Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Independent thoughts, independent light. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
It has been a year. One year since everything changed
in the Middle East. One year since a time of
somewhat peace comparatively to what we've had in the past,
changed immediately. It has been one year since the start
of a now operation to destroy the terror that rules
(00:40):
much of these countries throughout the Middle East. It has
been one year since.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
This we are announcing an operation called Alaxa Floods.
Speaker 4 (00:56):
Asraeli official say there are multiple injuries, some of them serious,
and at least one fatality.
Speaker 5 (01:09):
Palestinian militants crossed the border on motorcycles and in pickup trucks.
They went straight to small border communities where they reportedly
committed massacre.
Speaker 6 (01:18):
HAMASA spokesperson calling this latest coordinated attack operation ax Storm,
calling on all Palestinians to take up arms and join
the fight, saying they're carrying this out in revenge and
in retaliation for the way Palaestinians have been treated.
Speaker 2 (01:35):
It's been one year, and boy what a year it
has been. Let's first and foremost talk about the fact
that now instead of just fighting Hamas, they are taking
on the Houties, HESBLA and their real target is Arod.
I don't care what anybody says. That's where they're headed.
That's what bib net Yahoo wants tonight sixty minutes Kamala Harris.
(01:59):
Some of the excerpts have been released. One of them
is about Bibi Netnao.
Speaker 7 (02:03):
Do we have a real close ally in prime Minister
oft In Yahoo?
Speaker 8 (02:09):
I think, with all due respect, the better question is
do we have an important alliance between the American people
and the Israeli people? And the answer to that question
is yes.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
By the way, She's right, and it's the most important
alliance that we have in that region, simply because they're
the only democracy there. Secondly, Bibi Netanyah, who is running
the country, he wants Iran God, there is no doubt
in my mind his number one goal is the destruction
of Ayatola Romani and hopefully a regime change that we'll
(02:44):
see more peace throughout the Middle East. That being said,
over twelve hundred people were killed a year ago today.
I remember when the attacks first happened. I told my
wife it was later in the evening, we're getting ready
to go to bed. I said, oh, this is ugly,
but you know, I mean, how many times have we
heard attacks, sirens, those kind of things. By the time
I woke up at like two or three in the
(03:06):
morning out of the bathroom, and I was kind of
awake because I do that even you know, on the weekends.
It's tough for me to sleep because I get up
at two in the morning all the time. So at
three point thirty I look on my phone. I said,
oh my god, this is not just a random attack.
Here we are a year later, some hostages still missing. Now,
(03:26):
other nations being brought into this Yemen. They're always kind
of in it because their goal simply is to do
whatever their master, Iran wants them to do. The hooties Hesblah,
which by the way, is not Lebanon. I want to
tell people this because this weekend I got into I
don't want to say, a debate with somebody, but somebody
(03:47):
was like, well, it's about let it's not Hesblah is
partners with Iran, not Lebanon. They've almost divided the country
in two. And what would be the the the a
certain region to Israel is kind of the land that
Hesbelah occupies. And they would like Hesbelah gone as much
as anybody else, but Alas. When you have the kind
(04:09):
of money that they get thrown, this is what you get.
But here we are, one year later, according to the
Palestinian Authority and their Health Minister, forty two thousand dead.
Is it worth it? No, it's not. This is what
happens when you throw in with bad. This is what
happens when you allow bad to rule the day. This
(04:31):
is what happens when you allow that to take place.
This is what happens. And I don't think it's going
to change anytime soon until there is a actual change.
Not with Hamas because six and one a half does
in the other right, it's next guy up. Not with
(04:53):
the Houties, because again I couldn't even tell you anybody
with the Houtis at this moment in time, because they're
a non factor in reality and we're handling a vast
majority of that. Not with Hezbollah because again, next man up. No,
it has to start with the monster that is Iran
in their mind. And I have zero problem with that.
(05:14):
I think most of us look at this situation and say,
if we're honest with ourselves, it isn't going to change
until there is a change there. It isn't going to
change until they pay the ultimate price and have somebody
else who steps up and runs that country in a
way where it's not about destroying the Jews. And the
(05:36):
big question Trump talked about it this weekend is is
the next move for Israel to go after their nuclear facilities?
Biden yesterday, you know, they asked.
Speaker 9 (05:45):
Him, what do you think about what do you think
about Iran?
Speaker 2 (05:49):
Would you hit around?
Speaker 9 (05:50):
And he goes, as long as they don't hit the
nuclear stuff, that's the thing you want to hit, right,
I said, I think he's got that one wrong.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
Is that the what you're supposed to hit? I mean, yeah,
on Friday, several of you trying to think, you know,
Trump tore up that nuclear agreement that wasn't worth anything.
If you think that they were going to continue to
follow the rules on that and just do nuclear cultivation
(06:22):
if you will for peace, you are fooling yourselves. You
were absolutely fooling yourselves. That was never going to happen,
much like with North Korea, their goal ultimately is to
get a nuclear weapon. And as I explained to somebody,
even look at Chuck Schumer, who wanted no part of
(06:44):
that nuclear agreement because he understood that they were never
going to follow the rules, and what were the rules? Hey,
you got a month heads up for us to come in.
Oh wow, that seems good. I mean, come on, And
even at that point in time, they would denys over
and over again of getting in there and seeing anything.
So let's pretend for a second that we live in
(07:05):
a world where it's not about Trump, but it's about reality.
That agreement was useless, was never going to stop them.
And several of you said, well, why shouldn't they have
a nuclear weapon? Because if they get a nuclear weapon,
that means we got to give nuclear weapons to all
the countries that aren't as insane as a Yemen, Right,
but not just say, you know, Saudi Arabia is going
(07:26):
to want a nuclear weapon at that point in time
because you can't have Iran, one of their sworn enemies,
having a nuclear weapon. We already know Israel has nuclear weapons,
but who else gets one? Because we got to have
some sort of deterrence in that region? Oh yeah, three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is your
Twitter tweet at as text the program? And let's not
(07:48):
forget a year into this, we have seen hundreds of
thousands of Palestinian pro Palestinian pro Homas protesters. Here in
the United States, we have seen is real damned by
a vast majority of countries because apartheid and the screaming
and yelling that they push out there. We've seen a
lot of things that I'd never thought we'd see in
(08:09):
this country, but we're seeing it. So when they ask her,
the Vice President, about the relationship with Bebee, I think
it's important and we need to have a strong relationship.
And you may not be a fan of his, and
that's understandable. Not a lot of people are. But sometimes
the horrible decision that you have to make is the
(08:31):
right decision, and I think the right decision at this
point in time is they've got to look at Iran
because otherwise they're going to be back at this again.
Year after year, three, two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four,
twenty three at Chad Benson Show with your Twitter tweet
at his text to program. A lot of stuff to
get to today. Yes, kids, it's a big week for
the Vice President. She's going to do a ton of
(08:52):
interviews on some very hard hitting interviews and some very
hard hitting places. Said nobody ever talk a bit about that.
Another storm, this time cald Milton heading towards Tampa. We'll
talk about that as well. So much stuff to get to.
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It is the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 10 (10:24):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 11 (10:26):
Or back in worry you know now that.
Speaker 12 (10:28):
This news storm is common. It's like, well, we're just
back in preparation mode and we're just trying to put,
you know, one foot in front of the other and
just keep moving forward. You know, definitely exhausted from this
past week.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
Another storm Milton, this time rolling in and going to
hit Florida and starting to pick up some steam.
Speaker 13 (10:46):
Milton has the potential to bring you significant impacts to
places that were directly affected by Helene. Just you know,
a couple of weeks ago. You know, the Tampa Bay
area saw significant storm surge. Other portions of the west
coast of Florida. So you're dealing with the areas that
are already vulnerable. Milton is strengthening rapidly today and it's
going to bring multiple life threatening hazards to the state
of Florida by the middle of the week. Life threatening
storm surge in dation threat for that along much of
(11:08):
the West Coast, damaging hurricane force winds, not just at
the west coast, but potentially across the Peninsula and over
to the East Coast. From a preparedness standpoint, you really
want to focus on, you know, making sure you have
your disaster kit ready, several days worth of non perishable food, water, medicine, batteries,
anything you're going to need to sustain yourself for several
days after the event. You don't have to drive hundreds
(11:28):
of miles to get to a safe place, often just
tens of miles to get inland out of that evacuation zone,
to a shelter, a friend or loved one's home, or
a hotel or somewhere safe you can ride the storm out.
Speaker 2 (11:38):
It is ugly again, and they're still digging themselves out
in certain parts. So we talked about North Carolina over
the last week. Obviously, Tennessee, Georgia all have felt the
brunt of this nightmare. People are still pissed because they
feel absolutely freaking abandoned by the federal government.
Speaker 14 (12:01):
There's nothing here for.
Speaker 15 (12:02):
Eight days, nine days post hurricane, and that was the
first FEMA drop I've seen here in the swan I
Noah area.
Speaker 16 (12:08):
I haven't seen a FEMA agent yet. This is all
local volunteers. Volunteers from abroad as far as Washington State
are coming out here to hell and pick up the
slack that's been left behind, the part up.
Speaker 17 (12:21):
You know, in President Trump, he's not even in office,
but yet he's still getting a starlink.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
He's doing his best. He's shaking all the trees.
Speaker 17 (12:27):
And if we're talking about federal assistance, I didn't see
my first FEMA truck until what is today Saturday. I
didn't seen my first FEMA truck until Thursday afternoon Thursday.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
Keep thinking, that's just a few of people who really residents,
people who are trying to help, who are pissed at
the way that this thing has gone down, because it
has gone down poorly. And I expect people to be
angry and pissed because the reality is you're going through
the worst time of your life. You've lost everything, maybe
even lost loved ones, and all of a sudden you're
in a position where you've got nothing but the close
(13:00):
on your back, and government is nowhere to be found.
And I said this earlier today. I was talking to
somebody early this morning because I get up a you know,
freaking butt crack at dawn, and I was joking. I said,
you know what's funny is they are slow cumbersome. I said,
(13:20):
I can guarantee you if a UFO landed in three places.
They landed in Florida, they landed in North Carolina, Georgia,
or Tennessee, that the government federally would be buttoned up.
But they have failed here in a major way in
how they handled this. And because it is an election time,
(13:42):
because it's election season, because there is this real battle
going on with the way the Feds handled thing comparatively,
because to the average person who's on the ground, who
is because so much of what you're seeing, help wise
is coming from the locals, which I've always said, your
local govern your local townsfolk, whatever it is, they're going
(14:03):
to be more in your life as a helper and
a hindrance than the federal government. There is no doubt
in my mind about that. But this has not gone well.
And of course you've got the voting aspect, which a
lot of people are pushing out there because the conspiracy
theories are flying. And by the way, the conspiracy theories
don't help. I know, Marjorie Tayler Green something about the weather,
(14:24):
and some people were mad at me last week because
I pointed out, we can't control hurricanes. So if the
thought is that they did this on purpose to destroy people,
you're insane. And by the way, if there is a
group that can control hurricanes that are that powerful, then
we're all screwed. I just want to point that out
to you.
Speaker 18 (14:40):
The focus, of course, is on the recovery efforts, but
election officials in those states that have been impacted by
that storm are also working to make sure that residents
in those areas will be able to vote. In North Carolina,
for instance, early voting starts October seventeenth, and we are
now just thirty days out from the November election.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
And that's what a lot of people, Oh, they did
this on purpose. They did this on purpose so they
don't have to get these people's votes because these people
are in the rural area, and the rural area is
probably going to vote for the likes of Trump. So
it's enough with that, and there's enough insanity, by the way,
when it comes to what is happening with the failure
of FEMA, and let's not forget you can go back
(15:19):
Katrina and several other big storms that have rolled through
and see how inadequate, how poorly run, poorly organized, cumbersome,
and really a waste of money in space that the
federal government has been when it comes to several of
these massive storms. So this shouldn't be a surprise.
Speaker 19 (15:40):
My broader question to you, I think, is about this misinformation.
Do you think this is a time to put falsehoods aside,
like the idea that FEMA funds are being redirected to migrants,
which is just not true.
Speaker 20 (15:51):
It is true that FEMA and the Department of Homeland
Security have been spending billions of dollars on migrants. I
understand some people say they're separate finds, but we just
passed a short term spending bill. It's very common for
the administration to come and ask for permission to move
money between fines, especially to prepare for emergencies. And second,
I would note that this administration seems to have no
(16:11):
problem finding money when they want to spend it on
their priorities. When they need hundreds of billions of dollars
to pay off student loans for graduate students and gender
studies programs, they somehow find it. When it's trying to
get helicopters to deliver food and water and cellular service
and life saving medicine into these mountain valleys, they somehow
can't seem to find the money boom.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
And we talked about it on Friday. I walked you
through FEMA's way that they handle money, how money is allocated,
and how FEMA and the government in some cases you
may need Congress, but it's easy for Congress to come
together and quickly give them an emergency declaration for them
to take money from other places, and that they in
(16:54):
many cases don't even need that. And we touched it
on Friday, So it's not like it's funny. Depending on
how you want to look at it. Right, the left
is going to go see you have to have Congress's approval.
Actually you don't. Well, they didn't really spend money on migrants.
They actually did. Did they plan for this massive disaster? No,
(17:15):
but you should have planned ahead. And the fact that
you had to spend this much money and that there
was no more money available. That is also a hot mess.
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show is your Twitter. If you're
missing the show, grab the podcast. It is the Chad
Benson Show, Son.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
This is Chad Benson changing minds. Man, It's a tough
thing to do. We've talked about this on the show
that when presented with the truth, many people will not
believe it, and I don't know why that is. And
let's be real. In a lot of stuff, there's a
lot more gray area than black and white. So it's
(18:21):
not just as easy as oh, I didn't know that.
But for so many people changing something that they believe
when presented with facts, it is a situation where in
many cases they'll never believe it. So why people battle
on the internet all day? How I change people's mind
because they've built up something and their identity being one
(18:43):
of them. This is a neuro scientist talking about why
changing minds is so tough.
Speaker 21 (18:49):
Why is it so hard to change someone's mind? Let's
talk about it. The brain really doesn't like changing its mind,
and that gives rise to things like the confirmation bias
anchoring bias. Yes, confirmation bias means that we'll actually selectively
filter out information that is incongruent with our existing beliefs.
Even if we do process that information, we'll give it
(19:11):
a lot less weight than we would with something that
actually aligns with our existing ideas. Anchoring bias is where
we hold on to the very first thing that we
learn about something, and it's hard for us to let
go of that, even when we're presented with evidence that
suggests that it's not accurate. What a terrible design? Why
are we like this? Well, neuroscientifically speaking, once you learn something,
(19:32):
your brain has to restructure and rewire itself. We also
instinctively perceive change, uncertainty, unpredictability as inherently dangerous. Sticking to
what's familiar can obviously serve as an evolutionary advantage.
Speaker 2 (19:47):
Very interesting. So your brain has to rewire something, that's why.
When how many times, and let's just take politics out
of this, how many times have you had a person,
you know, a thread go out and talk about somebody
they're going to meet and put something in your mind
about that person, and you meet that person and you're like,
(20:10):
that's not really what but it kind of sticks. That
happens way too much. It does, and that goes for
not just people, but the politics of the world. When
presented with facts and figures, when presented with real data,
people don't want to change their mind. Okay, some of
it's evolutionary. Our brain is wired in a certain way.
(20:33):
We come up with our confirmation bias. That's why I
wad say in today's world, we're looking for affirmation. We're
not looking for information. We want affirmation. Somebody affirmed me,
somebody affirm my belief. But there is another thing, and
this one I think to be the most powerful at
this moment in time.
Speaker 21 (20:47):
The last and perhaps more psychological component of that is
that our ideas tend to be tethered to our identity,
and the brain really doesn't like threats to identity. Your
sense of self involves so many different structures, memories, processes
in the brain. To rewrite that would be very complicated,
and in the daily struggle for survival, potentially fatal.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
So going back in the olden days, your identity is
this whatever it is, right, You're this tribe going against
said tribe may be fatal, so you're never going to
do it. You've identified in a certain way, so you
will stick to that identification. And unfortunately we've gotten to
that point now where it no longer matters what the
(21:33):
facts and data are. We have dug ourselves in into
a world where confirmation, bias, affirmation, not information and identity
are the things that will drive this. And yes there's
some evolutionary parts of it, as you can tell, as
that neuroscientist from Scotland said, And if you can trust
(21:54):
a scott you know what I mean. And some people
will change their believe things. Some people are willing to
do that, some aren't. It's just the whole thing to
me is fascinating because we live at a time where
we have all the data we need. Unfortunately, we also
live at a time where data is presented in such
ways if you look hard enough to affirm your position
(22:18):
so you can stay within your tribe. My tribe is
happy because I am happy. I don't want to upset
my tribe because my tribe will be mad at me
and then maybe I'm kicked out of the tribe. Even
if the data in front of me says something completely different.
This goes to both the right and the left. This
lady took to ig that's the egg for an interview.
Some dude's walking around who you can vote for? Who
(22:39):
you going to vote for? And when you listen to her,
you're like, oh, this is interesting. And where she goes
with it is also very fascinating. I am actually not
a trunk fan.
Speaker 22 (22:46):
He is a narcissistic because egotistic call he's cruel. I
don't like the way that he treats people. However, when
I heard that Biden was no longer going to run,
I was so hopeful that we would have some a
stand up person to represent our country. And it's on Kamala.
Speaker 2 (23:03):
One of our family members was talking.
Speaker 22 (23:04):
To us about how he chose his surgeon, and he
chose a very narcissistic surgeon who is very good at
what he does. He said that he ended up making
this choice not because he was kind, but because he
was too egotistical to let himself fail on a life
threatening surgery.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
That right there is spot on in a lot of
different ways, because it's like the DEI think we've talked
about this, who do you want as your pilot on
an airplane. Do you want the diversity crew or do
you want the person that maybe the biggest a hole
in the world. But if the wings fall off, he's
going to land the plane successfully and then go thank
you for flying with us. I'm the best. I'll take
(23:46):
number two. And that's the way she approached this when
she heard her uncle talk about the fact that, hey, look,
I'm not marrying this guy. I am this surgeon that's
going to take care of me. I am not coming
at this in any other way that I want to
survive the surgery. So who's the best person out there?
Speaker 23 (24:00):
Guy?
Speaker 2 (24:00):
He's horrible? Okay, Why why is he the best? Well, bit,
he's horrible. I don't care about that. Why is he
the best? Because he refuses to fail? Can I feel
that way about Trump? I feel like even co unfortunately,
even though he.
Speaker 22 (24:12):
Is narcissistic, I feel like he is too egotistical not
to protect our country. My protection is what we need
right now in the world that we're living in, and
I feel like Trump is the right person.
Speaker 2 (24:25):
Very interesting, she could change her mind. Can most of
us know? Most of us can't, And partly because we
see ourselves strictly as team, a team b right, Red team, Blue, team, tribe.
We're all together. Even when presented with things that is
data that goes against the actual real thing that's happening
(24:48):
out there, people don't want to believe it, and they
refuse to they don't even want to hear it, and
that is frustrating as hell. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show is your
Twitter tweet at as text to per love hearing from
all of you. I do, And I know people say, Chad,
do you change your mind if I see data presented
to me? And like I said earlier, and you guys,
(25:09):
you know some people say, oh, it's not all black
and white. There is gray, and sometimes dad is not
complete and sometimes it is. And no matter what you
present somebody with, they will not change their mind. Speaking
of changing their mind, the Vice President has changed her
mind decided to do some big interviews sixty minutes tonight.
(25:30):
Also call her Daddy. A podcast that's massive. It's got
relationship stuff, it's got sex stuff. It's a massive podcast.
If you want to reach a large audience, this is
one of the ones you go on to. I guess
if you're I like to see Trump on there, but
I don't know if she's going to invite Trump, but
I would like to think that they were going to
invite Trump on this some of the hard hitting questions.
Speaker 24 (25:50):
I'm curious, like, you don't do too many long form interviews.
What made you want to.
Speaker 2 (25:56):
Do call her daddy today?
Speaker 8 (25:58):
Well, I think you and your listeners have really got
this thing right, which is one of the best ways
to communicate with people is to be real, you know,
and to talk about the things that people really care about.
What I love about what you do is that your
voice in your show is really about your listeners. And
(26:22):
I think, especially now, this is a moment in the
country and in life where people really want another scene
and heard and that they're part of a community, that
they're not out there alone. And so I'm really glad
to be with you.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
Oh my god, she's just awful at this, just absolutely
awful at this. I have no idea what that was,
not even the question why'd you come on here? Because
you got a massive reach people were trying to reach.
It's kind of the demographics out there and I've got
to go to where the people are and this age,
how hard is it? Apparently it's extremely hard. My god,
(26:58):
we're gonna have more from call her daddy, some of
the other things she's doing at sixty minutes. Obviously call
her daddy. She's going to be on the View, which
should be very hard hitting. She's going to be on
with Stephen Colbert, again very hard hitting, and then she
is going to do a town hall with Univision and
Howard Stern, which I'm sure will be another very hard
hitting interview. So not really hard hitting interviews. At least
(27:21):
I can give it up to Tim Walls. We'll talk
about him later. He went on Fox, so at least
I could give that to him. I don't know if
he did a great job, but at least he went
on three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at she had Benson Show's your Twitter tweet
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get a free risk review called eight six six seven
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Or go to Know Your Risk Radio dot com k
Now Your Risk Radio dot com. Investment Advisor, Reservice Officer,
the Trick Financial LC and sec Register Investment Advisor. The
opinions expressing this program are for general informational purpose online
and are not intended to provide specific advice or recommendations
for any individual or specific security. Any reference to performance
(28:46):
of security so thought to be materially accurate, and actual
performance may differ investments involve risk and are not guaranteed.
Past performance is not guarantee future results. Trick two four
three zero eight. It is the Chad Benson Show, serving
up talk radio medium, rare and dripping with irony.
Speaker 10 (29:10):
It's Chad Benson the box office.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
Taking a walk on the darker side.
Speaker 25 (29:13):
This weekend, Joker Folly Ad was the top movie, but
the film starring Wlaquem, Phoenix and Lady Gaga, only took
in forty million in its debut, far less than anticipated
and half of its predecessor Joker in twenty nineteen. The
second top grossing movie of the weekend the Wild Robot,
adding eighteen point seven million to its second weekend Beatlejuice, Beetlejuice,
(29:35):
Transformers Want and Speak No Evil, rounding out the top
five at the box office.
Speaker 2 (29:40):
Yeah, The Joker had several people that I know went
and saw it and said, awful. It's got a D
from audiences. It is not doing well. They said, it's
an art film more than it is whatever it was
supposed to be the first one. There is hardly any
remnants of what the the first one was. This is
(30:01):
definitely it feels like an art film that's not good man.
That's not good. It's now what you want. I mean,
this isn't one of those superhero movies. It cost three
hundred million dollars to make, but I think people expected
more out of that, and then you've got I mean,
I read an article this week and that said the
age of the flop is back. I don't know about that,
(30:22):
but I will tell you this just was not. This
missed the mark the trailers. I thought, I don't want
to see this. Nothing about this. I want to see.
Dolly Parton doing her bit for America.
Speaker 26 (30:33):
Singer and songwriter Dolly Parton says she will donate a
million dollars for recovery efforts from Hurricane Helene. The storm
impacted her home state of Tennessee. Of course, she also
used her legendary vocals to cheer up people.
Speaker 27 (30:45):
Well, I've been like everybody else, trying to absorb everything
going on, trying to figure out all the best ways
to do this, because then we had that crazy old
Helene Helene, Helen Heley, you came in here broke as
all pun.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
Yeah, and now you've got part two head in this way.
So doing your bits, but get ready because your bit
may be more needed because now Milton is heading this way.
And remember, just because it's on a certain path doesn't
mean it's going to stay on that path.
Speaker 11 (31:21):
Books around Tampa Bay who took on record storm search
during Colleen, preparing for the second major hurricane in less
than two weeks, their lives.
Speaker 28 (31:29):
Just got flipped upside down literally and dumped.
Speaker 14 (31:32):
On the street.
Speaker 11 (31:33):
Colleen destroyed Danny Ponnell's home and most of his rental properties.
He worries that Hurricane Milton will compound that loss.
Speaker 14 (31:40):
We don't know what this storm is going to do.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
That might be a one two punch, it might be
a one two punch. I mean, we're hoping that it's
not going to be a one two punch, but the
potential is there because it is gaining strength.
Speaker 29 (31:52):
Just got the update category three one and twenty miles
per hour Maxistain wins. Milton is rapidly intensifying, as we say,
but it is hard to imagine we're about to get
hit again with the second major landfalling hurricane. We had
record surge with Helene, and now it will be beat
with one that is even worse coming for us by Wednesday.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
So you've got a couple days to prepare for that.
I think the one thing is Florida demonstrated how strong
that the people are that they go through this. They
were so much further ahead of the game than what
took place in North Carolina, Tennessee, in Georgia, and they
were able to help their people get themselves out of
(32:35):
the situation they were in. Again, it's still bad, still
a nightmare, but they were also then able to send
some people to help in the surrounding areas and states.
The question is going to be is there going to
be a change in the path and is this going
to be another situation We're going to see massive amounts
of rain dropped And that's the fear I mean those people,
(32:57):
because you got to think about this in parts like
North care Line, in parts of Georgia, in parts of Tennessee,
it's it's not the hurricane. They're not getting the force,
the gale force winds, they're not getting any of those
that what they're getting is massive amounts of water dump.
It comes into land, and it's moving fast than as
it starts to get over the land a little bit further,
(33:17):
it slows down and then it becomes that tropical storm,
and then it just becomes a giant storm that doesn't
seem to move, and that remnants leaves the disaster that
we saw because people aren't prepared for that kind of rainfall,
and some of these places are not prepared at all
for that kind of rainfall whatsoever. And so what you
(33:37):
have is huge amounts of rain in a short period
of time in an area that is not prepared at all,
and in an area that cannot withstand that kind of rainfall,
which causes the domino effect of things to start to break,
and from there the floods start to happen, and from
there you get what we have right now. Those people
(34:00):
are displaced and they're still waiting around. We talked about
it earlier and Milton looks like it could come and
drop a ton, and then at the same time, because
of nature being nature, there may be a situation where
Milton starts to dissipate later on today, by tomorrow it
could just be a tropical storm, and by Wednesday it
may be nothing. That's what you're hoping for. You just
(34:21):
don't know. Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Sheadminton show is your Twitter tweet
at his texta program. Meanwhile, me hanging out in Nashville
on Saturday. I tell my wife, Man, if i'd have
thought about it, I should have gone. She's like where,
I said, we're literally a block away from the stadium.
What stadium, I said, Vanderbilt. It's the football game's going on.
(34:42):
She'd go to a football game, said, Alabama number one
teams here, and I said, it'd be neat just to
see Alabama. Little did anybody know that Alabama was going
to get beat by Vanderbilt, And boy, what a celebration
it became.
Speaker 30 (34:56):
Alabama's a great team. And you know, we just played
no tonight. And that's how the SEC is. It's any
given Saturday. You guys see it every single day, and
so this is what it is.
Speaker 2 (35:07):
That's what it was.
Speaker 31 (35:08):
Obviously, you know how much this means to me. I
love our university, I loved our city, I love our program.
This is why I came back. It's meant to be
emotional because again, I bled a lot into this and
it just feels great to be able to celebrate with
the team that I love and Carebau.
Speaker 2 (35:27):
It was awesome. We want to know why, because he
tore the goal post down they wandered by our house
there it goes my wife's like they ran into like
a hundred cars with it. Yes, they did, and they
got fined one hundred thousand dollars. And if you asked Vanderbilt,
would you be willing to be fined every weekend if
you could beat a team like Alabama? The answer to
(35:49):
that question is absolutely they would three two three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show,
is your Twitter? Sweet?
Speaker 32 (35:56):
At?
Speaker 2 (35:56):
Is texta program coming up? Our two? A lot of
stuff to get to, some scot of stuff, abortion, a
lot more on the new and latest giant storm heading here,
and how will FEMA act with that one? Because God
knows they haven't done a good job with this one.
If you missed the show, grab the podcast. It is
the Chadpencon Show.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent life.
Speaker 10 (36:47):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 33 (36:49):
First major American car company and generations in his rocket company.
Is the only reason we can now send American astronauts
into space.
Speaker 2 (37:00):
Come here, take over Elan, Yes, take up?
Speaker 34 (37:05):
Hi everyone, that's my favorite thing.
Speaker 2 (37:08):
Hi everyone. If you didn't see Elon and Butler jumping
up and down, which was hilarious. By the way, Elon's
a tall dude. I had no idea how tall Elon was,
cause Trump's a big guy, and Elon was like face
to face with him, like, get out of town. Look
at Elon's a big, tall guy. Elon came out and
obviously he's for the president. By the way, the hyperbolieve
(37:30):
like this will be the last election. How many times
I have to tell you guys, this is not going
to be the last election. That does not help your
cause when you say that on either side, when you
talk about the other one being the evil, that is
uh and you don't keep it to policy. Just the
fact that they're evil is ridiculous. You and I both
know that. But Elon was very interesting.
Speaker 35 (37:46):
You know, the true test of someone's character is how
they behave under fire. We had one president who couldn't
climb a flight of stairs and ANODA who was this
pumping after getting.
Speaker 36 (37:58):
Shot, fight fight fine, blood coming down the face.
Speaker 35 (38:02):
There's no true test than cards under fire. So that
who do you want representing America?
Speaker 2 (38:08):
Yeah, there's a portion of that that's absolutely true. I mean,
you know, what was it? Zuckerberg said, It's pretty bad.
Speaker 14 (38:14):
Ass.
Speaker 2 (38:15):
It was, it was, it was that was spectacularly bad ass. No,
I'm not going to take this. I'm going to stand
up and we're not going to just give up. Fight, fight, fight.
Speaker 35 (38:24):
This election, I think is the most important election of
our lifetime. This, this is no ordinary election. The other
side wants to take away your freedom of speech. They
want to take away your right to bear arms, they
want to take away your right to vote. Effectively, you
got fourteen states now that that don't require voter ID. California,
where you used to live, is just past the law
(38:45):
banning voter ID for voting.
Speaker 2 (38:47):
Is that true? That is absolutely true, by the way,
So Governor knew Some signed a bill in law Thursday
that bars local governments from enacting laws to require residents
to show a valid form of ID in order to vote.
The law that he signed is in direct response to
a ballot initiative approved by voters in the coastal Evil
community of Huntington Beach in March by a fifty three
(39:09):
percent margin to essentially require all residents who want to
cast a ballot in municipal elections to show a valid ID.
But it ran afoul of the Evil California Ia politicians.
That's insane. Here's the way I look at this, right.
You could sit here and say to Republicans when it
comes to vote right, you're overdoing it. It's ridiculous. Non
(39:32):
citizens are not voting. You guys are making something out
of nothing. This is bad. On the other side, can
I not ask a question, why are you guys so
dead set against people showing their ID. Let's flip the script.
Why are you dead set against that? Why are you
so sold on if you ask somebody for an ID
that somehow that is racism. I don't get that. I
(39:55):
think it's ridiculous. I think it's asinine. And for all
the other things we have to show ID for, I
am fine with showing my D for voting three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson's show,
to your Twitter, your Instagram, all of the other things.
So kam. Last big week of interviews starts with a
call her Daddy Interview, which is a podcast that is massive.
(40:19):
If you don't know what that is, it's massive. It's
mostly relationship and sex oriented, but it's a huge podcast.
And that is also the beginning. Just sixty minutes tonight.
Then you've got Stern the View, Colbert, and then Unavision
town Hall. Let's start with call her.
Speaker 24 (40:38):
Daddy Daddy gang to put it in our TikTok terms.
I have seen girls on the street walk up to
men and be like, do you know where a tampon goes?
Do you know how many tampons we use?
Speaker 2 (40:50):
Do you even know? How?
Speaker 7 (40:51):
Like?
Speaker 24 (40:52):
Do you know what a X or Y or Z
is of a part of our And they don't know
the answer.
Speaker 8 (40:57):
I was the first vice president or president to ever
in an office go to a reproductive healthcare clinic.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
Wow, some hard hitting stuff right there. What did you
guys like? Yeah? You know, like, do you know where
tampon goes? I do? I do know where it goes?
Would that have changed anything? No? What does that have
to do with anything? Continue?
Speaker 24 (41:22):
Why should we trust you?
Speaker 8 (41:24):
So I'll say this, look, you can look at my
career to know, okay, what I care about?
Speaker 2 (41:30):
Not quite sure exactly what it is you care about.
I think you care about power. I think you about
care about being in power. I think that's your big care.
I think most people would agree with that. And I
think depending on the day, you'll care about whatever you
need to care about to get the job. Welcome to
the world of modern politics see right and left for decades.
Speaker 24 (41:50):
At a rally in Pennsylvania, former President Trump recently told women,
you will be protected and I will be your protector.
Speaker 2 (41:58):
What do you make of that?
Speaker 37 (42:00):
Who?
Speaker 8 (42:00):
When he was president, hand selected three members of the
United States Supreme Court with the intention that they would
undo the protections of Roe v. Wade, And they did
just as he intended. And there are now twenty states
with Trump abortion bands, including bands that make no exception
for rapor incest, which is immoral.
Speaker 2 (42:19):
Trump abortion bands remind everybody this. First of all, when
they talk about, you know, Trump hand picked these people.
Trump didn't hand pick anybody. Is there a lot of
reading in this? Yeah, then you guys tell me two
or three were the best. I'll interview them. We'll go
from there. Secondly, he didn't bring any of the lawsuits.
They were bought by others. That's just it. If nobody
(42:40):
would have brought a lawsuit, and they would have had
these three judges that are rogue and evil. And we're
going to talk about Scotus because right now they're back
at session. Would there be quote unquote a ban, there
would not be so other people brought it, they ruled
on it. Yes, Trump was the one who said we
should put these people in power. But when you talk
about quote unquote the band that Trump orchestrated, brought on
(43:02):
by other people, remember that this is.
Speaker 8 (43:04):
The same guy that is now saying that. This is
the same guy who said that women should be punished
for having abortions. This is the same guy who uses
the kind of language he does to describe women. So yeah,
there you go.
Speaker 2 (43:18):
There you go, some hard hitting Kamala and look, Trump's
got enough stuff out there on it. You don't need
to me everything up. But it's just easier to do
so tonight she's got the sixteen minutes with a more
hard hitting interview. But the rest of the week, while
they can talk about she's doing press, she's going on press.
(43:38):
She's doing press. The reality of the press that she's
going to be doing is it's not that hard. She's
not going to be pressed on the view. Colbert is
going to fawn on her, Oh you're the best. Same thing,
same thing with Stern. Because Stern hates Trump, it's going
to fawn all over her. So you've got those two
(43:59):
and then you start to look and go, Okay, so
the View, Colbert Stern not hard? Where is hard? Well,
hard would be anybody that's going to ask you a
real question. I will say one thing, right, Tim Walls,
and we're gonna talk about abortion a little bit. He
went on this weekend to talk to Fox and that,
to me, I thought was pretty damn good. They talked
(44:22):
about everything from abortion to immigration and several other things.
I think he was pressed in a way that she
is not going to get pressed on the View or
Colbert or Stern, and I think he was pressed. I
don't know if he did a great job. That'll be
for you to decide. Now, you got called out on
(44:42):
a couple of things. I think he got pushback that
he doesn't get. Remember, Republicans will go anywhere they will.
Republicans will go anywhere to talk about any damn thing.
Even this weekend, right, you had this nightmare of what's
going on with FEMA, what's going on with the ask
you that these people in North Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia
(45:03):
are going through, and the fact that they feel like
being completely abandoned. Some of them are still stuck places
they haven't at rescued they're not even getting in some
of the stuff, and the debate between is it FEMA's fault,
do they give all the money here? What's the real story?
Tom Cotton goes on and talks to Christian Welker. Not
a friendly place for Republicans.
Speaker 19 (45:22):
My broader question to you, I think, is about this misinformation.
Speaker 2 (45:26):
Do you think this is a time.
Speaker 19 (45:27):
To put falsehoods aside, like the idea that FEMA funds
are being redirected to migrants, which is just not true.
Speaker 20 (45:33):
It is true that FEMA and the Department of Homeland
Security have been spending billions of dollars on migrants, and
I understand some people say they're separate fines, but we
just passed the short term spending bill. It's very common
for the administration to come and ask for permission to
move money between fines, especially to prepare for emergencies. And second,
I would note that this administration seems to have no
(45:54):
problem finding money when they want to spend it on
their priorities. When they need hundreds of billions of dollars
to pay off student loans for graduate students and gender
studies programs, they somehow find it. When it's trying to
get helicopters to deliver food and water and cellular service
and life saving medicine into these mountain valleys. They somehow
can't seem to find the money boom.
Speaker 2 (46:14):
I like it. But he went on there and he
knows there's gonna get hard questions as you should be,
not softball questions with zero pushback. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three atch Hedbenton shows
your Twitter, tweet, eds texta program. That's why I could
look at somebody like Tim Walls and said, will you
win in Fox? And you got pushback? Talk about abortion.
We're going to talk about a year ago today what
(46:35):
took place in Israel and how that has shaped so
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com slash chat today Buy Raycon dot com slash Chad
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Speaker 34 (47:48):
It's Chad Benson, Joe.
Speaker 10 (48:00):
Listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 3 (48:08):
We are announcing an operation called Alaxa floods.
Speaker 4 (48:11):
Asraeli official say there are multiple injuries, some of them serious,
and at least one fatality.
Speaker 5 (48:24):
Palestinian militants crossed the border on motorcycles and in pickup trucks.
They went straight to small border communities where they reportedly
committed massacre.
Speaker 6 (48:33):
AMASA spokesperson calling this latest coordinated attack operation on ax Storm,
calling on all Palestinians to take up arms and join
the fight, saying they're carrying this out in revenge and
in retaliation for the way Palestinians have been treated.
Speaker 2 (48:50):
So the question is a year later, are you guys happy?
Did you get everything you wanted? You've been destroyed for
the most part, your country or what was some sort
of country and again not recognized by a lot, but
the area of which Gaza and several other places throughout
Palestine are completely destroyed. You've lost tens of thousands of people,
(49:13):
Your money is being cut off, your leaders are being
hunted down. Did you get what you want? Did you
get all the things you wanted? And by that I
mean did Iran get everything they wanted? Because the goal
was never to see I think it was to disrupt,
it was to piss off, it was to be a
(49:34):
thorn in the side. I don't think it was ever
to be a situation. And this is just me talking
where they thought, well, this is going to be so
well planned, this is going to be so good that
we're going to kill God knows how many people, and
then this is going to cause us to be in
ruins because that's what's happened here. And I blame it
all on't Yes, the actors themselves, the ass hats who
(49:57):
did this, one hundred percent their fault, the Hamas leaders. Yes,
but Iran has a huge part to play in this,
and the reason because they didn't want Israel and Saudi
Arabia to be close. I said that from day one
when this happened, they couldn't stand any of that. That
was a thing that they could not ever have happened.
(50:21):
They wanted to be a thorn in the side. And
now because of this has Belah coming for you. The
hooties waste of time, but eventually people will get around
to you. And then let's not forget Iran because they
are coming. There is no doubt about that.
Speaker 37 (50:37):
Elon and his wife hid in a shelter like millions
of Israelis that day and waited, and after hours, in
darkened silence, Elon shows me the texts with his daughter
who lived nearby. She heard gunshots. She says, they're here.
They're trying to get into the house, trying to open
the door.
Speaker 2 (50:52):
Dad, help us, And so you thought any moment you
might lose your daughter.
Speaker 37 (51:00):
What was it like when you saw that text message
that said no, it's the army.
Speaker 2 (51:09):
They were safe. Safe. Many weren't, especially the people at
the festival.
Speaker 14 (51:16):
This was the song apparently that they were.
Speaker 38 (51:19):
Playing at this music festival when the attacks started, and
it's very loud. They're playing it, perhaps as loud as
it was playing.
Speaker 2 (51:28):
So you could imagine.
Speaker 38 (51:29):
People who were here enjoying this party, this festival of
the desert, could not even hear the gunshots or the rockets.
Speaker 2 (51:38):
No, they couldn't. Kidnappings, rapes, murders. We can go on
and on and on, and here we are a year later,
and what has happened. It has gone sideways, and it's
getting worse by the day. And I don't think that
is going to change anytime soon. I think it's going
(51:59):
to be much worse in the foreseeable future, because I
continue to think that, and I continue to absolutely not
just think. I am telling you right now. The bigger
prize is he wants regime change, and by that I
mean BB in Iran. That's what he wants. Tonight, Kamala
is going to be on sixty minutes shorty done, the interview,
(52:22):
and one of the questions is about Israel and BB
not in Yahoo.
Speaker 7 (52:25):
Do we have a real close ally in Prime Minister
it in Yahoo?
Speaker 8 (52:31):
I think, with all due respect, the better question is
do we have an important alliance between the American people
and the Israeli people? And the answer to.
Speaker 2 (52:40):
That question is yes. That wasn't the question because right
now BB is running the country and BB is not
talking you guys. BB is nowhere near in a position
where he trusts this administration and the potential for them
to help out with what they're trying to do. So,
as I've been saying, it's better to ask for forgiveness
(53:01):
then for permission, and that's what he's doing. I'll ask
for forgiveness later. I'll let you guys yell at me later.
But I need to do this. And they are bombarding
Hesbalah right now, they are bombarding Lebanon now, they are
making their move, They're setting themselves up, and I continue
(53:22):
to think that this is about reshim change in Iran,
and they're worried about it. They've got their ayatola hidden
because they understand that Israel now wants to finish this.
They want to cut off what they see as the
head of all of this evil three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad benzonhow
(53:44):
is your Twitter tweet? That is text the program, A
lot of stuff still to get it against. Sixty minutes tonight,
big week for her, all kinds of interviews, really tough interviews,
really no no, no, tough interviews. Sixty minutes was probably
the toughest, and we'll see what that looks like afterwards.
We got some excerpts from we'll talk about that bunch
of other stuff to get to. If you miss any show,
grab the podcast. It is the Chad Benson.
Speaker 23 (54:06):
Show, Son, Chad Benson, Shoe.
Speaker 1 (54:30):
Independent Thoughts, Independent Life. This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (54:35):
I will say this for Tim Walls, he at least
went into a place there was going to be a
little bit more hostile than the normal things that the
likes of Kamala the Vice President, Madam vice President, has done,
and she's got big interviews this week. We talked about
it all right, she's already done. Call her daddy, which
(54:56):
by the way, they're getting blasted because they're like, this
is not good, don't want this. Unsubscribe. I don't know
if she's going to lose any people over this. But
Tim Walls decided, Hey, I'm going to go on Fox,
which is if you're going to ignore half the country,
you're not going to go into the place where they
(55:19):
consume news. What do you expect that You're going to
get a lot of those people going, Oh, that's interesting.
You never thought of it that way. And we've already
talked about how difficult it is to change people's minds
in today's world. But at least he had the balls
enough to go in there and to look at Shannon
Breen and the Fox audience and say, I'm going to
(55:41):
answer your questions. And he was asked a lot of questions.
He was he was first of all, let's talk a
little immigration.
Speaker 39 (55:47):
The Vice president has made it clear that she has
policies that make a difference. Her border policies are the
most strongest, the fairest we've seen.
Speaker 40 (55:56):
Is now though there you know a lot of people,
including your own party with nuts, join that statements. There
are millions of people who have come here over the
last few years that you know they see this as
an open.
Speaker 14 (56:07):
Policies simply we have a policy.
Speaker 39 (56:10):
Donald Trump sees it as a political say, look, James
Langford and Oklahoma, the Border Patrol agents, the Wall Street Journal,
the Chamber of Commerce all said, past this legislation, you
have to have Congress to authorize fifteen hundred new border agents.
You have to have Congress to authorize DOJ to speed
adjudications on these asylum claims. Those are things that would
actually work. Donald Trump told us for four years he
(56:32):
would deal with this.
Speaker 14 (56:33):
He didn't.
Speaker 39 (56:33):
He didn't build his wall. Two percent Mexico didn't pay
for it.
Speaker 2 (56:36):
True, very true. By the way, you were never going
to let and build his wall. I think we all
recognize that never going to happen. He could have given
you anything, and you are never going to let it happen.
When can go back to win the battle between DOCA
recipients and he's like, I'll give you more DOCA recipients
if you allowed me to build my wall, it was
never going to happen. We know that, We absolutely know that.
(56:59):
So to say that he didn't build his wall because
he failed at doing it, he could have tried every
single day. Oh wait, he did, and eventually it was
just never going to happen because when it was being
built before, when it was not Donald Trump. It was
a right thing to do. When Donald Trump took it over,
it somehow became a racist wall.
Speaker 39 (57:16):
This is a real bill that has bipartisan support, It
has the experts on board, and it starts to tackle
these issues. And we don't have to resort to demonizing people.
We don't have to resort to making up our crafting stories.
As Center Vance said he did. Those things were not
happening in Springfield. But it doesn't mean that we can't
pass a piece of legislation to strengthen our border.
Speaker 14 (57:38):
That's what kam Larris is talking about. Well, start the problem.
Speaker 40 (57:41):
That piece of legislation does cut include the wall that
you guys have been so you've disparaged that. I mean
the Vice president has as well, so I don't know
if she really intends to move forward with that. But
it was negotiated by three or four senators and many
Republicans came out against it long before President Trump indicated
he didn't like it either.
Speaker 2 (57:59):
And that's the other side of the story. We never
talked about that because Trump was involved, so automatically it's
Trump's fault. Did he want it not passed? Yeah, of course, politics,
But was it a great bill even he talked about, well,
it was going to help adjudicate stuff and get people
through the system faster, but it didn't slow down anybody
from coming here. It moved the numbers from one place
(58:19):
to another and what could and couldn't be counted for.
We moved from there with mister Walls, Governor Walls, to
talk about abortion. Abortion abortion.
Speaker 40 (58:31):
Abortion is legal throughout pregnancy in Minnesota. There is no
ban or limit on abortion in Minnesota based on how
far along in a pregnancy you are.
Speaker 34 (58:39):
You signed the.
Speaker 2 (58:40):
Bill that makes it legal through all nine months.
Speaker 40 (58:43):
Is that a position you think Democrats should advocate for nationally?
Speaker 39 (58:46):
Look, the Vice President, I have been clear the restoration
of Roe versus Wade is what we're asking for. Wade
can make our own the law does. The law is
very clear. It does not change that that was been
debunked on every occasion.
Speaker 14 (58:58):
But this is age.
Speaker 40 (59:00):
Let's agree what you signed is there's not a single
limit through nine months of pregnancy. Rowe had a trimester
framework that did have limits to the pregnancy.
Speaker 14 (59:07):
The Minnesota law does not have that.
Speaker 2 (59:09):
Risk puts well, it doesn't have that. It doesn't have that.
This is a lawmaker from Minnesota talking about the law
and how they've reframed the wording in the law.
Speaker 36 (59:21):
But the change is occurring for a reason. Why else
would we say we're no longer going to require these
medical personnel to preserve the life and health of the
born of life infit and simply change it to care
for the infant who was born alive. The fact that
we're making a change to that language shows or proved
to me there is some sort of difference between those
two things, which is why we're making the change.
Speaker 23 (59:41):
To the law.
Speaker 2 (59:42):
Okay, again, he contends that none of that's real. He
contends that it's all alive. He contends that none of
those things have ever happened. Nobody's ever said anything like
that those things, nothing like that has ever happened.
Speaker 14 (59:52):
We know that this is simply something to be brought up.
Speaker 39 (59:54):
It gives to be very clear Donald Trump's asking for
a nation wide abortion VANKA And again we don't see this.
Speaker 40 (01:00:00):
Repeatedly that he will not sign a national abortion band.
Are you calling that just it's a flat out.
Speaker 39 (01:00:04):
Line soon, Yes, of course, and Senator Vance has in
the past said so too. Now, look, they may see
this as an election issue. We see it as a
right of women to make their own bodily decisions. And
that's what the states like my state have the ability
to put that. In states like Georgia force women to
cross the border, and then we have a death of
(01:00:26):
Amber Thurmott. So let's be very clear, trying to cut
hairs on an issue on this is not where the
American public's at. They want the restoration of ro Versus Wade.
Vice President Harris said she would sign it. That's what
we'll do with.
Speaker 28 (01:00:39):
It.
Speaker 4 (01:00:40):
Far beyond Roe v. Wade.
Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
It is far beyond Brovy Waite. And I don't want
to talk about it's funny because if Trump says it,
it's gospel. If it's bad, if he says I won't
do it, it is a lie. So I just want
to make this this is the world that we live
in now. Say everything you possibly can to debunk the
(01:01:03):
other side. Nope, just to call the other side liar.
So it's not even about saying that I'm going to
debunk you, I'm going to show you through data and facts.
I'm just going to call you. It's just easier to
call you a liar because people understand that. Trevor says,
I won't sign that. Well, he's a liar. Okay, she
says she's going to ban fracking. No, no, she's not
gonna do that. Well she's a liar. Well it's not
the same because she's evolved. Oh I see, I see.
(01:01:25):
And all you have to do is take a story
and you can twist it to however you want. That's
just the And this is that gray area we've talked about,
where's the real truth in a lot of things? Can
babies be born alive and then made comfortable and eventually
pass on? That's a lie. Ralph Northrom was running for
governor of Virginia. What did he say?
Speaker 41 (01:01:48):
The infant would be delivered, the infant would be kept comfortable,
the infant would be resuscitated if that's what the mother
and the family desired, and then a discussion would ensue
between the physicians and the mothers.
Speaker 2 (01:02:02):
That doesn't sound like somebody that is saying no, that
doesn't happen. And the whole Amber Thurman thing, which you know,
you've got all of these people from Jensaki to everybody
else holding her out there saying, look what happened because
of Georgia, Look what happened because of Georgia.
Speaker 40 (01:02:19):
And about the Amber Thurman case in Georgia. Her family
has and it's tragic. She is a young mother who
left behind a young son. But what her family has
said is it was a complication from an abortion pill
that she received, and she didn't get proper care when
she went to a Georgia hospital, which had multiple opportunities
to intervene there. Her own attorney, the family's attorney, says
it wasn't the Georgia law, it was the hospitals. What
(01:02:41):
he claims is malpractice not treating for her when she
clearly showed up in distress and still had the byproducts
of her pregnancy because of that rare complication from the
abortion pill. So just to be clear on the Georgia
law and how her family and her attorney sees it, and.
Speaker 2 (01:02:55):
Those are things you never hear the whole story. And
it's frustrating because I want to know all the facts
and data. Now I knew about Amber Thurman, I knew
what took place. I knew what their attorneys had said
and the people inside of their said. But all you
have to do, and this is the sad thing in
today's world, is just cut it off at the right
moment of the story to get across your story, and
(01:03:17):
that is frustrating for all of us. That's how we
get misinformation, disinformation and all that stuff. In fact, that's
what's driving a lot of the chaos right now in
what is happening with FEMA and whether or not people
are getting the things they need. And there is misinformation
out there. There is some disinformation out there, and there
(01:03:40):
is some truth to what people are saying is disinformation
or misinformation or outright lies. The governor's doing a very
good job.
Speaker 9 (01:03:47):
He's having a hard time getting the president.
Speaker 8 (01:03:49):
Of the phone.
Speaker 42 (01:03:50):
Former President Donald Trump said the governors of states in
the storm's path couldn't get President Biden on the phone,
a claim that those governors, including one in Trump's own party, dispelled.
Speaker 14 (01:04:02):
I just the President just called me yesterday afternoon.
Speaker 41 (01:04:05):
I missed him and called him right back and he
just said, hey, what do you need.
Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
Okay, that's one thing. And I played that last week
back to back because I thought that's not true. But
there is plenty of information that's out there of the
frustration of these people, the fact that FEMA's come in
taking over all the hotels. People that want to help
are being told they can't help because FEMA wants to
run everything, and you're dealing with areas that are small,
(01:04:33):
people are separated by now a changing landscape. People in
the area know exactly where to go and how to
get to some of these people, and they're being denied
the opportunity to do it. And yes, the money situation
is very real because, as we've talked about, while FEMA
has spent money on migrants, they act as if that
money was always going to be there for the migrants
(01:04:54):
and it would not be allocated for something else. It
could have been, so that is not true that it
was only allocated for them and it could never be
used for something else. As we know in government, they
will dip into any bank account they need to handle business.
So disinformation and misinformation is everywhere, and both sides are
a part of it, and it is frustrating because these
(01:05:15):
people are trying to figure out how to start to
rebuild whatever is left of their life. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chet Benson
shows your Twitter tweeted as text the program Roughgreens, ruff
greens dot com slash chad has now meogreens. What Yeah,
they've got meogreens. What is it? Well, first of all,
(01:05:37):
everybody knows that nutrition isn't brown, it's green, and that
is so true, and that goes for adults as well.
So naturopathic doctor Dennis Black, the founder of rough Greens,
got big news. He's created Meogreens Free Cats and he's
excited to bring the benefits that we give to the
dogs and rough Greens to cat owners as well. We've
got to roughgreens dot com slash d for a free
jumpstart trialbag of rough Greens or meogreens it is. That's awesome.
(01:06:01):
So when it comes to your cats, and we've talked
about this all the time with my cats, allergy was
a huge issue with our big cat Angus. He had
to wear the ConA shame. It was tough. The dogs
didn't even know what to do with them. You see,
it's like a satellite dish watching it, walking at it,
but it looked like you get hit by lightning. Because
he had so much issue with his fur and skin,
we started feeding him rough Greens and boom, things started
to change. First started to grow back. Cone of shame
(01:06:23):
came off. There are so many amazing things inside of meogreens,
concentrated vitamins, minerals, enzymes, probiotics, and omega oils. So you
have rough Greens and you have Malgreens, and now it's
your chance to choose a Jumpstart trial bag for free.
All you have to do is cover the cost of shipping.
It is that simple. This is how you get it.
You get a Roughgreens dot com slash chat. Now when
you go there again, Mealgreens or Roughgreens, that's Roughgreens dot
(01:06:46):
com slash chat call eighty eight ninety my dog. You
cover the cost of shipping, they get you a Jumpstart
trial bag for Freeroughgreens dot com slash Chad Let's talk
Buttons Chad Benci Show.
Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
If you like talk radio like Chad Benson likes his meals,
you've come to the perfect place for takeout.
Speaker 43 (01:07:15):
Nearly two decades ago, Apple changed the face of technology.
Speaker 20 (01:07:19):
Well, what we're gonna do is get rid of all
these buttons and just make a giant.
Speaker 43 (01:07:24):
Screen driving a touchscreen takeover into high gear. Everything from
how you order to how you read, to household appliances
and even cars have been touched by the trend.
Speaker 2 (01:07:37):
Did say go to the right It can't mean that, but.
Speaker 43 (01:07:44):
This morning, there are growing calls to rebtonize from frustrated consumers.
Speaker 32 (01:07:52):
There are days when I'm on my iPhone on an
iPad watching something and then I go to my computer
and I touch the screen and I'm like, wait, why
is this not working? Because I think it's just a
lot for our brains. Over saturation of screens.
Speaker 2 (01:08:05):
Yes, tablet breaking this down, over saturation of screens. Kids.
The button is making a comeback. That's right, I repeat,
the button is making a comeback. BlackBerry, You're not dead yet.
Speaker 43 (01:08:20):
Over the years, companies discovered consolidating functions into a single
tappable display can be cheaper and allow us to accomplish
more than the BlackBerry's classic clickie keyboard. What the Wall
Street Journal explains the problem with touch based interfaces is
that they aren't touch based at all, because they need
us to look when using them. That can be especially
(01:08:42):
problematic behind the wheel, Does it feel distracting when you
actually have to look at the touch?
Speaker 21 (01:08:47):
I think yeah, I think it does.
Speaker 43 (01:08:48):
And research degrees adjusting devices such as touch screens increases
the risk of a crash four point six times. That's
a bigger impact than climate controller, radio buttons.
Speaker 2 (01:09:00):
Not be the only one that hates with a passion
touch screens in cars. So this is one of the
things that makes me laugh. They tell you not to
be on your phone when you're driving.
Speaker 14 (01:09:11):
I agree.
Speaker 2 (01:09:11):
I mean, we've all been guilty of it myself, so
let's just stop pretending. Look I would never we all have.
Then you put a computer in your car, and not
just a computer your phone plus in many cases, so
now you've got a computer in your car, So don't
be on your phone, but be on the computer that
is driving your car in many cases. So now it's
(01:09:34):
more confusing and frustrating. Sometimes keep it simple stupid, especially
in this situation. Now we don't need turn knobs, and
I'm gonna go that far, but could we go back
to maybe just buttons, just plain old regular buttons.
Speaker 44 (01:09:50):
Now dials, buttons and physical controls are being prioritized in design,
from e readers to automakers like Volkswagen and BMD which
owns many.
Speaker 15 (01:10:01):
You have a ray of toggles at the bottom as
well as some customizable buttons on the steering wheel.
Speaker 42 (01:10:08):
We're trying to do things in multiple ways so that
it really is the power of choice for a customer.
Speaker 43 (01:10:14):
Even Apple is biting, adding two new buttons to their
latest models.
Speaker 2 (01:10:19):
Click launches your camera instantly.
Speaker 43 (01:10:21):
Tech experts say it's about embracing the best of both worlds.
Speaker 45 (01:10:25):
I do think we're going to start to see more
of these manufacturers start to converge and think about where
does a touch screen make sense and where does a
simple button or knob or control make sense for a user?
Speaker 2 (01:10:38):
Ah? So simple, right, And there is something to the click.
There is something to that sense of oh that just
it felt like something happened with the touch screen. Did
it happen, did it not happen? I don't know. Maybe
it's there is a sense of that. Now. I'm very
good at the swipe, you know, when you're swiping around
when you're typing and stuff, the type swipe. Very good
(01:11:00):
at that, But I was better at the uh, the
regular typing. I get it, I get it. I've just
always been fascinated by the car thing because you I mean,
I go in my car and it's like it's a computer.
That's what it is. From the climate, you know, controls
on it, to all of the stuff on it. It
is a computer and it's got to update every once
(01:11:21):
in a while too. It's just there is something about
the the the what would be considered a cheaper version,
a less intelligent version, and there's also something about the click.
Speaker 43 (01:11:35):
The loss of buttons. Areminded consumers largely have two things.
One they're simply more satisfying to press they can video
game controllers, and two they can be more practical giving
us immediate tangible feedback.
Speaker 2 (01:11:47):
Immediate tangible feedback. Yes, that's what I'm talking about right there,
tangible feedback. Give it to me, baby, Give it to
me three, two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three A Chad Benson Show is your Twitter tweet
at as texted program. A lot of stuff to get
to coming up in the third and final hour of
this Monday edition of The Chad Benson Show, including a
(01:12:10):
neuroscientist talking about why it's so hard to change minds.
I think it needs to be heard. We don't talk
about it, and by we, I mean other people. I
talk about it a lot. Why is it hard? Why
don't we talk about it? So much of it has
to do with identity, but there's a lot of other
things that go onto it that is not about so
(01:12:33):
much something you do, but maybe what your brain does Oh,
very interesting. I know right, we do interesting things here.
If you miss any of the show, shame on you
and shame, shame, shame. You can grab the podcast and
you a podcasts are available HAPPEND Monday. It is the
Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:12:51):
This is the Chad Benson Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 10 (01:13:21):
This is Chad Benson.
Speaker 2 (01:13:22):
It has been a year. A year since the world
woke up to the massacre in Israel, A year that
has seen now division in the world because young people
believe that it's apartheid and they had every right to
go in and do what they did. But a year
of people dying, a year of people paying the price
for Hamas being.
Speaker 3 (01:13:42):
The a holes that they are, we are announcing an
operation called Alaxa Floods.
Speaker 4 (01:13:53):
Asraeli official say there are multiple injuries, some of them serious.
Speaker 5 (01:14:03):
Palestinian militants crossed the border on motorcycles and in pickup trucks.
They went straight to small border communities where they reportedly
committed massacre.
Speaker 6 (01:14:12):
HAMASA spokesperson calling on all Palestinians to take up arms
and join the fight, saying they're carrying this out in
revenge and in retaliation for the way Palestinians.
Speaker 4 (01:14:23):
Have been treated.
Speaker 2 (01:14:24):
And that's how it began. So overnight a year ago.
It began where there was some information of a shooting,
and I followed a little bit, but it was bedtime,
went to bed, woke up about three thirty or four,
because even on the weekends, I don't sleep very late
because I'm up so early. And I got up and
I looked at my phone. I thought, oh my god,
(01:14:45):
this is not an incident. This is a massacre. This
is not something that there will be some firing of
missiles and then everybody will retain some calm. This is
something much bigger. And here we are a year later,
forty thousand plus according to the Health Minister of the
Palestinians have died. But then you've got numerous people dead
(01:15:09):
across the Middle East because of this, and this is
all Iran's fault. Yes, Hamas did the deed, but they
did it because Iran wanted the deed done. They couldn't
stand for a second the fact that maybe Saudi Arabia
and Israel, the two mortal enemies of Iran, would become
friends and bring some more stability to the Middle East.
(01:15:30):
They live on instability and alas here we are.
Speaker 37 (01:15:33):
As Israel marks October seventh, the multiple conflicts triggered by
Hamas's rampage are escalating overnight. The idea of saying they
attacked his bull ammunition's warehouses in be Root and igniting
those fireworks like secondary explosions and in Gaza, Israel renewing
its ground operations in the north for the third time.
Speaker 2 (01:15:56):
They are not going to stop until they get what
they want, and what they want being is simply this.
They want change at the top in Iran. They look
at Aran as the reason that all of this happened,
and they're absolutely right. You know, we talk about cutting
the head off. You cut the head off of this,
you cut the head off of that. You may cut
the spiritual leader's head off for a while, but the
(01:16:17):
mission will stay the same. But if you can grab
the money and you can cut the head off, eventually
the vines will start the wither. And that is what
they're hoping for. That if we got rid of what
is going on in Iran with the likes of the Ayatola,
if we can get Homoni out of there, if we
can finish this off and give these people here in Iran,
in theory, a chance to live a normal life without
(01:16:40):
the fear of the theocrats, without the fear of this insanity,
of this bizarre sixth century. Don't go outside without your
you know, a family member, or where your heat job,
or else, the moral police will come for you. If
we can get rid of some of that, then maybe,
just maybe there's a chance for everybody. And that's a
big if.
Speaker 37 (01:16:57):
If bab Horn's father was murdered at this house.
Speaker 46 (01:17:00):
The tale is they bought a diggo and they started
breaking the window of the safe one.
Speaker 37 (01:17:06):
Seven of his family members taken. Thankfully, six were returned
in that hostage deal, but his brother in law tale
is still there.
Speaker 46 (01:17:13):
I want to remind people that we are about life.
To remind people that when you saw hostages come back
in the first deal, how happy you were. I want
this happiness again. I don't want to all. I just
want my family back.
Speaker 2 (01:17:27):
A lot of people feel that way. Now what Israel
does from here, I don't know at this moment in time.
There is going to be some retaliation for the missile
barrage that they took last week from Iran, and that
is going to happen. Is it going to happen? Today tomorrow,
I couldn't tell you. Is it going to be bigger
than the US wants? Oh? Absolutely, I think one hundred percent.
(01:17:49):
I don't think they have any trust in this administration,
and they're at the point now where they're like, look,
we're the only democracy in the region. You're not going
to abandon us. So we're not worried about that. You
may get pissed at us and yell at us, but
you know, as the in the Great movie in Glorious Bastards,
Brad Pitt's character shoots a guy at the end and
(01:18:11):
he says, you're gonna be court martialed for that, And
he says, nah, I'm gonna be yelled at. I've been
yelled at a lot. But that's it. That's kind of
the way this is going to happen. No longer asking
for permission, but for forgiveness, knowing full well they're going
to get it.
Speaker 9 (01:18:24):
Biden yesterday, you know, they asked him, what do you
think about what do you think about Iran? Would you
hit around? And he goes, as long as they don't
hit the nuclear stuff, that's the thing you want to hit, right,
I said, I think he's got that one wrong.
Speaker 2 (01:18:37):
Is that the what you're supposed to hit. I mean, yeah,
you go after that, and I think that's what they're
gonna do. But there's the piece of paper that was
useless the moment it was drawn on the moment the
ink dried. It was useless because they never for a
second were going to abide by anything in that agreement. Period.
Case closed, and I had several you reach out last week,
you know, Trump killed that thing. Good hit every right
(01:18:58):
to Nobody believed that to be real. And if you
believe that, you're the same people who believe that the
North Korea was going to be above board and not
try to get a nuclear weapon. And then when they did,
what were you to do? Nothing? Now what you have
another nut job that holds the world hostage. Saber rattles
whenever he wants some new liquor and some bent leaves
and some women and some money. Except the difference between
(01:19:22):
him is it is about him and the death cult
and maintaining that when it comes to Israel and it
comes to Saudi Arabia and it comes to the rest
of the Middle East, they have an understanding that the
Ayatola and the rest of their death cult. This is
not about stability. This is about unstability, and this is
about a potential destroying of a country and a group
(01:19:45):
of people in Israel. That's what they're worried about because
they realize, Yeah, that guy over here's a lot of talk,
but he just wants stuff. These people, they'd act on it.
It's the biggest risk.
Speaker 9 (01:19:56):
We have nuclear weapons, the power of nuclear weapons, the
power of weaponry.
Speaker 2 (01:20:00):
You know, I rebuilt the entire military jets.
Speaker 9 (01:20:03):
Everything I built it, including nuclear, and I hated to
build a nuclear but I got to know firsthand the power.
Speaker 2 (01:20:09):
Of that stuff. And I'll tell you what. We have
to be totally prepared. We have to be absolutely prepared.
Speaker 9 (01:20:14):
But when they asked them that question, the answer should
have been hit the nuclear first and worry about the
rest later.
Speaker 2 (01:20:20):
I don't know about all the stuff that you rebuilt,
but I will tell you as far as they hit
the nuclear, I got no problem with that. I think
most people don't have a problem with it. And I
believe that's what BB Neat and Yahoo and the likes
are going to do. And it's easier to ask for
forgiveness than for permission, because you will never get permission.
Three two three five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chadminton Show is your Twitter tweet at his
(01:20:41):
text program. Meanwhile, here uh not happy. People still trying
to figure out what the hell's going on when it
comes to the relief with Helen, people are pissed, people
are angry. Misinformation disinformation stuff flying around everywhere. And oh,
by the way, we'll get to the fact that Milton's
on the way.
Speaker 15 (01:20:59):
There's nothing here for eight days, nine days post hurricane,
and that was the first FEMA drop I've seen here
in the Swana Noa area.
Speaker 16 (01:21:07):
I haven't seen a female agent yet. This is all
local volunteers. Volunteers from abroad as far as Washington State
are coming out here to hell and pick up the
slack that's been left behind.
Speaker 46 (01:21:18):
The part ven.
Speaker 2 (01:21:19):
He goes on and on. People are pissed, people are
people are very angry, they're frustrated, and a lot of
those people are people who are waiting for stuff, waiting
for government. And a lot of those people are people
that have volunteered to come there and feel like they're
getting pushed, they're getting turned around, they're told they can't help.
But yet it's about government at this point, in time,
you've failed. I think it may change in the future,
(01:21:39):
hopefully it does, but at this point in time on
the federal level, you have failed, and these people feel it.
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chad Benson Show. Is your Twitter tweet at
as text to program. Then you've got Milton hanging out
out there ready to come on shore, which is going
to be another nightmare for these people at potential one
to two, especially in Florida. We'll talk about that as
(01:21:59):
well as maybe a little history made last night in
the NBA preseason though, but still a little bit of history.
But first, it is that time of the year, spooky time.
What some of the scares you, no matter how big
or small it is, right, Like, I'm not a fan
of ladders. I'm fine going up, but I have a
horrible time, Like it's like kind of a weird phobia
trying to get on the ladder from the roof. What
(01:22:21):
about you? Though, not everything is a ghost and a goblin.
There's some things out there that scare you, and maybe
talking about them is a phenomenal thing. In fact, I
know talking about him is therapys is a great tool
facing your fears and finding ways to overcome them. So,
if you've been thinking to yourself, you know what, I
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Little What's trending? Straight Ahead Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 10 (01:23:33):
You're listening to the Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
Now it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending.
Speaker 27 (01:23:48):
Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, ser.
Speaker 2 (01:24:00):
Lot trumping. Shall we find out what's trending on this Monday?
Where do we start today? How about this little Google
Steelers game I might still be going on. I have
no idea. I think the Cowboys won, but there was
(01:24:21):
like a two hour rain delay. I would telling my
wife it's like midnight. It feels like they're kicking off.
And those people in Pittsburgh, They're like, we got nothing
else going on. We're showing up here, Giant Seahawks, Hurricane watch,
Milton on his way, Panthers Bears, lots of NFL stuff.
You know, it's Monday. Christopher Chacone, that is the I
(01:24:44):
think it's the older brother of Madonna passed away, call
her daddy. We've talked about it throughout the show. You're
not amazed about a lot of friends, obviously in this industry,
they're like, I have no idea what that's about. That's
some sort of sex podcast kinda. It's just a hot
chick talking to her friends and talking to some famous people,
(01:25:05):
and the sex is a part of it. Relationships and
hilarity stories and blah blah blah blah. But as you
guys know, Kamala was on there. Nothing like going on
the hard hitting places, right, Oh yeah, got it. Absolutely
lots of NFL talk. Head over to Yahoo Hurricane Milton, Steelers, Cowboys, Rush,
(01:25:29):
Ukine War Israel. It's been one year. We've talked a
little bit about that. You think, good God, Donald Trump,
Megan Markle, college Football, FEMA out of Money, Taylor Swift
and Sean Diddy Combs all trending. And finally over to
the X.
Speaker 14 (01:25:46):
The X.
Speaker 2 (01:25:47):
You say the X, I say Cowboys October seventh, Dodgers
justin Fields, not missus Fields, justin Fields. Jet, It's Hurricane Milton,
the Penguin Victory Monday, NFL TJ Watt, Kyle Allen, all trending.
(01:26:12):
Call her Daddy, Bronny Bronnie. What the hell?
Speaker 46 (01:26:15):
What?
Speaker 2 (01:26:15):
What? What the Hell's a Bronni? Oh you're wondering what
a Bronnie is? A little history made last night. Now,
the history that was made last night is not official yet,
but I have to admit kind of cool and waiting
for it.
Speaker 47 (01:26:26):
It is the preseason final, Lebron James and Lebron James
Junior on the floor at the same time. Again, it
would be official in the regular season, but as he said,
this is cool to see.
Speaker 2 (01:26:40):
It is cool to see. So he wanted to play
as long as he could with a chance to play
with his son. And this year Lakers took his kid
in the second round and they got on the court
at the same time, and that was pretty damn cool.
It is it's it's And here's the weird thing. You know,
(01:27:01):
you think, Okay, I want to play as long as
I can have a chance to play with my kid.
How cool will that be? All of that aside, he's
still a factor. He's still a top fifteen player potentially
in the NBA. Now Brownie's not, but he may grow
into something you don't know. And there's if you want
to talk about nepo, let's talk about nepo. This is
all about nepotism. There three two, three, five, three eight,
(01:27:22):
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show's your Twitter
tweet at his text the program. Yes, we were talking
about the hard hitting interviews that she is doing, and
she's doing some hard hitting interviews this week, and by
that I mean Kamala Harris so yesterday's first hard hitting interviews,
because tonight she got the sixty minutes. So sixty minutes
(01:27:43):
is tonight. And I don't know what that even is.
I mean, we've got some clips from that. I don't
know how hard they push back, but the call her daddy.
Speaker 24 (01:27:53):
At a rally in Pennsylvania, former President Trump recently told women,
you will be protected, and I will be your protector.
Speaker 2 (01:28:01):
What do you make of that?
Speaker 8 (01:28:02):
He who, when he was president, hand selected three members
of the United States Supreme Court with the intention that
they would undo the protections of Roe v.
Speaker 2 (01:28:10):
Wade.
Speaker 8 (01:28:11):
And they did just as he intended. And there are
now twenty states with Trump abortion bands, including bands that
make no exception for rape or incest, which is immoral.
Speaker 2 (01:28:23):
Trump abortion bands. I would remind everybody, first of all,
if you guys think Trump hand picked these people, you're wrong.
People come and go here's a bunch of conservatives, usually
the Heritage Foundation, several other people, and he looks and goes, oh,
you know, he doesn't know anything about any of these
people any points or it sounds good, and he goes
from there. Secondly, and this is important, you know, you
(01:28:45):
could the Supreme Court decided to take these cases. And
I always remind everybody that they could have said no.
God knows how many cases a year get thrown at
the Supreme Court. They take a handful. And we've talked
about that today because they've got a trans case, a
gun case, even a porn case that's the age verification,
(01:29:07):
among other things. There's several cases that are going to
be going before the Supreme Court. But you bring a case.
Donald Trump didn't bring a case. And I remind everybody
that Donald Trump didn't bring the cases others did. The
Supreme Court decided to hear it, and that's where it went.
That is where it went. You just have to remind
people of that. They make it seem like, all right,
(01:29:28):
here's the deal. We're going to get these three on here.
They're going to be four getting rid of Roe v. Wade,
and I'll bring the case. They're like, that's not the
way it works, sir. You didn't bring the case. You didn't.
So just a reminder. There are some interesting cases, for sure,
no doubt about that. So and they've got some issues.
I mean, the court itself has issues, and it is
(01:29:50):
because and they can sit here and say, well, it's
all because of the evil rogue Court. It's not an
evil rogue court. I want to remind everybody it is
not an evil rogue court. It is a court that,
for the most part agreed on a vast majority of things,
but a couple issues they were in differing minds and
differing opinions, and because of that, the media jumped on
(01:30:14):
it as if it's some giant rogue court, and it's not.
And the media has done a job in making sure
that everybody understands how evil and bad this court is,
and it's not. It's no different than a lot of
other courts that have been in the past when you
look at the numbers. But people don't want to do
that because it's just easy to go there. Bead three two, three, five, eight,
(01:30:36):
twenty four, twenty three at Chat Benson Show is your Twitter?
You missed any show? Grab the podcast Chat Benton shown
Chad Benson.
Speaker 1 (01:30:45):
Show, Independent Thoughts, Independent Life.
Speaker 2 (01:31:08):
This is Chad Benson scout us back in session. You
know what that means, Oh, it's the Evil Road Court.
Speaker 48 (01:31:15):
The justices are braced for a wave of election related
disputes over voting rules and possibly certification of the results,
but they are also prepared to take on some major
questions like canned states require age verification to access pornography online.
The court will also look at whether the FDA is
(01:31:35):
illegally blocking the sale of flavored e cigarettes and vapes,
and should self assemble gunkits, which are widely available online,
be treated like any other firearms, subject to background checks
and registration requirements.
Speaker 2 (01:31:50):
Wow, I got a lot of stuff. You know, they're evil, right,
that's what I've been told evil. That's a further So
evil are they really evil? Should we look at the
data and the numbers, Well, of course they are chad,
but let's look at the numbers, just humorous. So those
numbers are just It was completely ideological the entire time. Actually, no,
(01:32:11):
twenty two cases were decided six to three, Just twenty
two cases. Out of those only half of what you
would call the ideological half, which means the conservatives over
here and the liberals over there. That's it. The other
ELEVN rulings, by the way, were scrambled. They were all
over the place, and that included like everybody thinks it's
gonna be this big maga. No it hasn't been. In fact,
(01:32:31):
it's been anything but in many cases which the conservative
slash maga people thought they were gonna get handed all
kinds of wins. They failed, including the COVID nineteen right
website slash Facebook slash crushing people's freedom of speech. That
didn't go the way that a lot of people thought.
There were so many things in this when you went
(01:32:55):
in looked the issue is it's never been the same
since Row and anything that may help not conservatives, but
Trump shows you that it's a rogue court. And that's
the way that everybody approaches this. It's a rogue court.
It's a rogue It's a rogue court. And there's some
(01:33:15):
interesting cases coming up. Got a case of transgender Should
trends affirming care aka scientific experiments be run on kids?
I don't think there should be. Sorry, I think when
you're eighteen and you're fully matured and you're fully developed,
and that's a different story. But they understand where they
(01:33:38):
are Scotus. Does they get like, hey, this is we're
in a different place right Like we used to be beloved,
we used to be looked at in a much different way,
and now we've got dragged into politics in a way
that we never had because the politics battle took place
during the confirmation, and even at that point in time
twenty thirty years ago, nobody paid attention like they do now.
(01:34:01):
The first time we paid any attention to confirmation was
with Thomas. That was the first time.
Speaker 49 (01:34:06):
They are all fully aware of how little confidence the
public has in the court right now. But most of
these justices appointed for life take a long view of
this situation and have a lot of faith in the process.
Speaker 2 (01:34:23):
And I'm glad they have a lot of faith in
the process. It is the left and the media that
are driving this insanity right now. It is the left
and the media that is pushing this insanity of them
being rogue and horrible. It is the left and the
media that are doing that. The fact is they're pretty
much about where they were. Oh yeah, it's more conservative
(01:34:47):
than it was, but it's not some out of control court.
And let's not forget if it was six to three
on the liberal side, they would be cheering it and
the media would be like, this is what it should
be about. So everybody's that, how you ass is down?
Scotus is here, They're here to do all of the
bidding for Maga. Such a lie three two, three, five
(01:35:08):
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at you had Benton
shows your Twitter tweet at US text to program. Meanwhile,
the rest of the Southeast, still digging out from the
hell that was Helene, gets ready for Milton.
Speaker 11 (01:35:22):
Or back in worry.
Speaker 12 (01:35:23):
No, now that this news storm is coming. It's like, well,
we're just back in preparation mode and we're just trying
to put, you know, one foot in front of the
other and just keep moving forward. You know, definitely exhausted
from this past week.
Speaker 11 (01:35:35):
What do you need the most help?
Speaker 2 (01:35:38):
And now here comes another one. So Milton, depending on
who you're talking to, is category three or four and
depends on the time of day, God willing, it starts
to fall aparts on the way in, but it is
picking up steam at this point in time. In Tampa Bay,
they're looking at you.
Speaker 11 (01:35:53):
Books around Tampa Bay who took on record storm search
during Colleen, preparing for the second major hurricane in less
than two week.
Speaker 46 (01:36:01):
No.
Speaker 11 (01:36:01):
Colleen destroyed Danny Ponnell's home and most of his rental properties.
He worries that Hurricane Milton will compound that loss.
Speaker 12 (01:36:08):
We don't know what this storm is going to do.
Speaker 2 (01:36:09):
That might be a one two punch, yeah, one, two punch,
now three or four depending They expected to get there
potentially wednesday. How bad it'll be, as you know, we
don't know, because the way it works is nature does.
Nature thinks. It could turn head in a different direction,
(01:36:30):
It could dissipate, it could become a tropical storm, it
could slow down, become nothing, and then all of a
sudden pickup steam. We don't know. I know that, you know.
Marchory Taylor Green said they control the weather. They don't,
by the way, I don't know who they are. That
was the big thing when you saw her post that
last week. And it's funny because I talked about that
(01:36:52):
on Friday, and then somebody said on the station that
you're on, they just had an expert says they do
control the weather. If there are people out there that
control the weather to that extent where they can take
a three hundred miles swath of nature and control it,
you're dealing with superpowers. You're screwed. We're all screwed. But see,
(01:37:14):
they can't do that. Just won't let you, guys know
that they can't. So settle down. They can chad. Now
you've got that. And then on top of this. You've
got what's going on still in North Carolina, the frustration
we heard it earlier, you got still the nightmare that
is happening in Georgia as well as parts of Tennessee.
(01:37:36):
And then, of course, the politics of it rose its
ugly head the other day because people are saying, oh
my god, they're doing this on purpose so nobody can vote.
Speaker 18 (01:37:43):
The focus, of course, is on the recovery efforts, but
election officials in those states that had been impacted by
that storm are also working to make sure that residents
in those areas will be able to vote. In North Carolina,
for instance, early voting starts October seventeen.
Speaker 2 (01:37:58):
And as of today, we are twenty eight days away
from the election. So will those people be able to
vote depends on who you talk to. Guess they're going
to be able to vote. Do I think that's top
of mind right now? I don't, but yes, they'll be
able to vote. You know what's top of mind is
my family still alive. I haven't heard from them. This
is all I have left. My life has changed and
(01:38:20):
changed in the short term. I just wanted to tell
you guys something. In the short term, the change of
just trying to get through the day and the fact
that everything is gone in the long term, when everybody
takes a step back and finds out that the insurance
you had in many of these places is nothing compared
to what you're going to need to rebuild and to
(01:38:41):
move on, that the insurance you had may cover very little,
if anything in some of these things because it was
about storms, not floods. That's a story that is going
to grow in the coming weeks and months, and you know,
then the disinformation comes from that, the misinformation comes from that,
and the frustration will come for that. Well. The misinformation
here's one of the things that's out there right because
(01:39:02):
they even set up FEMA set up a misinformation disinformation
like section on the website I guess, which just is
so ridiculous.
Speaker 28 (01:39:10):
Complicating relief efforts misinformation. And this morning Trump writing falsely
on truth Social that the FEMA disaster relief money is
going to undocumented migrants, but that money comes from a
separate food and we know this morning that some officials
have been threatened because of that misinformation, and there's a
real concern right now that it could prevent people from
(01:39:30):
getting that critical help.
Speaker 2 (01:39:32):
No, it's not going to the critical help is going
to come slower than usual. That's why the local side
of things is going to help you better. The disinformation
about whether or not that money went to migrants, well,
Tom Cotton this weekend on NBC made the Press with
Kristen Welker, was well, he took it head on when
(01:39:52):
she's like, that's really just not true.
Speaker 19 (01:39:54):
My broader question to you, I think is about dismissinformation.
Do you think this is a time to put falsehoods aside,
like the idea that FEMA funds are being redirected to migrants,
which is just not true.
Speaker 20 (01:40:05):
It is true that FEMA and the Department of Homeland
Security have been spending billions of dollars on migrants, and
I understand some people say they're separate fines, but we
just passed the short term spending bill. It's very common
for the administration to come and ask for permission to
move money between finds, especially to prepare for emergencies. And second,
I would note that this administration seems to have no
(01:40:26):
problem finding money when they want to spend it on
their priorities. When they need hundreds of billions of dollars
to pay off student loans for graduate students and gender
studies programs. They somehow find it. When it's trying to
get helicopters to deliver food and water and cellular service
and life saving medicine into these mountain valleys, they somehow
can't seem to find the money.
Speaker 2 (01:40:46):
Did he say ginger studies, because that's not cool gender studies.
I thought he said ginger studies, So that's weird. Why
would they have ginger studies? So he's right. They do
take that money when needed, and they allocate at other places.
They have spent one for four billion dollars since twenty
twenty three on migrants who've come to this country illegally,
(01:41:06):
using our system to do well whatever they essentially need
to do and say to get into this country, and therefore,
by coming into this country, getting the opportunity to go
to places like New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Philadelphia,
and to get gobs of cash and opportunities to stay
in certain places. We've seen it over and over again.
(01:41:27):
This is nothing new, and people inside of those cities
have been complaining about this for quite a while. So
to say that that isn't true would be a lie
because if you look at the rules, the rules state
and I'm talking about when it comes to FEMA as
at any given time, if they need to, they can
either reconvene Congress to move that money or in some
(01:41:48):
cases they have the authority to move that money to
other places to help out in things like natural disasters.
So settle down. And then what people will say is
will they voted against it? They didn't vote against it.
I go and say this again, a continuing resolution is
not a standalone bill for FEMA. A continuing resolution. So
(01:42:11):
because they voted against ninety nine things they didn't want,
somehow that FEMA one being in there, he serves you, right,
is kind of what people are saying to me. And
the continuing resolution has to do with our budget and
all the stuff that we go on. It's just a nightmare,
it is. So settle yourselves down. I found this interesting.
Changing minds, this is very interesting. I want you guys
(01:42:34):
to soak this up.
Speaker 21 (01:42:35):
Why is it so hard to change someone's mind? Let's
talk about it. The brain really doesn't like changing its mind,
and that gives rise to things like the confirmation bias
anchoring bias. Confirmation bias means that we'll actually selectively filter
out information that is incongruent with our existing beliefs. Even
if we do process that information, we'll give it a
(01:42:57):
lot less weight than we would with something that actually
aligns with our existing ideas. Anchoring biases where we hold
on to the very first thing that we learn about something,
and it's hard for us to let go of that,
even when we're presented with evidence that suggests that it's
not accurate. What a terrible design? Why are we like this? Well,
neuroscientifically speaking, once you learn something, your brain has to
(01:43:19):
restructure and rewire itself. We also instinctively perceive change, uncertainty,
unpredictability as inherently dangerous. Sticking to what's familiar can obviously
serve as an evolutionary advantage.
Speaker 2 (01:43:34):
Very interesting, So at a livationary advantage, our brain gets
wired in such a way that when we find new
information that goes against our quote unquote confirmation bias, it
is hard for us to rewire it. But this gets
to the point I think that's most important.
Speaker 21 (01:43:51):
The last and perhaps more psychological component of that is
that our ideas tend to be tethered to our identity,
and the brain really doesn't like threats to identity. Your
sense of self involves so many different structures, memories, processes
in the brain. To rewrite that would be very complicated,
and in the daily struggle for survival, potentially fatal.
Speaker 2 (01:44:14):
Because of tribes, and your tribe may leave you out
in the cold if you decide to go in a
different direction. It's different.
Speaker 21 (01:44:20):
Now.
Speaker 2 (01:44:20):
I don't know if it's going to be that fatal,
but understand that this is something that's happened over lifetime
and lifetimes, lifetimes and lifetimes lifetimes. Very interesting. We choose
to have confirmation bias based on something we see, and
then out of a safety side of things, we protect
ourselves by not rewiring the brain the way it should
(01:44:40):
be more given data that juxtaposed the data that we
have already, and then our identity is wrapped around our
first thought process, and so is the tribe, and we
don't want to let them down, so we feel that
we'll just continue to move in that direction. Very interesting.
I think we're talking about this more or tomorrow. We
touched on a little bit earlier today. I find the
(01:45:02):
whole thing fascinating. Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty
four to twenty three at Chad Benson Show. Is your
Twitter tweet at his text program wrap it up straight ahead.
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Benson Show.
Speaker 1 (01:46:25):
Welcome to chesshef No, not the country, the institution, The
Chad Benson Show.
Speaker 47 (01:46:31):
Good waiting for It is the preseason, but Lebron James
and Lebron James Junior on the floor at the same time. Again,
it would be official in the regular season.
Speaker 2 (01:46:42):
But as we said, this is cool to see, cool
to see indeed, so last night Lebron James and his
son came the first father and son duo to play
in the NBA. Here's the thing. Didn't officially count, but
I guess we you know, we look at it and
we say, all right, all right, right, right, you know
it's it's gonna count. We see that. But it brings
us to the question of who was first.
Speaker 15 (01:47:04):
And then I go and spoil it all by saying
something stupid.
Speaker 2 (01:47:09):
We'll take stupid pills this morning it's the honest ones
you want to watch out.
Speaker 37 (01:47:13):
For, because you can never predict they're gonna do something
incredibly stupid.
Speaker 2 (01:47:18):
Now you're the fact stupid. One with the big mouth
is stupid. You should never underestimate the predictability of stupidity.
Now it's time for stupid information. Oh, we've had a
lot of father and son duos briefly making an appearance
(01:47:40):
throughout history. How about Ken Griffy and Ken Griffy Junior.
They made an appearance back to back home runs pretty awesome.
Montreal expos in two thousand and one traded the great
hitter and based dealer Tim Raights the Orioles, who had
just called up his son, Tim Range Junior. You could
even go back far and find that at one time
(01:48:01):
pre the NFL, which eventually became the NFL, the Columbus
Panhandlers by then name the Columbus Tigers, played their last
season nineteen twenty six, but Ted and Charles Nesser remained
the only NFL father and son duo to play at
the same team. You see, Ted was the coach and
player and his son was nineteen and played on the team.
(01:48:23):
But the first father and son duo that was more
than just a duo that played professional sports in modern times. Well,
that would be Gordy Howe and his sons. You see,
Gordy Howe retired from hockey at age forty three, and
he had one of the greatest careers of all time.
But his sons Mark and Marty joined the Houston Arrows
of the World Hockey Associations three seasons later. He could
(01:48:44):
not resist, says I want to play with him. Here's
the thing. It wasn't just a quick brief cameo. He
played seven seasons with them, eventually moving with the Whalers
to New England, who then joined the NHL in seventy
nine eighty. He was he's fifty one years old. He
played eighty games with the Whalers in his final season,
scoring fifteen goals for finally hanging up his skates. That
(01:49:07):
was incredible, solid fun show today, as always, lots of stuff.
We're gonna be watching what's going on with Milton obviously,
what's happening in the Middle East as well, and the
big election twenty eight days away. You guys, have a
blessed rest of your Monday. We'll do it again tomorrow
as always, nine Night Jack.
Speaker 10 (01:49:25):
This is the Chad Benson Show.