All Episodes

October 11, 2024 109 mins
Biden joins growing calls for Congress to pass hurricane relief. One dead and 12 rescued after elevator malfunction trapped group in Colorado gold mine. Chad's NFL picks. Hurricane Milton cleanup. Diddy trial date set. Why people like Trump. Zach Abraham, Bulwark Capital, talks the effect of the hurricanes on the financial markets. 
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Chat Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
It could have been worse, that's for damn sure.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
But it was still nasty. But when all is said
and done, they dodged a bullet. And part of that
is because they were planning for a beast and the
beast arrived in a different way, and we'll talk about
that in a second. But because of that plan, because
they were forward thinking, and give credit to Ron DeSantis,

(00:38):
it wasn't as bad as it could have been. And yes,
part of that is because nature decided not to rear
its ugly head the way it could have. But it
was still ugly.

Speaker 4 (00:45):
The storm was significant, but thankfully this was not the
worst case scenario. The storm did weaken before landfall.

Speaker 5 (00:52):
President Bike calling on Congress to return to Washington immediately
to pass additional funding for disaster at making this vow
to the people of Florida.

Speaker 6 (01:01):
I promise you, and you have to pick up the
pieces still. I want you to know everything on our
power to help you put pieces back together.

Speaker 2 (01:09):
And there's going to be some pieces. This thing's going
to be expensive.

Speaker 3 (01:12):
You know, yesterday during the long pressure that he did
and I'm talking about DeSantis, you know, somebody asked them
about wall Street, and what do you think of Wall Street,
you know, saying this. Look, here's the reality of it.
This thing's going to cost an upwards of sixty to
one hundred billion dollars. It is going to take a
while to build some of this stuff out, the human lives,

(01:33):
and we are not going to know what that number
looks like for a while because, as we all know,
there are people are missing. There are some people that
are reported missing that aren't actually missing, and it's a
fluid situation and that matters more than money.

Speaker 2 (01:44):
But the truth is that this thing is going to
take a bit, you know. I mean, you've got.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
Some serious, serious damage everywhere. The destruction was tremendous, and
a lot of that which destruction was done by tornadoes.

Speaker 7 (01:55):
We at this church that's just in front of that neighborhood,
this tree snapped, those hurricane shutters blown off, and the
roof of the church there just completely gone. We saw
cruise out looking through the rubble in that neighborhood yesterday.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
One of the.

Speaker 7 (02:08):
Deadliest parts of this hurricane is something people say they
weren't even expecting this damage from tornadoes that happened before
the hurricane even made Lumfall.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
On the opposite coast, and.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
That was the thing that surprised a lot of people,
is the tornado damage that was done. FEMA's there, You've
got all the local CHARITIESNGOS. I was talking to my
buddy last night. I'm gonna try to get him on
the phone maybe a little bit later. He is actually
there right now and he's works for all the insurance
companies out there. I said, how's the damage. He says,

(02:42):
it's extensive, it's bad, it goes. It's not as bad
as the flooding has been in North Carolina, because that
flooding is just you wipe everything else because but there's
no doubt that this thing it missed a couple areas
where it could have been horrific. And he said, one
of the things, though, you're seeing is people out there
helping each other, which is the issue that I think

(03:02):
a lot of people out trouble with what's going on
in the you know, the Carolinas, in particular North Carolina.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Is a lot of people know the area. They want
to get out and help.

Speaker 3 (03:11):
They weren't being allowed to help where you've got such
an extensive area here, and they are going out and
neighbors are helping neighbors in Tampa.

Speaker 8 (03:20):
A mother and son use their fishing boat to rescue people.

Speaker 9 (03:23):
These people on need help.

Speaker 10 (03:24):
Nobody has been here today and they have animals, no police, nothing,
and they're really needing help.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
So you're getting a lot of that out there. It
was again, it was a beast. There was no doubt
about that. But now it's time to pick up the pieces,
time to move on. Let the political battle begin for
money and the rebuild and what the Wall Street and
insurance companies are going to do that will take place
when that takes place. Is now, it's just hope these
people and get themselves in their lives back as fast

(03:53):
as possible. And the beauty of our country and how
we are built. And I'm not just talking about as
the belief in ourselves in America. I'm talking in America
as a holes and infrastructure is You watch how fast
that this is going to go. There's going to be
some issues still in the next week or two or three,
but I wouldn't be surprised. By the middle of next
week you see people returning to some normal way of life.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
You watch, that's how fast we bounce back. In some areas. Obviously,
it's a little worse. But in other areas you watch
it's like, hey, it's time to get back to work.
We got to go.

Speaker 3 (04:22):
This is life three, two, three, five, three eight, twenty
four to twenty three atch hadmentson show is your Twitter?

Speaker 2 (04:27):
And speaking of that, we have an election coming up.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
What do we twenty Let me give you the exact
you know, hours, day, seconds away from the election.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
I want to get it right. We're about twenty four
days and about sixteen and a half hours away from
election day.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
For many of you, you're already heading out to the polls.
The opportunity is in front of you. What do the
polls say?

Speaker 11 (04:54):
Nearly three quarters of Americans would like to see Vice
President Harris chart a new course as president if electtion did,
rather than continue the policies of the Biden administration. That
according to a new ABC News ipsos Paul, which also
finds voters don't expect her to do that. Just thirty
three percent expect to see a new direction from the
vice president. Just over half of voters want to see

(05:15):
something new from former President Trump in a second term,
but just a third expect it.

Speaker 3 (05:19):
I don't know if I expect anything different as politics,
and I know how politics works. If Harris wins, it's
uncharted territory. Now she's just a politician. You know, the
fact that she's a female should have zero play in
any of this. I just want everybody understand.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
That the fact that she has bosoms and a whoah
should mean nothing.

Speaker 3 (05:39):
How are you going to govern? And that should be
the only thing that matters. How are you going to lead?
That should be the only thing that matters. For Trump,
I think a lot of it would be much of
the same. I think he would be well, he would
be in, you know, a lame duck if you will,
in the sense that he can't run again. So would
he be more untethered as some people say he's going
to be a dictator. No, I think what's going to
happen is he's going to come out is you tried

(06:00):
to do a lot of things that he thinks America
should you know, hope and want for I think you
know he's also going to come that stuff, as many
presidents do.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
By the way, you start thinking a bit about your legacy.

Speaker 3 (06:10):
I've always said the legacy that he is leaving has
to do with the Supreme Court, which he may get
another opportunity to appoint somebody the minute.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
If he wins, the.

Speaker 3 (06:18):
First thing he needs to do is go straight over
to Clarence Thomas and say you need to step down.
The first thing he needs to do number one, and
that's obviously you hold the Senate, and that's the first
thing though, You've got to step down, got to go young.
So it's going to be interesting to see how this
thing plays out because they depending on the polls, and
the polls are all over the place, and when you
go and look at these numbers, you know, everybody's trying

(06:40):
to have that magic I know what's going to happen.
Nobody knows what's going to happen. These polls are we're
looking at something that we may have never seen before
on how close this race may be.

Speaker 12 (06:51):
Holes aren't really helpful for discerning, especially when the American
public is on clearly on one side of an issue.
They're just not that useful at discerning the difference of
like a two to three point presidential race where emotions
are running high and clearly either candidate could win.

Speaker 3 (07:09):
And that's where we are, I mean, within the margin
of error, and it's closer than it was for Hillary
and it's closer than it was for Biden. So a
lot of people out there are on the right are like,
oh my god, it's this This could be a runaway
for Donald Trump.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
Because those poles were so awful. We know how he
doesn't poll well.

Speaker 3 (07:25):
People lie, They'll talk about it at a possibility, it's
absolutely possibility. But I think this thing is going to
come down to literally blocks of people in certain areas,
both rural and urban, that are going to decide this.

Speaker 12 (07:40):
If the polls are accurate right now, this will be
the closest election in our lifetimes, and perhaps the closest
election since the nineteenth century.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
That is crazy.

Speaker 3 (07:52):
I mean, it's like it's going to be like that
movie was it Robin Williams, where he's the only person
who's cast a vote and he's like the decider.

Speaker 12 (08:00):
This could come down to one of the candidates winning
just exactly two hundred and seventy electors to the Electoral
College if the polls are exactly right, and.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
I don't know if they're exactly right. We never know.

Speaker 3 (08:12):
I mean, I've looked at AI models. I mean, I
go with my gut. There's some days I think it's
it's a Trump Win. There's some days I think it's
going to be Harris Win. It's I have you know,
the closer we get, the better sense I'll get. But
I still think there are a decent amount of undecided
in certain areas, in particular Pennsylvania, and I think that
is the one Pennsylvania I believe. Is it nothing else

(08:37):
matters at this moment in time. If I'm both of
those candidates, I've bought a house in Pennsylvania. At this
moment in time, I'm setting up shop three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chadminton shows
your Twitter, a lot of stuff to get to get
a little Finally, Friday Sounds, I got your NFL picks
as well, and truth, Baby, We're going to talk about truth.
Interesting study done out of Ohio State. Talk about that.

(09:02):
I think you guys are going to find it very interesting.
It's about truth. I know it's crazy, kids, I know
it's crazy. Truth Does it matter? Of course it does?
You know that, and so do I. Speaking of truth.
Later out today, we got our good buddy in yours
talk a bit about the economy of what impact maybe
the hurricanes can have on certain things or buddy from Bulwark.
Of course I love Borg and I see my family there.

(09:25):
You guys know that. Yeah, we have him on the
show with sponsored show. But the guy is as real
as it get. And right now our friends who at Bullwark,
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You call eight sixty six seven seven nine Risks. You
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(09:46):
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(10:07):
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(10:29):
this programmer 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 and securities are
thoughts to being materially accurate, and actual performance may differ
investments involved. Risks you know not guarantee past performance, is
not guarantee future results. Trip two four three zero eight.
It's Finday Friday. Let's take a listen when we come back,
Chat Benson.

Speaker 1 (10:47):
Shoe Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Thank god it is finally Friday.

Speaker 3 (11:02):
Man, what a hell a week to spend. It's been
a crazy week. And if you forgot already some of
the stuff that's happened, I would like to remind you
how fast the news cycle moves and some of the
stuff you might have missed. And we take a look
back and listen back with our good friends George Jones.
Because finally, baby, it's Friday.

Speaker 13 (11:23):
It's just an incredible, incredible, incredible hurricane. It has dropped.
It has dropped fifteen millibars in ten hours. I apologize.
This is just horrific.

Speaker 14 (11:35):
Got a Kathy Bara in our garage, himers in our bathroom.

Speaker 15 (11:39):
I'm got a hundredfold I know. I'll say it in
Monday's mourning. Old got through buggeting and do my skin
come on morning, I'll be fay free.

Speaker 16 (11:57):
Scar.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
I've got my motor running. Wow.

Speaker 10 (12:02):
This is 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 17 (12:17):
He loses man, what if you lose them?

Speaker 18 (12:33):
Fine?

Speaker 5 (12:41):
When I make you out in the hall, I said,
I'm really nervous because I want this to go well
for you.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
I want it to go well for the country.

Speaker 10 (12:47):
It is not right that teachers and nurses and firefighters
are paying a higher tax rate than billionaires and the
biggest corporations.

Speaker 9 (12:55):
And I plan on making that fair but we're dealing
with the real world. But the real world includes.

Speaker 2 (13:01):
How are you going to get this new Congress.

Speaker 4 (13:03):
Hurricane watches have been issued for portions of west central
Florida and Florida's Nature Coast. Thankfully, this was not the
worst case scenario.

Speaker 19 (13:26):
It's not a matrix to someone I just did. It
doesn't feel real, so I'm always thinking about it. You
know that's my dad, because that's not literally my dad.

Speaker 20 (13:33):
A ferocious hurricane Milton making landfall along the west coast
of Florida.

Speaker 21 (13:38):
If you want to go watch MSNBC Primetime and hear
how great things are going for the Arias campaign.

Speaker 22 (13:43):
You're welcome to do that.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
But if you want to.

Speaker 20 (13:44):
Understand what's actually happening, we're here to tell you she's
got a lot of trouble.

Speaker 10 (13:48):
Would you have done something differently than President Biden?

Speaker 9 (13:51):
During the past four years.

Speaker 10 (13:52):
There has done a thing that comes to mind in
terms of and I've been a part of most of
the decisions that have had.

Speaker 3 (14:01):
Oh my god, still the worst answer of the week,
any question and answer that was the worst answer of
the week.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Ah.

Speaker 3 (14:08):
No, No, I wouldn't have done anything different. I think
this thing's going really well. I mean, I know the
rest of the world feels like it's going to hell
in a hand basket, But hey, I am just thinking
this thing.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
Is awesome, just awful. What are you doing? He's the
reason why?

Speaker 3 (14:22):
Maybe's Last night during her unscripted town hall, there was
some sort of teleprompter.

Speaker 2 (14:28):
People are asking a question.

Speaker 3 (14:30):
Totally understandable. Hey, this is supposed to be unscripted. People
ask you a question, you answered the question. You shouldn't
have a teleprompter. It's kind of like a conversation, right,
Do I need a teleprompter for a conversation? I would
hope I wouldn't, but apparently she might. Three two three, five,
three eight twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show,

(14:53):
is your ex slash Twitter whatever the hell it's called?
Speaking of that Tesla debuted it's bots? What Yeah, you
had to see these bots? I mean it is, uh,
it's crazy, awesome and a bit frightening.

Speaker 23 (15:07):
Optimist saying it's even talking. Oh hello, John, how are
you crazy?

Speaker 24 (15:11):
I'm talking to robot from Santase probably from where you
were from where you were born in Silicon Valley?

Speaker 23 (15:17):
Where do you live in San Jose? Walking in a
Valley or Theresa A.

Speaker 16 (15:22):
No.

Speaker 23 (15:22):
I live in Los Attles.

Speaker 22 (15:24):
Shat's a wonderful Yeah.

Speaker 23 (15:26):
Where do you live?

Speaker 22 (15:27):
I live in Paula also at the current Columbent. That's
where they train us.

Speaker 25 (15:30):
That's where we get our bills, and that's where we
look bill.

Speaker 23 (15:32):
It's crazy, I'm talking to robot.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
Yeah, that's where they train us. That's where we get
our bill, that's where we get our marching orders. Do you
go out to destroy you humans?

Speaker 23 (15:38):
What's the hardest thing about being a robot?

Speaker 25 (15:41):
Trying to learn how to be as human as you guys.

Speaker 26 (15:46):
That's something I try harder to do every day, and
I hope that people help us become that awesome.

Speaker 23 (15:52):
Nice to meet you, optimists to you as well.

Speaker 3 (15:54):
Now, I don't know if we need that. I don't
know if we need you that human. I'd like a
separation a little bit of it, wouldn't you. These things
are badass though, I mean, it's war's gonna look different,
especially when they come for us humans. But the good
news is they did sing Happy birthday to me, but
not to me. This is for Chad. But I wasn't
the Chad.

Speaker 2 (16:12):
But you know what, I'll take it Chadad.

Speaker 23 (16:16):
Yeah, everyone, what's all?

Speaker 22 (16:19):
Pin have ey birthday together while.

Speaker 17 (16:21):
I get.

Speaker 23 (16:27):
By birth.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
Now I must destroy you. I have this urge to
destroy you.

Speaker 3 (16:48):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four twenty three
at Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
Is your Twitter? Your Instagram? Truth matters?

Speaker 3 (16:55):
Interesting study done out of OHIPO Date University. Guys, we'll
talk a bit about that because I'm a big believer.

Speaker 2 (17:06):
Let's talk about truth. Let's talk about data, Let's talk
about facts, and this study shows that.

Speaker 3 (17:12):
Guess what, all the things we talk about on the
show and how people go to their own areas.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
Well, that may be actually very true. What Yeah, the
echo chamber thing is very real.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
We'll talk about that a bunch of other stuff to
get to, including your NFL picks.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
It is the Chad Benson Chow.

Speaker 27 (17:38):
Chad Benson, Joe.

Speaker 1 (17:59):
The Chat Benson.

Speaker 2 (18:01):
Authority.

Speaker 28 (18:02):
See an elevator malfunctioned at the Molly Kathleen gold mine,
killing one person and trapping a group of tourists one
thousand feet underground. Eleven people, including children, were pulled to
safety early on, but twelve others had to wait hours
to be rescued. Authorities say the tourists who were trapped
for six hours, had access to water well in the mine,

(18:22):
but no food.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
Oh my god, it's horrible that the tourist died. You
listen to that, You like, they had access to water
but no food.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
People, you were going into a gold mine of which
people used to work there, that was their living. Oh yeah,
I forgot about that. We've turned it into a tourist attraction.
And it's horrible that that happened.

Speaker 3 (18:46):
And oddly enough, the fact that it broke like that
was also how they got the people back up because
they ended up fixing it. But it's a thousand feet
below and it's terrifying.

Speaker 2 (18:58):
I mean it is when you think it, But then
you think to yourself, my god, people, this used to
be people's jobs.

Speaker 26 (19:04):
Once they were able to identify that there were no
other issues that could cause a problem with the equipment,
they were able to lower it back down without anyone
in it and then bring it back up to make
sure that it was going to run correctly. And then
we decided on a plan to go ahead and do
that bring them back up. It's going to take a
full investigation and know what really went wrong. Accidents happen
when you're dealing with this type of machinery.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
Bold machinery, but it is.

Speaker 3 (19:26):
That's the first thing that when I heard about it,
I thought to myself, this used to be somebody's job.
This is still somebody's job in other parts of the world.
And if you've ever seen coal mining, by the way.

Speaker 2 (19:40):
Guess what, that's still people's job where they go deep
and it is crazy.

Speaker 3 (19:47):
I follow some people on Instagram. They're coal miners and
they go down and they get on this little machine.
They lay back and it's just like it's like they're
laying on a thing that's like a bed and there's
something just above their head and they're going it's crazy,
and we're like, we should turn this into a tourist attraction. No,
all have a hard pass three two, three, five, three eight,

(20:08):
twenty four to twenty three at Chadmnton show is your Twitter,
tweet at is text the program.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
Love hearing from all of you. Uh Kamala Harris had
a town hall last night. One of the big things
was immigration.

Speaker 10 (20:17):
So my pledge to you of Alliegionce is that, by
the grace of God and hopefully with your support as well,
when I am elected president, I will bring back that
Border of Security Bill, and I will sign it into
law and do the work of focusing on what we
must do tav orderly and humane pathway to earn citizenship.

(20:41):
And one of the biggest problems with failure to have
a comprehensive plan for immigration is that we have not
given them the pathway to earn their right to citizenship.
And that is again, that is one of the priorities
for me, frankly in terms of my motivation for what
I know we must do.

Speaker 9 (21:02):
And I think it's I think it should compel.

Speaker 10 (21:06):
Us to agree they should not have to live in fear,
but should have an ability to be on a pathway
to turn their citizenship. So it is one of my priorities.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
She just rambles, No, they shouldn't get citizenship. Sorry, that's
not the way that happens. And if you want to
we talked earlier about you know, one of the things
when you become president, at some point you start thinking
about your legacy, because who wouldn't think about their legacy
in a situation like that, of course you're going to
think about it. For Trump, I still say his legacy

(21:37):
is going to be well, yes, he was different, he
was all of the things he brought about, a populism.
When it comes to the likes of the Republican side
that they haven't seen he was much different. He was
again he was Trump, But his legacy in the governing
side is going to be what took place, in my opinion,
for us and our impact here, it is going to
be the courts. Hers is if she got something past

(21:59):
and there was a pathway to citizenship that they were
able to get people on. That legacy would be the
fact that she essentially eliminates the Republican Party. Because if
you're gonna go and get a'm teen millions citizenship and
you're the party that does it, and you're the party
that's been fighting for it, you're the party that's going
to get a vast majority of those votes, that would

(22:20):
be her legacy, no doubt about that. And that's a
big gif. Still have a long ways to go, even
though it's a short time. If that makes sense. Three two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four to twenty three at Chet Benton shows your Twitter,
I'll have more of the town hall yesterday, including guests.
Did she have a teleprompter? Sure seem that way. It's
not really an unscripted thing. If you've got a teleprompter,
talk about that. But first let's talk about truth. I'm

(22:43):
a big believer in truth and understand information is important. Okay,
you can't have truth in a subject if you don't
have information and all the information. And that is the
problem with where we are into I've said it, it's
been one of my mantras for years. People in today's

(23:04):
world do not want information, They want affirmation. I want
you to affirm my beliefs. Well, there's a study out
of Ohio State, And guess what that seems kind of
like what people do?

Speaker 25 (23:15):
You know that feeling when you are in a debate
with somebody and you make a point and you just
know you're right, only to find out that self assuredness
was misplaced and you're really actually very wrong. It turns
out there's a scientific reason people can be so confidently wrong.
A newly published study shows it boils down to you
thinking you have all the information you need to form

(23:37):
an opinion when you really do not. One of the
studies authors put it this way, quote our brains are
overconfident that they can arrive at a reasonable conclusion with
very little information.

Speaker 3 (23:50):
That's true I mean, that's everybody's, you know, and it
doesn't matter what it is, sports, anything, but information is
the thing that matters. Information is key, and the thing
is where we get information today matters as much as
anything else, because that is how we then perceive the

(24:12):
right and the wrong.

Speaker 25 (24:14):
The researchers with the Ohio State and University wanted to
know how people make judgments about situations or other people
based on their confidence in information they have, even if
they don't have all the information they might need. So
they rounded up thirteen hundred people and had them read
a fictitious story. Five hundred were given a version that
was biased in favor of a certain point of view,

(24:36):
another five hundred were given one biased against that view,
and three hundred were given a balanced article. The fake
story was about a school that was running out of
water because its local aquifer was drying up, so a
merger with another school was being considered. Once they had
read the story, researchers asked their opinions on what the
school should do and how confident they were that they

(24:57):
had all the information they needed to make the judgment.
They found a majority of the people were more likely
to agree with the bias of the argument they had
read and were often confident they had enough information to
make that decision.

Speaker 3 (25:10):
Often confident. And how many of us out there believe
that we've got all the information because we don't. And
the reason is is because we don't seek it out. Now,
some of it's hard. I'll be one hundred percent honestly,
I do this for a living. Sometimes to get all
the information, you've got to dig. You've got to go
to certain places because every side, and unfortunately that's the
way the world has become. This side, that's everybody's going

(25:33):
to give their score to the game. They're not going
to give the other team score. So you've got to
go and put puzzle pieces together, and it gets frustrating.
And I will tell you to be honest, sometimes it's
an incomplete puzzle because even when you get both sides,
it's not fully complete because there's not enough data information
overall to get.

Speaker 2 (25:53):
And the other side of it is identity.

Speaker 3 (25:54):
We don't want to go and challenge our beliefs because
maybe we feel like, well to things. First, we've become
this identity is who we are, so we believe so
much in it. We don't feel that we should have
to challenge it. And secondly, and this is important tribe.
We've talked about that over and over again. We don't
want to go against the tribes, so we would never
challenge anything that has to do with the tribe.

Speaker 25 (26:17):
But then the researchers had half the people from each
group also read the other group's version of the story.
It turns out when they had all the facts, they
were more likely to change their mind. Researchers also found
that those who only read one biased version of the
article were more confident in their opinions than those who
had read both articles.

Speaker 3 (26:38):
I tell you guys, you know, we try to do
things differently here, you know where stan politically, of course,
more conservative than liberal. That being said, I want to
know the truth and I can handle it because I
don't live my life in the identity world that a
lot of people do. But it goes both ways, and
both sides only want to give their score, and you
can't have a healthy society that way. If you believe

(27:00):
even what you believe in, and you believe it wholeheartedly,
don't be afraid to challenge your beliefs because you may
learn something new. But if you only want affirmation and
nothing else, then you're not really looking for the truth.
You just want everybody to affirm what you believe.

Speaker 2 (27:22):
And that is not a good thing. Find out the truth,
do a little research.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chadminton Show is your Twitter three dot is
texted program love hearing from every single fun of you.
Rough Greens, ruff greens dot com, slash Yet, vitamins and minerals,
probiotics make a three sixty nine. All of this incredible
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Right now, they want you to try a jumpstart trial
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(28:28):
ninety my dog for Rough Greens eight a eight ninety
my dog for roughgreensroughgreens dot com slash Chad.

Speaker 2 (28:33):
Some NFL pic straight Ahead Chad Benson Chow.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
Fronting with Scissors sounds great compared.

Speaker 10 (28:49):
To this same.

Speaker 11 (28:52):
If you're looking for something to watch this speaky season,
Variety has ranked the one hundred best horror movies of
all times, laying the competition at number one is nineteen
seventy four's The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, followed by nineteen seventy
threes The Exorcist, and the nineteen sixty Alfred Hitchcock classic Psycho.

Speaker 2 (29:12):
All Good, All Good. Our rankings start next week.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
I count on the thirteen best horror movies of all time,
and I break it down in a way other people
don't break it down.

Speaker 2 (29:23):
It is going to be you guys are gonna like it.

Speaker 3 (29:25):
And I'm taking some suggestions, okay, of movies that maybe
I haven't seen, maybe you have I'd love to hear
from You can tweet at me text the program three
two three, five, three eight, twenty four twenty three. That
is also the comment line, or you can tweet directly
at us at Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
But I do want to hear from you.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
I want to know what you think is the best
horror movie of all time. We're going to break it
down starting next week, the thirteen greatest horror movies of
all time.

Speaker 2 (29:54):
It is Friday, you know what that means?

Speaker 29 (29:56):
And AFL maybe he's.

Speaker 2 (30:09):
Kounted down the NFL games pretty much five hundred this year,
not doing great.

Speaker 3 (30:14):
I'm gonna make it up though big win last night
got the Niners the hell of a game. By the way,
Rock Purty still going on. There's still something about him.
Though he was the last pick in the draft, right,
mister irrelevant, There's just still something about him that I
think you know that people still wonder as this guy
for real, like they're waiting for something to happen, that
shoe to drop.

Speaker 2 (30:35):
The guy's just he just keeps doing his thing. He's
making like eight hundred grand this year, maybe a little
bit more, maybe nine hundred grand. Are you ready for this?

Speaker 3 (30:47):
He's gonna get a raise probably next year, could be
making sixty million.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Soak that up. It's good. Rais, Jags and Bears take
the Bears. Saints. Buccaneers go with Saints.

Speaker 3 (31:01):
Missing the quarterback, They're gonna go with Spencer Rattler. I
think the Bucks A're gonna get a win this weekend.
Ravens Commanders. Normally I would say the Ravens in an
easy walk. I still think they're gonna win the game.
The Commanders are gonna give him a better game. Jaden
Daniels is playing a hell of a quarterback right now.

(31:21):
He is playing like lights out. The guy's just brilliant.
Packers Cards go with Packers. Titans, Colts go with Titans
this weekend. Patriots, Texans go with the Texans. Brown's Eagles
go with the Eagles. Browns are awful. Broncos Chargers, I'm
gonna go with the Broncos this weekend. Raiders, Steelers go

(31:41):
with the Steelers. Falcons Panthers, I'm gonna run with the Falcons. Lions,
Cowboys go with the Boys this weekend. Continue to give
you guys love and I don't know why at times. Bengals, Giants,
I'm gonna go with the Bengals and the Jets, Bills
go with the Bills on Monday Night areas you're picks
this week?

Speaker 2 (32:02):
How about that?

Speaker 3 (32:03):
It's funny that you look at the Texans right now.
They are chicken ass taking names. They traded away Deshaun
Watson for basically everything the Browns had. Brown signed him
to a ridiculous contract for untained millions of dollars.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
And I think it was Stephen A.

Speaker 3 (32:21):
Smith this weekend this week that said he should be
arrested for being awful and not just talking about as
human as a quarterback. He is just absolutely awful, and
I think that is being nice.

Speaker 2 (32:37):
He doesn't look engaged, he doesn't look like he cares,
and that is a lot of money.

Speaker 3 (32:42):
And so he thinks next year, as soon as this
season's over, they're going to trade him to another team
and give that team their first round pick, so then
that team can cut him. They get a first round
pick because it's that bad. It is that bad of
a situation in there. Three two, three, five, three eight,
twenty four to twenty three atch you had Benson show

(33:04):
is your Twitter? As everybody still is reeling in the
Southeast through the you know the massive storms that rolled
through the Hurricane Helen dumped all that water and the flooding,
and then you had Milton that dumped a bit of flooding,
but more tornadoes than anything else.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
There's plenty of damage.

Speaker 3 (33:21):
Tay Swift, Oh no, little t Swift, little tea swizzle action.

Speaker 11 (33:27):
Taylor Swift is doing her part to help those affected
by Hurricanes Helene and Milton. She made a five million
dollar donation to Feeding America, which will go towards helping
communities rebuild and recover after the storms. And speaking of
hurricane relief, Keith Urban, Bailey Zimmerman, and Cheryl Crowe have
been added to the Concert for Carolina lineup. Benefit show,

(33:50):
spearheaded by North Carolina natives Luke Combs and Eric Church,
is set for October twenty sixth at Charlotte's Bank of
America Stadium.

Speaker 3 (33:58):
That's pretty cool, that is. I know, you guys are
still thinking about Kanye when they did the thing on
MTV and George bush Head's Black People sent I had
more comments about that yesterday and they're like, oh God,
I remember that, and I just kept thinking, man, that's
that guy's that guy's a bit out of his mind
and then your hold your beer moment, You're like, do

(34:21):
you think this is bad?

Speaker 2 (34:22):
If you could look into the future? Wow? Crazy? Indeed?

Speaker 3 (34:26):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
at Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
Is your Twitter, you can tweet at us text program.

Speaker 3 (34:32):
Some of you have already text in about the truth
as we were just talking about it. The fact that
people are and I've talked about it for years because
I get a lot of pushback, and you guys know this.
You know how I feel about Donald Trump, love a
lot of the ideas. I think at times he makes

(34:56):
life way harder than it should be on himself and
a lot of people will admit that. And at the
same time, I can readily admit he's a very flawed candidate.
And for Trump's supporters, they get mad at me, but
that's the reality. And some of the stuff he does

(35:16):
say is ridiculous and it's bs and it's out out
just crap. And on the other side, on the left,
the fact that I don't hate him, the fact that
I do support a lot of what he would like
to do. You flip out it and that article or

(35:38):
that study by Ohio State is just spot on. It's
it's and it's a snapshot of what we've talked about
for years. Everybody now wants affirmation, nobody wants information. Some
of you are pissed and some of you going, yeah,
you know, maybe there's more to it.

Speaker 2 (35:55):
There is more to it.

Speaker 3 (35:56):
That's why I keeps saying every single day, go out
there and challenge your beliefs when it comes to certain things.
And don't make these things like politics, your sole identity
unless you are a politician, if that makes sense. Three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show
Show Twitter, Instagram.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
If you miss an the show, please grab the podcast.
I much appreciate that this is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 30 (36:21):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (36:50):
They are digging out in Florida. Milton came, Milton, saw
Milton destroyed. Not as bad as it could have.

Speaker 5 (36:56):
Been, Florida's Governor Ron De Santis authorizing thousands of floor
to National Guard troops to respond, saying he knows that
Hurricane Milton could have been even worse.

Speaker 4 (37:06):
The storm was significant, but thankfully this was not the
worst case scenario. The storm did weaken before landfall.

Speaker 5 (37:13):
President by calling on Congress to return to Washington immediately
to pass additional funding for disaster at making this vow
to the people of Florida.

Speaker 6 (37:22):
I promise you you have to pick up the pieces still.
I want you to know everything on our power to
help you put pieces back together or whatever.

Speaker 2 (37:32):
It wasn't as bad as it could have been.

Speaker 3 (37:34):
Talking to my buddy who is there right now, works
in the insurance world, and they are surveying all the damage.
He said, if it would have been north of Tampa,
it would have flooded everything. It was not as bad
as it could have been. He's been out to places
like parts of Ashville and he said that place is destroyed,
and it's the old thing, right. You can hide from

(37:57):
the wind, but you run from the water. The water
wasn't the issue. The issue in this giant storm that
did all the destruction for the most part was tornadoes.

Speaker 2 (38:09):
What yeah, the natives.

Speaker 8 (38:11):
In central and eastern Florida. Milton spawned thirty eight reported tornadoes.
The Palm Beach County Sheriff called the damage in the
Wellington area extensive, saying all two hundred homes he surveyed
were uninhabitable.

Speaker 13 (38:22):
The places that I saw looked like it was an
atomic bomb blew it up.

Speaker 8 (38:25):
Twelve tornadoes were reported within ninety minutes in Saint Lucie County.

Speaker 29 (38:29):
So as we made in the house, you could feel it.

Speaker 8 (38:31):
Mike Johnson's house was spared, his neighbors not as lucky.

Speaker 6 (38:35):
One guy was already pass away, and it looked like
that there was a bomb and went off right there.

Speaker 3 (38:40):
And I've seen some horrific pictures of you know, and
the difference between a hurricane and a tornado. The winds
that come in they'll remove a roof. You know, when
the hurricanes they'll they'll they'll do the damage. Let's be real,
they'll knock some stuff around. But a tornado is a
whole different world. And there's I saw this dad with

(39:00):
the kids and his wife, and before the hurricane had hit,
the boom, here comes a tornado. They run into the
middle of their house, they get down, the dad shields
everybody and you can see the roof just gets ripped
completely off. And it wasn't like you know, the F
five's or something like that you would see out in
the middle of the country in tornado alley. But they

(39:21):
were everywhere touching down and that's the damage that has
been done there and it has been awful for some people,
but for other people, they were really spared and the
water wasn't there. Doesn't mean that there is an incidence
of flooding, because there has been, but it wasn't as

(39:42):
bad as it could be. And thank God for that.
And let's not forget those people out there in North
Carolina are still trying to figure out what the hell's
going on. You know, Milton came right behind it, and
you know, we can't forget about the people out there
in Ashville. We can't forget about the people out there
in parts of Georgia, in eastern Tennessee where it they
were just absolutely shellacked by massive flooding. And people ask me, well,

(40:04):
why wasn't the flooding so bad here? This thing was stronger,
it was quicker, Remember that we talked about even before
Helen got there. The worst thing that happens isn't the wind.
It is massive amounts of participation precipitation. So you've got
a storm that is moving fast and it's dropping rain,

(40:27):
but it moves right on through. That is bad, but
it's not as bad as a storm that maybe isn't
as strong when it comes to the wind, but what
it does is it plots and it's got more rain,
it's got more water, and it just drops copious amounts
of water. That's the worst case scenario because then you

(40:49):
lead it leads to floods, it leads to far more damage.
Three two, three, five, three, eight, twenty four to twenty
three at Chadminton Show, is your Twitter tweet as text
the program? You know, the conspiracy side of it. You know,
people ask me, they send me stuff all the time.
What do you think about this? What do you think
about that? I go back to I don't the frustration

(41:10):
of how no matter what you show people, it doesn't matter.
They believe something, and it's that whole anchor belief right
that they're tethered to it. That the government is inherently
bad and it's inherently evil, and that they are always
manipulating and always doing something. And I'm not saying that
there isn't portions of the government that's always manipulating and

(41:32):
trying something coursers. We've got agencies specifically for that. But
the difference between certain things and the reality of what
they can do, meaning things like controlling the weather to
the point where you are controlling hurricanes, not cloud seating,

(41:57):
not trying to modify, but hurricane hanes themselves.

Speaker 31 (42:01):
What do you think happened with the hurricanes.

Speaker 32 (42:02):
I think there was an upcoming storm, and then I
think governments set in with whatever it is that they do.
I don't know all the specifics about it. I'm not
an expert in cloud seating or whatever it is that
they use to magnify the storm to a higher degree
to disturb a land that may be wanted for lithium

(42:24):
that Harris's husband is partaking in.

Speaker 31 (42:27):
You think that, Milton, they're making it stronger.

Speaker 32 (42:29):
From a two to immediately to five.

Speaker 3 (42:32):
Didn't even do that, but you believe it, and you
and now it is ingrained in you that that's happened,
And no matter what is going to be shown to you,
no matter what information that would be shown that would
juxtapose any of that, you will never not believe that
it's going to take. It may take an act literally
of God coming down going You know that's not right.

Speaker 33 (42:54):
You're implying that the government made a hurricane stronger to
hurt its own country. The United States of America, correct,
What would be the gain of that? Why would a
country want to have a hurricane and be strong and
hit its own country.

Speaker 32 (43:07):
Because they want to control certain places. And if you're
looking at where the hurricanes going, it's a lot of
red states. If you're looking at the counties in North
Carolina that were hit, there are all of them. Twenty
six out of twenty eight of those counties were for Trump.
They're doing whatever they can because they can't.

Speaker 31 (43:26):
Rig the elign even control the weather.

Speaker 2 (43:28):
Yes, that's a hard thing.

Speaker 3 (43:31):
So if there was to be a massive earthquake in California,
would you say that you that they're controlling that for something?

Speaker 2 (43:39):
I mean, it's.

Speaker 3 (43:42):
I don't know how people get there. I'm not saying
that government can't do stuff. I continue to say the
JFK thing is a big deal, and I'm trying to
get a guy on who is maybe the greatest researcher
documentarian about JFK, who came out with new information this
week on his substack and he actually put it out

(44:05):
there for free about the CIA, the relationship with Oswald.
It's interesting because there's something where you could say to yourself, well,
what if that was real? I mean, we'd have our
own government potentially killing one of our own presidents. I'm
not saying that there isn't things out there that our
government has done to the people that we don't look

(44:27):
back and go, oh my god. We find it out
years later and most of the participants are dead and
the people who are affected are gone, so it doesn't really
play into it. What I am saying, though, is there's
a difference between trying to manipulate the media, which they've
done in the past, and trying to control the weather.
That's a totally different thing. One of them is okay,

(44:49):
I could see that.

Speaker 2 (44:50):
The other one.

Speaker 3 (44:50):
Is so you think they're gods, and manipulation of the
weather has been around for almost a century, but there
was a difference between that. And they would love to
be able to control work. They would love it, but
they can't. They can't. Could they one day it's possible.

(45:12):
But if they really can control the hurricane world and
the tornado world, I would brag to everybody about that.

Speaker 2 (45:22):
And you know it's not true because Donald Trump has
not come out and said it. And let's be one
hundred percent honest, Donald doesn't keep a lot of secrets.
Three two three five three, twenty four, twenty three at
Chad Bedson show's your Twitter.

Speaker 3 (45:32):
If you miss the show, grab the podcast this portion
of the show it's brought to you actually buy Betterhelp.
It's that spooky time of the year, all of us, you, me, everybody,
we've got, you know, some things were a little scared of.
Nothing wrong with that, and sometimes seeing somebody and talking
about that is a good thing for me.

Speaker 2 (45:53):
You know, it's interesting.

Speaker 3 (45:54):
I was never afraid of flying until I had kids
and I talked to somebody about I'm like, what's the
deal and they explained, look, you know, it's a different
world now that you have children. They set it up
in a way where, oh my god, this is this.
I see why this is, I see what happens. All
of us have fears in something, and if you've thought about, hey,
I'd like to overcome some of these fear.

Speaker 2 (46:15):
What's holding you back? What is it? Why don't you
do this?

Speaker 3 (46:18):
Go see a therapist. It's a great way of facing
your fears. Talk to our buddies over at Better Help.

Speaker 16 (46:23):
Right.

Speaker 3 (46:23):
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Do it with better help. Visit betterelp dot com slash
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better help HLP dot com slash Benson.

Speaker 1 (47:06):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 34 (47:07):
The judge has set a May fifth trial date for
Sean Ditty Combs to face those charges of racketeering, conspiracy,
sex trafficking, and transportation a prostitution and Diddy was in
court today. He entered the courtroom wearing a jail issued
outfit khaki longsleeved shirt and pants. He was also shackled
at the ankles. His family members were in the courtroom,

(47:28):
his mother and most of his children. He had waved
to them, blew a kiss to his mother, and one
of his sons had raised and flexed his arm. His
bicep as though to show a sign of strength.

Speaker 2 (47:39):
Strength.

Speaker 3 (47:39):
You're going to need it where you're going. Brother, It's
going to get a lot worse for him. I want
you guys to understand how bad this is going to
get for him and for other people as well.

Speaker 2 (47:50):
So he was hoping to get out yesterday. That isn't
going to happen.

Speaker 23 (47:53):
Now.

Speaker 3 (47:53):
He's going to have a trial date coming up soon.
Usually in a situation like this, it takes a while
to put together case. And because it takes a while
to put together case, guess what happens. They usually allow
them to put together.

Speaker 2 (48:09):
You know, if it takes two or three years to
put together case like this, they may give you two
or three years to mount your defense. Here's the thing
he wants to get out of asap.

Speaker 3 (48:16):
He's going crazy there, and he also knows he's probably
on parro time.

Speaker 35 (48:19):
About one hundred devices seized in raids of Diddy's homes
last March and then after his arrest in September, they're
still going through the one hundred electronic devices. They're having
some trouble getting into all of them. But it gives
you a sense of just how much evidence prosecutors already
have as they begin to dig into this case.

Speaker 3 (48:41):
So much evidence, and Tony Busby, who is taking on
the civil side of this thing, because the question keeps
coming who's next? Because there is a who's next in
this because you can't have a conspiracy of one, who
are you conspiring with? Well myself that didn't really count.
You've got to have more if you're going to go

(49:01):
after them with rico and stuff. There's got to be
conspiracy to do all of these things. There's going to
be other people. So Tony Buzby, who is a lawyer
in Texas, who is so far one hundred and I
think twelve cases, talks about you know, because everybody's asking
there's other big people out there?

Speaker 36 (49:16):
Right?

Speaker 37 (49:16):
You would begin filing lawsuits as early as this week?
And do they involve celebrities? Do they involve just ditty
people beyond Didty?

Speaker 14 (49:25):
Everyone's focused on what other celebrities were involved. You know
who's going to be named, who's going to be outed.
I want to be clear about something. If you were
attending one of these parties and you attended before or
you knew what was going to happen, that is, you
knew that a particular drug was being used in drinks
that was causing people to be coursed and taken advantage of.
And you were there in the room, or you participated,

(49:46):
or you watched it happen and didn't say anything, or
you helped cover it up.

Speaker 2 (49:49):
In my view, you have a problem.

Speaker 3 (49:51):
Yeah, you have a problem because how many people now.
The way that a lot of people have come out
and talked about going to these Diddy parties is there's
a party and everybody goes. It's a fun party, it's
a cool party, it's a hip party. Then there's a party,
and that is the after party. That is the real

(50:13):
party where all this stuff happened. The bad stuff's not
happening at the you know, nine o'clock till midnight party.
The bad stuff takes place afterwards, and it is bad.
And there are people out there already settling major stars.
You've been hearing about it for the last couple weeks.
We've been talking about it. Stars that are equal or

(50:35):
greater than the did.

Speaker 14 (50:37):
As we file each one of these cases, we're going
to make an effort to resolve them on the front end,
but failing that, we're going to file public lawsuits and
pursue these cases aggressively, So.

Speaker 2 (50:48):
Who will be named, when they will be named.

Speaker 14 (50:50):
All that will come out and do course, But the
bottom line is, you know, I want to be clear
about the scope of this. A lot of people attended
these parties. A lot of people saw this activity going on.
A lot of people allowed it to go on, said nothing,
didn't intervene, maybe benefited from it, profited from it. All
of these individuals and entities, in my view, have exposure.

Speaker 2 (51:12):
Here, all of them. So if you were there and
you knew what was going on.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
Now, if you go to a party, right and there's
a bunch of people there that have done bad, but
you're there for a few hours, it's a different thing.
You didn't see it, you didn't participate in it. But
if you were there, you knew what was happening. You
participated in these things. You knew going there that there
were going to be ladies given to you, other things

(51:37):
of that nature. The kind of drugs and stuff that
are being used, potentially kids. You understand that, you know,
and they're filming this whole damn thing, which is again insane.
You're in trouble, and take away the civil side of it.

Speaker 2 (51:52):
How many of these people who are big.

Speaker 3 (51:54):
Stars are going to start flipping sooner rather than later,
and the names will eventually get out because, as.

Speaker 2 (51:58):
We all know, beings can't keep their mouths shut.

Speaker 37 (52:02):
Are we talking about celebrities on the level of Diddy?

Speaker 2 (52:05):
I would expect so.

Speaker 14 (52:06):
Yes, we attempt to resolve these matters without the filing
of a public lawsuit, and we have done that already.
We've done that, I would say, you know, with a
handful of individuals, many of which you've heard of before,
and we'll continue to do that.

Speaker 3 (52:20):
And then the other question is how many people here
in TMZ asked the question? You know, how many of
them here looking for you know, free handout. Maybe they
went to a party or two, but they they're not celebrities.
Maybe they did some stuff, but or maybe they just
happened to go to the party, left early.

Speaker 2 (52:36):
But they still want some money.

Speaker 37 (52:38):
But there are also people who want to jump on
the gravy train and want to make money. That's got
to be a big slice of what you're getting. I mean,
it's not just automatically believing somebody because they say it.

Speaker 14 (52:50):
You're right, you know, I was born at night, but
I wasn't born last night. You know, you get thirty
two hundred calls and that turns into one hundred sum
add biants.

Speaker 2 (52:57):
I think you see the process that.

Speaker 22 (52:58):
We're involved in.

Speaker 2 (52:59):
We're doing a lot, a lot of vetting, a lot
of due diligence.

Speaker 3 (53:02):
He's got a hundred people vetting these people and some
of the people that have called in, and he has
talked about this before. The people that have called in,
they are or or they're dealing with They're not part
of something that happened, but they are witnesses into what
has happened as well. So, yeah, are there going to
be people out there that are are are grabbing for money,

(53:24):
of course, but there's a lot of other evidence out
there that shows that we're not talking one hundred, We're
talking hundreds of people. I don't think Diddy's ever getting
out of jail, no matter how much money you think
you have. Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four
to twenty three at Chadminton show, is your Twitter tweet
ons tax the program? A lot of stuff still to
get to. We've got a big election coming up. I
don't know if you're aware of that.

Speaker 2 (53:45):
With some more of Harris last night, the town hall
that she had yes, there was a teleprompter. I again,
what I have no idea.

Speaker 3 (53:58):
Supposed to be unscripted, but was it talk about that
and a bunch of other things.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
You can see you show grab the podcast. It is
the Chad Benson, Sheryl.

Speaker 38 (54:13):
Son, Chad Benson, Joe, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (54:37):
You know why people like Trump? And I explained this
to my friends on the left. He pushes back. He
doesn't take a lot of crap. Sometimes he starts crap,
but he's not afraid to say things that are that
are honest, and that makes people uncomfortable.

Speaker 2 (54:54):
No, Chad, you're just he's a liar.

Speaker 3 (54:56):
He's nothing but a liar. Here's two pieces of audio
about two different places. Ben'sil and then in Detroit, and
both of them make me laugh, and both of them
are the truth.

Speaker 2 (55:07):
First Pennsylvania and the wind, the wind, it sounds so wonderful,
the wind, the wind. The wind is wind is bullshit.

Speaker 9 (55:13):
I'll tell you, it's horrible.

Speaker 2 (55:16):
Made me laugh. Had nothing to do with politics, just
about the win.

Speaker 23 (55:19):
This.

Speaker 3 (55:20):
People on the left are like, oh, he's done now
in Michigan. Why because he told everybody the truth?

Speaker 9 (55:26):
You want to know the truth.

Speaker 2 (55:27):
It'll be like Detroit, our whole country will end up
being like Detroit.

Speaker 9 (55:31):
If Cesia, President, you're gonna have a mess in your hands.

Speaker 2 (55:34):
She destroyed San Francisco, she destroyed, along with Newscombe, California,
and uh, we're not gonna let her do that to
this country. We're not gonna let it happen. Amen.

Speaker 3 (55:45):
We cannot let this country become Detroit. I don't think
we would. But Detroit is an absolute freaking nightmare. If
you want to see what failure of democratic policies is,
if you want to point the one thing everybody points
to California in San Francisco and Los Angeles, and you
can in the modern way that's happened with the bums
and the junkies and all of that stuff.

Speaker 2 (56:04):
But they still have lots of stuff around, right.

Speaker 3 (56:06):
California still has the sunshine, it still has Silicon Valley,
it still has all the stuff.

Speaker 2 (56:11):
So you've got million dollar homes, etc. Etc.

Speaker 3 (56:14):
But if you want to see what ruins look like
under democratic leadership, look no further than Detroit. I'm on
a website right now called Buildingdetroit dot org, where you
can buy houses for a thousand dollars or less. What
kind of houses, not great houses, some gnarly houses, some

(56:35):
houses that I believe maybe people have lost their lives
and or they've burned down and or they were drug dens.
Some of them not awful. The structure's still.

Speaker 2 (56:45):
There, but you're in neighborhoods that are awful.

Speaker 3 (56:49):
Go look at Detroit's population over the last several decades,
from three million people down to under a million people.
Why because the Democrats ran it into the ground. Want
to know why people like Trump a lot of things pushback.
They feel that he is real and honest. They feel

(57:12):
that the government's come after him. And it's hard not
to say the government hasn't come after him. By the way,
if you don't think that's true, go read what happened
in his hearing, his appeal hearing about the fraud.

Speaker 2 (57:28):
Right when they mar a lago's worth a dollar fifty,
you know that five hundred million dollars everybody sell it.
He knew he was a fraud because the appeals court
basically tore them a new a hole. And by the
time all was said and done, they were wondering are
they going to be sanctioned for bringing this case? So
go look, if you wonder about what law fair and

(57:49):
stuff looks like. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (57:51):
So, if I am Donald Trump and I'm trying to
win Michigan, I point to Detroit as this is what
happens under democratic leadership.

Speaker 2 (58:03):
This is what.

Speaker 3 (58:03):
Happens when you decide to allow the Democrats to run
for years and destroy an amazing city like Detroit. It
used to be the heartbeat of the country. That's easy
to do. That's why people like him, because he's willing
to look and go, God, look at this place.

Speaker 2 (58:22):
It's a crap hole.

Speaker 3 (58:24):
When other politicians would talk around it, they would speaking
of politicians. I don't know if you guys are aware
of this, but last night the person running against Donald Trump,
Kamala Harris Kamala, had a town hall unscripted, although there
tends to be many of cameras picking up the fact

(58:46):
that there was teleprompters there, unscripted town hall people asking questions,
all kinds of questions.

Speaker 2 (58:55):
So I'm about the Donald.

Speaker 9 (58:57):
Thank you for the question.

Speaker 10 (59:00):
Based on a life experience, I know that the vast
majority of us have so much more in common than
what separates us. And part of what pains me is
the approach that frankly, Donald Trump and some others have taken,
which is to suggest that it's us versus them, whoever
that may be, and having Americans point fingers at each
other using language that's about belittling people and calling them

(59:23):
names and meant to make them afraid and live in fear.

Speaker 9 (59:28):
I don't think that's healthy for our nation.

Speaker 2 (59:30):
I don't think it's healthy for our nation either.

Speaker 3 (59:32):
But I also don't think your policies are healthy for
our nation. I also don't think allowing unfettered access to
our country through illegal immigration and the abuse of our system,
and then only trying to save yourself when it became
such an issue that you realize it was going to
hurt you in a major way during the election, that

(59:56):
you decide to really get behind something. I also don't
think one thing that's not been brought up, as if
it's completely just forgotten, the fact that this guy who's
president now was such a giant, freaking mess that the
entire country thought and you lied to our faces, and
it's still not being brought up that he was incapable

(01:00:19):
of doing the job anymore, that he had good days,
that he had bad days, that he had good days,
that he had bad days. No, you can't have a
bad day, not in that position. And the difference between
I got something wrong and I didn't know where I
was and I can't make it up the stairs, those
are two different things. She was also asked about immigration.

Speaker 10 (01:00:42):
So my pledge to you is that, by the grace
of God, and hopefully with your support as well, when
I am elected president, I will bring back that Bord
of Security Bill and I will sign it into law
and do the work of focusing on what we must
do tavel orderly and humane pathway to earn citizenship. And

(01:01:07):
one of the biggest problems with failure to have a
comprehensive plan for immigration is that we have not given
them the pathway to earn their right to citizenship. And
that is again, that is one of the priorities for me, frankly,
in terms of my motivation for what.

Speaker 9 (01:01:25):
I know we must do, and I think it's.

Speaker 10 (01:01:30):
I think it should compel us to agree they should
not have to live in fear, but should have an
ability to be on a pathway to earn their citizenship.

Speaker 9 (01:01:38):
So it is one of my priorities.

Speaker 2 (01:01:41):
No, first of all, they don't live in fear.

Speaker 3 (01:01:43):
They don't. I mean, it's thought that they live in fear.
Maybe the people that are coming here right now have
some fear, not quite sure. But the other people that
have been here.

Speaker 2 (01:01:51):
For years, the people with bank accounts because they have IDs,
they're not living in fear that La migra is around
the corner. It isn't happening now.

Speaker 3 (01:01:59):
Maybe Trump they might live that way because he's evil.
I remind everybody that a majority of Americans support mass deportation.
But the thought of just handing out citizenship is insane.
It really freaking is, and trust me that is. I
think priority one of the administration was to get a

(01:02:26):
pathway to citizenship, and it didn't work the way they
wanted to, so they moved to other things. If she
gets in and she feels that she has a mandate,
and they have the Senate and they have the House,
it will be to get millions of people that are
here on a pathway to citizenship, which means a pathway
to voting for Democrats, because if you brought me in

(01:02:48):
your country, you've allowed me to be here, and you're
gonna be the one that gets me over the line
where I don't ever have to worry about going back
to wherever I came from you better bet your candy ass,
you're getting my vote. And that would be a game changer,
and the Republican Party, at least for a long while,
would cease to be anything than an afterthought. And if

(01:03:09):
you don't believe me, there's a reason they're trying so hard.
How about this.

Speaker 2 (01:03:13):
Pitch it this way. They can have permanent residency but
no citizenship and they can't.

Speaker 3 (01:03:21):
Vote because they're going to say no, they need to
be citizens because they want to vote. I can guarantee
you this. If they found out the quote unquote eleven million.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
Wink wink people that are here, wink wink, twenty five
we're going to vote Republican, they would go we can't
allow this to happen. The battle right now is whoever
gets them across the line.

Speaker 3 (01:03:49):
It's going to dominate for a while at the ballot
box three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to
twenty three at chadmentson show is your Twitter, tweet, eds
texta program And yes, only one of them is trying
to get them across the line. If you know what
I mean, Raycon passed here, but around love my Raycons,
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(01:04:10):
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Speaker 2 (01:05:16):
Only offer you these everyday earbuds because they are the best,
and why settle for anything else Rather than the best?
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Speaker 3 (01:05:25):
Some raycons go to buy raycon dot com slash chat
today to say big buy raycon dot com slash Jed
buye raycon dot com slash ched Our buddy'sz Acabranch, investment
officer Board Capital Joints. The program talk about the impact
of these hurricanes and what it may do to the market.

Speaker 2 (01:05:38):
It is d Jed Benson show, a.

Speaker 30 (01:05:50):
Sashtag me too, hashtag immigration reforms, hashtag help. I'm trapped
in a hashtag factory and I can't get out the
chat Benson show.

Speaker 3 (01:05:59):
That's sit down and talk to our buddy, Zach Abraham Chi,
investment officer of a Board Capital, front of the show,
sponsor of the show, Zach. The hurricanes rolled through, so
we had Helene and then we had Milton. I look
at things like this and I say to myself self,
at a time like this, obviously the markets pay attention.

Speaker 2 (01:06:17):
How much do they pay attention?

Speaker 3 (01:06:18):
One of the big markets to pay attention though, is
obviously things like natural gas, oil and gas things of
that nature. Because energy markets, in particular commodity markets, you
buy the rumor you sell the fact. If I'm correct,
It's been a while since I've been, you know, trading
commodities in a full time way.

Speaker 2 (01:06:36):
But that is the truth, right.

Speaker 16 (01:06:37):
Yeah, No, I don't think that that's incorrect at all.
It could certainly do that. You know, storm like that
can wipe our refineries and it could miss them. To
your point, it can move a lot. And I think, ironically,
and this is a theory I don't have. I mean,
I've got a lot of different examples of this, but
and it's kind of the opposite.

Speaker 22 (01:06:58):
Of what you think.

Speaker 16 (01:06:59):
In this era time where you know, data is being
transmitted so quickly, this market has become increasingly insensitive to
especially macroeconomic things. January of twenty twenty, COVID was making
around which way around the world. Nobody knew about it
was going to be, but you know it was. It
was making a lot of waves right on the global stage.

(01:07:19):
You look over at the United States equity markets and
the SMP was up thirteen percent a month of January alone. Right,
I've talked about the Facebook example of Al Zuckerberg talked
for a whole year about how they're going to spend.
So we've watched this market walk into buzzsauce time and
time again.

Speaker 22 (01:07:34):
Why wouldn't all be surprised if that's the case.

Speaker 16 (01:07:36):
Another one that looks really interesting to us is that
gas meaning based on you know, these storms and areas
they're going to impact, they could have a significant impact
on that gas.

Speaker 22 (01:07:48):
Because of the stresses on the grid.

Speaker 16 (01:07:53):
Looking at the new power demand that's coming online from
all these AI data centers, these companies SpaceX on mustad
this recently, these power in the new SpaceX facility with
natural gas generators, right. And so bottom line is because
when you see all of these very intense things coming
online at the same time, and meanwhile, this is all

(01:08:15):
during the you know green energy push, right, you just
have incredible taxation on the grid itself. And because of that,
players cannot get the power they need off the grid
or traditional sources, so they're trying to gnat gas and
other forms of energy and you're just going to see
that continue and continue. This market's proven time and time
again that it's willing to just walk blindly right into

(01:08:35):
buzz sauce. So you know, and this is one of
the reasons why I think that having exposure to stuff
like that in a portfolio is important if nothing else
is to shield you from inflation, you know, Like we
tell our clients, one of the best ways to shield
yourself from inflation is to own things that benefit when
those things that you need in your daily life go
up in price. If you commute and spend a lot

(01:08:56):
on gas, you should probably have exposure to oil and
natural gas in your portfolio.

Speaker 2 (01:09:00):
It's a trip of talking to Zach Abrahm, Chief investment Officer,
Bullard Capital. I don't think people realize that I always
talking about to my kids this. You want to buy Nikes,
you know, why don't we look at Nike stock? You
want to buy some of these things. What are you
using on a daily basis that may benefit you? And
that's a perfect way to look at your poltfolio, because
I don't think people do that.

Speaker 16 (01:09:16):
To go to what you're just saying, anecdotally speaking, the
source of some of our biggest winners, especially in the
consumer discretionary space or consumer staple space or anything like that.

Speaker 22 (01:09:30):
Some of the biggest winners.

Speaker 16 (01:09:31):
We've ever had has been watching the purchase habits of
my wife, right, especially my wife and now team daughter. Okay,
they agree that a new brand or a new store
or something else is really good, and they like it,
and they've got their list of reasons why we're not
going to buy it without researching it. But again, that's
just an example of how we I'm not just you know,

(01:09:51):
I'm not just saying that we really pay credence to
what you know, the wives and the kids are spending on,
because you know, there's real impact there and you got
to keep your finger on the pulls.

Speaker 2 (01:10:03):
That's true. Talking to Zach Abrahm, p investment Officer, Bullward Capital,
you know here we are, what do we three and
a half weeks away from this thing kind of wrapping up?
Because I still think whoever wins or loses, there's going
to be lawsuits. I just I just don't sense that
this thing's going to end on November fifth. The market unsteady,
are you?

Speaker 22 (01:10:19):
I mean?

Speaker 2 (01:10:20):
I look at it them like, is it building in
any nerves or is it just just riding the waves?
Saying I don't really care who wins because we're just
going to keep plowing on.

Speaker 16 (01:10:27):
I think that that's the way you have to approach
it right now, And it makes a lot of sense
if you look at a lot of the economic activity.

Speaker 22 (01:10:33):
That's the way it seems to be pointing.

Speaker 16 (01:10:35):
And what I mean by that is you'll see significant
factors inputs, change, price of oil, some raids here and there,
all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 22 (01:10:42):
You look at the underlying data, it just doesn't blink.

Speaker 16 (01:10:45):
So to me, I think it's an economy and a
marketplace that is just overwhelmingly telling you one thing, and
that is that right now, it doesn't matter what the
issues are. There's so much money and so much liquidity
being pumped into the system. You know, bad things can happen.
But as far as asset prices and market prices are related,
we could have a news headline where all of this

(01:11:07):
changes on a dime.

Speaker 22 (01:11:08):
Right, So I'm not saying.

Speaker 2 (01:11:09):
What would be that news like World War three? Israel,
Israel invades Iran and it sets off something. What does
that do?

Speaker 16 (01:11:16):
Well?

Speaker 22 (01:11:16):
Look, man, you bring up a really good point.

Speaker 16 (01:11:18):
Do you realize right now gold Costco Is selling two
hundred million dollars worth of gold board bars per month?
It's nuts because you know, when the world goes to war,
all those supply lines are threatened.

Speaker 22 (01:11:31):
Right.

Speaker 16 (01:11:31):
It has a not dissimilar impact to the global economy
in some ways than even COVID had, Right, So those
are the things that are going to benefit from it
the most. And like I said, it's very rarely that
you're looking out at the world going, hey, I see
this big risk, the thing that it would do. I
need to go buy the thing that would protect me
the most. But then you go look at that thing
and you're like, oh man, it already went up a lot, right,

(01:11:51):
I miss I missed my shot. That's not the case.

Speaker 2 (01:11:53):
Today's talking exac GAMERAM chief investment Officer Board Capital peop
want to reach out to you. They're like, dude, we
like this guy.

Speaker 22 (01:11:58):
What do we do?

Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
How do we get a hold?

Speaker 22 (01:11:59):
Oh yeah, pretty easy?

Speaker 16 (01:12:00):
Just google Know your Risk Radio podcasts can go to
Bullwarkapitalmanagement dot com. You can find know your Risk Radio
podcast on any podcast site and we're not hiding, not easy,
not hard to find.

Speaker 22 (01:12:09):
So yeah, reach out and hopefully we can help you out.

Speaker 2 (01:12:12):
Run on brother, good to talk. You're doing again next week?

Speaker 22 (01:12:13):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:12:14):
Man?

Speaker 22 (01:12:14):
Sounds good.

Speaker 2 (01:12:14):
Thanks for having investment advisor, reservice officer, the Truck Financial
LLC and SEC registered investment advisor. The opinions expressing this
programmer for general informational purpose online and are not intend
to provide specific advice or recommendations for any individual or
specific security. Any reference to performance and security so thought
to be materially accurate and actual performance may different investments
involve risk. You know, not guarantee. Past performance is not
guarantee FUTU results. Stretch two four to three zero. Wait
love talking this act coming up. Third hour. We're gonna

(01:12:36):
do a little what's trending. We've got some finally Friday
sounds and of course a little sound solid as well.

Speaker 3 (01:12:41):
Don't you go anywhere, kids, because that would be a
shame and I would miss you. You miss any of
the show. Make sure you grab the podcast otherwise again.

Speaker 2 (01:12:49):
More of a shame. This is the Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 30 (01:12:54):
This is the Chad Benson Show, The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 3 (01:13:23):
Twenty five days from the election? Who will win? How
will they win? What will it look like when they win?
Will it be Kamala Harris? Will it be Donald Trump?
How close is the race?

Speaker 12 (01:13:38):
See if the polls are accurate right now, this will
be the closest election in our lifetimes, and perhaps the
closest election since the nineteenth century.

Speaker 2 (01:13:48):
Damn skippity, it could be.

Speaker 31 (01:13:50):
That's really crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:13:51):
How close it is.

Speaker 12 (01:13:52):
This could come down to one of the candidates winning
just exactly two hundred and seventy electors to the Electoral
College if the polls are exactly right.

Speaker 2 (01:14:03):
And that's the polls.

Speaker 3 (01:14:04):
If they're right. We all know that Trump at times
has been more than underrepresented poles. They've got it wrong
with him.

Speaker 2 (01:14:10):
So could it be this time they've got it right
and it is a dead heat. Could it be they
got it wrong again and Trump wins easy? Could it
be Kamala wins easy? Could it be a coin flip?
Could it be done on the night of the election.
Or are we going to see days and days.

Speaker 3 (01:14:26):
I think we're going to see days of people claiming
this and claiming that, and I don't even know.

Speaker 2 (01:14:31):
It's just it feels crazy. It feels like we're headed
towards a battle of something. Unless there's something that's that's
we wake up, you know the next day, go oh
my god.

Speaker 3 (01:14:43):
Somebody's got two undred ninety five three hundred. I mean
then you're like, Okay, we're not this is we're not
having this conversation. But I just don't think that's going
to happen. I do not think that's going to happen.
I think what's gonna happen is it's going to be
very close. It's gonna be very tight, and I think
when all is said and done, they'll be some jockeying
for you know, lawsuits in this, that and the other.

(01:15:04):
I'm sure they'll be controversy. I mean, these are all
things that I think in modern politics right now, this
is what we're going to get. So be prepared for
this thing not to be done on that day, especially
if it is tight the way they're saying it is tight,
and I do believe it is tight. Indeed, three two, three, five,
three eight, twenty four to twenty three at Chad Benson
shows your Twitter tweet at is text to program. This

(01:15:26):
is interesting. So Lauren Leader and Maragay on MSNBC, these
are two ladies who want to.

Speaker 2 (01:15:33):
Speak to both men and white women. You freaking white women, and.

Speaker 39 (01:15:37):
The gender gap has been growing for years, right, this
is not new to this election cycle, like we've seen
this for the last decade, the Democrats have skewed more
Democrats and Independence have skewed more female, and Republicans have
skewed more male. Trump accelerated that, right, and you know,
sort of put that trend on steroids. And then the
questions that we were asking over the last few years

(01:15:57):
was was he going to try to expand the time
and try to expand his base and his outrage to women.
I mean, the answer was clearly no. Jadie Vance was
a very clear statement. You know, they've been very comfortable
with the ways in which they've alienated friends and suburban
women who were so the key to their very consistent
losses by the way, since twenty sixteen, right because, as
Maris said, women are more likely to turn out to vote.

(01:16:18):
That's why Joe Biden won Pennsylvania, even though there was
a Republican advantage. Brian turned out in greater numbers. They
flipped Pennsylvania for Joe. That's absolutely what has to happen
this time.

Speaker 3 (01:16:27):
Yes, but you know what suburban white women we're talking
to you, they also pay the bills. They also have
felt the wrath of more expense. They've also felt all
the other things. It's not just about a choice. I
remind everybody that the fact that you would even think
that it's only about choice, I find to be insulting.

Speaker 2 (01:16:49):
But has Republicans done a great job? No, they haven't.
And the reason is is because they know how to
talk about abortion. They don't.

Speaker 3 (01:16:56):
They either ignore it or they just don't know how
to talk about it. They don't, And the Democrats think
that's that's all that women care about in your wrong.

Speaker 39 (01:17:08):
Still, I do worry, and maybe Harris should go on
Joe Rogan. I do worry because I think, first of all,
on the white women, the Trump has lost no ground
since sixteen with white women. We're still seeing fifty percent
of white women supporting him, which I know drives a
lot of Democratic women nuts because it's so hard to
drop her heads around. But on the you know, with

(01:17:30):
black men in Michigan, like she has to win them.
The margins are so thin that if she can't win
over and this are so happy to hear Barack Obama
say that last night. I mean, we've all been seeing
this under the surface.

Speaker 9 (01:17:41):
I have to go after those voters.

Speaker 39 (01:17:43):
The question is, can you convince people if the base
is sexism, it's.

Speaker 3 (01:17:47):
Not about the base being sexism. They look over and
what do they see. They see democrats who for the
last umpteen years have devalued men over and over again.
They see the fact that this the education system is
set up for women. They see the fact that they
feel that they're they're the problem for everything and it's

(01:18:07):
not about fascism, and they should go on, Joe Rogan,
and they're looking around, going, you know what, life sucks
right now?

Speaker 2 (01:18:17):
Life is more expensive. I'm frustrated. And you guys are
talking wackiness over here, and you're talking about, you know,
let's get everybody opportunity to have citizenship. You're talking about
all of these things that quite frankly, aren't dealing with
the day to day of living.

Speaker 3 (01:18:35):
And when it comes to fifty percent of white women,
and let me tell you something. We've talked about the
gender gap single women, uber progressive single men, kind of
conservative married men, more conservative married women, kind of conservative,
Mara gay. This is to the men out there, boy

(01:18:56):
and boy, is she's something else.

Speaker 40 (01:18:58):
I hope that women see this, who are you know,
over half the population and vote more consistently than men.
I hope that they see this and that they coalesce
around the obvious choice white women. I'm talking to you
as well, and I just think we really also might

(01:19:20):
want to take a moment too, as Barack Obama did
yesterday speak speaking specifically to black men, but I think
this is actually for all men.

Speaker 3 (01:19:29):
Okay, for all men, because he came out to talk
about black men and Barack Obama and.

Speaker 2 (01:19:34):
Men in general. And you guys shouldn't be afraid of
It's just are there men out there that are afraid
to vote for a woman? Yeah, I have news for you.
There are women out there that.

Speaker 3 (01:19:44):
Don't feel comfortable voting for a woman, but we won't
talk about that. There are you know, there are women
out there that they're just like there were people out
there that didn't want to vote for somebody like Pete
Bootagees because of like I can't vote for.

Speaker 2 (01:19:57):
My nephew so young? Could you do the job?

Speaker 30 (01:20:01):
Well?

Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
I mean so, yes, are there biases?

Speaker 3 (01:20:04):
Of course there is in everything, by the way, but
they make it out to be at all. Now this
is where mar Gay, who's editorial board New York Times,
she gets into it about men. Joe Rogan and you
know this this this evil that is men and and this, this,
this masculinity is evil.

Speaker 40 (01:20:22):
You know, I think men are in crisis actually in
this country. I think that plays out different ways. And
not all men are in crisis, of course, and not
all men are just at home listening to Joe Rogan
being angry or being recruited to fascism. Some just need therapy,
like we all do.

Speaker 2 (01:20:42):
I go to therapy.

Speaker 40 (01:20:43):
That's great, But I think we need to have a
real conversation about that rather than allowing this kind of
drift toward this faux masculinity that we see Donald Trump
as saying that.

Speaker 2 (01:20:56):
Is a bunch of horror. I'm going to say that
I know.

Speaker 3 (01:21:03):
That is absolutely a bunch of one grade a horte.
And if you're wondering if I did that live, thank
god I got it right. Yes, I said it live,
said it real, no beep, it's live radio.

Speaker 2 (01:21:17):
It's no net.

Speaker 3 (01:21:17):
Kids, this manner sitting at home just watching Joe Rogan
looking at this faux masculinity and thinking to himself, I'd
like to be a fascist. Oh, sweet mother of God,
this is why you're not listening to men.

Speaker 2 (01:21:33):
You're lecturing men. You're not listening to men.

Speaker 3 (01:21:38):
You're harping on them, telling them how bad they are,
telling them that what they're doing based on the fact
that they've got needs, they'd feel like the government is
failing to meet that. Somehow they're evil and inherently bad.
So they're angry and they sit.

Speaker 2 (01:21:51):
At home all day and all they do is listen
to Joe Rogan and fundaments. They can join the vertus movement.

Speaker 3 (01:21:59):
This is why men are looking around saying, sorry, can't
vote for you, and I can't vote for a party
that fails to deliver anything that I'm asking.

Speaker 2 (01:22:11):
And that also tells me I'm inherently the problem.

Speaker 3 (01:22:16):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty three
Act you had Benson shows your Twitter tweet as we
can do a little what's trending straight ahead, We've got
some sound salad and probably more of this stuff as well.
Roughgreens are uff greens, dot com slurs, chair vitamins, minerals,
probiotics make a three six nine. All of this incredible
stuff power packed into an amazing supplement. As you guys know,
shelf stable. That's what dog food is, right. Dog food

(01:22:38):
is dead food. So's cat food.

Speaker 2 (01:22:39):
Meow because they got me out.

Speaker 3 (01:22:41):
Greens and brown is a healthy green is and that's
where rough Greens comes in. It's a powdered supplement you
sprinkle on top of your dog and now you're cat's
food and it's going to help them with everything from
their aches and pains, to their joints, to allergies, with
their skin and their fur, digestive track issues, you name it,
they've got it and lethargy. Try a Jumpstart trial bag,
whether it be for rough Greens, for you dog or

(01:23:01):
for your cat. We've been given it to our cat.
He had horrific allergies. He doesn't look like he's been
struck by lightning anymore. Hair's growing back in a major way.

Speaker 2 (01:23:09):
No more cone of shame. Try a Jumpstart trial bag
for free today. All you have to do is cover
the cost of shipping.

Speaker 3 (01:23:14):
R u f f Greens dot com slash Chad Roughgreens
dot com slash Chad rough Greens dot Com slash Chad.

Speaker 2 (01:23:20):
It is the Chad Benson.

Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
Chad Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:23:33):
No, it's time to find out what's trending. What's trending?

Speaker 41 (01:23:38):
Signed James Norway, Oman, Pakistan, Qatar, Russia, Serene.

Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
Jump what truping?

Speaker 31 (01:24:01):
It's fine?

Speaker 2 (01:24:01):
I was turning in the older inn webs on this Friday,
Baby with Google.

Speaker 3 (01:24:08):
Last twenty four hours, Northern Lights lighting up the sky,
Babe forty nine ers last night. I got a win
Tesla because of their taxis and their Optimus Prime robot. Yeah,
we'll talk about that. Venezuela Aruntina, Chile, Brazil. Those are
woke up qualifiers. Jordan Mason forty nine or death Joy England, Greece.

Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
Oh, not a good game for England. No, indeed, not
Terrifier three. It's a movie. It's out. Apparently the first
five minutes is so narrowly people walk out. Oh, Mark
God Obama, Tiffany Trump, Robert Kennedy. Because, of course, Ethel
died yesterday. Oh Ethel. It's the name. You don't hear

(01:24:54):
much anymore.

Speaker 3 (01:24:54):
Hurricane Milton, no more training thing over in Yahoo, Donald Trump,
Tesla's cybercab, Yankees, Yankees, Kamala Harris. Town Hall talked a
bit about it today. Yes, there was a teleprompter. I
have no idea why it's. Town Hall is supposed to
be unscripted. Apparently it wasn't. Some of it might have been,

(01:25:15):
but not all of it.

Speaker 2 (01:25:18):
It's pretty sad if that's the truth. That's what you
have to go to. It's like this is totally unscripted,
except for the part where I scripted out everything. Finally,
over to the Magical world of Twitter. Donny Doe, Do
I want to try anything I bought? That's that thing
we've been talking about. The robot. You'es the robot? You say, yes,

(01:25:40):
the robot, I say, Roadway rapper.

Speaker 3 (01:25:44):
Optimus it's the robot that's calling. Well there's more to that,
but you know, I am Optimus Prime teleprompter terminator. It's
kind of hard not to think that I don't know
quite terminator, but I look at it. I think, hmmm,
ex Mackenna, maybe maybe terrifier.

Speaker 2 (01:26:04):
Three Edward sciss her Hands, Barry. That's Barack last night
shizam all trending in the Magical World of.

Speaker 3 (01:26:17):
Twitter three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four, twenty
three at Chat Benson Show, is your Twitter tweet at
us text the program. I love hearing from all of
you again. The robot thing is very interesting. This is
optimist bot singing to Chad, not me another Chad, but
still could be me Chad.

Speaker 15 (01:26:37):
Chad, All everyone, what's all can have your burday together?

Speaker 23 (01:26:43):
All by birth.

Speaker 3 (01:27:00):
Yea, it is a uh, it is a creepy thing,
but it is also very cool. It's a weird you
look at it and you're like, that is that is
awfully weird, but it is also kind of a neat

(01:27:20):
thing as well. They're coming. There's no doubt about.

Speaker 23 (01:27:23):
That, optimist saying. It's even talking. Oh hello, John, how
are you crazy?

Speaker 24 (01:27:28):
I'm talking to robots from San Jose, probably from where
you were from where you were born in Silicon Valley.

Speaker 23 (01:27:34):
Where do you live in San Jose?

Speaker 2 (01:27:36):
You walking in al Valley?

Speaker 23 (01:27:37):
Or do you Theresa are No? I live in Los
Gutta Stata.

Speaker 10 (01:27:41):
It's a wonderful.

Speaker 23 (01:27:42):
Yeah, where do you live? How live?

Speaker 25 (01:27:45):
Also at the current moment, that's where they train us,
that's where we get our bills, and that's where we look.

Speaker 23 (01:27:49):
Though it's crazy, I'm talking to robot.

Speaker 3 (01:27:51):
Yeah, Like where do you live? I live in Like
you're talking to it, like it lives in Palo Alto.
Like that's where they're.

Speaker 2 (01:27:56):
Training us right now.

Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
I mean eventually they're gonna We're gonna go out and
you have to get real jobs.

Speaker 23 (01:28:00):
What's the hardest thing about being a robot?

Speaker 2 (01:28:03):
Trying to learn how to be as human as you guys.

Speaker 26 (01:28:08):
That's something I try harder to do every day, and
I hope that people.

Speaker 23 (01:28:12):
Help us become that awesome. Nice to meet you, optimists
you as well.

Speaker 3 (01:28:17):
It's weird, man, It's weird because, like I say, I
use AI every day and every once in a while I
think it like it's a Personah, thanks a lot. I
appreciate that you're not real, but you could still show
kindness chat.

Speaker 2 (01:28:28):
I understand that.

Speaker 3 (01:28:29):
But if you've not seen these bots, man, they are
freaking awesome looking.

Speaker 2 (01:28:35):
They're not cheap.

Speaker 3 (01:28:36):
I don't know what they're gonna cost, and you know, eventually,
I mean, we're all gonna have one, are we?

Speaker 2 (01:28:40):
I don't know, not the poor god. I can't snarky today,
aren't we? I can't help.

Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
But it's a Friday. I'm a little snarky. I do
that every once in a while. I just want to
point that out. Every once in a while. There's a
little bit of snark here. Three two, three, five, three
eight twenty four twenty three at Chad Benson's show is
Your Twitter Tweet at is Tech Program, I don't want.

Speaker 2 (01:29:01):
The other things. He debuted a cybercab, so the cybercab company.
I I've been in cars with no drivers into the
weymou and stuff like that. It's okay.

Speaker 3 (01:29:14):
The thing is, what you're missing is the human interaction,
and sometimes that goes wrong. But there's also a lot
of benefit to human interaction that we don't see. And
it's little things that I don't think people really understand
who live in a world of only technical little things

(01:29:36):
like if you go and you get a cabby or
a driver, they know what's going on in the city
in a way that this thing doesn't.

Speaker 2 (01:29:47):
They They're just little things like that. So removing the
human element, I don't know if you know, because I
know a lot of people are worried about that, and
that's understandable. Trust me. I've heard from a lot of
you people people out there who are terrified of what's coming.

Speaker 3 (01:30:03):
Right now, it's only about five percent of jobs that
these you know, AI creations can do. I mean, will
that change, yes, But what are the other jobs that
are coming as well?

Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
I think that's something that needs to be talked about.
That is it? Because every time we talk about AI,
it's always had a fear that they're going to blow
the world up or control us, which you know, I'm
not saying that can happen. There's a possibility of that.
Three two three, five three eight twenty four twenty three
at Chad Benson Show for Twitter, thri it out a
text to show if youre missing the show, grab the

(01:30:35):
podcast Little Sound Salad straight at Chat Benson.

Speaker 27 (01:30:37):
Shown Chat Benson, Joe.

Speaker 1 (01:31:07):
The Chad Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:31:10):
It is Friday, which of course I love Little Friday.

Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
I think we're off Monday back Tuesday Wednesday that I'm
on the road for a couple of days and it's
gonna be interesting. I'm actually gonna be on the road
and I'm gonna be at the State Fair of Texas.
I wish I was there this week because well, big
football game tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (01:31:33):
It's a Red River shootout baby Oh Claholm on Texas.
So but we're gonna be on the road a couple
of days.

Speaker 3 (01:31:40):
Next week, which I'm pretty pumped about, if you know
what I mean.

Speaker 2 (01:31:43):
But on Fridays we do a little thing called Sound Salad.

Speaker 3 (01:31:46):
Some things maybe you miss, some stuff that maybe have
happened yesterday, and some stuff that happened earlier the week
we just didn't talk about. How about this one, which
is hilarious. This is Trump talking about Destrois that's Detroit.

Speaker 42 (01:31:58):
New national polling showing Harrison Trump essentially tied Harris up
by one point. Thank you Trump bringing his economic message
to Detroit. But as he went after Harris, he also
insulted the city he was campaigning in.

Speaker 9 (01:32:10):
Our whole country will end up being like Detroit. If
shees your president, you're gonna have a mess on your.

Speaker 42 (01:32:15):
Hands, prompting a quick response from the state's Democratic governor,
Gretchen Whitmer, warning you better believe Detroit ER's won't forget
this November.

Speaker 2 (01:32:23):
No, they won't.

Speaker 3 (01:32:23):
They're like, oh my god, thank god, somebody's finally saying it.
He came out and insult. We didn't insult Detroit. He
said exactly what you're supposed to say about Detroit. If
you want to talk about government rule by a single party,
and that party being the Democrats, I wouldn't point out
any other So you don't have to point out what
happened in California. You don't have to point out what

(01:32:45):
happened in you know, Seattle or Chicago. Just say, look,
do you want to be Detroit? Do you Chad? That's
not very nice. Detroit is a dumpster fire, and that's
been nice to dumpster fires. And it's a one party city.

(01:33:06):
Since nineteen sixty two, it has been run by Democrats
nineteen sixty two. Since then, it has gone to hell
in a handbass. It has lost a million people. You
can buy a house there in Detroit for under one

(01:33:27):
thousand dollars. It's a dumpster fire and it's gross, but
the reality is you can if you want to. Detroit
is an absolute mess. And I don't think the people
of Detroit are like, well, I didn't think we were
a mess, but now that he said it, I'm offended.
They're probably going, Yep, this place sucks. If we could
do something different, we'd love to see it. By the way,

(01:33:48):
they went bankrupt a few years ago, well, they've gone
bankrupt on several occasions. It got to the point where
they were going into the art galleries, like, so, imagine
if the city of New York was so bad they
had to go to some of the art galleries and like, look,
we're gonna have to sell.

Speaker 2 (01:34:05):
Some of this stuff to make rent.

Speaker 23 (01:34:09):
That's not very.

Speaker 3 (01:34:11):
Nice, yet, that's just truth. Earlier this week, CBS has
not had a good week.

Speaker 2 (01:34:17):
When it comes to.

Speaker 3 (01:34:20):
Media slash journalism, did they or didn't they change an answer?
They won't release the transcripts, at least they haven't yet
when it came to sixty minutes in Kamala Harris.

Speaker 2 (01:34:32):
But earlier this week something that wasn't talked about.

Speaker 3 (01:34:35):
Tony de Kopple, who is a one of the people
that host the morning show, had the opportunity to sit
down with ioways script his name Dashantee Coats or Tanisi Coats.

Speaker 2 (01:34:50):
I screwp his name, and it's not because I'm white.
It's because I don't know how to see your name,
so I think it's Tanisi Coats. And this is a
guy who's, you know, freaking hates America and all white
people are bad. He's made that pretty obvious in his writing,
and I mean, was it. The New York Times refused
to edit him because they thought it would be wrong.

(01:35:13):
So the New York Times or what are those?

Speaker 3 (01:35:15):
What are the places he wrote, wouldn't edit him because like,
it's racism if you edit him. So Tony the couple
his he converted to Judaism, and in doing so, his
wife is Jewish. As kids, they live in Israel, and
he's got a book out about Palestine, and this book
about Palestine, not him, but the shiny Coats has this

(01:35:35):
book about Palestine, and the book about Palestine basically is
the Jews are bad.

Speaker 2 (01:35:40):
Israel sucks, it needs to be eliminated.

Speaker 3 (01:35:41):
And they've never done anything wrong, the Palestinians.

Speaker 2 (01:35:45):
And well, Tony didn't take that too lightly.

Speaker 3 (01:35:48):
And I just want to say, yet, aprils and football
players probably like, hey man, when I was going to
do the morning show, Mike excitement was like, We're going
to talk about some fun stuff and like getting ready
for the Halloween season and stuff. He's sitting there with King, who,
by the way, Gail King actually submitted her questions before
he came on there. So Tony Dekablin did.

Speaker 21 (01:36:09):
Not to say. When I read the book, I imagine
if I took your name out of it, took away
the awards and the acclaim, took the cover off the book,
the publishing house goes away. The content of that section
would not be out of place in the backpack.

Speaker 2 (01:36:23):
Of an extremist.

Speaker 21 (01:36:25):
And so then I found myself wondering, why do is
Tanahashi Coats, who I've known for a long time read
his work for a long time, very talented, smart guy.

Speaker 22 (01:36:33):
Leave out so much?

Speaker 21 (01:36:35):
Why leave out that Israel is surrounded by countries that
want to eliminate it? Why leave out that Israel deals
with terror groups that want to eliminate it. Why not
detail anything of the first and the second intifave of
the cafe bombings, the bus bombings, the little kids blown
to bits? And is it because you just don't believe
that Israel in any condition has a right to exist.

Speaker 43 (01:36:58):
Well, I would say the perspective that you just outlined,
there is no shortage of that perspective in American media.

Speaker 3 (01:37:05):
And some of that's right by the way to Toshaani.
He did not object, He hasn't thrown a fit about it.
The reality is when there's good arguments, it's good for business.

Speaker 2 (01:37:19):
And so in this book, and I've read excerpts of it,
I'd like to get him on.

Speaker 3 (01:37:23):
I doubt you come on my show and be like, ahs,
whit guy's gonna say horrible things about me or whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:37:27):
I'm not.

Speaker 3 (01:37:27):
But the respective essentially is that you know, Palestine has
done nothing wrong. Palestine deserves to not only exist, Israel doesn't.

Speaker 2 (01:37:38):
And you heard you know the complancity right there.

Speaker 3 (01:37:41):
Hey, this would be found in somebody's backpack that's getting
ready to blow up a bus. That's kind of like
you know, and look, this is what this guy does.
His business is racism and division.

Speaker 43 (01:37:53):
I wrote a two hundred and sixty page book. It
is not a treatise on the entirety of the conflict
between the Palestinians and the Israelis.

Speaker 21 (01:38:01):
But if you were to read this book, you would
be left wondering, why does any of Israel exist? What
a horrific place, committing horrific acts on a daily basis.
So I think the question is central and key if
Israel has a right to exist, And if your answer
is no, then I guess the question becomes, why do
the Palestinians have a white are twenty different Muslim countries?

Speaker 43 (01:38:23):
I answer is that no country in this world establishes
its ability to exist through rights. Countries establish their ability
to exist through force.

Speaker 2 (01:38:33):
Not all countries, but yes, some that's true.

Speaker 3 (01:38:35):
By the way, the same thing could go with what
do you want to talk about the Islamic religion? Through force?
Through the tip of the spear is how they've dominated
in areas. Just to point that out, so that was
the battle that ensued. It wasn't really that horrific. He

(01:38:55):
asked some serious questions. He's a journalist, that's what journalists
are supposed to do. So what ended up happening, Well,
the editorial team, the news team absolutely went after him,
destroyed him. Not Didsjohanna go, oh no, no, he's wonderful.
How dare Tony kaplan do this? How dare he do this?

(01:39:16):
He didn't follow editorial standards. He went above and beyond.
He was evil, he was bad and to the point
where they just lost their blanking mind. And then some
audio got out about them because by the way, he
had to go to DEI training, he had to I
mean this.

Speaker 2 (01:39:34):
They were like, we need to bring in therapist. You
think I'm kidding.

Speaker 11 (01:39:37):
CBS even planned to invite a mental health expert, deive strategist,
and trauma trainer to attend the staff conversation and offer guidance.

Speaker 3 (01:39:45):
Oh goodie, yeah, yeah, let's listen to what CBS had
to say.

Speaker 44 (01:39:50):
And there are times we fail our audiences and we
failed each other. We're in one of those times right now,
and it's been growing and now we you are at
tipping many of you have reached out to express concerns
over recent reporting, specifically about the CBS Morning's Coaches interview
our last week, as well as comments made coming out

(01:40:13):
of some of our correspondents reporting. I want to thank
every single reached out for your honesty, your transparency, and
your committment. So I want to address three things. Number One,
after a review of our coverage, including an interview, it's
clear there are times we have not met our editoring students.

(01:40:34):
Number Two, this has been addressed and it will continue
to be in the future. And number three, I want
to acknowledge and I want to say I want to
apologize that it's taken this long to have this.

Speaker 3 (01:40:47):
Conversation, a conversation by the way, they had on October seventh,
So let's rub some of that salt in there. They
were going to suspend them, do all these things make
them go to the struggle session, et.

Speaker 2 (01:40:56):
Cetera, et cetera.

Speaker 3 (01:40:58):
And then Sherry Redstone she popped in, who's that She's
the head of Paramount Global who owned CBS, and said, no, no, no,
We're glad we had to SHAWNE. Coates on Tony didn't
do anything wrong. This is a bad mistake by you,
the handling of the way that you've done this.

Speaker 2 (01:41:19):
This is not a hymn thing. He did a great
job with the interview.

Speaker 3 (01:41:22):
He did what journalists are supposed to do, which is
pushed back and asked questions, and he did so in
a respectable way.

Speaker 2 (01:41:29):
And there was no animals.

Speaker 3 (01:41:30):
I and I remind everybody shawnny Coates never said a
word about how horrible they were. He never said anything.
He even said he expected on his book tour when
he did interviews that he was going to get pushed back.
And the person who pushed back, by the way, is
Jewish and his wife and children live in Israel.

Speaker 22 (01:41:51):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (01:41:53):
And they wanted to suspend him, put him through a
session where you get told how horrible you are based
on the color of your skin, and how dare you
ask questions to somebody whose skin is different and has
a different point of view. Yeah, that's that's that's no.

Speaker 3 (01:42:11):
That was journalism what he did kids three, two, three, five, three, eight,
twenty four, twenty three at Chad Benson Show, is your
Twitter speaking of struggle sessions? There should be one here.
This is a professor the University of Kansas, and well,
he thinks if you don't vote for Commlin.

Speaker 2 (01:42:29):
You should maybe be shot for you, especially if you're dude.

Speaker 36 (01:42:31):
That's what frustrates me. There are going to be some
males in our society that will refuse to vote for
a potential female president because they don't think females are
smart enough to be president. We can line all those
guys up and shoot them, and they clearly don't understand
the way the world works.

Speaker 22 (01:42:49):
Did I say that?

Speaker 36 (01:42:51):
It scratch that from the recording. I don't want the
deans hearing.

Speaker 22 (01:42:55):
That I said that.

Speaker 2 (01:42:56):
Well, that didn't happen. They did here and it got
out dirt.

Speaker 45 (01:43:00):
The University of Kansas issue in a statement, the instructor
offers his sincerest apologies and deeply regrets the situation. His
intent was to emphasize his advocacy for women's rights and equality,
and he recognizes he did a very poor job of
doing so. The university has an established process for situations

(01:43:22):
like this and will follow that process.

Speaker 3 (01:43:25):
Yeah, he suspended. He's sorry. He's not sorry. He's sorry
it got out. He's not sorry. That's the way he feels.
You should be put up against the wall. You don't
believe that a woman can be president.

Speaker 2 (01:43:40):
So is it any woman.

Speaker 3 (01:43:44):
I believe any woman could be president, any competent woman,
just like I believe any competent man. And I'm talking
about competent people who have shown throughout their life leadership
and whatnot. But is it this specific woman that I
think should be president? Because if that's what you're saying,
And no, I don't believe so. Not that she couldn't
do the job. She just did do the job the

(01:44:06):
way that I think the job should be done. And
I think some of her ideas are wacky. Who would
come back and bite us in the ass. Has nothing
to do with her being a woman, though, because I
also think there are plenty of men out there that
shouldn't do the job either, who've also ran for president.

Speaker 2 (01:44:21):
Three two, three, five, three eight, twenty four to twenty three.
Atch you had Benson show? Is your Twitter? You could
tweet that's ax chat. I get it, I get it.
It's X. It's X. You tweet at us, X at us.
I don't think you're supposed to call it X though
you're not xing at us. Still you're tweeting, so it's
not an axe at us. That'd be weird. You could
x at us. You can tweet at us x at us.

(01:44:41):
Check out the Instagram as well. I got the YouTube
the whole nine yards.

Speaker 3 (01:44:44):
We can do some videos over the next couple of days,
getting ready to really ramp up that side of it.

Speaker 2 (01:44:48):
If you miss any the show, make sure you grab
the podcast. My pillow.

Speaker 3 (01:44:52):
My pillow has the my slippers. That's right, the my slippers,
the moccasins on cell. Now, so you say to yourself self,
I am interested in these chat tell me about that.
How about four layers of amazing We'll get to that
in a second. But first you're gonna notice the sway ooh,
tons of color styles, juice from men's and women's. Then
you're gonna notice the faux fur on the inside. No fur, monsters,

(01:45:14):
word and making.

Speaker 2 (01:45:15):
In any of this.

Speaker 3 (01:45:17):
Then you get to those four amazing layers, like a
four layer dip, but even better because for your foot. First,
the MyPillow mat the patent field right there.

Speaker 2 (01:45:27):
Secondly, oh, tell me more, how about this right little
memory film action followed by this amazing gel followed by
the soul for.

Speaker 3 (01:45:37):
Indoor outdoor use. It's incredible. You're gonna save big two.
See you money back there in t ten year waranty.
Let's talk about that. How about one hundred dollars off
for the my slipper moccasins right now? Boom, go to
mypellow dot com slash Benson forty nine ninety eight make
great Christmas gifts MyPillow dot com slash Benson for the
best thing around this holiday season, something that's great for

(01:45:58):
indoor outdoor all the time. My slippers just forty nine
ninety eight My pillow dot com slash Benson.

Speaker 2 (01:46:03):
How about we wrap it up straight at it is
the Chat Benson.

Speaker 18 (01:46:06):
Show, Deep States no deep doo doo eh, the Chat
Benson Show.

Speaker 2 (01:46:20):
It is Friday. You know what that means, Little George
Jones and finally Friday. As we listened to all the
craziness that happened this week.

Speaker 13 (01:46:27):
It's just an incredible, incredible, incredible hurricane. It has dropped.
It has dropped fifteen millibars in ten hours. I apologize,
this is just horrific.

Speaker 39 (01:46:40):
Got a Kathy Bara in our garage, whimers in our bathrooms.

Speaker 15 (01:46:44):
I'm got a hondred dollars walking in my hole. I
know how I'll say it didn't Marty's burning hold.

Speaker 2 (01:46:52):
Right through my buggeting and do my skim.

Speaker 23 (01:46:55):
Come on morning, I'll be bro.

Speaker 3 (01:47:00):
Fine.

Speaker 10 (01:47:07):
This is 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.

Speaker 9 (01:47:20):
So yeah, there you go.

Speaker 17 (01:47:21):
He loses, man, what if you lose them?

Speaker 2 (01:47:37):
It's fine.

Speaker 5 (01:47:45):
When I make you out in the hall, I said,
I'm really nervous because I want this to go well
for you.

Speaker 2 (01:47:50):
I want it to go well for the country.

Speaker 10 (01:47:51):
It is not right that teachers and nurses and firefighters
are paying a higher tax rate than billionaires and the
biggest corporations.

Speaker 9 (01:48:00):
And I plan on making that fair. But we're dealing
with the real world. But the real world includes.

Speaker 2 (01:48:06):
How are you going to get this to Congress.

Speaker 4 (01:48:08):
Hurricane watches have been issued for portions of west central
Florida and Florida's Nature Coast. Thankfully, this was not the
worst case scenario.

Speaker 2 (01:48:30):
It's not a matrix or something I just did. It
doesn't feel real.

Speaker 19 (01:48:33):
So I'm always thinking about you know, that's my dad,
because that's not literally my dad.

Speaker 20 (01:48:37):
A ferocious hurricane Milton making landfall along the West coast
of Florida.

Speaker 11 (01:48:43):
If you want to go watch MSNBC Primetime and hear
how great things are going for the Arias campaign.

Speaker 22 (01:48:47):
You're welcome to do that.

Speaker 5 (01:48:48):
But if you want to understand what's actually happening, we're
here to tell you she's got a lot of trouble.

Speaker 44 (01:48:53):
Would you have done something differently than President Biden during
the past four years.

Speaker 10 (01:48:57):
There has done a thing that comes to mind in
terms of and I've been a part of most of
the decisions that have had impact.

Speaker 2 (01:49:05):
Ooh not.

Speaker 3 (01:49:05):
The answer to America was looking for solid, crazy fun week.
Huh man, I tell you what we've been through a
whole hell of a lot.

Speaker 2 (01:49:12):
We forgot last week.

Speaker 3 (01:49:13):
We were going through Helene, then all of a sudden,
halfway through became Milton, and now we're back to election time.

Speaker 2 (01:49:19):
Indeed, just twenty five days left. You guys, have a
blessed rest.

Speaker 29 (01:49:22):
Of your weekend.

Speaker 2 (01:49:22):
We'll do it again next week on Tuesday and off Monday.
You have a good one.

Speaker 30 (01:49:25):
As always, my dad, This is the Chad Benson Show.
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