall revenue is down, but gaming
revenue is up across the board whatever.

Speaker 3 (26:04):
That's misleading though, because they've repriced everything. When I was there.
When I was there in two thousand and five, I
went to Hong Kong and then went to Macau and
checked out the casinos there. And when I came back,
when I saw a stat that blew my mind that

(26:29):
a Vegas blackjack table will do about profit about two
thousand dollars a day. An average table in Macau it's
twenty two thousand dollars a day. So they focused. The

(26:49):
shift is the reason why game gaming receipts are up.
Probably if even though everything else is down, is because
they're targeting rich people. You can see it. I've seen
all of the hotel rooms are through the roof. There's
no more cheap buffets. You can't get a five dollars

(27:10):
blackjack table. That don't exist anymore.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
They used to.

Speaker 3 (27:12):
It was great. You could go, you know, everything's twenty
five bucks, everything's you know, you want to sit down
on a Friday night, it's one hundred bucks to play
black oh han, you know, maybe fifty five fifty more
than likely.

Speaker 4 (27:25):
When I lived there, the great thing was that there
were so many programs for locals that you basically got
into all the shows for free. You got so much
value out of living here. If you were into go
into the night life, which I was, it was amazing.
It was fucking great. So I wonder how that's impacted
by this financial spike and prices and everything out there,

(27:48):
because I'm really itching to get the fuck back there,
but I don't want to get out there and not
be able to afford to do shit.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
You know.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
Well, the the real key the industry that does well
in Vegas as local casinos.

Speaker 4 (28:04):
Yeah, the station stations do well. I love those places.
They're great and they got all the new games and everything.

Speaker 3 (28:13):
They're Valley Ranch is my favorite casino in the.

Speaker 4 (28:21):
World, the new one.

Speaker 3 (28:26):
I happened to it. I was blown away. Actually, I'll
tell you. Can I say this I went in with
when I was there or last last summer for my mom.

Speaker 2 (28:36):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
One day I said let's get to my buddy. Luckily,
my best friend Andy lives there and he'd be bored
and he and I said, let's go to Durango Station
check it out. And haven't been there, He's like, oh,
I haven't been there either, and like, I'll be honest,
like a casino is a casino, you know, they all
look the same. This is the only casino I've ever

(28:57):
seen that didn't do the dark walls you can't tell
what time it is sort of thing. They put clear
glass along the sides of the casino and let in
all the natural light. So it's like gambling in the daylight,

(29:18):
and it's it's weird. It's if you I lived in
Vegas for ten years, so that's why if you get
kind of used to casinos all kind of looking the same,
this one looked totally different. And then they did a
food court. Back to more casino talk with Charlie and
Corey after this, but no, seriously, they did a food court. Corey,

(29:39):
next time you're in Vegas, go to Durango Station and
check it out. Food court is will blow your mind.
It's fantastic. And same thing. It's like all lit up
with natural light. It's not dark. It's not depressing, and
it doesn't make you they're not trying to trick you.
Intoto staying there all night and all day and gambling
like that bullshit doesn't work. Those psychological tricks have been exposed.

(30:02):
I think people recognize that. So we walked through there,
I was like, this is the best new casino I've
seen in a long time. So and again it's a
station casino, right, So they know what they're doing and.

Speaker 4 (30:14):
They target locals, so that's probably why they're not yeah tricks.

Speaker 3 (30:18):
Yeah, they target locals, and with the locals are like,
who we bullshitting? I gotta go home tonight. No, I'm
not gonna get all crazy and gamble. Forget that it's
three o'clock in the morning. Like, let's cut through the bullshit,
bring back all the free drinks and do all that stuff.
Don't charge for parking, you know, don't treat me like
an asshold and try to squeeze every last pick out

(30:41):
of me. Like, if you want me to keep coming
back here as a local, you have to you have
to do things like that. So I think maybe like
maybe traditional Las Vegas, like Strip Vegas, needs to you know,
it's so fucking corporate now it's like, I don't know
what do they do just write it off their balance,
But like they need to experience some pain, you know,

(31:05):
they need to learn that. Like somebody is going to
make a calculation. The Circus Circus could actually be really
fucking awesome if somebody took a billion dollars and renovated
that thing. It's got a killer location. You could lean
into the clowniness of it all, and you could and

(31:25):
it's the sixth largest hotel in the world. You could
turn that into a fucking or you could just bulldoze it.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
You could do that.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
But that's probably the better because that's because that's because
that property was worth a fortune's or echelon is uh,
it was going to be. So I don't know, Man
Vegas is like like a home to me, you know.
I mean, even though I don't live there, I still
am there all the time. I still have the real

(31:56):
estate company out there, and so I'm still there. But
it's it's you know what, it's it's still a way
better place than anywhere in California for tax reasons, for
you know, sanity reads things like that. It's got its problems.

Speaker 2 (32:16):
But I just I just think that businesses are collectively
trying to fuck themselves, like like across the board, Like
it's like, yeah, we're gonna go up, We're gonna go up.
We're gonna make this description based gonna make that we're
gonna charge. I'm just like, do niggas is bright man?
I mean that they ain't no more money.

Speaker 3 (32:39):
That's my no probleney with Vegas. It's like how many
Louis Vuitton bags can you sell in Las Vegas?

Speaker 2 (32:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (32:46):
You could sell infinitely more. Uh dollar ninety nine steak
and eggs? Do you remember that? Corey? Like how old
are you? Like the night the mid nineties were now
you probably you weren't in Vegas in the mid nineties.
We would go out there in like the in like
ninety two ninety three, and it would be like dollar

(33:09):
ninety nine steak and eggs and ninety nine cent Heinekens,
And when you're on a budget, you could go there
and have fun and we would spend you know, we
would spend money. Not a ton of money, but we
would go And maybe it's not that anymore because obviously
prices are out of control, but maybe you make it.
My point is make it reasonable. Go after a segment

(33:30):
that's like wants to go to Vegas and have that
fun experience, but isn't going to play twenty five dollars
hands blackjack. Get the volume bring back five dollar hands
of blackjack. Put it in the basement, you know, sell
dollar beer, like, turn it into a fucking party, get
people in there, and then you know, make money elsewhere.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
Well it's just like a It's like so right now,
all the car manufacturers, for some reason, they decided to
all get together and say, you know what, we're gonna
make it where car play didn't work anymore. We're gonna
make it where we got as system that you pay
a subscription for to listen to music, use navigation. I'm like, no,

(34:14):
he just already charged fifty five thousand dollars sixty thousand
dollars for a car. Niggas is broke man like they
they find you a different revenue model they want they want.

Speaker 3 (34:29):
See the problem is that when you sell cars, as
you know, you don't sell that guy doesn't buy a
car every year. He buys a car every five years.
Maybe if you're lucky, right, so you're a revenue stream
once and then you disappear to them, right. But if
there was a way for them to smooth out those

(34:53):
bump and bumps in like the money that they get
from you, and they could have a subscription model that
just kind of extends on and on and on they
can continue to profit from you. And and like, charging

(35:13):
a subscription for heated seats makes me want to light
my car on fire if I had a car that
subscription heated seats, which I do not.

Speaker 2 (35:23):
But could you a message on backfire? So bad? Man,
it's gonna backfire is so bad. Like it's not gonna work.
It's it's just not. I mean, it's kind of like
own Star right now. But they they begging for man,
talk to somebody about own Star. Nobody wants to pay
forty dollars a month for your own Star. Okay, there's

(35:45):
only there's only a select few people that want to
do that. They just don't. So when you tell somebody, hey,
you know, if you want to see your navigation on
your screen and you want to connect, you know, listen
to your Spotify, you're paying door and all that will
pay us twenty bucks a month. Man, it just they're like, no, dog,
I'm just not gonna do it. You know what I'm saying.

(36:07):
I'm gonna put my phone in there, and then I'm
gonna I'm gonna get me a Bluetooth speaker. I'm put
it in there. I'm gonna tell you to Kate Rocks.

Speaker 3 (36:15):
You know.

Speaker 2 (36:15):
I mean, it's just like I ain't got no more money.
Like it's just like the way you just ain't went up.
They went up like you you wanted a strict more,
but you ain't paid nobody more. Like usually when you
want a strict they got to have some money to
give you. They got shit to give you.

Speaker 3 (36:34):
Well, this is going to be a much bigger problem
because we have now with the introduction of artificial intelligence,
we now have the possibility, probability more i'd say likelihood
that things are gonna get automated and then doing so,

(36:57):
people some people are their jobs aren't going to be
needed it anymore, right or or not. Let's not have
to say that accountants will go away altogether, right, But
what if this does it so well that you lose
like thirty percent of like the normal that's a that's
a huge amount, right they killing so dude, it's about

(37:19):
it could get rough. Where are those people going to
get money to spend in this economy that they're dreaming of.
You're going to have to give them the money in
the form of UBI like snap benefits or whatever to speak.

Speaker 2 (37:40):
But you got to give them enough to spand like
like because everything subscription base like like to spend on
whatever they want it.

Speaker 4 (37:49):
Roosevelt who knew the new deal that he just fucking
he fuck everybody for all time. Yeah, yeah, everybody.

Speaker 2 (37:58):
Yeah. So it's just like it's like, all right, so
you be as the answer, It's like, yeah, but you've
got to artificially given a f you be, I to
make sure these companies don't go under, you be Hoyes.

Speaker 4 (38:11):
So when once it's a leak in the economy, that's
what it is. It's fundamentally money siphoning out of the
economy to get spun back into the economy. It's nonsense.
It's it's uns.

Speaker 2 (38:24):
Paying your sale. He's just paying your sale.

Speaker 4 (38:26):
It's it's a It creates a cycle that ends in
fucking misery and destruction. Okay, so fuck the whole thing.
Like here's the deal. I'd rather be homeless on the
fucking streets than get ten dollars from the god damn government.
Like I don't want their fucking ever. I didn't get
that twelve hundred dollars. They gave that twelve hundred dollars
to bitches. I didn't get that twelve hundred dollars.

Speaker 3 (38:48):
I didn't get it either money. I don't know what
anybody says. I heard some people say, oh, it was
just automatically putting your account. I would have noticed nobody putting.
Nobody automatically put it in my account.

Speaker 2 (39:00):
Maybe it actually was not get like like legit, like
you just just yeah, there's just money in there. I'm
like people, maybe they did.

Speaker 3 (39:15):
My name can be very black sounding. My official name of.

Speaker 4 (39:21):
Robinson is the Black.

Speaker 2 (39:25):
Yeah, there is nobody ain't get any free money. So
but that's that's that's how it actually worked, though. Like
I woke up one day and I was just sitting there,
everyone looking at the camp and there's just money there.

Speaker 3 (39:40):
I'm like, but can I say, like, twelve hundred dollars
is not fuck you money?

Speaker 2 (39:48):
No, it ain't quite that it is.

Speaker 4 (39:51):
It is one night hooker.

Speaker 3 (39:53):
Yeah, it is like a Vegas weekend.

Speaker 2 (39:58):
You know. Well.

Speaker 4 (40:00):
The thing is also people got that money and they
paid off debts with it. It didn't stimulate shit.

Speaker 2 (40:06):
Well all that was fake anyway, it was all fake.
You know what I'm saying. It's kind of like the
girl in there when she's sitting there. Oh yeah, and
you ain't doing nothing, She ain't felt shit faking it.
It was a fake orgasm, is what it was. FI
did a whole lot of hooping it. Yeah, yeah, Fiat orgasm,
a whole lot of hoop It ain't this ship. Yeah.

(40:29):
All it did was put us in a hole. It
sunk us. Dude. When people come up to me and
they're like, oh, man, I don't understand why she is
so high, I said, nigga, won't you around? During twenty
twenty printed you are money six point two tree, and
they opened the door to fucking let that Hell's Hell's
demons come right through and swarm y'all's asses Corporations was like,

(40:53):
thank you.

Speaker 4 (40:54):
I heard higher numbers than that. I heard numbers of twelve.

Speaker 2 (40:58):
Six point two.

Speaker 3 (41:00):
I heard whatever percent of the entire money supply was
created during that time. Yeah, I heard it too, aggering
amount of money.

Speaker 4 (41:10):
They don't need our tax money, they can just print
the shit.

Speaker 3 (41:14):
Well, of course, the tax money is meant to keep
us down on the reservation and without resources and jumping
through hoops and declaring what we do and what we
you know, I mean, putting us in a position of
pledging our allegiance by paying extortion to the government.

Speaker 2 (41:34):
It's all psychological.

Speaker 3 (41:35):
And by the way, yeah, it also helps to finance
the interest on the debt for the Federal Reserve, which
is the reason why the IRS and Federal Reserve were
created in nineteen thirteen the same year. So this has
been a nice funding mechanism for the bankers. It's not

(41:56):
so much that our taxes go to like build the
who build the roads. Our money goes towards paying the
interest on the debt, which is the only bankers care about.
And they don't even really care about that too much.

Speaker 2 (42:11):
Yeah, they put the what they say, damn, they put
the cheese on the board, put the cheese right on
the rat trap and nigga, we ate it like we
ate it. I mean, people were up there, they were
just nibbling right on. Man, this shit is good. And
then now five years later, but it does splatter that.
You know what I'm saying. You got right to the
point where you triggered that shit. You've triggered my trap card.

(42:35):
All the people who were sitting out there like, oh man,
this is great. Man, boy, I got a way. I
got away, like abandoned. When I sold my house for
fifty thousand dollars over asking Now you in some piece
of shit place, You're like, man, man, I need to
get out of here. I need to down downsize. You can't.
You downsized is something that's gonna cost you more. Like
you fucked yourself. I don't know how some of the

(42:57):
folks didn't see it.

Speaker 3 (43:00):
As we have said before in previous real estate discussions,
cost you more for the house, and cost you more
because the interest rate is double what you probably had
when you bought it in the first place.

Speaker 2 (43:17):
Let's see it. But you have core, You hasn't.

Speaker 3 (43:23):
No Thomas of Day zero.

Speaker 2 (43:32):
Word. I'm sting here thinking, I said, I'm trying to
think through it because you know your mind to start
competing stuff and say all right, how can we get
out of this? And then like it all comes like
funneling right to this thing. We're at the bottom. It
says we're fucked. Like everything froms right to you like, oh, se,
there's got to.

Speaker 4 (43:51):
Be But yeah, we have some really crazy economic signals
going on still, like the stock markets are higher than
they ever been. Crypto bitcoin Bitcoin just finished a four
year cycle. At the end of the four year cycle
was expected that they went to the moon, it didn't
go to the moon. Some people say when you compare

(44:12):
bitcoin against the price of gold, that the fucking market
peaked back in December of last year, and so nobody
knows what the fuck's going on with bitcoin or crypto.
Can it can go to fucking ten bucks or it
can go to million tomorrow, And like right now, the
market's never been so tenuous. That doesn't really jive with markets,
stock markets being at all time high and global money

(44:33):
supply being at all time high and all the and
like the car market's falling apart to housing markets falling apart,
all real assets are following the fucking pieces. All the
money is going into AI and bullshit. I saw a
thing that basically said that if it wasn't for the
AI bubble that we're in, we would be flat with growth,
like zero growth domestically.

Speaker 3 (44:52):
Oh and the AI bubble is a is like a
uh real incestuous mix of everybody's investing in each other's companies.
They're buying each other's stocks or buying each other's processors
or whatever it is, and it's all a bunch of bullshit.

Speaker 4 (45:11):
It's like a lot of circular It's a circular economy
I saw very much.

Speaker 3 (45:15):
So they're and they're getting funded by the government, and
they're getting stuff from like the five hundred billion dollars
for AI infrastructure that Larry Ellison and Sam Altman have
been working on and and and stuff like that. So
they've got almost infinite money. And then they use that
money and deploy it in a way that goes to
one company, but with instructions that that company needs to

(45:38):
invest in these other companies and buy their stuff or
buy their stock or buy their bonds or whatever the
fuck it is. And and in doing it, and you know,
and that's like a that's like a cartel. It's like
the mag seven cartel. I mean, you know, they're all

(46:01):
intertwined with each other. And but you know gold, yeah,
it's doing that for sure. They need to figure that
out as well. But gold, silver and bitcoin were all
at all time hives at one point a couple of
weeks ago. That is a bet against uh, the system,

(46:26):
I guess, I know how else to describe Electricity and
water are two weird fucking items.

Speaker 2 (46:33):
They're the only items where you can use less of
it and your bill be exactly the same. I mean,
it's a weird. It's some weird ass ship. Somebody was
sitting there and they were like, they were like I
think they said their their water bill one month was
like two hundred dollars. I was like, damn, it's the
highest water bill. But anyway, they were like, okay, so

(46:54):
we're going intentionally save water. Okay. They were taking like
two minute showers, you know, say it won't wash it,
but once every two day like everything. And they got
they got their water building next month and they say
three dollars. It's my hold on the sacond. Three dollars.
That was it. I saved like five hundred gallons of

(47:16):
water and they equated to three dollars. It's like, shit,
I'm as well.

Speaker 1 (47:21):
Use.

Speaker 4 (47:22):
The thing is, when it comes to things like water
and electricity and gasoline, these are the things that fund
that that fuel the economy in general. And so right
now here's another factor. Fucking gas is like two dollars
in change. Bro. We went to Denver the other day
and it was gas. I saw I gas for like

(47:42):
two nineteen. I was like, are you shitting me? The
world's fucking falling apart in one end, it's blowing up
on the other end, and we got two dollars gasoline
and fucking electricity is expensive as fuck. Like none of
this stuff makes any sense at.

Speaker 2 (47:57):
All, not to make sense, like it like it didn't
add up. Like even though what you was saying, Corey
about the about Trump's regime, like it seems status quo
and then it done. It's like, how can it be
both at the same time, it's like it's like something
I mean, it's like we're almost like flip flopping damn universes,

(48:21):
like it was a Jesus person.

Speaker 4 (48:22):
That they were in a spiritual war, or it's another
there's another weird thing. So at the time, at the
same time that gold and silver and bitcoin, we're all pumping.
The past couple of months, Magic cards had the biggest

(48:42):
bull run that they ever had in their history. Huh
and so well one one one speculation is that some
crypto bros prophets went back into magic cards and they
were drastically overpaying for ship, drastically overpaying for ship, Like.

Speaker 3 (49:00):
There were cards that were selling in an attempt.

Speaker 4 (49:03):
To when bro, when you make up a million dollars
in crypto, when you make ten, when you take ten
dollars and you turn it into a million in crypto.
You're willing to spend whatever the fuck because money doesn't
mean anything to you at that point, so you'll overspend
on everything to get what you want, which drove the
prices of the market at big time, And now they're
seeing a collapse in a lot of areas, which is
interesting because you'd think something as casual as magic cards

(49:26):
wouldn't fall under the same kind of auspices of the
larger markets.

Speaker 2 (49:33):
Well, dang, I watched a video today about counter Strike too,
about how motherfuckers were selling ski is for fucking thousands
of dollars to millions of dollars.

Speaker 3 (49:44):
I do what.

Speaker 2 (49:47):
Ski is on a good on a video game? I said,
d ain't no fucking way. And people were like, yeah,
you know, I've been up here. I've been I've been
rolling the dice on these leop chests since I was
thirteen years old, since I was eleven years old. I'm like, well,
who's money does your fucking They get their credit card statement,
get a ran five thousand dollars on the thing. He

(50:09):
is running the bill up and then and then trying
to get this one skin. I think they said, was
it like the blue a K or whatever, and ship
sold for a million dollars. I'm like, wow, a million dollars.

Speaker 4 (50:23):
Well, I guess it was one person who made who
caused this crash, one person who had all this One
rich dude, older dude in his fifties or sixties who
had all this ship. He just started selling ship for cheap,
and the market just was like.

Speaker 2 (50:40):
But that's some that's some crazy shit, man in a
video game, and like this it's gambling, but technically it
didn't go underto gambling rolls. Like it's like its skirts
it somehow, and.

Speaker 4 (50:54):
It shouldn't because you gotta you pay for a loop box,
and the loop box may or may not have something
good in it. It's like buying a pack of fucking
magic cards. It may or may not have a good
card in that, right, right, you may buy something they
got some dog shit, and if it's got something good,
then you can sell that for maybe a million dollars.
So it's using loopholes obviously, right, So right, I always

(51:16):
been here's the thing, man, I always been a fuck
the system guy. But then I hate when people exploit loopholes.
There's an other constitution there, you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (51:25):
Yeah, exactly exactly. Well, it's just the amount, the amount
that people pay for stuff. Yeah, it's just the amount
of people will pay for stuff. Like you know, oh,
this is a uh nineteen sixty five baseball signed by
whoever and it sold for five million dollars. I'm like,
why fucking baseball. I'm like, yeah, y'all Thinkga's got that

(51:50):
much money? And it just this is this matters, this
baseball five million dollars. It's like, I I don't get it,
Like I'm trying to grasp it.

Speaker 4 (52:03):
I appreciate collecting and rarities and variations and stuff like
that that make things worth it, but I mean it's
really a vanity kind of exactly.

Speaker 3 (52:17):
All the stuff I've got I got signed myself. I
didn't buy it from.

Speaker 2 (52:28):
A place. I've got.

Speaker 3 (52:31):
Angels jerseys on the wall that I had made. They
don't exist normally, old early eighties, late seventies Angels jerseys.
Had had three of them made and had them signed
by the guys, each one obviously different ones, and then
had him mounted and framed. And it was fucking expensive.

(52:55):
And I did it like twenty years ago, and I'm
glad I did. And I've at it in like my Vegas,
my old Vegas house in the game room. It's fucking bitch.
And I had a big couch and big TV and
I had these these badass jerseys with lights on them
and I love that. But that's the stuff that I
collected myself. And then I've got baseballs and bats and

(53:17):
stuff from when I, uh, from when I worked in
pro sports and we would get stuff like that. We'd
get like Rick Fox sign a basketball, signing ten basketballs
and gives me one or whatever.

Speaker 2 (53:38):
Yeah, but it's it's crazy. But it's crazy, like somebody
come and to you like, oh, yeah, you know, I
got a basketball side myself and say, oh do you
man that times for five hundred thousand dollars. You're like,
well the basketball was was was as a seventy bucks. No,
it's it's it's uh, it just goes into rarity. Uh.

Speaker 3 (54:01):
You know if it's something from a particular.

Speaker 4 (54:04):
Event significance, you know it's.

Speaker 3 (54:07):
Gonna have some significance. Home run ball from you know.

Speaker 2 (54:11):
I'm picking up, like I understand what you're saying, but
my mind says is dumb, Well, it's got to be
a better use of the money. Okay, Well it's it's.

Speaker 3 (54:24):
Only purchased by people who are looking for assets. They're
looking for unusual assets because they've got money, and money
doesn't do them any good, and money is losing.

Speaker 2 (54:33):
Value every year.

Speaker 3 (54:34):
They want assets and owning a Mark McGuire sixty second baseball,
you know, home home run. I remember when that was
going on, people were like this for the fuck a
million dollars. It was like, oh, minimum a million dollars.
So you know, it's it's much like priceless art. You

(54:59):
know it's value.

Speaker 2 (55:00):
You is what it is.

Speaker 3 (55:01):
And by the way, not that I have a problem
with this, also tremendous way to do launder money.

Speaker 2 (55:14):
Yeah, it might be the number one way the launder money.
That and then the fake corporations where you'd be like,
hold on a second, what did they make again? Nothing,
they don't make anything.

Speaker 3 (55:31):
Overvalued, just get valued memorabilia, overvalued.

Speaker 2 (55:35):
Ship like that. Well, I mean, hey, the only person
in history that I knew that was able to pay
child support with their paintings, damn Joe Biden's sons. He
paid a damn woman child Well, is that didn't even that?

(56:02):
That's what I'm saying, Grayland that one, I mean, are
they worth anything? I mean, of course, but let me
ask you. Let me yeah, let me let me ask
you this Hunter. If you if someone offered you a
Hunter Biden painting, would you not take it?

Speaker 3 (56:21):
Would you not be like? Holy shit, have I got
a story for you?

Speaker 2 (56:25):
You know who? Did you know who did this?

Speaker 3 (56:29):
Uh? No, not really, but to be clear, that would
be worth something. It's not worth not worth fifty thousand
dollars or whatever sort of money laundering he's got going
on with his benefactor, his I don't know sugar daddy,

(56:52):
the dude Malibu who pays all his bills, things like that.

Speaker 4 (56:56):
You know Who's goot paintings that you can buy on eBay?

Speaker 3 (57:00):
John Hinkley, Oh, John Hinckley does ship.

Speaker 4 (57:07):
It's always the same. He has like three paintings that
he does and he just does them over and over
and over again. One is like a stupid looking cats,
just like dumb ship from around his house. He just
put on an album and when you buy them, they
come signed. I've been meaning to get them. I just
haven't had that kind of disposable not much. But I
look at it and I'm like, do I want to
eat this week? Or do I want to buy a

(57:28):
John Hinkley record.

Speaker 2 (57:28):
For Corey Eat this Week day, don't don't don't never
let that fat? Yeah eat this week Think who I.

Speaker 3 (57:45):
Would buy that for?

Speaker 2 (57:48):
You can get that?

Speaker 4 (57:52):
He's on X dude, friends, now, oh my god, the
saddest thing in the world world, let me find it,
fucking Johnny.

Speaker 3 (58:02):
Yeah, well, I mean listen. I don't know. Maybe maybe
I won't. Maybe that's not such a good idea, but
I don't. I don't know. I would be interested to know.

Speaker 4 (58:12):
No one else has had him on yet, like.

Speaker 3 (58:18):
About the connection to the Bush family.

Speaker 4 (58:23):
For his family, Yeah, it's John Hinckley twenty is his ex.

Speaker 1 (58:32):
Got me?

Speaker 4 (58:33):
Yeah, look, this is fine. I gotta share the screen
as hilarious. Just as I mentioned it. He fucking when
uh yeah, here we go.

Speaker 3 (58:45):
Oh wow, there.

Speaker 4 (58:48):
That's his cat painting.

Speaker 3 (58:51):
Okay, that's kind of terrifying. But I would I fuck
on that. I'm not gonna lie, guys.

Speaker 4 (59:03):
What else is he put on here? Maybe it's it's
the same picture, dude, but it's a little different, but
like it's the same thing. He just paints the same
ship over and over again. Oh hey, this is a
modern art, so maybe some CIA messages in.

Speaker 3 (59:16):
There by as much I do like the cat.

Speaker 4 (59:22):
You can see the subtle difference. It's not the same picture.
It's a different picture.

Speaker 3 (59:27):
The cat is different every time.

Speaker 4 (59:29):
Yeah, look at the boat.

Speaker 3 (59:34):
Yeah he's maybe not well.

Speaker 2 (59:36):
But I.

Speaker 3 (59:46):
I thought when you said he was a painter, I
thought you that looks like paint by numbers. Maybe the
reason why they're all exactly the same is because it's
like paint by you know, It's like there's an outline
of a sailboat. There's an outline of a cat, sort
of it's in pencil or whatever, and you kind of

(01:00:09):
you know, because.

Speaker 2 (01:00:16):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:00:17):
Oh shit, his record is sold out. Oh, you can
get it on colored vinyl. Red vinyl is sold out.
Blue vinyl is sold out, and you can see ad
the Karte. Can I buy it? His album is called
Redemption and you can get it on colored vinyl for

(01:00:39):
twenty five dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:00:42):
I wonder if it's on YouTube, Well, bay baye twenty five.
I think, what kind of did.

Speaker 3 (01:00:53):
You have, John? How long were the sessions and were
they done at your house or were you taken to
a facility where they're performed on you?

Speaker 4 (01:01:04):
Oh it's on YouTube, dude, I'm rocking out. Can we
play it? Or we got banned somewhere.

Speaker 2 (01:01:12):
It's no, you would definitely get banned.

Speaker 4 (01:01:14):
Yeah, so this can't be copyright coreri this is.

Speaker 2 (01:01:22):
This is horrible. It's bad.

Speaker 4 (01:01:28):
What expect if Kerry Thorny put out an album? Oh
it's terrible.

Speaker 2 (01:01:34):
Well, I mean, everything can't be good. Everything ain't be good. Hey,
well look we we finally got some some some numbers,
or we got the low down on the No Kings protest?
Who was uh, who was out there the most? And
it would be white women in their forties, educated white women, allegedly.

Speaker 4 (01:01:58):
Educated white women.

Speaker 2 (01:02:03):
They're dangerous.

Speaker 4 (01:02:04):
Gave me some gutter tramp.

Speaker 2 (01:02:07):
That they were holding therapy stations.

Speaker 3 (01:02:13):
But I could I could say that that I could
over educated liberal white women. I could say that every
society they go to.

Speaker 2 (01:02:22):
I could say it was a it was definitely a
majority white event, and no doubt about that.

Speaker 3 (01:02:28):
Oh yeah, My people love a good parade.

Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
They love it.

Speaker 3 (01:02:33):
You know, they get out, they get to walk, and.

Speaker 2 (01:02:38):
They get to make their voice heard, hold a sign,
they get the hold of it's a custom sign too,
and then they start at.

Speaker 3 (01:02:51):
Well, depending on the rally, I suppose, I mean, I
guess if it's a Trump rally, that you start at cracker.

Speaker 2 (01:02:55):
Barrel and then you go from there.

Speaker 3 (01:02:57):
But if it's if it's a leftist rally, you started
some uh maybe a Dell Taco they really very healthy place,
or a donut shop or a they got mental saying
asylum and go from there.

Speaker 2 (01:03:19):
It's had to take off from there. It's a pretty
rough stuff, man, I mean it's and you know they
did that, and I just the only question I have
for him is do you feel better afterwards? Do you
feel like there's no longer any king? Do you feel
like did you see.

Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
Did you see the ladies? This was in I think
it was the similar weekend and I don't know if
it had anything to do with the king kings, but
it was. I think it was in Austin. All the
people screaming at the at the river they were not
and they were all yelling at the water down there,

(01:04:00):
I hate you Donald Trump like and they were just
like letting it. They're doing all that and oh they
having a struggle station.

Speaker 2 (01:04:08):
I see I see one of those where the where
the women go into woods that they pay this other
woman to do this retreat where they go into woods
and slam sticks and release their whatever. This was a
visual that.

Speaker 3 (01:04:22):
This was a makeshift, free version of that. There was
anybody who wanted to scream at the water from a
bridge in Austin, And I don't know, I don't know
what organized. It doesn't make any sense because it's like
it's like a leftist idea. So I'm just saying the usual.

(01:04:49):
It doesn't make any sense. It doesn't do any good.
It's misdirected energy. You know, it's performative horseship. It's I'm
gonna go screw. I'm gonn scream at the water today.
Good dude, good fucking job. You've screamed at the water.
Do you feel better now? Do you want to take

(01:05:09):
a nap to you? Dope? Be to get out of here.
These people need to be punished for their stupidity album.
They need to be forced to listen to John's album but.

Speaker 2 (01:05:29):
Goddamn stupid for the next month now. At least we
haven't gotten as deep as they have overseas. I think
it was Italy if I'm correct. Uh, the women be
out there, they'll have their tops off and yelling, doing
the little marches and stuff.

Speaker 3 (01:05:46):
I'll take Italy not quite.

Speaker 2 (01:05:48):
Not quite. The ones that have the titties out. I've
seen it pop up multiple times. Them. Well, okay, I
I hate not without payment. Well they'll let them hang out,
but any payment. All that said, I'm gonna need some
payment that he's gonna be out all right, just not

(01:06:09):
showing these for reasons, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3 (01:06:12):
The good ones, you should keep the good pay wall.
The free leftist ones you get to see for free
in the mean streets of Portland. Free come to liberal titties.

Speaker 2 (01:06:29):
Come here on Tuesday to see get a pick of
these free liberal titties. And then hey, look here's what
I do know that they put Now they independent and
they said that's their pussy. They can do what they
want with it, and they'll just give it to you.
And they said, but you know, and that's it. I'm good.

Speaker 3 (01:06:54):
We're all stocked up here in the pussy department.

Speaker 2 (01:06:58):
Thank you. Okay, okay, you ain't low on, I'm not.

Speaker 3 (01:07:01):
No, we're good.

Speaker 2 (01:07:02):
You don't need.

Speaker 3 (01:07:05):
Portland.

Speaker 2 (01:07:09):
Come on, you get some action. That's where the real
actions that had out there in Portland. Oh man, it's
all good. I got married in Portland. Oh okay. There
were good.

Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
There we go.

Speaker 2 (01:07:22):
First, my first marriage, I got married in Portland, Oh man,
in Oregon. Can you can they still get like stone
right out there in the street. I know that they
let it go and then they were like, man, we
gotta cut this back because mofucker's a damn just laid
out here now. So I don't know if they cut
that all or not. I know they talked about shutting
that down because it got out of hand, which I

(01:07:44):
knew was going to. I'm like, it's gonna get out
of hand. I mean, I.

Speaker 3 (01:07:51):
I'll let you shoot Heroin, but they won't let you
pump your own gas. Yeah, you can't pump like some
dude at the gas stations humping for it. It's retarded.

Speaker 2 (01:08:01):
Look, I believe in freedom. I also believe in having
a society set up with some restrictions. So niggas just
don't do wild ship all the time, because man, if
you lead people to their own devices, they be out
there just just fucking shit up for everybody else. I
was like socialist something like that.

Speaker 4 (01:08:23):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:08:25):
Here's what I do know. Was like yeah, when was like, yeah,
we're just gonna We're gonna let him get fucked up
in the street. I'm just like, doll, that's not gonna end. Well, okay,
it's gonna be bad for you if you just let
everybody out there just be all tore up, laid out
in the street. This this ain't gonna be great. And

(01:08:46):
then finally are like, damn, but that didn't work the
way we thought it was gonna work. I'm like, well, no, ship, man,
I mean this, this was easy to spot. But for
some reason, you know, we the logistic thing like it's
it's too of force, you know. So I mean, it's
all good. It's all good. What they say you live
and you learn, and then what they say, there's too

(01:09:08):
many people doing that, too much living and learning. Man, listen,
use some logic and learning.

Speaker 3 (01:09:18):
She learned by now, yeah, a lot of people that
aren't learning too.

Speaker 2 (01:09:26):
They ain't learning.

Speaker 3 (01:09:27):
They're living and they ain't learning, Jack Ship, I encountered
them out in a while from time to time.

Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
Ain't that about that? Hey? Well, look just saying Maxwell.
She just she made a claim right here recently mm hmm,
or let me see right here. Oh this is in
uh the memoirs, but from uh Gumphrey. But she claimed
that that she sucked off George claiming so she gave

(01:09:57):
him a little filatate back in the day, and uh.

Speaker 3 (01:10:02):
Oh yeah I.

Speaker 4 (01:10:02):
Knew that, didn't he Obama by some little Vietnamese girl?

Speaker 2 (01:10:09):
Is that right that I heard that?

Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
I knew Glane Maxwell Blue, George Clooney, Yeah, I knew that.

Speaker 2 (01:10:19):
Okay, Okay, that was that was some.

Speaker 3 (01:10:22):
Some It's fantastic. It's fantastic. Uh news really.

Speaker 2 (01:10:32):
Gm TMC type stuff. I'm just like white, Okay, You're
don't put that out there for the masses. I'm just
trying to figure out.

Speaker 3 (01:10:44):
Why she's still alive, like because she's working with the thing.

Speaker 2 (01:10:51):
I means as has got to be a reason. I'm like, man,
she there's no reason.

Speaker 3 (01:10:58):
Dead man switch. I've got to think that. Like you
don't sit around in the you know, in a ten
hour flight with Jeffrey Epstein one hundred times and not
figure out, like what's the escape route if everything goes

(01:11:21):
to ship?

Speaker 2 (01:11:22):
What do we do? Right? Right?

Speaker 3 (01:11:24):
I mean, this is this is who gets given up,
This is who doesn't get given up. This is where
some money stashed. These are passports, these are this you know.
I mean it didn't wind up going that way, but
like I don't think these guys Maxwell coming from her
family with her dad was a triple agent and Epstein

(01:11:46):
his ties to Israeli intelligence, American intelligence. I mean, come on,
like they had to have some sort of like they
had to have, you know, operation back up.

Speaker 2 (01:12:06):
Obviously, obviously she's got something of value left.

Speaker 3 (01:12:14):
Oh yeah, yeah, that.

Speaker 2 (01:12:17):
They don't have access to. That nobody has access to except.

Speaker 3 (01:12:20):
For her, And I would imagine it stays that way
as long as she stays alive. Right, that's how you stay.
So you if you're gonna work with the Feds in
a in a in a way like that, you don't
work with them like I submit to you and work
with you. Right, you would go into it saying like

(01:12:46):
I have this information about your boss and it's you know,
and it stays a secret as long as I stay alive.
If anything happens to me, it comes out. Then your
boss goes to prison, and you go to prison, and
your life is and I'm dead, but your life is
a catastrophe. So and all these other people are affected.

(01:13:07):
So and you make that known. And that's like the
only way like I've I've sort of like been on
this lately because a lot of the Epstein survivors have
been coming out in the last year or so.

Speaker 2 (01:13:19):
It's like.

Speaker 3 (01:13:22):
It's like there's three ways. There's three ways to approach it.

Speaker 2 (01:13:25):
You either.

Speaker 3 (01:13:28):
Never say anything and take that all that information whatever
you know to the grave you or you come out
and say, here's every single thing. I remember. You do
a tell all interview, multipart whatever. You put it all
out and you just go it's out and then you
just walk away. But if you do that half measure

(01:13:48):
where you say, I have information that might lead to
the arrest of Hillary Clinton, that's when you get killed.
So if you've really got the goods, you either put
it all out or you shut the fuck up. But
if you tease it like you've got it but you're
just holding onto it, someone will come get you. That's like,

(01:14:09):
won't it will That's like the way it goes. So
it's like and and and you know what, man, Like
it's cool if the calculation is I never say anything
about it. Like if you if you wind up with
information that would get you killed if you if you
can't went public with it, you know, and you go,

(01:14:29):
I could never tell anybody this, Like I think some
of these people that are in interesting positions wind up
with information that is like literally too dangerous to know,
Like you know, like, what what's really going on with

(01:14:50):
the Clintons. H that's really a dangerous position to be.
It's like, all of a sudden, you have this information
and then in having that information, you default have a
target on your head.

Speaker 2 (01:15:05):
Yeah, what you know, Just think if you walked in
the wrong room at the wrong time. You used to
be sitting there and all of a sudden, like I
didn't see You're like, what the hell am I in here?
How did I get here? You're like damn it. It

(01:15:26):
was like, well, this is information and when people usually
get they don't make it back from That's what this
information is.

Speaker 3 (01:15:33):
Yeah. So yeah, the the U the UFO story I
tell by the guy I met like thirty years ago,
who had you when? Who's at Area fifty one? And
he's like punchline to his story was like that was
the point where I thought they might not let me
walk out of there alive after he saw some crazy

(01:15:56):
ass techogy there. So you know, sometimes the information like
probably shouldn't know that.

Speaker 2 (01:16:05):
Yeah, I had I end up here, That's that's the
question you ask you. So, uh, but the last thing.
It looks like some people in New York's PanicIn because
it looks like a mom. Donnie is starting to extend
his lead for quote. So we've got some people who

(01:16:26):
are shifting their bridges right now.

Speaker 3 (01:16:29):
This is great, man, this is fantastic, fantastic. Actually, here's why.
I mean. I don't live in New York, so it
doesn't impact me. But people are going to get a
chance to watch a real life socialist experiment with a
first rate class one a American city. You're gonna get

(01:16:55):
to watch and and then this will finally well for
the next fifty years put hopefully put to rest the
idea of socialism. After they watch what this guy does
to New York City. He is going to turn it
into a shithole, not that it isn't already in some places.

Speaker 2 (01:17:17):
I was there.

Speaker 3 (01:17:18):
I watched a guy shooting Heroin. Watched him look, we
locked eyeballs on each other. I have a camera. I
had a camera that was filming say it's fucking sad man,
it's not good, and he's gonna make it infinitely worse
for everybody. And then people are gonna go, We're just
gonna point right to New York and go see that's

(01:17:40):
what socialism gets. You get your shithole city. And it
doesn't have to be that way. But they're gonna if that,
If that's what they want, your wish is my command,
let him have it, go for it. Watch, let's watch,
get you popcorn. It's gonna be it's gonna be rough.

(01:18:02):
And then and the poor people that are hostages, they're
like the sane, rational people who are like, we don't
want this insanity. You know, I feel bad for them,
I feel real bad for them, but like they're outnumbered. Man,
the lunatics are running the asylum.

Speaker 2 (01:18:19):
And this is.

Speaker 3 (01:18:24):
New York has done this before, by the way, this
is like not brand new, Like New York goes through
massive cycles, like decade long cycles where it's like a
shitty place to live in the seventies, where it's like
super sketchy, and then corporate interests get involved, the Times
Square turns into Disney and then you know, I mean,
and now you just feel like it's on like another

(01:18:44):
downswing and it's like almost engineered to have that happen.

Speaker 2 (01:18:49):
So yeah, stuff like you want to bring a socialist Their.

Speaker 3 (01:18:55):
Ideas are so fucking stupid. It's mind numbing. I can't wait.

Speaker 4 (01:19:05):
Camps, and I.

Speaker 2 (01:19:10):
Think and I think they tried to slip Quomo in there,
hoping that some nostalgia would UH would win the people.

Speaker 4 (01:19:17):
A broken candidate, what a terrible candidate like I shouldn't
run for dog catcher.

Speaker 3 (01:19:23):
No kidding, I mean, but again, what an indictment on
New York City politics that the best you can do
to run against the insane socialist is is a Cuomo
who was busted for sexual assaulting somebody. I think, and

(01:19:45):
is uh single handedly responsible for murdering old people in
nursing homes during COVID. That's the best you can do,
then you deserve a socialist lunatic if you If that
is that, that's the thing. I look at that, and
they go, there's no possible way this could be the
optimal lineup here. This can't be plan A, can it?

Speaker 2 (01:20:08):
Like or in my.

Speaker 3 (01:20:12):
Five dimensional chessing in it the wrong way and saying no, no, no, Actually,
this is the controlled demolition of New York City, and
they've got the perfect guy for the job, socialist who's
going to destroy it economly and scare everybody out of
there over to Florida and move all of Wall Street South.
Maybe that's the plan.

Speaker 2 (01:20:34):
Well, here's what we do know. We we know from
over the past year plus that they didn't want Eric Adams,
like we knew that they want them now because of
some because some of the ship he was saying. They
were like, we need to get him out of there.
But then Mom Donnie kind of popped up out of
nowhere and they were like, oh this is who else

(01:21:00):
is a ram Let me get Quomo. It's like, okay,
we'll get Quomo.

Speaker 4 (01:21:03):
It's like the why aren't we deporting these Muslims yet?

Speaker 3 (01:21:11):
I think they are. I think, you know, what I
would be interested to know is the self deportation And
I think that that's a number that's probably right for
being manipulated massively by the Trump administration. But but I
wonder what the real number is. Not that I expect
to find out, of course, but I would be curious

(01:21:33):
to know how many people just went, you know what,
this is too much? He I'm not looking for this.
I'm leaving before you know it gets to I don't
know whatever. How many people do you think left?

Speaker 2 (01:21:48):
Do we know?

Speaker 3 (01:21:49):
Do we have numbers on how many people?

Speaker 2 (01:21:50):
They say, saying yeah, I think I was saying to
home Plug just said I'm getting the fuck out. Then
how many gets real?

Speaker 4 (01:21:59):
And that's why they're do these tactics. Yeah, that's why
they're doing these tactics, Like, that's why they're going into
churches and schools and wherever they fucking rip you out
of the goddamn bathroom or wherever the fuck you at
because it sends a message to everyone else that we're
not fucking around.

Speaker 3 (01:22:19):
So no, I understand the reasoning for it. And and
I actually if you're if you're trying to uh deport
large numbers of people, the best way to do it
is for them to self deport, And the best way
to do that is to scare the ship out of them.
I'm not advocating for it, but I of course understand
the logic behind it.

Speaker 4 (01:22:39):
So all these people who are employing these illegal aliens
should be fucking deported with them.

Speaker 2 (01:22:46):
Yeah, because there's a reason that they're employing them. They're
they're they're employing them because they get maximum profit from
damn undercutting them as far as payment. Let's see it
like that's it ain't because they care about them as
a person. It's as they can pay him fucking dollshit.
I mean, let's just see it, man, I mean, let'sten.
You got to be serious, all of them.

Speaker 3 (01:23:08):
But the government should pull any subsidies that they're getting
if they're found to be hiring illegals. Right, they should.

Speaker 2 (01:23:18):
They shouldn't be.

Speaker 3 (01:23:19):
There shouldn't be government subsidies to begin with. But if
you if you're getting government subsidies and you're hiring illegals,
you need to lose both, right, sound reasonable?

Speaker 4 (01:23:33):
Right, Well, here's one thing, so I kind of have.

Speaker 2 (01:23:37):
Here's the thing.

Speaker 4 (01:23:38):
If you're naturalized, you can lose your citizenship. I kind
of like I kind of a hypocrite a little bit
when it comes to stripping American citizens of this of
their citizenship because where else you gotta fin and go.

Speaker 2 (01:23:53):
What can you do?

Speaker 4 (01:23:53):
That's a that's a rough one, were and like it's
it's a hard one. But like if it's argument something,
I I just these people should be charged to the
hilt with crimes. If not, they can't be stripped of
the citizenship. So charge them to the fucking hilt and
put them in jail for twenty fucking years. You know

(01:24:14):
that'll send a message.

Speaker 2 (01:24:17):
You get it? Yeah, The punishment has to be severe
enough where other people be like hm, hm, Okay, if
I get busted, I don't want what happened to him
happened to me. So And I think that's that's where
we suck up a lot of art work. I don't know.
We became extremely soft on crime, like damn squishy, like it's.

Speaker 3 (01:24:43):
Like yeah, intentionally, yeah, at the district attorney level, from
a from a prosecutorial level, we were soft on I
mean and chess a Bowden coming in and as the
district attorney in San Francisco and reimagining stealing and anything

(01:25:03):
under nine hundred and fifty one dollars didn't count as
actual theft, and some people were just loading up with
stuff and walking out. Nobody could do anything. Cops couldn't come,
cops couldn't arrest them, you know, and so like they're like, oh,
we're just gonna We're just gonna reimagine the way people
do things. It's like, dude, what do you do?

Speaker 2 (01:25:21):
Like it?

Speaker 3 (01:25:22):
And then you find out he's financed by Soros and
you're like, oh, he's sent to destroy society and he's
that's how you do it by doing dumb shit like
that putting in new laws like that. So like this
stuff is, it's intentional, and it's it's plotted out years

(01:25:43):
in advance and financed into existence into a candidate that
is viable. Jessic Bowden as a prime example, like his
parents are literal terrorists, and Soros administration financed his right
and put him in a position to destroy San Francisco.

(01:26:05):
And it has never recovered, and it'll it'll it'll be
a shithole city for a long time until they can
buy up everything on the cheap and then change the
laws back and exactly, you know, inject some sanity into
it and then values that go through the roof again.

Speaker 4 (01:26:21):
But I went in twenty sixteen and it was really nice.
It was I I didn't go. I didn't see a lot,
but like we went downtown, we didn't see whole bunch
of homeless people and stuff. I mean, it seemed like
it it seems.

Speaker 3 (01:26:32):
Like, oh, we drove around, we saw some where where
I was I was there in twenty seventeen where I
was was fine, but where we drove through was super
sketchy ville. But it was like million you know condos

(01:26:55):
million plus, but like out in front of the front
of the building. It's just never ending sea of people
sleeping and sleeping.

Speaker 2 (01:27:06):
It's crazy San Francisco crazy.

Speaker 3 (01:27:09):
For those who don't know, it's not like sunny, warm California.
San Francisco is so cold all year around. It's just wet, cold, windy,
windy cold. And those people just said, I don't know.
I don't know anything about heroin, man, but I would

(01:27:29):
want to be in Santa Monica doing it on the beach,
not San Francisco.

Speaker 2 (01:27:37):
My head to Cheese.

Speaker 3 (01:27:38):
Fisherman's Wharf in thirty degree temperature with forty mile an
hour winds. Oh, thank you.

Speaker 1 (01:27:48):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:27:48):
It sounds really comfortable. This sounds really I don't want that,
all right, So it'll be interesting to see where we're
at come next week on this government ship. If we
have the doomsday that is November first, we'll be bringing
that to y'all next week. We're gonna go ahead and
wrap up this week a day zero. We're gonna go

(01:28:09):
ahead and shout out Lindsey Rogue Ways Row Soul Finder
on all your social media YouTube channel, all that good
jazz rumble as well. Charlie, go ahead and fire off
what you got. Oh.

Speaker 3 (01:28:26):
Also, Lindsey's significant other. Johnny has a new book coming out,
and you need to get on the pre order. If
you're real nice, doesn't you know? Just you can find
out more about that over at Lindsay's place. Go help
Johnny outco get on the pre order, and then that

(01:28:48):
kicks it up in the rankings. We gotta play these
games because we know how they how to win. So
monkey with the algorithm macroaggressions dot io. Eric Hohlerbach is on.
Comedian Eric Khlerbach is on. This week we talk about
his new book. It's like the rantings of a crazy person.

(01:29:11):
I haven't it's wild man. Uh so check out the episode.
It's funny. At the end, Derek goes like, hell, when
did you know I was insane? I was like, oh
right away. So, uh if you're looking for if you're
looking for a funny book.

Speaker 2 (01:29:28):
This is it. So check it out. All right?

Speaker 3 (01:29:31):
Cool?

Speaker 2 (01:29:31):
I got Corey because he's bad at this. Corey dot org,
butdyhistory dot substate dot com, A Wonderful History JFK Book,
Lee Harvey Oswald and Black and White Art two Early
twenty twenty six. If that's still the case, we're still
feeling that Corey that's a yes for the people on

(01:29:55):
the podcast. Fins me everybody, you're being here with us
and we will catch y'all on next week's Daisy Row
peace Out
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The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, And Charlamagne Tha God!

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